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PSYC 3450 Experimental Psychology
Alla Chavarga
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Course Syllabus Syllabus review On the importance of emails
Attendance / Lecture vs. Lab, attending other lab Course Format: Lecture & Lab Required Textbook – OER
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CHAPTER 1 Scientific Thinking in Psychology
Why take this course? How do we come to know things? Science as a way of knowing Psychological Science vs. Pseudoscience Goals of Research
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Why take this course? Learn how to do research in Psychology
Process vs. content Informed and critical consumption of information Responsibility as a clinician How to Get into Grad School 101
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How do we come to know things?
I know three things: Correlation does not prove causation. Socrates has ten fingers. The sun will come up tomorrow. Authority Reason (a priori) Experience (a priori) Empiricism
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How do we come to know things?
Empiricism – the process of learning things through direct observation or experience, and reflecting on those experiences. Sounds legit. What could be wrong about this method? Social Cognition Biases Belief perseverance – the tendency to hold on to a belief, even in the face of contradictory evidence. Confirmation Bias – tendency to seek out information only in support of belief, ignoring contradictory information. Availability heuristic – tendency to overestimate the frequency with which unusual or memorable events occur
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Science as a way of knowing
Scientific Method - the most reliable way to develop a belief; independent of pre-existing bias and opinion. Hypothesis Experiment Conclusion Assumptions Determinism Discoverability All events have causes. Statistical determinism. Through systematic observation, these causes can be found.
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Science as a way of knowing
Scientific methods are characterized by objectivity. Scientists need not be perfect; their results simply need be publicly verified and replicated. Specific, detailed descriptions of method. Scientists are data-driven. Science produces tentative conclusions. Science asks answerable questions. Science develops theories that can be disproven.
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Psychological Science vs. Pseudoscience
Pseudoscience: any field of inquiry that appears to be scientific but is based on inadequate scientific methods and typically produces false conclusions. May seem convincing! Anecdotal evidence; effort justification Sidesteps disproof
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Science as a way of knowing
Some important concepts: Hypothesis Theory – a set of statements that summarize what is known about some phenomenon and propose working explanations for those phenomena. Falsification
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The Goals of Research Description Prediction Explanation Application
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