Psychological Research - Crash Course Psychology #2
Economy | Information | History | Online | Facts | World | Global | Money
You can directly support Crash Course at http://www.subbable.com/crashcourse Subscribe for as little as $0 to keep up with everything we're doing. Also, if you can afford to pay a little every month, it really helps us to continue producing great content. So how do we apply the scientific method to psychological research? Lots of ways, but today Hank talks about case studies, naturalistic observation, surveys and interviews, and experimentation. Also he covers different kinds of bias in experimentation and how research practices help us avoid them. -- Table of Contents The Scientific Method 2:06 Case Studies 3:05 Naturalistic Observation 3:48 Surveys and Interviews 4:15 Experimentation 6:35 Proper Research Practices 8:40 -- Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet? Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse Tumblr - http://thecrashcourse.tumblr.com Support CrashCourse on Subbable: http://subbable.com/crashcourse
Comments
-
green armadillos with laser eyes would be a cool thing... just sayin....
-
if coffee was not involved what will we do if the natural self does not effect what our environment feels
-
What I learned: next time some weird-o asks me to run through a corn maize or anything, I'm gonna be getting myself a lotta coffee before xD
-
science the best excuse to get people to do what ever you want.
-
How would brains evolve in Mars and what kind of psychology do they have. Is it possible to study about aliens psychology.
-
How would brains evolve in Mars and what kind of psychology do they have.
-
I'm in grade 7, no wonder usually get bored after five minutes.
-
So what happened with the coffee, maze experiment?
-
Is there a transcript of the crash courses somewhere on the Internet??
-
If this gig does not work out the host can have a promising career as an auctioneer
-
very nice, i believe I can pass my finals after watching all of these
-
Actually Amy; the girl that believes caffeine helps her focus, most likely has ADD/ADHD. Caffeine acts in a similar way that Aderall, Vyvanse, ect. work. There are people, especially in the older generation that may drink over 15 cups of coffee a day and instead of making them jittery it actually calms them down and helps them stay focused. If an average person were to take Aderall, Vyvanse, ect., they would become have symptoms similar to if they had several caffeinated drinks.
-
This channel is the sole reason I passed my foundation year and how im surviving first year now :').
Thank you so much <3
Feel Like I should be sending you the £9,000 a year instead -
i have a question .
when you did the maze experiment and divided the groups to see which ones did better what about the fact that maybe one group has people who solve puzzles more often than other and therefore might do better . that might be an external factor that completely makes the experiment not productive? -
so, Im back for a second try. I now realize my mistake the first time was trying to watch the video while also trying to absorb the info- over stimulating. Now that Im listening only, it's so much easier.
-
You had me at psychedelic pizza
-
You're speaking too fast. Its ok when the subject is history or politics but for psychology this is too fast.
-
i wish you didn't talk so fast
-
Hank I'm disappointed, you said coffee doesn't make you smarter, but you presented no evidence. There are numerous studies that show coffee increases test scores, and that alone needs explaining. This does not prove coffee increases intelligence, but is worth noting and deserves exploring.
10m 51sLenght
23215Rating