Short Answer

Suppose you want to study whether listening to classical music improves memory retention. Apply the scientific method's approach to idea generation by describing how you would use 'intuition' and 'rationalism' to develop a testable hypothesis before conducting a formal experiment.

Question: Suppose you want to study whether listening to classical music improves memory retention. Apply the scientific method's approach to idea generation by describing how you would use 'intuition' and 'rationalism' to develop a testable hypothesis before conducting a formal experiment.

Sample answer: To develop a hypothesis, I would use intuition by reflecting on my personal gut feeling that soft music helps me remember facts better. I would use rationalism by logically reasoning that because classical music has a steady tempo and no distracting lyrics, it should enhance cognitive focus. Combining these would allow me to formulate a specific, testable hypothesis before starting my experiment.

Key points:

  • Apply intuition to generate a hunch or gut feeling about classical music and memory.
  • Apply rationalism to logically reason how classical music affects memory retention.
  • Formulate a testable hypothesis from these initial concepts.
  • Establish the hypothesis prior to conducting a formal experiment.

Rubric: The student should apply intuition (e.g., personal gut feelings or subjective experience) and rationalism (e.g., logical reasoning or deduction about music and memory) to formulate a testable hypothesis prior to formal experimentation.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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