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Chapter 6 Formulating Hypothesis

The document outlines the differences between experimental and nonexperimental hypotheses, emphasizing the characteristics of a good experimental hypothesis, such as being testable, falsifiable, and fruitful. It discusses the inductive and deductive models of reasoning in hypothesis formulation and the importance of building on prior research. Additionally, it highlights the role of serendipity and intuition in the research process and provides guidance on searching for relevant literature in psychological journals.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views5 pages

Chapter 6 Formulating Hypothesis

The document outlines the differences between experimental and nonexperimental hypotheses, emphasizing the characteristics of a good experimental hypothesis, such as being testable, falsifiable, and fruitful. It discusses the inductive and deductive models of reasoning in hypothesis formulation and the importance of building on prior research. Additionally, it highlights the role of serendipity and intuition in the research process and provides guidance on searching for relevant literature in psychological journals.

Uploaded by

redsatorou
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Chapter Objectives
• Learn the differences between nonexperimental and
Chapter 6 experimental hypotheses
• Understand the components of a good experimental
Formulating Hypothesis hypothesis
• Explore where the hypotheses come from
• Learn how to conduct literature search
Christelle Ann Jimenez, RPm, MA (cand)
Psychology Department
Institute of Arts and Sciences
Far Eastern University

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Hypothesis Non experimental hypothesis


• is the thesis, or main idea, of an experiment • hypothesis predicts the effects of specific
• statement about a predicted relationship between at antecedent conditions on some behavior that is
least two variables to be measured
• nonscientific synonyms: speculation, guess, or hunch • correlational and quasi-experimental studies -
hypothesis about relationships

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Characteristics of an experimental hypothesis

• experimental hypothesis is a tentative explanation of an


event or behavior
• statement that explains the effects of specified
antecedent conditions on a measured behavior
⚬ hypothesis must be SYNTHETIC STATEMENTS that are
TESTABLE, FALSIFIABLE, PARSIMONIOUS, AND
FRUITFUL

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• Synthetic Statments 2. Testable statements


• are those that can be either true or false • the means for manipulating antecedent conditions and
• "Hungry students read slowly" measuring the resulting behavior must exist
• Avoid nonsynthetic statements: Analytic or Contradictory • if dogs display muscle twitches and vocalizations during
⚬ analytic statement - one that is always true sleep, then they must be dreaming
⚬ contradictory statments - statements with elements • Give examples of testable statements
that oppose eachother
• "if... then" form

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3. Falsifiable statements 4. Parsimonious statements

• "disprovable" by research findings • means that the simple


• failures to find the predicted effect must
hypothesis is preferred over one
be considered evidence that the
hypothesis is indeed false that requires many supporting
assumptions

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5. Fruitful statements The Inductive Model

• Leads to new studies • The process of reasoning from specific cases


to more general principles
• Watson and Rayner's 1920 study • Example: BF Skinner on operant conditioning,
of classical conditioning Functional Behavior Analysis
• Basic tool for theory building
⚬ Theory - set of general principles that
can be used to explain and predict
behavior

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The Deductive Model The Deductive Model


• reverse of the induction model • Example: Equity Theory
• prcess fo reasoning from general principles • Individuals will try to optimize their outcomes
to make predictions about specific instances (outcomes = rewards minus costs)
• most when there's a well-developed theory • When individuals believe they are in an
which clearly stated its premises inequitable relationship, they will feel distress in
direct proportion to the perceived degree of
equity
• The more distress they feel, the harder they will
work to restore equity

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Combining Induction and Deduction Building on prior research


• Through induction • Reading and building on prior research will:
⚬ help you understand the area more
⚬ devise general principles and theories that
⚬ suggest additional variables that could mediate an
can be used to organize, explain, and predict
effect demonstrated in an experiment
behavior until more satisfactory principles are
⚬ see conflicting outcomes
found ⚬ come up why some findings are inconsistent
• Through deduction ⚬ might be able to generate hypothesis
⚬ test implications of set theories ⚬ anticipate problems/difficulties in a research topic
⚬ integrate findings into existing facts

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Serendipity and the Windfall Hypothesis Intuition


• Serendipity
⚬ knack of finding things that are not being sought • knowing without reasoning
⚬ Ivan Pavlov - initially about stomach secretions transitioned into • closest to phenomenology
salivation, led to classical conditioning
• only useful when we are open to new possibilities • intuition guides what we choose to study
• a good scientist takes note of all potentially relevant observations and
analyzes and evaluates them
• Herbert Simon (Nobel Prize winner)
⚬ are they interpretable ⚬ Intuition is most accurate if it comes
⚬ do they explain something that was previously unexplained
⚬ do they suggest a new way of looking a ta problem from experts
• "Serendipity is not just a matter of luck; it is also a matter of knowing
enough to use an opportunity."

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Searching for the Research Literature

• Psychological journals
⚬ periodicals that publish individual research reports and
integrative research reviews
• Meta-analysis
⚬ is a statistical reviewing procedure that uses data for many
similar studies to summarize research findings about
individual topics
⚬ more objective than review articles

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