The Scientific Method
Scientific Instruments
Accurate, precise
interobserver agreement
Agreement between observations of two or more independent observers.
Nonscientific (everyday) Concepts
Ambiguous, with surplus meanings
Nonscientific (everyday) Reporting
Biased, subjective
Nonscientific (everyday) Observation
Casual, uncontrolled
Scientific Concepts
Clear definitions, operational specificity
Scientific Attitude
Critical, skeptical
We use the term concepts to refer to relationships
among things or events, as well as to their characteristics
Scientific General approach
Empirical
Nonscientific (everyday) Instruments
Inaccurate, imprecise
Nonscientific (everyday) General approach
Intuitive
Nonscientific (everyday) Measurement
Not valid or reliable
Scientific Observation
Systematic, controlled
Scientific Hypotheses
Testable
Scientific Reporting
Unbiased, objective
Nonscientific (everyday) Attitude
Uncritical, accepting
Nonscientific (everyday) Hypotheses
Untestable
Scientific Measurement
Valid and reliable
in scientific reporting, observers must guard against
a tendency to draw inferences too quickly
Scientific instruments are
accurate and precise
One problem of an operational definition there is nothing to prevent us from giving a construct
another operational definition
Scientists seek to determine whether any differences in their observations of the dependent variable
are caused by the different conditions of the independent variable
Dependent variables are measures of behavior used to
assess the effects of independent variables
Operational definitions facilitate communication
at least among those who know how and why they are used
An operational definition explains a
concept solely in terms of the observable procedures used to produce and measure it
We use the term concepts to refer to things
both living and inanimate
Scientists gain the greatest control when they
conduct an experiment
The study of "concepts" is so important in psychological science that researchers refer to concepts by a special name
constructs
The accuracy of an instrument is determined by
calibrating it, or checking it with another instrument known to be true
everyday observations are not always made
carefully or systematically
testable hypotheses have
clearly defined concepts (operational definitions), are not circular, and refer to concepts that can be observed
A construct is
concept or idea
One way in which a scientist gives meaning to a construct is by
defining it operationally
The measures of behavior that are used to assess the effect (if any) of the independent variables are called
dependent variables
One type of scientific measurement, physical measurement, involves
dimensions for which there is an agreed-upon standard and an instrument for doing the measuring
operational definitions are not always meaningful
does performance on one test compare to performance on other tasks that are commonly accepted as measures of the construct
reliability of a measurement is
indicated by its consistency
In a sense, the human observer is the
instrument for psychological measurement
illusory correlation
is our tendency to perceive a relationship between events when none exists.
In an experiment, scientists
manipulate one or more factors and observe the effects of this manipulation on behavior
In most psychological research, however, the measurements do
not involve physical dimensions
clear communication of constructs occurs when
operational definitions are used
Measurements can be made at varying levels of
precision
independent variable two levels often represent the
presence and the absence of some treatment, respectively
agreement among a number of observers provides the basis for
psychological measurement
Scientists use two types of measurements to
record the careful and controlled observations that characterize the scientific method
in an experiment
researchers manipulate independent variables to determine their effect on behavior
One way to determine whether a report is unbiased is to
see if it can be verified by an independent observer
The scientific method is empirical and requires
systematic, controlled observation.
A hypothesis is a
tentative explanation for a phenomenon
Clear, unambiguous communication of ideas requires
that we clearly define our concepts
validity refers to
the "truthfulness" of a measure
the condition in which the treatment is absent is called
the control condition
Accuracy refers to
the difference between what an instrument says is true and what is known to be true
The condition in which the treatment is present is commonly called
the experimental condition
a major strength of using operational definitions is that
they help to clarify communication among scientists about their constructs
We use the term concepts to refer to events
things in action
In the simplest of studies, the independent variable has
two levels
Scientific reporting is
unbiased and objective
Scientific reporting seeks to be
unbiased and objective
physical and psychological measurement should be
valid and reliable
One possible basis for the illusory correlation bias is that
we are more likely to notice events that are consistent with our beliefs than events that contradict our beliefs
To determine whether a different procedure or test yields a new definition of a construct
we would have to seek additional evidence
When scientists report their findings, they seek to separate what they have observed from
what they conclude or infer on the basis of these observations
events should be described in sufficient detail
without including trivial and unnecessary minutiae
a literal description in reporting
would not be appropriate