DO NOW: Hole punch your new DO NOW sheets. Organize your binders! Answer on your DO NOW sheet: What is an illusory correlation?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Aim: What must we understand before designing an study? HW#2: complete the assignment on the last slide (must be typed and article must be included when.
Advertisements

Welcome to EPS 525 Introduction to Statistics Dr. Robert Horn Summer 2008 Mondays – Thursdays 1:00 – 3:15 p.m.
Unit 1: Science of Psychology
Introduction to Statistics: Political Science (Class 7) Part I: Interactions Wrap-up Part II: Why Experiment in Political Science?
Research in Psychology Chapter Two
Critical Thinking.
By: Kelsey Russell & Rachel Holmes.  Hindsight Bias  When you tell people that something is true, yet tell another group of people the opposite the.
Unit 2: Research Methods in Psychology
AP Statistics Week of 2/23 – 3/2
47.269: Research I: The Basics Dr. Leonard Spring 2010
Research Strategies: How Psychologists Ask and Answer Questions Module 3 Psychology 7e in Modules.
1 EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (7th Edition) David Myers PowerPoint Slides Aneeq Ahmad Henderson State University Worth Publishers, © 2008.
Research Methods in Psychology Pertemuan 3 s.d 4 Matakuliah: L0014/Psikologi Umum Tahun: 2007.
General Psychology (PY110)
Research Methods Steps in Psychological Research Experimental Design
AP Biology Scientific Inquiry Adapted from Rebecca Rehder Wingerden ©
 There are times when an experiment cannot be carried out, but researchers would like to understand possible relationships in the data. Data is collected.
How to conduct a valid experiment.
Thinking Critically with Psychological Science Chapter 1
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Chapter 2 Psychology’s Scientific Method.
Chapter 2: The Research Enterprise in Psychology
Basic Concepts of Research Basis of scientific method Making observations in systematic way Follow strict rules of evidence Critical thinking about evidence.
AIM: AP Psychology 1 st Quarter Interim Review DO NOW: Take out your review sheets, get into groups of 5…MOVE YOUR DESKS TOGETHER!
8-10% of AP Exam. » Does sleeping less than seven hours a day reduce how long you will live? » Do violent video games make people more aggressive? » Can.
Chapter 2: The Research Enterprise in Psychology
AP Psychology Ms. Simon September 17-24, 2009 Introduction to Research Methods.
1 of 46 MGMT 6970 PSYCHOMETRICS © 2014, Michael Kalsher Michael J. Kalsher Department of Cognitive Science Inferential Statistics IV: Factorial ANOVA.
RESEARCH & STATISTICS. o What are the 3 types of psychological research? o Experimental o Descriptive o Correlational.
Ch 8 Estimating with Confidence. Today’s Objectives ✓ I can interpret a confidence level. ✓ I can interpret a confidence interval in context. ✓ I can.
Chapter 1: The Research Enterprise in Psychology.
The Research Enterprise in Psychology. The Scientific Method: Terminology Operational definitions are used to clarify precisely what is meant by each.
Chapter 1: The Nature of Statistics
The Scientific Method Chpt. 5 Summary. Objectives Describe the order of steps in the scientific method Describe the order of steps in the scientific method.
Research Methodology & Statistical Analysis Unit Overview.
+ The Practice of Statistics, 4 th edition – For AP* STARNES, YATES, MOORE Chapter 8: Estimating with Confidence Section 8.2 Estimating a Population Proportion.
Statistical Reasoning Chapter 1, Lecture 3 “To be an educated person today is to be able to apply simple statistical principles to everyday reasoning.
Unit 2 Research Methods: Thinking critically with psychological science.
Research Methods It is actually way more exciting than it sounds!!!!
Scientific Inquiry How to Use The Scientific Method.
Place the following disciplines in order from "most scientific" to "least scientific" and explain/justify why you have ordered them in this way. Art Biology.
1.) *Experiment* 2.) Quasi-Experiment 3.) Correlation 4.) Naturalistic Observation 5.) Case Study 6.) Survey Research.
Inference about a population proportion. 1. Paper due March 29 Last day for consultation with me March 22 2.
How to conduct a valid experiment.
Chapter 2 The Research Enterprise in Psychology. Table of Contents The Scientific Approach: A Search for Laws Basic assumption: events are governed by.
1.1 Analyzing Categorical Data Pages 7-24 Objectives SWBAT: 1)Display categorical data with a bar graph. Decide if it would be appropriate to make a pie.
+ The Practice of Statistics, 4 th edition – For AP* STARNES, YATES, MOORE Unit 5: Estimating with Confidence Section 12.1 Estimating a Population Proportion.
DO NOW: On your DO NOW sheet in the Tuesday box: What is a common diagram psychologists use to describe data? Why can this graph be misleading?
Variables. Recap from last lesson  Aims  Hypotheses  IV and DV.
Making Inferences about Causality In general, children who watch violent television programs tend to behave more aggressively toward their peers and siblings.
DESCRIPTIVE METHODS Methods that yield descriptions of behavior but not necessarily causal explanations.
Research in Psychology Chapter Two 8-10% of Exam AP Psychology.
Chapter 1: The Science Of Psychology
1 PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers PowerPoint Slides Aneeq Ahmad Henderson State University Worth Publishers, © 2007.
Analysis…Measures of Central Tendency How can we make SENSE of our research data???
Designing Good Experiments Do Now: Please copy the following definitions onto your notes. (On New Week 2 Do Now sheet in notebooks, write “9.8 – copied.
RESEARCH & STATISTICS.
Chapter 8: Estimating with Confidence
Independent/ Dependent Variables
Statistical Reasoning in Everyday Life
Observational Study vs. Experimental Design
How Do Psychologists Ask & Answer Questions?
INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY REVISION
What are the key elements of maths that you need to focus on
RESEARCH & STATISTICS.
Module 8 Statistical Reasoning in Everyday Life
Chapter 8: Estimating with Confidence
Research in Psychology
2/3/ Estimating a Population Proportion.
Research in Psychology Chapter Two 8-10% of Exam
Presentation transcript:

DO NOW: Hole punch your new DO NOW sheets. Organize your binders! Answer on your DO NOW sheet: What is an illusory correlation?

Variables and Statistics AP Psychology Ms. Desgrosellier

Objectives: SWBAT explain the difference between an independent and a dependent variable. SWBAT explain the importance of statistical principles, and give an example of their use in everyday life. SWBAT how bar graphs can misrepresent data.

Independent and Dependent Variables Variable: anything that can vary in an experiment IV: the experimental factor that is manipulated; the variable whose effect is being studied. You can have more than one in an experiment!

Independent and Dependent Variables DV: the outcome factor; the variable that may change in response to manipulations of the independent variable. Both require operational definitions

Summary Experiments aim to manipulate an independent variable Measure the dependent variable Control all other variables (age, gender, etc.) Two conditions in an experiment: experimental condition and a comparison condition Random assignment: equates the conditions before any treatment effects happen

Comparing Research Methods

Examples Read the following scenario. Identify the independent and dependent variables. Was random assignment used?

Examples Researchers are studying how cocaine affects cognitive processing in rats. Rats are randomly put into two groups: One group of rats receives a minimal dose of cocaine each day. The other group does not receive any cocaine. The rats are then put in a maze and are timed to see how long it takes them to reach the food in the center of the maze.

Examples Researchers want to study how people see colors affects memory. There are three groups. One group of all men is shown a normal colored picture. One group of all women is shown the same picture, but all the red tones are missing. A third group of both men and women is shown the same picture, but all the normal colors have been replaced with their natural opposite. Participants are then asked to describe the picture in great detail. The number of objects in the picture that are accurately recalled are counted.

Statistical Reasoning Statistics are tools that help us see and interpret what the unaided eye might miss by organizing, summarizing, and making inferences from data. Random estimates often misread reality and can then mislead the public

Statistical Reasoning Examples: We use only 10% of our brains. Or is it closer to 90%? Different studies have said both. 10% of people are gay or lesbian. Or is it 2-3%, like some national surveys have found?

Statistical Reasoning Remember: doubt big, round, undocumented numbers. Focus on thinking smarter by applying simple statistical principles to everyday reasoning. Ask yourself: what is the sample size? Was it representative? Did researchers use random assignment/control for extra variables? How was the data analyzed?

Describing Data First thing’s first: researchers must describe their data A common, simple way: the bar graph People can design a graph to make a difference look small or big, depending on what they want to emphasize Be critical when you look at figures in magazines, newspapers, or on TV: read the labels and note their range

Describing Data

Homework Read pgs. 42 – 44 STUDY for your Unit 2 exam (Friday) See Ms. Desgrosellier with any questions or for make-up work!