AP Psych-Unit 2 PowerPoint
AP Psych-Unit 2 PowerPoint
3. Intuition Research
Perceiving Order
Flaws of Intuition
Scientific Attitude & Critical
Thinking
What are the
three main
components of
the “scientific
attitude”?
Foundation of Critical
Thinking? The Amazing James
Randi!
Wrap Up: Identify whether hindsight bias (HB),
overconfidence (O), or the tendency to
perceive patterns in random events (P) is at
work below
1. Toni notices that the last four times she has been to the grocery store she has scored a
parking place right up front! She knows she is on a lucky streak!
2. Bruce is often called a Monday Morning Quarterback by his friends for saying he knew the
Eagles should have put the rookie wide receiver in last Sunday’s game.
3. Amanda, a senior in high school with a 3.0 GPA, is filling out her college applications.
When asked by her friends and family what schools she is applying to and what schools she
thinks she will get into, she lists Princeton, Yale, Harvard and Stanford and says she thinks she
will get into all of them, except maybe for Harvard, which is her reach school.
4. Shreya and Steve break up. Their classmate, Iram, tells her mother that she knew all along
the two of them were not going to make it.
5. Fiona, a student in your class, is certain that the instructor does not like her. For the last
three class sessions, the instructor has not called on her to answer a question, even though
her hand was raised.
Module 5
THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD & DESCRIPTION
Basics of Scientific Method
1. Crash Course Key Points
2. Module 5 Takeaways
3. Operational Definitions
3. Testing
1. Forming a the 5. Drawing
question Hypothesis Conclusions
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
• Allows description • Allows researcher
of behavior as it little or no control
occurs in the of the situation.
environment. • Observations
• Often useful in first may be biased.
stages of a • Does not allow
research firm conclusions
program. about cause and
effect.
Laboratory Observation
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
• Allows more • Allows researcher only
limited control of the
control than situation.
naturalistic • Observations may be
biased.
observation. • Does not allow firm
• Allows use of conclusions about
sophisticated cause and effect.
• Behavior may differ from
equipment. behavior in the natural
environment.
Surveys
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
•Provides a large • If sample is non-representative or
biased (Volunteer bias), it may be
amount of impossible to generalize from the
information on results.
large numbers of • Demand characteristics: people
respond in a way they know the
people. researcher wants them to
•Cheap
• The wording of surveys may be biased
•Hits a lot of and participants are not always
people at once honest
• Low response rate
Framing (Why is Wording of
Surveys/Interviews important)
1255 people were surveyed by New York’s American
Museum of Natural History:
1. 77% interested in plants and trees, but only 39%
interested in botany
2. 48% interested in fossils, but only 39% interested in
paleontology
3. 42% interested in rocks and minerals, but 53%
interested in geology
Other EXAMPLES?
KEY TERMS: Populations & Samples
Readarticle and
summarize key points
Why is replication so
important?
WRAP UP
A theory….
is an explanation using an integrated set of principles that organizes observations and
predicts behaviors or events, often highly researched
A hypothesis….
is a testable prediction, often implied by a theory. In psych, it is a statement between or
among variables
Operationally defining the variables allows for repetition and replication, which is
essential;…..
These need to be measurable and manageable.
Replication importance:….
If a result is true, it should show itself over and over. If a study shows that gratitude increases
positive well-being, then replication of that study should show the same results. Replicated
studies with the same results can lead to advancing our knowledge.
Generalizability….
The degree that results of a study can be applied to different types of populations
Discuss and explain
Which descriptive technique would be best utilized in each
case: a case study (CS), naturalistic observation (NO) or
survey (S).
1. Mr. Bucher wants to determine whether he should use the building funds for a
renovated student courtyard or a faculty exercise room.
2. An army doctor wants to see how soldiers are handling the transition back to civilian
life.
3. A parent is curious to know how their child behaves when away from home at school.
4. An animal researcher wants to prove that squirrels run in packs as wolves do.
5. The Central Bucks School Board is trying to determine if teachers and students feel the
building facilities are adequate and safe.
Module 6
CORRELATION &
EXPERIMENTATION
Discuss and Identify
these basic
concepts Correlation
Correlation
Coefficient
+.70
$ $ $ A A A
Positive correlation:
Variables related in
same direction
$ Show graph
A
Negative Correlation
-.70
Negative correlation:
Variables related in
opposite direction
Show graph
Confounding (Third) Variables
Third
variable problem: Positive
correlation between murder rate
and the sale of ice-cream.
Third variable which includes a
confounding variable
Weather is cold, fewer people are out
interacting with others and less likely to
purchase ice-cream.
Hot outside, more social interaction
and more ice-cream being purchased
Weather is the variable that confounds
the relationship between ice-cream
sales and murder
Correlation Does not mean
Causation
Correlation Does not mean
Causation
Correlation Does not mean
Causation
Correlation Does not mean
Causation
Correlation Does not mean
Causation
Illusory Correlations?
Illusory
correlation: A suspected relationship
that doesn’t empirically exist
Isaw a few very short students getting A’s on my
quizzes in class, therefore, short kids must be
smarter!
Predict whether the correlation would
likely be positive (P) or negative (N):
1. The number of fast food restaurants: the obesity rate in
the U.S.
2. The average U.S. household income: annual gross profit
reported by U.S. retailers.
3. The illiteracy rate: the presence of Head Start or early
intervention education programs.
4. The number of hours spent commuting to and from
work; the amount of dinners cooked at home from
scratch.
5. Hours spent learning a skill; proficiency in the skill.
Scatterplot Correlation Practice
1. Which is +/-
Groups
Experimental
Experimentation
Independent
Variables
Dependent
Experiment
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
• Allows researcher to • Situation is artificial,
control the situation. and results may not
• Permits researcher to generalize well to the
isolate cause and real world.
effect and to • Sometimes difficult to
distinguish placebo avoid experimenter
effects from effects.
treatment effects.
When psychologists set up an
experiment, they think, “If I do X, the
people in my study will do Y.”
X Y
Independent Dependent
variable variable
Do Cell Phone Use and Driving Mix?
In an experiment, participants are randomly assigned
...
. . . into experimental and control groups . . . which
are then subject to independent and dependent
variables.
Random Assignment
Controlling for confounding variables such as parental
intelligence and environment
Participants
Experimental Method
Experimental
Control group
group
• Members of an • Participants in an
experiment who experiment who
are exposed to are not exposed
the treatment to the treatment
variable or variable; this is the
manipulation by comparison
the researcher; group.
represents the
treatment group.
Experimental Method
Independent Dependent
variable (IV) variable (DV)
•In an experimental •In an experimental
design, the design, the
variable characteristic or
manipulated by response that is
the researcher to measured to
determine its determine the
effect on the effect of the
dependent researcher’s
variable manipulation
Variables continued….
Double-blind study
Neither experimenter nor
participants know who is in
which group
Eliminates experimenter bias
What is the Placebo Effect?
• An action or substance
given to members of
the control group; the
fake treatment that has
no benefit, but is
administered as if it
does
• People taking the
placebos often
experience effects that
are similar to those
reported by the
participants taking the
actual drug or
treatment
Does my Experiment Test what it is
supposed to test? What is validity?
▪ Internal Validity: How well constructed was the experiment to control for
confounding variables?
▪ Content Validity: Learning Shakespeare, test questions on Shakespeare NOT
Geometry
▪ IQ tests are strictly timed, may be a good measure of speed of
processing. However, if researchers do not believe processing speed
is an important component of intelligence, content validity would be
questioned
▪ Face Validity: Tests appears valid to test taker
▪ Construct Validity: Self-esteem is a CONSTRUCT. What does it exactly mean
though? Difficult to operationalize, need to be clear how you are
measuring the construct
What about……Reliability?
• Mean
Measures • Mode
• Median
• Positive Skew
Skewing • Negative Skew
Central Tendency
• 3 Measures of Central Tendency (OR
single scores that represents a whole set
of scores)
• Mean: the arithmetic average
• Add all scores then divide by number
of scores (N)
• Strongly influenced by outliers – gets
pulled up or down depending on
extreme data points
• Median: the middle score in a distribution
• Mode: the most frequently occurring score
• Bimodal – if two scores appear most frequently
• Multimodal – if three or more scores appear
most frequently
Note that when a variable is normally distributed, the mean, median, and mode are the
same number.
You can use the following two rules to provide some information about skewness even
when you cannot see a line graph of the data (i.e., all you need is the mean and the
median):
1. Rule One. If the mean is smaller (because of a very low score) than the median, the
data are skewed to the left.
2. Rule Two. If the mean is larger (because of a very high score) than the median, the
data are skewed to the right.
Practice: Central Tendency AT
Dunder-Mifflin
The median salary
looks good at $100,000.
$25,000-Pam
The mean salary also
$25,000- Kevin looks good at about
$25,000- Angela $110,000.
$100,000- Andy But the mode salary is
$100,000- Dwight only $25,000.
$200,000- Jim Maybe not the best
place to work.
$300,000-
Then again living in
Michael Scranton is kind of
cheap.
Mean, Median and Mode - Watch out for extreme scores
or outliers!
Measures of Variation:
Standard Deviation
What is the
important takeaway
related to standard
deviation?
Ex: If the variance is 81. Take the square root of that. The
standard deviation is 9.
Try these:
If the variance is 144, the standard dev is ___.
If the variance is 9, the standard dev is ___.
Normal Distribution Of Scores
• IQ Scores, heights, shoe sizes of large
groups of people usually produce a
symmetrical distribution; pattern of
scores on one side are a mirror of the
other side
• Referred to as “Bell Curve” because of
the shape
• Data in a normal distribution fall around
the mean in the same way each time
• Percentile rank: Percentage of scores in
a distribution that a particular score falls
above
68 - 95 - 99.7 rule
• In a normal distribution:
• 68% of scores fall
within 1 SD of the
mean
• 95% fall within 2 SD
• 99.7% fall within 3 SD
Inferential Statistics
Inferential vs Statistical
Descriptive Significance
Statistical
Reliability
Statistical Significance
Significance •ZERO indicates near certainty that the result is
reported as p- due to manipulation of variables, basically
value, which is the impossible
probability of •When p (equal to or less than) ≤ 0.05 a researcher
getting the can conclude that the result is unlikely due to
experimental results chance BUT with p ≤ 0.05, you can still expect a
different result in 1/20 trials
• The closer the p- •When statistical analysis shows that the results of a
value is to ZERO, study are significant, the researcher can reject the
the less likely the null hypothesis
result is due to •When you reject the null, you are saying that the
chance IV had an impact on the DV
•With p ≤ 0.05, rejecting the null will be the wrong
decision 5/100 times or less
Module 8
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT
PSYCHOLOGY
Ethical
• View video on studies from the
past
• Why considered unethical?
studies in
past
Video Discussion
• Key points from video
• How does this connect to our previous
modules?
Social Media Assignment
B. Choose one example from your group, research the actual study or an
actual study related to the “reference”. Using terminology from this unit, write
a brief summary of your findings as to whether the study was presented in
social media accurately and properly.
4.2: Identify how the three main components of the scientific attitude
relate to critical thinking.
8.3: Explain why psychologists study animals, and describe the ethical
guidelines that safeguard animal research participants.