THIRD EDITION PSYCHOLOGY from inquiry to understanding CHAPTER

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THIRD EDITION PSYCHOLOGY from inquiry to understanding CHAPTER 1 Psychology and Scientific Thinking A

THIRD EDITION PSYCHOLOGY from inquiry to understanding CHAPTER 1 Psychology and Scientific Thinking A FRAMEWORK FOR EVERYDAY LIFE Slides prepared by Matthew Isaak Copyright © 2014, © 2011, © 2009 by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Learning Objectives LO 1. 1 LO 1. 2 LO 1. 3 LO 1. 4

Learning Objectives LO 1. 1 LO 1. 2 LO 1. 3 LO 1. 4 LO 1. 5 Explain why psychology is more than just common sense. Explain the importance of science as a set of safeguards against biases. Describe psychological pseudoscience and distinguish it from psychological science. Identify reasons we are drawn to pseudoscience. Identify the key features of scientific skepticism. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Learning Objectives LO 1. 6 LO LO Identify and explain the text’s six principles

Learning Objectives LO 1. 6 LO LO Identify and explain the text’s six principles of scientific thinking. 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what each of them does. 1. 9 Describe the two great debates that have shaped the field of psychology. 1. 10 Describe how psychological research affects our daily lives. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Lecture Preview • • What is psychology? Psychological pseudoscience Scientific thinking Psychology’s past and

Lecture Preview • • What is psychology? Psychological pseudoscience Scientific thinking Psychology’s past and present Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

True or False? LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common

True or False? LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common sense. • Most people use only about 10% of their brain capacity. • Hypnosis enhances the accuracy of our memories. • People tend to be romantically attracted to individuals who are opposite to them in personality and attitudes. ALL OF THE ABOVE ARE FALSE! • So why do most people believe them? Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

What is psychology? LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common

What is psychology? LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common sense. • First off, it’s not very easy to define. • Our definition will be that psychology is the scientific study of the mind, brain, and behavior. • As a discipline, psychology spans many levels of analysis. – Runs from biological to social influences Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

What is psychology? LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common

What is psychology? LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common sense. • We can’t understand psychology by focusing on only one level of analysis – instead we need to examine all of them. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Figure 1. 1 Levels of Analysis in Depression. We can view psychological phenomena, in

Figure 1. 1 Levels of Analysis in Depression. We can view psychological phenomena, in this case the disorder of depression, at multiple levels of analysis, with lower levels being more biological and higher levels being more social. Each level provides unique information and offers a distinctive view of the phenomenon at hand. (Based on data from Ilardi, Rand, & Karwoski, 2007) Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Challenging and Fascinating LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common

Challenging and Fascinating LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common sense. • Five factors make the study of psychology very difficult, but very rewarding. 1. Human behavior is difficult to predict. § Actions are multiply determined. 2. Psychological influences are rarely independent of each other. 3. People display individual differences in thinking, emotion, and personality. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Challenging and Fascinating LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common

Challenging and Fascinating LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common sense. • Five factors make the study of psychology very difficult, but very rewarding. 4. People influence one another. § Reciprocal determinism 5. Behavior is shaped by culture. § Emic vs. etic approaches Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Common Sense LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common sense.

Common Sense LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common sense. Most of us trust our gut intuitions about how the world works. Birds of a feather flock together. Opposites attract. Absence makes the heart grow fonder. Out of sight, out of mind. Better safe than sorry. Nothing ventured, nothing gained. Two heads are better than one. Too many cooks spoil the broth. Actions speak louder than words. The pen is mightier than the sword. Even though each of these ring true, they are in fact opposites! Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Naïve Realism LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common sense.

Naïve Realism LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common sense. • The belief that we see the world precisely as it actually is in truth – “seeing is believing” Works well in ordinary life, but consider: – The earth seems flat. – We seem to be standing still, yet the earth is moving around the sun 18. 5 miles/sec. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Which table is longer? LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just

Which table is longer? LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common sense. These two tabletops are identical in length. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

When Common Sense is Right LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than

When Common Sense is Right LO 1. 1 Explain why psychology is more than just common sense. • Not all common sense is wrong. • Common sense should serve as a generator for hypotheses, which can then be tested. • But learning to think like a scientist means learning when—and when not— to trust our common sense. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Psychology as a Science LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a

Psychology as a Science LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a set of safeguards against biases. • Science is not a body of knowledge (e. g. chemistry or physics). • Science is an approach to evidence, one designed to keep us from fooling ourselves. • Science begins with empiricism, but then tests those observations using rigorous methods. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Psychology as a Science LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a

Psychology as a Science LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a set of safeguards against biases. • In psychology (and all science) we must abandon relying on opinions. • Instead we find out which explanations best fit the evidence or data. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Theories and Hypotheses LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a set

Theories and Hypotheses LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a set of safeguards against biases. • A scientific theory is an explanation for a large number of findings in the natural world. • A hypothesis is a specific prediction based on a theory, which can then be tested. • Theories are general explanations; hypotheses are specific predictions derived from them. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Theory Misconceptions LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a set of

Theory Misconceptions LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a set of safeguards against biases. “A theory explains one specific event. ” “A theory is just an educated guess. ” Why are these both wrong? Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Science as a Safeguard against Bias LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science

Science as a Safeguard against Bias LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a set of safeguards against biases. • Confirmation bias – Tendency to seek out evidence that supports our hypothesis and neglect or distort contradicting evidence • Scientists need to design studies that may disprove their theories. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Figure 1. 3 Diagram of Wason Selection Task. In the Wason selection task, you

Figure 1. 3 Diagram of Wason Selection Task. In the Wason selection task, you must pick two cards to test the hypothesis that all cards that have a vowel on one side have an odd number on the other. Which two will you select? Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Science as a Safeguard against Bias LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science

Science as a Safeguard against Bias LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a set of safeguards against biases. • Belief perseverance – Tendency to stick to our initial beliefs even when evidence contradicts them • The “don’t confuse me with the facts” bias Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Metaphysical Claims LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a set of

Metaphysical Claims LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a set of safeguards against biases. • Non-testable assertions that fall outside the realm of science – The existence of God, the soul, or the afterlife Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

FIGURE 1. 4 Nonoverlapping Realms. Scientist Stephen Jay Gould (1997) argued that science and

FIGURE 1. 4 Nonoverlapping Realms. Scientist Stephen Jay Gould (1997) argued that science and religion are entirely different and nonoverlapping realms of understanding the world. Science deals with testable claims about the natural world that can be answered with data, whereas religion deals with untestable claims about moral values that can’t be answered with data. Although not all scientists and theologists accept Gould’s model, we adopt it for the purposes of this textbook. (Source: Gould, 1997) Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

We Might Be Wrong LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a

We Might Be Wrong LO 1. 2 Explain the importance of science as a set of safeguards against biases. • Good scientists are aware they might be wrong. • Scientific knowledge is always tentative and open to revision. • Science forces us to question our findings and conclusions. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Popular Psychology LO 1. 3 Describe psychological pseudoscience and distinguish it from psychological science.

Popular Psychology LO 1. 3 Describe psychological pseudoscience and distinguish it from psychological science. • About 3500 self-help books are published each year – only 5% are tested! • The quality of the information can be good, misleading, or even harmful. • Many websites may offer helpful advice, but others may contain erroneous information. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

What is Pseudoscience? LO 1. 3 Describe psychological pseudoscience and distinguish it from psychological

What is Pseudoscience? LO 1. 3 Describe psychological pseudoscience and distinguish it from psychological science. • A set of claims that seem scientific, but aren’t • Pseudoscience lacks the safeguards against confirmation bias and belief perseverance that characterize science. • Testable beliefs that are not supported by the evidence Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Warning Signs of Pseudoscience LO 1. 3 Describe psychological pseudoscience and distinguish it from

Warning Signs of Pseudoscience LO 1. 3 Describe psychological pseudoscience and distinguish it from psychological science. • Ad hoc immunizing hypotheses – Escape hatches to protect against falsification, usually a loophole or exception for negative findings • Lack of self-correction • Overreliance on anecdotes – Anecdotes are often not representative, but can’t tell us about cause and effect and are often difficult to verify. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Why Pseudoscience? LO 1. 4 Identify reasons we are drawn to pseudoscience. • Our

Why Pseudoscience? LO 1. 4 Identify reasons we are drawn to pseudoscience. • Our brains are predisposed to make order out of disorder and make sense out of nonsense. • Apophenia is the tendency to find connections among unrelated or random phenomena. • Pareidolia is seeing meaningful images in meaningless visual stimuli. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

The “Face” on Mars LO 1. 4 Identify reasons we are drawn to pseudoscience

The “Face” on Mars LO 1. 4 Identify reasons we are drawn to pseudoscience Original photo Higher resolution photo Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Why Pseudoscience? LO 1. 4 Identify reasons we are drawn to pseudoscience. • We

Why Pseudoscience? LO 1. 4 Identify reasons we are drawn to pseudoscience. • We believe what we want to believe. • Many pseudoscientific beliefs offer control over an uncontrollable world. • Terror management theory and mortality salience – Pseudoscientific beliefs help counter our fear of death. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Thinking Clearly LO 1. 4 Identify reasons we are drawn to pseudoscience. • Learning

Thinking Clearly LO 1. 4 Identify reasons we are drawn to pseudoscience. • Learning to think scientifically can help us avoid falling prey to pseudoscience. • Emotional reasoning fallacy—using emotions rather than evidence as the guide • Bandwagon fallacy—Lots of people believe it, so it must be true. • “Not me” fallacy—Other people may have those biases, but not me. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Why Should We Care? LO 1. 4 Identify reasons we are drawn to pseudoscience.

Why Should We Care? LO 1. 4 Identify reasons we are drawn to pseudoscience. • Because pseudoscience can be very dangerous. • Three major reasons to be concerned: – Opportunity cost – Direct harm – Inability to think scientifically • Although not foolproof, scientific thinking is our best safeguard against human error. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Scientific Skepticism LO 1. 5 Identify the key features of scientific skepticism. • Being

Scientific Skepticism LO 1. 5 Identify the key features of scientific skepticism. • Being scientifically skeptical does not mean being closed-minded. • Evaluate claims with an open mind, but insist on persuasive evidence before accepting them. • Skeptics are willing to change their minds, but must have good evidence before doing so. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Critical Thinking LO 1. 6 Identify and explain the text’s six principles of scientific

Critical Thinking LO 1. 6 Identify and explain the text’s six principles of scientific thinking. • A set of skills for evaluating all claims in a open-minded and careful fashion • This allows us to overcome our own biases (especially the confirmation bias). • Six critical thinking principles will be emphasized in this course. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Critical Thinking Principles LO 1. 6 Identify and explain the text’s six principles of

Critical Thinking Principles LO 1. 6 Identify and explain the text’s six principles of scientific thinking. • Ruling out rival hypotheses – Have important alternate explanations for the finding been considered? • Correlation isn’t causation – Can we be sure A causes B? • Falsifiability – Can the claim be disproven? Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Critical Thinking Principles LO 1. 6 Identify and explain the text’s six principles of

Critical Thinking Principles LO 1. 6 Identify and explain the text’s six principles of scientific thinking. • Replicability – Can the results be duplicated in other studies? • Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence – Is the evidence as convincing as the claims? Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Critical Thinking Principles LO 1. 6 Identify and explain the text’s six principles of

Critical Thinking Principles LO 1. 6 Identify and explain the text’s six principles of scientific thinking. • Occam’s razor – Does a simpler explanation fit the data just as well? – Parsimony: logical simplicity Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Psychology’s Early History LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. •

Psychology’s Early History LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. • For many centuries, psychology was indistinguishable from philosophy. • In 1879, William Wundt developed the first psychology laboratory in Germany. • But psychology had to break away from another influence as well—spiritualism. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

From Séance to Science LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology.

From Séance to Science LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. • In the 1800’s, Americans were obsessed with spiritualism and mediums. • The public saw psychology and spiritualism as inextricably linked. • Psychology ultimately distanced itself from spiritualism. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Great Theoretical Frameworks LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. •

Great Theoretical Frameworks LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. • What unifying theoretical perspective best explains behavior? • Five primary schools of thought have shaped modern psychological responses to this question. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Great Theoretical Frameworks LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. •

Great Theoretical Frameworks LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. • Structuralism – Major figures were Wundt and E. B. Titchener. – Aimed to identify the most basic elements of psychological experience E. B. Tichener. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Great Theoretical Frameworks LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. •

Great Theoretical Frameworks LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. • Functionalism – Its major figure was William James, heavily influenced by Charles Darwin. – Hoped to understand the adaptive purposes of thought and behavior William James Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Great Theoretical Frameworks LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. •

Great Theoretical Frameworks LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. • Behaviorism – Major figures were Watson and Skinner. – Focuses on uncovering the general laws of learning by looking outside the organism Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf John Watson

Great Theoretical Frameworks LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. •

Great Theoretical Frameworks LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. • Cognitivism – Major figures were Piaget and Neisser. – Focuses on the mental processes involved in different aspects of thinking Jean Piaget Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Great Theoretical Frameworks LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. •

Great Theoretical Frameworks LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. • Psychoanalysis – Major figures were Freud and Jung. – Focused on internal psychological processes of which we’re unaware Sigmund Freud Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Contributions to Scientific Psychology LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology.

Contributions to Scientific Psychology LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. • Structuralism – Encouraged systematic data collection and empiricism • Functionalism – Influenced evolutionary perspectives in modern psychology • Behaviorism – Helped to understand how we learn and improved psychology’s scientific rigor Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Contributions to Scientific Psychology LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology.

Contributions to Scientific Psychology LO 1. 7 Identify the major theoretical frameworks of psychology. • Cognitivism – Highlighted the role of thought and our interpretation of events in behavior • Psychoanalysis – May have actually retarded scientific advance of psychology, but theories of mental processing outside of conscious awareness are holding up Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Psychology Today LO 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what each

Psychology Today LO 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what each of them does. • Very diverse, as reflected in the 500, 000 psychologists worldwide • There are many types of psychologists who work in many settings. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Figure 1. 9 Approximate Distribution of Psychologists in Different Settings. Psychologists are employed in

Figure 1. 9 Approximate Distribution of Psychologists in Different Settings. Psychologists are employed in a diverse array of settings. (Based on data from the National Science Foundation, 2003) Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Types of Psychologists LO 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what

Types of Psychologists LO 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what each of them does. • Clinical – Work with people who have mental disorders – Therapists may have different degrees (Psy. D. , M. S. W. , Ph. D. , etc. ). Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Types of Psychologists LO 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what

Types of Psychologists LO 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what each of them does. • Counseling – Work with people experiencing temporary or self-contained problems (e. g. , marital or occupational difficulties) Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Types of Psychologists LO 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what

Types of Psychologists LO 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what each of them does. • School – Assess and develop intervention programs – Differs from educational psychology • Developmental – Study why and how people change over time – Most work with infants and children. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Types of Psychologists LO 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what

Types of Psychologists LO 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what each of them does. • Experimental – Use sophisticated research methods to study memory, language, and thinking of humans • Biopsychologists – Examine physiological bases of behavior – Most work in research settings. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Types of Psychologists LO 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what

Types of Psychologists LO 1. 8 Describe different types of psychologists and identify what each of them does. • Forensic – Assess, diagnose, and assist with rehabilitation and treatment of prison inmates – Others conduct research on eyewitnesses or juries. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Great Debates in Psychology LO 1. 9 Describe the two great debates that have

Great Debates in Psychology LO 1. 9 Describe the two great debates that have shaped the field of psychology. • Two great debates have shaped the field of psychology, both currently and in the past. – Nature-nurture § Are our behaviors attributable mostly to our genes or our rearing environments? – Free will-determinism § To what extent are our behaviors freely selected, rather than caused by factors outside of our control? Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

How Psychology Affects Our Lives LO 1. 10 Describe how psychological research affects our

How Psychology Affects Our Lives LO 1. 10 Describe how psychological research affects our daily lives. • Two broad categories of research: – Basic research § Examines how the mind works. – Applied research § Examines how we use basic research to solve real world problems. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

How Psychology Affects Our Lives LO 1. 10 Describe how psychological research affects our

How Psychology Affects Our Lives LO 1. 10 Describe how psychological research affects our daily lives. • Yellow fire engines, cars with three brake lights, sequential police lineups, and standardized college entrance tests are examples of the application of psychology. Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf

Conclusions LO 1. 10 Describe how psychological research affects our daily lives. • Learning

Conclusions LO 1. 10 Describe how psychological research affects our daily lives. • Learning to think scientifically will help you make better decisions not only in this course, but in everyday life. • When confronted with claims from popular psychology and popular culture, remember to “insist on evidence. ” Understanding Psychology: from Inquiry to Understanding , Third Edition Lilienfeld | Lynn | Namy | Woolf