Don’t Believe Everything You Think The Six Basic Mistake People Make in Thinking.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Probability.
Advertisements

Section 10.2: Tests of Significance
Introductory Mathematics & Statistics for Business
Lesson 8 Data Toss.
Right Brain vs. Left Brain. Directions Get a blank sheet of lined paper. Every time you read a description or characteristic that applies to you, write.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Slide
DRAWING INFERENCES FROM DATA
Right vs. Left Brain. This theory of the structure and functions of the mind suggests that the two different sides of the brain control two different.
1.3: Scientific Thinking & Process
CS1512 Foundations of Computing Science 2 Week 3 (CSD week 32) Probability © J R W Hunter, 2006, K van Deemter 2007.
Building Relationships
Chris Morgan, MATH G160 January 30, 2012 Lecture 9 Chapter 4.1: Combinations 1.
Building a Conceptual Understanding of Algebra with Algebra Tiles
An Extra Point Quiz. Are You Smarter than a Pre-Calc Student is a game in which the first 10 questions the class is playing the game together to earn.
TEST-TAKING STRATEGIES FOR THE OHIO ACHIEVEMENT READING ASSESSMENT
MAT 103 Probability In this chapter, we will study the topic of probability which is used in many different areas including insurance, science, marketing,
Section 6.3 ~ Probabilities With Large Numbers
Show Me the Money! How to ask for a Raise!.
Interview Skills Training
40S Applied Math Mr. Knight – Killarney School Slide 1 Unit: Probability Lesson: PR-L1 Intro To Probability Intro to Probability Learning Outcome B-4 PR-L1.
What’s the topic of our essay?
An Introduction to Physics
Helping Families Promote Children’s Social Emotional Competence Based on materials from Center for Social Emotional Foundation of Early Learning (CSEFEL)
1 Using one or more of your senses to gather information.
What is research? Lecture 2 INFO61003 Harold Somers.
Introduction to Science and the Scientific Method
CHAPTER 15: Tests of Significance: The Basics Lecture PowerPoint Slides The Basic Practice of Statistics 6 th Edition Moore / Notz / Fligner.
Testing Hypotheses About Proportions
Copyright © 2010, 2007, 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 14 From Randomness to Probability.
Order of Operations And Real Number Operations
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Slide
Probability and Induction
Symbolic Logic Lesson CS1313 Spring Symbolic Logic Outline 1.Symbolic Logic Outline 2.What is Logic? 3.How Do We Use Logic? 4.Logical Inferences.
Statistical Hypothesis Testing Popcorn, soda & statistics Null Hypothesis Significance Testing (NHST) Statistical Decisions, Decision Errors & Statistical.
NON - zero sum games.
1 Hypothesis Testing Chapter 8 of Howell How do we know when we can generalize our research findings? External validity must be good must have statistical.
What is Science anyway.
Card Counting What is it, how does it work, and can I use it to pay for college? (and if it does work, do I even have to go to college?) Jeff O’Connell.
Statistics Introduction.
Probability.
Understanding the art of Persuasion
Chapter 4 Probability Lecture 1 Sections: 4.1 – 4.2.
Schema Theory Cognitive Psychology. psychlotron.org.uk Source: Roth & Bruce (1995)
LOCUS OF CONTROL Manishaa & Dayaanand.
Brian Duddy.  Two players, X and Y, are playing a card game- goal is to find optimal strategy for X  X has red ace (A), black ace (A), and red two (2)
Introduction to Science: The Scientific Method
Bell Work. Have you ever watched someone win a game again and again? Do you think that person just has good luck? In many cases, winners have strategies.
1 Lecture 5 Binomial Random Variables Many experiments are like tossing a coin a fixed number of times and recording the up-face. * The two possible outcomes.
1 Chapter 1 Observation Skills CATALYST (LEFT HAND SIDE) Take out your three questions from last night’s reading! When you walked onto the second floor.
Scientific Inquiry & Skills
What’s this picture of?. Schema Theory Cognitive Psychology.
Rejecting Chance – Testing Hypotheses in Research Thought Questions 1. Want to test a claim about the proportion of a population who have a certain trait.
5.1 Probability in our Daily Lives.  Which of these list is a “random” list of results when flipping a fair coin 10 times?  A) T H T H T H T H T H 
The Scientific Method …and the Nature of Science.
GamblingGambling What are the odds? Jessica Judd.
Scientific Method Chapter 1-1. What is Science?  Science – organized way of gathering and analyzing evidence about the natural world  Described as a.
1 Binomial Random Variables Lecture 5  Many experiments are like tossing a coin a fixed number of times and recording the up-face.  The two possible.
Introduction to Physical Science Chapter 1 The Nature of Science.
6.3 Binomial and Geometric Random Variables
Uncertainty and confidence Although the sample mean,, is a unique number for any particular sample, if you pick a different sample you will probably get.
Nature of Science. Purpose of Science ► Science is the pursuit of explanations of the natural world.
Chapter One: Observation Skills
The Law of Averages. What does the law of average say? We know that, from the definition of probability, in the long run the frequency of some event will.
Unit 5 – Chapters 10 and 12 What happens if we don’t know the values of population parameters like and ? Can we estimate their values somehow?
Warm-Up What are three science facts you can list? (SCIENCE: bio, chemistry, geology….) YOU HAVE 5 MINUTES AFTER THE BELL RINGS TO WORK ON THE WARM-UP.
Chapter Randomness, Probability, and Simulation
Fallacies Part 2 A Mr. C Production.
PROBABILITY RULES. PROBABILITY RULES CHANCE IS ALL AROUND YOU…. YOU AND YOUR FRIEND PLAY ROCK-PAPER-SCISSORS TO DETERMINE WHO GETS THE LAST SLICE.
The Scientific Method.
Chapter 12 Power Analysis.
Presentation transcript:

Don’t Believe Everything You Think The Six Basic Mistake People Make in Thinking

Thinking is Skilled work. People with untrained minds should no more expect to think clearly and logically than people who have never learned and never practiced can expect to find themselves good carpenters, golfers, bridge players or pianists.

Science is a METHOD, not a SUBJECT

QUIZ #1) In the past 20 years, violence in schools has: A)Increased B)Remained about the same C)Decreased

QUIZ #2) In the past 20 years, violent crime in America has: A)Increased B)Remained about the same C)Decreased

QUIZ The answer to both was c) decreased. Individual stories have a powerful affect on how we see the world, but they do not accurately reflect it.

Six Common Mistakes People prefer Stories to statistics

Anecdote ≠ Data Many factors contribute to each individual person or situation. This is why science uses statistics. For example, an individual may smoke cigarettes for 80 years and die of an unrelated cause, but statistics show people who smoke are 8x more likely to have heart and lung disease.

The popular media usually reports both sides of an issue; even if there is only one side. Stories are often about conflict and the media looks for the conflict…even if it has to inflate it…or make it up.

Quiz #3) The following three numbers follow a rule. If you give 3 numbers, I will tell you whether or not they follow the same rule. Attempt to discover what the rule is: 2, 4, 6

Quiz 2, 4, 6 The rule is: “Three positive whole numbers in ascending order.”

Six Common Mistakes People prefer Stories to statistics People seek to Confirm, not question, ideas

Science Thought Most people seek evidence to support. In science, we attempt to disprove. Nothing can EVER be proven. Cases may still exist to falsify. Lucy: I think your the most selfish human being on the planet. George: Well that's just silly. Have you met everybody on the planet? -Sandra Bullock and Hugh Grant in Two Weeks Notice

The process of science is about viciously weeding out the bad ideas and leaving the good ones.

Science is: Testable Falsifiable Repeatable

If you don’t question ideas, then you cannot distinguish the useful from the worthless.

Scientific “facts” are conclusions confirmed to such an extent that is reasonable to offer agreement…but this assent is NEVER final.

There are no final answers in science— only varying degrees of probability.

QUIZ A B #4) Which of the following is the most random?

QUIZ #5) What is the chance of a coin coming up heads on a single flip? #6) What is the chance of a coin coming up heads if I have already gotten 3 heads in a row? #7) What is the chance of a coin coming up heads if I have already gotten 10 heads in a row?

QUIZ #8) A popular ESP test uses five (5) symbol cards for the “reader” to try to identify. If each trial uses twenty-five (25) cards, how many would you expect by chance alone? #9) Would it be evidence of psychic powers for someone to get nine (9) right?

QUIZ A B #4) A is the most random

QUIZ #5) 50% #6) 50% #7) 50% #8) five (5) #9) No

The Bell Curve SOMEBODY has to in the top 0.1%: Million-to-one chances happen eight times a day in New York.

Six Common Mistakes People prefer Stories to statistics People seek to Confirm, not question, ideas People do not understand the role of chance and coincidence in life

Chance: The Gambler’s Fallacy The roulette wheel has just hit four red numbers in a row….bet on black: it is “due” John has just hit four three-point baskets in a row...pass him the ball: he has a hot hand. The gambler has been winning at blackjack…keep playing: he’s hot. The gambler has been losing at blackjack…keep playing: he’s due.

What’s the chance? We must be aware of the power of chance and coincidence. Will you take this bet: At least two people in this room were born on the same day of the month. Would you take this bet: At least two students in my classes have the exact same birthday. BOTH have better than 75% chance.

Quiz #10) Please write down the following sentence Paris in the the spring

Quiz: #11) Describe what you see:

Quiz: #12) Describe what you see:

Quiz: #13) Count the number of passes made by people in WHITE shirts. PASSES

Quiz answers #10) Paris in the the spring #11) Three partial circles (there is NO triangle) #12) Faces? Vases? It’s both! #13) Re-watch the video without counting…Re-watchvideo

Six Common Mistakes People prefer Stories to statistics People seek to Confirm, not question, ideas People do not understand the role of chance and coincidence in life People misperceive the world around them

Patterns We are pattern seeking. The ability to see cause and effect has enormous advantage The ability, however, can be easily fooled. Pareidolia-seeing patterns in random noise Responsible for ghost sightings, etc. We need to be careful to avoid seeing patterns that do not exist.

Quiz #14) Consider the following: There is a contagious virus in the population. A test exists for it that 100% accurate if you have it (it will never say you don’t if you do.) The test has a 5% false positive rate (says you have it even though you don’t) 1 in 500 people have the virus. IF your test says you have it, what is the chance that you ACTUALLY have it?

Quiz #15) Consider the following: Steve is very intelligent, but speaks quietly. He is shy and withdrawn, but tries to be very helpful. He very orderly and pays attention to the details. Which is most likely Steve’s Job: Farmer, Salesman, Airline pilot, Librarian, Actor?

Quiz Answers #14) 1 in 500 have the virus. For every 500 tested, 1 has the virus 5% test positive falsely (500 x 5%= 25) So 1 true positive + 25 false = 26 total your chance are 1/26 (4%) you really have it! #15) All are equally likely…

Six Common Mistakes People prefer Stories to statistics People seek to Confirm, not question, ideas People do not understand the role of chance and coincidence in life People misperceive the world around them People over-simplify

Memorize this list SourNiceCandy HoneySugarSoda BitterChocolateGood HeartTasteCake ToothTartPie

Quiz #16) Write down the list of words. #17) Which Star Wars character was Mr. Colby posing with?

Quiz Answers #16) Sour, Nice, Candy, Honey, Sugar, Soda, Bitter, Chocolate, Good, Heart, Taste, Cake, Tooth, Tart, Pie #17) None. It was a Halo Costume!

Six Common Mistakes People prefer Stories to statistics People seek to Confirm, not question, ideas People do not understand the role of chance and coincidence in life People misperceive the world around them People over-simplify People have faulty memories

Selective Memory Psychics make hundreds of predictions. Some, just be chance, turn out to be right. People remember the few right predictions and forget wrong ones. – Save a prediction issue of a magazine for one year – Compare/Count the “hits” and “misses”

Don’t ignore the negatives. Consider all the evidence.

Scientific Thinking Statistics: individual stories do not make data Science attempts to falsify Science takes into consideration the role of chance and coincidence in studies Studies must be repeated to avoid perceptual error All possibilities considered, only evidence matters

The Scientific Method Report your results Analyze data and draw conclusions Experiment to test hypothesis Construct a hypothesis Do Background Research Ask a Question/Define the Problem/Observation

The Scientific Process