Chapter 2: The Research Process
Characteristics of Good Hypotheses
High correspondence with reality: hypothesis should logically follow from what your literature search reveals on a given topic Parsimony (simplicity and directness) Must be falsifiable or refutable -- must be possible to show that the hypothesis may be incorrect Specificity
Four strategies of developing a hypothesis
Introspection: identify the factors that might influence your happiness and use those explanations to develop a testable hypothesis Find the exception to the rule: crafting hypotheses that look at the outcomes in the opposite direction of prior research has the potential to provide new insights into the phenomenon of interest a matter of degree: when crafting hypotheses, try to think about variables in terms of amounts, which can take many forms, such as quantity, intensity, strength, volume, number, force, persistence, and effort change the directionality: thinking about ideas from both directions will help you form creative hypotheses
Law vs. Theory
Law describes an aspect of the world Theory is an in-depth explanation of why a phenomenon occurs
between-subjects design
a data collection method in which each participant is only assessed on the dependent variable once
within-subjects design
a data collection method in which each participant or subject is assessed on the dependent variable more than once
correlational design (nonexperimental) (what)
a design in which there is no control or manipulation of the IV; cause and effect relationships between variables cannot be established
research protocol
a detailed series of steps that describe the order in which to administer the study and provides a script of what the researcher should say and do
constant
a factor that does not change and remains consistent
paper presentation
a formal oral research presentation explaining key features of the study and the results
research poster
a formal, visual research presentation that presents the research question and rational for asking it, the study procedure, the findings, and what the findings mean
APA style
a format for writing a research report, addressing both content and formatting, that was established by the American Psychological Association and that psychology and many other social sciences use
Research Journal
a periodical containing articles by experts in a particular field of study
Explanatory/Predictor Variable
a potential causal variable in nonexperimental designs
APA Publication manual
a publication of the APA that details how to write research reports in APA style
hypothesis
a specific, educated conjecture or prediction that provides a testable explanation of a phenomenon
scientific law
a statement based on repeated experimental observation that describes sterm-6ome aspect of the world, but makes no assumptions about why it occurs.
programmatic research
a systematic and planned sequence of related studies where subsequent studies build directly on a previous study's findings to provide a more comprehensive understanding of a phenomenon
Scientific Theory
a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world confirmed through repeated observation and experimentation
script
a written set of instructions that the researcher reads to the participant while collecting data
an "empirical" approach
an approach in which the experimenter uses direct and indirect observations or experiences to test the research question
informed consent
an ethical principle that research participants be told enough to enable them to choose whether they wish to participate
levels
different variations of the independent variable determined by the researcher
data
distinct pieces of information that determine the analytic strategies you should use to test your hypothesis
Variables
factors or elements that you expect to change, vary, or have several different values
Which characteristic is important for minimizing natural flaws in thinking?
falsifiability
criterion/response variable
outcome variable in a nonexperimental design
debriefing
part of standard ethical procedures at the end of a research study; contains an explanation of the purpose of the study and disclosure of deception, and gives participants a chance to ask questions
Results Section
provides information about how the hypotheses were tested, explaining through statistical language, narrative, and reference to tables and graphs
Occam's Razor
refers to the idea that you should "cut away" unnecessary parts also referred to as the principle of parsimony (simplicity); which suggests that if there are multiple ways of saying something, the most simple and direct ways are best
operational definition for the variable
represents how we will use (or put into operation) the variables in our study
Weber's Law of Just Noticeable Difference
states the amount by which a stimulus must change in intensity for us to perceive the change
longitudinal design
the collection of data on participants over a set period of time
Title Page
the first page of an APA-style report that identifies the title of the work as well as the authors and their institutional affiliations
Method Section
the portion of an APA-style research report in which the researcher provides details about the sample, materials, and procedure of collecting data.
introduction
the portion of an APA-style research report that provides background literature on the topic under investigation, as well as a justification of importance for the work and the hypotheses
open science
the practice of freely sharing our scientific work along all stages of the research process
peer review
the process by which scientific experts in a field serve as reviewers who evaluate the quality of research reported in an article; identities of reviewers are kept secret to reduce potential bias; could be seen as a method of fact-checking information
the key distinction between scientific and nonscientific questions is whether or not
the question can be empirically tested
The Barnum Effect
the tendency of people to believe that general descriptions of personality, supposedly tailored specifically for them, are highly accurate This shows the importance of specific hypotheses: if your hypothesis is too vague/broad, it is unclear what exactly you are testing
independent variable
the variable manipulated in an experimental design; responsible for influencing another variable in the study
dependent variable
the variable that represents the effect or outcome in the study; influenced by another variable in the study
conceptual definition for the variable
what the variable represents in the context of the researcher's study
Discussion Section
where the researcher interprets, explains, and applies the results of the study
Abstract
A brief but informative summary of an entire research report that addresses the research topic, methodology used, findings, and conclusions (120-250 words) important because it is sometimes the only piece of information that others see about the research when conducting literature searches; its your chance to convince a potential reader that your report is worth their time
experimental design (why)
A design in which researchers manipulate an independent variable and measure a dependent variable to determine a cause-and-effect relationship
Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development
Argus that moral development occurs throughout the lifespan in six different stages