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Psychology The Study of Human Behavior
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Purpose of Psychology -To describe behavior - To predict behavior - To change behavior
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Common sense says… Opposites Attract Birds of a Feather Stick Together Out of Sight Out of Mind Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder
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Ways to Study Behavior ObserveTest Ask NaturalisticExperimental method longitudinal Case study survey Cross section
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How to universalize Who does it apply to…. SampleRandom selection assignment Population (Stratified) Cause - Effect Operational Definition; to operationalize Dependent VariableIndependent Variable Controlled Variables Between Group Design vs. With-in Group Design
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Operationalize 8 A psychologist wants to know if counseling will make people less depressed 2 How do different types of jokes affect a person’s sense of humor. 3 Overall senior girls are prettier than junior girls but the juniors are less insane 4 People who make over $300,000 a year tend to be snobs 5 School spirit is at an all time low 6 The Rolling Stones are the best rock group ever. 7 College athletes are not as smart as regular students 1 People dream more If they have eaten a big meal 3 hours before sleep Billy is on a new behavior program, will it make him act more friendly toward others
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Hypothesis Utilize the following format If-----(IV) Then -----(DV)
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Errors Every (experiment) Study (Subject Selection) Can (Control/Confounding) Be (Bias) Pretty (Practice Effect) Dirty (Demand Effect)
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Experiment Design Most general of the errors. There are many, many ways to botch the design of an experiment.
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Subject Selection Selection must be random Assignment must be random If subject reflect the population
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Confounding Variables Other variables -that could cause the behavior -stuff not accounted for
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Control Errors Things not kept the same for all subjects
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Bias Experimenter Bias Researcher influences results E.g. –The experimenter mood, –facial expression –actions
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Practice Effect Your subjects get better as they do it longer. E.g. - Most tests of manual dexterity –Color discrimination
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Demand Effect Subjects intentionally do act the way the experimenter expects them to. Examples: –The good subject – The subject tries to “help” the experimenter by doing whatever it takes to confirm the hypothesis –The negative subject – The subject tries to destroy the credibility of the study.
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Ethics Consent Protection Confidentiality Debriefing Animal Studies
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Types of Statistics in Psychology Descriptive Statistics: Describe data to get meaning Inferential Statistics: Use data for drawing conclusions
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Descriptive Statistics Central Tendency Measures of Variability Standard Scores Bell Curve
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Measures of Central Tendency A number describing a typical score around which the other scores fall Mean = average Median= score that in the middle; half the values fall and half below Mode = most frequently occurring score
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Measures of Variability Provide a single number that tell us how spread out the scores are Range = Difference between the highest and lowest scores Standard Deviation = how much a typical score differs from the mean of a group of scores Z Score: how many standard deviations above or below the mean
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Bell Curve Normal Curve: Bell-shaped curve, most scores in the middle and very few extremely high and low scores Mean, Median & Mode all equal When it isn’t – skewed right or left
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Fig. A.3 The normal curve. The normal curve is an idealized mathematical model. However, many measurements in psychology closely approximate a normal curve. The scales you see here show the relationship of standard deviations, z-scores, and other measures to the curve.
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Fig. A.4 Relationship between the standard deviation and the normal curve.
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Inferential Statistics Statistical Significance: Degree to which an event is unlikely to have occurred by chance alone p<_.05
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Drivers 3rd 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 090120150180210240270300330360
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Drivers 4th 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 090120150180210240270300330360
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Drivers 5th 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 090120150180210240270300330360
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Correlation Shows a relationship between 2 variables Corelation Co-efficient between -1 and 1 (slope)
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Bell Curve
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Study Chart
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Correlation
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Professor Perry is interested in testing whether the amount of time a person spends with children affects his attitudes toward having children of his/her own. She randomly chooses a sample and randomly assigns them to two groups. Group 1 spends 5 hours a day for a week with a group of children. Group 2 spends 1 hour a day for a week with the same group of children. At the end of the week, Professor Perry measures their attitudes with a survey.
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