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An experimental psychologist analyzes data from a series of attention tasks and finds that all trials yield results that align perfectly with their hypothesis. Based on the problem of induction, the psychologist's finding does not guarantee the truth of their hypothesis because a single disconfirming observation in the future could instantly disprove it.
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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What does the problem of induction illustrate about the nature of scientific theories and observations?
According to the problem of induction, if a psychologist observes a consistent behavioral pattern across thousands of participants in multiple studies, they can definitively prove their psychological theory as a universal rule.
A cognitive psychologist is studying the 'testing effect' (the idea that taking a test improves memory). Arrange the following research events in the correct logical sequence to illustrate why empirical observations cannot provide absolute proof for a universal rule.
A research team has published dozens of studies consistently showing that 'high-stress environments reduce working memory capacity' across diverse participant groups. To evaluate the logical boundaries of this research, match each element of their scientific reasoning to its corresponding role within the problem of induction.
A social psychologist is developing a new theoretical framework for 'Intergroup Empathy' after observing consistent prosocial behaviors across several pilot studies. Arrange the following steps in the correct logical sequence to construct a scientifically rigorous research program that adheres to the constraints of the problem of induction.
According to the problem of induction, why can empirical scientific theories never be considered absolutely proven?
Match each component of the problem of induction to its correct description or implication within psychological research methods.
A cognitive psychologist observes a specific behavioral effect in consecutive participants across multiple studies. If the psychologist concludes that this evidence provides 'absolute proof' that the theory is a universal law which can never be overturned by future data, an evaluator would argue this claim is logically flawed; according to the problem of induction, all such empirical generalizations must remain _____.
An experimental psychologist analyzes data from a series of attention tasks and finds that all trials yield results that align perfectly with their hypothesis. Based on the problem of induction, the psychologist's finding does not guarantee the truth of their hypothesis because a single disconfirming observation in the future could instantly disprove it.
A research evaluator reviews a claim that a behavioral theory has been 'definitively proven' due to a massive sample of confirming observations. To properly evaluate this claim under the framework of the problem of induction, the evaluator must classify the theory not as an absolute fact, but as _____ and subject to revision.