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Lecture Outline

Lecture Outline. Developing Research Ideas Inductive techniques 1) Case studies 2) Paradoxical incidents 3) Analyzing the practitioners rule of thumb 4) Serendipity Deductive techniques 1) Reasoning by analogy 2) Applying a functional or adaptive analysis 3) Hypothetico-deductive method

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Lecture Outline

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  1. Lecture Outline • Developing Research Ideas • Inductive techniques • 1) Case studies • 2) Paradoxical incidents • 3) Analyzing the practitioners rule of thumb • 4) Serendipity • Deductive techniques • 1) Reasoning by analogy • 2) Applying a functional or adaptive analysis • 3) Hypothetico-deductive method • 4) Account for conflicting results • 5) Accounting for exceptions

  2. Developing Research Ideas • Inductive techniques • From specific to general • Deductive techniques • From general to specific

  3. induction vs. deduction. • ideas,meaning,abstract,conclusions,interpretions,theories • ---------------------------------------------------- • life, data, concrete, evidence, reality, facts

  4. Inductive Techniques • 1) Case studies • 2) Paradoxical incidents • 3) Analyzing the practitioners rule of thumb • 4) Serendipity

  5. Case Studies and Paradoxical Incidents • 1) Case Studies • Generating hypotheses from carefully documented observations of a particular group or person • For example, the case of Phineas Gage • 2) Paradoxical Incidents • Generating ideas from puzzling or nonsensical observations • For example, noticing that ppl are less likely to receive help when around a lot of other people than when around only a few others

  6. Bystander Intervention • Kitty Genovese murder • Thirty-eight witnesses • People feel less personally responsible when they are in a group than when they are alone • Latane and Darley studied this phenomenon

  7. Diffusion of Responsibility • The Smoke-Filled Room (Latane & Darley, 1970)SS showed up for an experiment and were asked to fill out a set of questionnaires. While filling out these questionnaires, the room began to fill up with smoke. • SS were tested in three conditions: • 1) Alone in room • 2) w/ 2 confederates • 3) w/ 2 other "real" subjects • DV: Time to notice smoke and time to get help

  8. Diffusion of Responsibility Percentage of SS Reporting Smoke • Interpretation: • The Presence of Others decreases our ability to notice other factors in our environment and our tendency to interpret an emergency as an emergency.

  9. 3) Practitioner’s Rule of Thumb • Analyzing things that experts, or failures, do in a particular area to achieve specific outcomes. • How do car salespeople sucker us into spending more money than we want to but leave the interaction feeling like we got a good deal??

  10. Persuasion Techniques • Foot-in-the-door • Get person to consent to small task first, then ask for larger task • That’s not all technique • Begin with high-priced product, then improve the deal • Door in the face • Begin with a very large request (which will be refused), then make a smaller request • Smaller request is what you want in the first place • Why? • Norm of reciprocity

  11. Cialdini (1975) First (large) request: Counsel delinquent boys, 2hrs/wk/2yrs Second (smaller) request: Take delinquent boys to zoo? Experimental group: Large then smaller Control group: Smaller request only Door in the Face Percent Compliance

  12. 4) Serendipity • Many discoveries are the result of luck and good fortune! • Discovery of penicillin • Discovery of the ever-useful Velcro 

  13. Discovering the Hand Cell • Charles Gross • Single cell recording techniques • Trying to map the receptive field of a cell in the IT • They presented the usual visual stimuli • spots of light, bars and other stimuli • The neurons responded weakly to these stimuli • After studying a particular cell for an extended time decided to move on to another cell.

  14. Discovering the Hand Cell • One whimsical experimenter bade the cell a symbolic farewell by waving good-bye. • The cell immediately began to respond rapidly to the moving hand. • Serendipity had struck again! • Researchers began cutting out hand-shaped stimuli and waving them in front of the monkey's eyes. • The stimulus that produced the most vigorous response from the cell: • An upright hand shaped like a monkey's paw.

  15. Deductive Techniques • 1) Reasoning by analogy • 2) Applying a functional or adaptive analysis • 3) Hypothetico-deductive method • 4) Account for conflicting results • 5) Accounting for exceptions

  16. Reasoning by Analogy • Analyzing similarities between different phenomena to shed light on the less well understood of the two • Cognitive psychology • Computer analogy • Work on memory, attention and problem solving • Attempts to study mental representations and processes • Computer:  • information input through keyboard,  camera, microphone… • Brain:          • information input through six senses = channels    vision  -  touch  -  hearing  -  taste  -  smell  -  temperature

  17. The Brain as a Computer

  18. 2) Applying a Functional/Adaptive Analysis • A good way to generate hypotheses is by analyzing things that organisms need to do to master an environment or achieve a desired end state • Let’s look at a couple of examples from evolutionary psychology

  19. Grounds for Divorce • Men are concerned with finding a woman who will bear their children; they have concerns about paternity • Women are concerned with finding a man who will provide for them and their children • Therefore • Men will seek a divorce if their wife commits adultery. • Women will seek to end their marriage if their husband's cruelty signals that he is not acting as a good provider for his wife and children.

  20. Grounds for Divorce

  21. Divorce Petitioners • Because women are not fertile as long as men are: • Young women who realize that they have made a mistake need to get out of the relationship as quickly as possible so that they can have children while they are still young enough with another partner. • In contrast because men can continue to father children until they are at least 65, older men can divorce and raise a family with a new younger partner.

  22. Divorce Petitioners

  23. 3) Hypothetico-Deductive Method • Beginning with a working set of assumptions and deriving one or more logical conclusions from them

  24. Terror Management Theory • Like other animals, humans have a drive to self-preservation • Unlike other animals, humans know they are going to die. • The combination of (1) and (2) could lead to “paralyzing terror.” •  To manage this terror, we try to make the world predictable and controllable AND we try to be “good.”

  25. TMT •  We create a cultural anxiety buffer: • We try to be valued members of a valid cultural worldview. • Cultural worldview: • A set of beliefs that all members of a particular culture share. • Cultures can promise immortality • One (but not the only) major consequence of being reminded of death: • A need to cling firmly to one’s belief system, expressed as ingroup favoritism

  26. To test the hypothesis that mortality salience leads to ingroup favoritism:  Researchers recruited Christian participants  IVs: 1: Think about your own death vs. think about watching TV 2: Christian target versus Jewish target DV: How much do you like the target? Results: Christian targets were liked more than the Jewish targets when participants thought about their own death. Testing the Hypothesis

  27. 4) Account for Conflicting Results • Attempting to come up with theoretical reasons why different studies on the same topic have yielded different findings • Early research by social psychologists suggested that using the Internet makes you lonely, but more recent evidence has contradicted that view. • Current researchers are examining some of the conflicting research findings on the connection between Internet use, loneliness, and social interaction.

  28. 5) Account for Exceptions • Attempting to generate exceptions or limiting conditions to well-established psychological principles or empirical findings

  29. Research shows ppl tend to like those high in ability…. but we might like those who commit a blunder more College quiz bowl (Aronson et al.,1966) Participants heard audiotape of student said to be a candidate for the "College Quiz Bowl." An interview asked difficult questions. Four tapes: Candidate "nearly perfect," no blunder Candidate "nearly perfect," blunder (coffee spill) Candidate "average," no blunder Candidate "average," blunder DV: Rate "liking: of the candidate Pratfall Effect

  30. Pratfall Effect

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