Friday, November 8, 2019
Ch 1 PPT For Students Essays
Ch 1 PPT For Students Essays   Ch 1 PPT For Students Essays  Chapter 1    Thinking  Critically with  Psychological  Science  PowerPointà ®  Presentation by Jim Foley    à © 2013 Worth Publishers    Surveying the Chapter: Overview  ï⠧ Typical errors in hindsight, overconfidence, and coincidence  ï⠧ The scientific attitude and critical thinking  ï⠧ The scientific method: theories and hypotheses ï⠧ Gathering psychological data: description, correlation, and experimentation/causation  ï⠧ Describing data: significant differences  ï⠧ Issues in psychology: laboratory vs. life, culture and gender, values and ethics    ââ¬Å"Think criticallyâ⬠ with psychological scienceâ⬠¦ does this mean ââ¬Å"criticizeâ⬠?  Critical thinking refers to a more careful style of forming and evaluating knowledge than simply using intuition.    In addition to the scientific method, critical thinking will help us develop more effective and accurate ways to figure out what makes people do, think, and feel the things they do.    Why do I need to work on my thinking?  Canââ¬â¢t you just tell me facts about psychology? The brain is designed for surviving and reproducing, but it is not the best tool for seeing ââ¬Ërealityââ¬â¢ clearly.  To improve our thinking, we will learn to catch ourselves in some critical thinking errors. When our natural thinking style fails:    Hindsight bias:  ââ¬Å"I knew it all along.â⬠ The coincidence error, or mistakenly perceiving order in random events:  ââ¬Å"The dice must be fixed because you rolled three sixes in a row.â⬠    Overconfidence error: ââ¬Å"I am sure I am correct.â⬠ Hindsight Bias  Classic example: after watching a competition (sports,  When  you see most cooking), if you donââ¬â¢t results of  You  make were a this prediction accepted  I  knew psychological would ahead into of time, this you research, happenâ⬠¦ you might college/university might make a say, ââ¬Å"that was ââ¬Å"postdictionâ⬠:  ââ¬Å"I  obviousâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬  figured that team/person would win becauseâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬     Hindsight bias is like a crystal ball that we use to predictâ⬠¦ the past.    Absence makes the heart grow fonder  Out of sight, out of mind  You canââ¬â¢t teach an old dog new tricks  Youââ¬â¢re never too old to learn  Good fences make good neighbors  No [wo]man is an island  Birds of a feather flock together  Opposites attract  Seek and ye shall find  These  sayings all But then why do Curiosity killed the cat seem toother make these sense, inalso hindsight, phrases seem after we read to make sense? them.  Look before you leap  S/He who hesitates is lost    The pen is mightier than the sword  Actions speak louder than words    The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence  Thereââ¬â¢s no place like home    Hindsight ââ¬Å"Biasâ⬠  Why call it ââ¬Å"biasâ⬠?    The mind builds its current wisdom around what we have already been told.  We are ââ¬Å"biasedâ⬠ in favor of old information.  For example, we may stay in a bad relationship because it has lasted this far and thus was ââ¬Å"meant to be.â⬠    Overconfidence  Error 1:    Overconfidence  Error 2:    Performance    Accuracy    ï⠧ We are much too certain in our judgments. ï⠧ We overestimate our performance, our rate of work, our skills, and our degree of self-control. Test for this: ââ¬Å"how long do you think it takes you toâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬   (e.g. ââ¬Å"just finish this one thing Iââ¬â¢m doing on the computer before I get to workâ⬠)? And your unscrambling speed?    HEGOUN    ERSEGA    ï⠧ We overestimate the accuracy of our knowledge. People are much more certain than they are accurate.  ï⠧ Overconfidence is a problem in eyewitness testimony. ï⠧ Overconfidence is also a problem on tests. If you feel confident that you know a concept, try explaining it to someone else. Perceiving order in random events:  Danger: thinking you can make a prediction from a random series. If  Example: The the ball in the roulette wheel has coin tosses landed on an even number four times that ââ¬Å"look in a row, it does not increase the wrongâ⬠ if likelihood that it will land on an odd there are five number on the next spin. heads in a  Why this error happens: because row. we have the wrong idea about what randomness looks like.  If 60 pieces of candy were randomly distributed to 55 students, what is the most    
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