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Introduction to Biology
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What is Biology? What is scientific inquiry? Describe the steps of scientific inquiry?
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Introduction to Biology Biology The systematic study of life
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Introduction to Biology What is Biology? Anatomy……..gross structure Physiology………gross function Histology………tissues Cell Biology…… cells Biochemistry…..molecules Genetics…….inheritance Zoology……animals Botany……plants Microbiology….. microorganisms Virology…….viruses Bacteriology……bacteria Mycology…… fungi
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The Nature of Scientific Inquiry Critical thinking Mental process of judging the quality of information before deciding whether or not to accept it
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The Scope and Limits of Science Science is a way of looking at the natural world which helps us to communicate our experiences without bias by focusing only on testable ideas about observable phenomena Science does not address the supernatural Science The systemic study of nature
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How Science Works Researchers make and test potentially falsifiable predictions about how the natural world works Generally, scientific inquiry involves forming a hypothesis (testable assumption) about an observation then making and testing predictions based on the hypothesis A hypothesis that is not consistent with the results of scientific tests is modified or discarded
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Common Research Practices 1. Observe some aspect of nature 2. Frame a question about your observation 3. Propose a hypothesis (a testable explanation of the observation)
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Common Research Practices 4. Make a prediction – a statement based on a hypothesis, about some condition that should exist if the hypothesis is not wrong 5. Test the accuracy of the prediction by experiments or gathering information (tests may be performed on a model)
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Common Research Practices 6. Assess the results of the tests (data) to see if they support or disprove the hypothesis 7. Conclusions: Report all steps of your work and conclusions to the scientific community
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Making Observations: A Field Study
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A Scientific Theory Scientific theory A hypothesis that has not been disproven after many years of rigorous testing Useful for making predictions about other phenomena
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Laws of Nature Law of nature Generalization that describes a consistent and universal natural phenomenon for which we do not yet have a complete scientific information Example: gravity
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Examples of Scientific Theories
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1.7 The Power of Experiments Natural processes are often influenced by many interacting variables Variable A characteristic or event that differs among individuals
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The Power of Experiments Experiments simplify interpretations of complex biological systems by focusing on the effect of one variable at a time Experiment A test to support or falsify a prediction
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Experimental and Control Groups Experimental group A group of objects or individuals that display or are exposed to a variable under investigation Control group A group of objects or individuals that is identical to an experimental group except for one variable
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Peacock Butterfly Defenses
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Example: Butterflies and Birds Question Why does a peacock butterfly flick its wings? Two hypotheses Exposing wing spots scares off predators Wing sounds scare off predators Two predictions Individuals without spots are eaten more often Individuals without sounds are eaten more often
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Peacock Butterfly Defenses
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Experiments and Results Four groups of butterflies were exposed to predators (birds) Butterflies without spots Butterflies without sounds Butterflies without spots or sounds Control group Test results support both original hypotheses
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Results: Peacock Butterfly Experiment
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How would you graph this data?
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