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Explore the key components of the scientific method, types of research, ethical considerations, and issues in psychological research. Understand the significance of hypotheses, theories, and research design in conducting empirical studies. Learn about ethical guidelines in research involving human and animal participants.
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Psychological Foundations Psychological Research
The Scientific Method The Scientific Method ensures that results are empirical, or grounded in objective, tangible evidence that can be observed time and time again, regardless of who is observing.
Hypothesis or Theory? • Hypothesis: (plural: hypotheses) tentative and testable statement about the relationship between two or more variables • Theory: well-developed set of ideas that propose an explanation for observed phenomena
Key Components of the Scientific Method • Fairness: implies that all data must be considered when evaluating a hypothesis • Falsifiable: It should be possible to disprove a theory or hypothesis by experimental results • Predictability: implies that a theory should enable us to make predictions about future events • Verifiability: an experiment must be replicable by another researcher
Ethics in Research with Human Participants Any research institution that receives federal support for research involving human participants must have access to an institutional review board (IRB), a committee of administrators, scientists, and community members that reviews proposals for research involving human participants to ensure that the participants are not harmed.
Informed Consent • An IRB will require informed consent from all participants. • A research participant must understand what to expect during an experiment, any risks involved, and the implications of the research, and then give written consent to participate. • In some cases researchers may use deception or purposely mislead experiment participants in order to maintain the integrity of the experiment. In these cases participants are debriefed, or told the truth after the experiment.
Ethics in Animal Research Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC):a group of administrators, scientists, veterinarians, and community members that reviews proposals for research involving animals to ensure that research animals are treated humanely and inspects research facilities
Categories of Psychological Research • Descriptive research: research studies that do not test specific relationships between variables; they are used to describe general or specific behaviors and attributes that are observed and measured • Correlational research: tests whether a relationship exists between two or more variables • Experimental research: tests a hypothesis to determine cause and effect relationships
Common Types of Descriptive Research • Clinical or case study: observational research study focusing on one or a few people • Naturalistic observation: observation of behavior in its natural setting • Survey: list of questions to be answered by research participants allowing researchers to collect data from a large number of people. Surveys use a sample, or representative group, to learn more about a population
Other types of Descriptive Research • Archival research: method of research using past records or data sets to answer various research questions, or to search for interesting patterns or relationships • Cross-sectional research: compares multiple segments of a population at a single time • Longitudinal research: studies in which the same group of individuals is surveyed or measured repeatedly over an extended period of time
Issues with Descriptive Research • It may not be possible to generalize, or infer that the results for a sample apply to the larger population • Observer bias is when observations may be skewed to align with observer expectations • One way to assess observers is inter-rater reliability, a measure of agreement among observers on how they record and classify a particular event • It cannot test relationships between variables or cause and effect
Correlational Research Correlation means that there is a relationship between two or more variables. We can measure correlation by calculating the correlation coefficient, a number from -1 to +1 that indicates the strength and direction of the relationship between variables.
Limits of Correlational Research • Correlation does not prove cause and effect! • Some other factor, a confounding variable, could be causing the systematic movement in our variables of interest
Experimental Design: Participants • Basic design involves two groups: experimental group and the control group • Random samples ensure that the groups represent the larger population researchers are studying • Random assignment to control or experimental groups prevents differences between the two groups other than the independent variable being tested
Operational Definition A clear operational definition or description of how we will measure our variables is important so people can understand the results and the experiment can be replicated
Preventing Bias in Experiments Double blind studies where researchers and participants do not know which group received the treatment prevent experimenter bias and control for the placebo effect in participants The placebo effect is the influence of people’s expectations or beliefs on their experience in a given situation
Reliability and Validity Reliability: consistency and reproducibility of a given result Validity: accuracy of a given result in measuring what it is designed to measure
Distributional Thinking • Data vary. More specifically, values of a variable vary • Analyzing the pattern of variation, called the distribution of the variable, often reveals insights • It is important to look beyond averages and medians
Statistical Significance • A result is statistically significant if it is unlikely to arise by chance alone • This probability is referred to as a p-value • The p-value tells you how often a random process would give a result at least as extreme as what was found in the actual study, assuming there was nothing other than random chance at play
Generalizability and Cause and Effect Random sampling is necessary to generalize results from our sample to a larger population, and random assignment is key to drawing cause-and-effect conclusions. With both kinds of randomness, probability models help us assess how much random variation we can expect in our results, in order to determine whether our results could happen by chance alone and to estimate a margin of error.
The Structure of a Psychology Research Article The American Psychological Association (APA) creates guidelines for how articles are structured which include: • Abstract • Introduction • Method • Results • Discussion
Abstract • The concise summary of the article • Summarizes the most important features of the manuscript, providing the reader with a global first impression on the article • Generally just one paragraph that explains the experiment as well as a short synopsis of the results
Introduction • Provides background information about the origin and purpose of performing the experiment or study • Reviews previous research and presents existing theories on the topic
Method • Covers the methodologies used to investigate the research question, including the identification of participants, procedures, and materials as well as a description of the actual procedure • Should be sufficiently detailed to allow for replication
Results • The results section presents key findings of the research, including reference to indicators of statistical significance
Discussion • Provides an interpretation of the findings, states their significance for current research, and derives implications for theory and practice • Alternative interpretations for findings are also provided, particularly when it is not possible to conclude for the directionality of the effects • Authors also acknowledge the strengths and limitations/weaknesses of the study and offer concrete directions about for future research
Practice Question • You read a news article that says that a person’s sex causes them to have better spatial memory • Using what you have learned about research design, how should you evaluate the claim? • What questions should you ask?
Quick Review • What is the scientific method? • How does the scientific method apply to psychology? • What are the strengths and weaknesses of descriptive, experimental, and correlational research? • What are the basic elements of a statistical investigation?