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Brian
Hughes
School of Psychology,
National University of
Ireland, Galway
Smith, T. W., Limon, J. P., Gallo, L. C., & Ngu, L. Q. (1996).
       J Personality Social Psychol, 70, 1012-1024.
• “Helping is intrinsically good”
• “Psychotherapy works because it’s psychotherapy”
• “Positivity is great”
• “Women are great”
• “Qualitative approaches to psychology are
  (a) positive, (b) womanly , and (c) therefore great”
http://ed.fnal.gov/projects/s
cientists/index.html
Leydesdorff & Rafols (2009). Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 60, 348-362.
http://users.fmg.uva.nl/lleydesdorff/map06/index.htm
• Some philosophical assumptions
  – Determinism
  – Empiricism
  – Skepticism
• Some methodological principles
  – Observation
  – Measurement
  – Experimentation
• Some reasoning principles
  – Parsimony
  – Falsification
  – Objectivity
• Some philosophical assumptions
  – Determinism
  – Empiricism
  – Skepticism
• Some methodological principles
  – Observation
  – Measurement
  – Experimentation
• Some reasoning principles
  – Parsimony
  – Falsification
  – Objectivity
HOT!                         NOT!

                     Physics   Chemistry     Psychology


Empirical
                      Yes         Yes             Yes
falsifiability
Parsimony of
                      Yes         Yes      Most of the time
theory
Experimental
                      Yes         Yes        To an extent
control
Measurement
                      Yes         Yes          Kind of
accuracy
Facilitates
                      Yes         Yes           A bit
prediction
HOT!                                    NOT!

                       Psychology       Meteorology    Astrophysics


Empirical
                           Yes              Yes          Kind of
falsifiability
Parsimony of
                     Most of the time    Not really          Yes
theory
Experimental
                       To an extent         No               No
control
Measurement
                         Kind of          Kind of      Within limits
accuracy
Facilitates
                          A bit            A bit       Who knows?
prediction
HOT!                                       NOT!

                       Psychology       Palaeontology        Botany


Empirical
                           Yes               No                 No
falsifiability
Parsimony of
                     Most of the time    Hard to say      Not a priority
theory
Experimental
                       To an extent          No                 No
control
Measurement                             Patchy track
                         Kind of                          Within limits
accuracy                                   record
Facilitates
                          A bit         Not a priority    Not a priority
prediction
HOT!                                          NOT!

                       Psychology           UFOlogy            Astrology


Empirical
                           Yes          Absolutely none     Absolutely none
falsifiability
Parsimony of                            The antithesis of
                     Most of the time                          Not at all
theory                                    parsimony
Experimental
                       To an extent        Err, nope          No attempt
control
Measurement                                                  Track record of
                         Kind of         Not a priority
accuracy                                                      utter failure
Facilitates
                          A bit          Not a priority        Afraid not!
prediction
Question:
Is psychology a science?

    Short Answer:
Smith, T. W., Limon, J. P., Gallo, L. C., & Ngu, L. Q. (1996).
       J Personality Social Psychol, 70, 1012-1024.
Hughes, B. M., & Callinan, S. (2007). Psychology &
              Health, 22, 457-472.
http://goo.gl/EVUs7
• “Do to others as you would
  have them do to you”
• “Do not do to others what you
  do not want done to yourself”
• “Do not do unto others
  whatever is injurious to
  yourself”
• “What is hateful to you, do
  not do to your neighbor”
• “Not one of you truly believes
  until you wish for others what
  you wish for yourself”
“Usual” Blood Pressure
                                                           100 university staff; 67 women, 33
                                                           men; aged 26 to 63 (mean 37.9)

                                                           Regression Analysis
                                                                                    β      p
                                                           Model 1 (19.3%)
                                                              Gender               +.27   .009
                                                              Age                  +.18   .063
                                                              BMI                  +.15   .147
                                                           Model 2 (+ 4.7%)
                                                              Social support       –.22   .018
                                                              [Depression]         –.03   .778
                                                              [Perceived stress] –.02 .825
                                                                     p < .001 for both models


Hughes, B. M. & Howard, S. (2009). Social support reduces resting cardiovascular
function in women. Anxiety, Stress, and Coping, 22, 537-548.
O'Donovan, A., & Hughes, B. M. (2008). Access to social support in life and in the laboratory: Combined impact on
cardiovascular reactivity to stress and state anxiety. Journal of Health Psychology, 13, 1147-1156.
• What type of social support (e.g., group
  work, peer mentoring, etc.) would
  provide effective couples counselling?
• Practice
   – Exposure to couples with cohesive
     relationships

• Evidence
   – Exposure to couples with discordant
     relationships leads to greater happiness,
     confidence, and benefit-finding


   Buunk, B. P., & Hoorens, V. (1992). Social support and stress: The role of social comparison and
   social exchange processes. British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 31, 445-457.
• ‘Placebo’ problem
    – Most studies have inadequate
      control conditions

• ‘Expertise’ problem
    – No difference between trained
      vs. untrained therapists

• ‘Experience’ problem
    – No difference between experts
      vs. novices

• ‘Generic effectiveness’ problem
    – ‘Dodo bird’ conjecture
Wampold et al. (1997)
p of hypothesis that effect deviates from zero
 (i.e., probability that both therapies are the
                      same)
Wampold et al. (1997)
“Small” effect size
(d of .21 equivalent to r = .1, or 1% of variance)

Wampold et al. (1997)
Wampold, B. E., Imel, Z. E., and Miller, S. D. (2009). Barriers to the dissemination of empirically supported
          treatments: Matching evidence to messages. The Behavior Therapist, 32, 144-155
http://goo.gl/wWJNC
“Peer-reviewed journals, positivist epistemology, and
quantitative methods work… to reduce women’s
participation in psychology.” (p. 96)

“*In addressing discrimination against women+ the
new Qualitative Methods in Psychology Section should
also provide an important forum…” (p. 96)

                                    The Psychologist
                                    (2006)
                                    On behalf of the British
                                    Psychological Society’s
                                    Standing Committee for
                                    the Promotion of Equal
                                    Opportunities
HTTP://XKCD.COM/385/
Validity
   Construct validity
   External validity
   Internal validity

Reliability
   Inter-rater reliability
   Test-retest reliability
Group vs. Individual Differences
Group vs. Individual Differences
Group vs. Individual Differences
Tendency to
notice sex
differences and
to under-
emphasize ‘sex
similarities’

File-drawer
problem
Psychology, done      Psychologists, and
scientifically, can   the societies they
teach us much about   work in, will have
the world…            social value-systems


And value-systems     …but in doing so
influence the way     requires prioritisation
we form subjective    of objectivity over
judgements            values!
                         brian.hughes@nuigalway.ie
                          http://thesciencebit.net
Psychology, done      Psychologists, and
scientifically, can   the societies they
teach us much about   work in, will have
the world…            social value-systems


And value-systems     …but in doing so
influence the way     requires prioritisation
we form subjective    of objectivity over
judgements            values!
                         brian.hughes@nuigalway.ie
                          http://thesciencebit.net

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Ucc one sided coin actual

  • 1. Brian Hughes School of Psychology, National University of Ireland, Galway
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4. Smith, T. W., Limon, J. P., Gallo, L. C., & Ngu, L. Q. (1996). J Personality Social Psychol, 70, 1012-1024.
  • 5. • “Helping is intrinsically good” • “Psychotherapy works because it’s psychotherapy” • “Positivity is great” • “Women are great” • “Qualitative approaches to psychology are (a) positive, (b) womanly , and (c) therefore great”
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11. Leydesdorff & Rafols (2009). Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 60, 348-362.
  • 13. • Some philosophical assumptions – Determinism – Empiricism – Skepticism • Some methodological principles – Observation – Measurement – Experimentation • Some reasoning principles – Parsimony – Falsification – Objectivity
  • 14.
  • 15.
  • 16.
  • 17.
  • 18.
  • 19.
  • 20.
  • 21. • Some philosophical assumptions – Determinism – Empiricism – Skepticism • Some methodological principles – Observation – Measurement – Experimentation • Some reasoning principles – Parsimony – Falsification – Objectivity
  • 22. HOT! NOT! Physics Chemistry Psychology Empirical Yes Yes Yes falsifiability Parsimony of Yes Yes Most of the time theory Experimental Yes Yes To an extent control Measurement Yes Yes Kind of accuracy Facilitates Yes Yes A bit prediction
  • 23. HOT! NOT! Psychology Meteorology Astrophysics Empirical Yes Yes Kind of falsifiability Parsimony of Most of the time Not really Yes theory Experimental To an extent No No control Measurement Kind of Kind of Within limits accuracy Facilitates A bit A bit Who knows? prediction
  • 24. HOT! NOT! Psychology Palaeontology Botany Empirical Yes No No falsifiability Parsimony of Most of the time Hard to say Not a priority theory Experimental To an extent No No control Measurement Patchy track Kind of Within limits accuracy record Facilitates A bit Not a priority Not a priority prediction
  • 25. HOT! NOT! Psychology UFOlogy Astrology Empirical Yes Absolutely none Absolutely none falsifiability Parsimony of The antithesis of Most of the time Not at all theory parsimony Experimental To an extent Err, nope No attempt control Measurement Track record of Kind of Not a priority accuracy utter failure Facilitates A bit Not a priority Afraid not! prediction
  • 26. Question: Is psychology a science? Short Answer:
  • 27.
  • 28.
  • 29.
  • 30. Smith, T. W., Limon, J. P., Gallo, L. C., & Ngu, L. Q. (1996). J Personality Social Psychol, 70, 1012-1024.
  • 31. Hughes, B. M., & Callinan, S. (2007). Psychology & Health, 22, 457-472.
  • 33.
  • 34.
  • 35. • “Do to others as you would have them do to you” • “Do not do to others what you do not want done to yourself” • “Do not do unto others whatever is injurious to yourself” • “What is hateful to you, do not do to your neighbor” • “Not one of you truly believes until you wish for others what you wish for yourself”
  • 36.
  • 37. “Usual” Blood Pressure 100 university staff; 67 women, 33 men; aged 26 to 63 (mean 37.9) Regression Analysis β p Model 1 (19.3%) Gender +.27 .009 Age +.18 .063 BMI +.15 .147 Model 2 (+ 4.7%) Social support –.22 .018 [Depression] –.03 .778 [Perceived stress] –.02 .825 p < .001 for both models Hughes, B. M. & Howard, S. (2009). Social support reduces resting cardiovascular function in women. Anxiety, Stress, and Coping, 22, 537-548.
  • 38. O'Donovan, A., & Hughes, B. M. (2008). Access to social support in life and in the laboratory: Combined impact on cardiovascular reactivity to stress and state anxiety. Journal of Health Psychology, 13, 1147-1156.
  • 39.
  • 40. • What type of social support (e.g., group work, peer mentoring, etc.) would provide effective couples counselling? • Practice – Exposure to couples with cohesive relationships • Evidence – Exposure to couples with discordant relationships leads to greater happiness, confidence, and benefit-finding Buunk, B. P., & Hoorens, V. (1992). Social support and stress: The role of social comparison and social exchange processes. British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 31, 445-457.
  • 41.
  • 42.
  • 43. • ‘Placebo’ problem – Most studies have inadequate control conditions • ‘Expertise’ problem – No difference between trained vs. untrained therapists • ‘Experience’ problem – No difference between experts vs. novices • ‘Generic effectiveness’ problem – ‘Dodo bird’ conjecture
  • 44.
  • 45. Wampold et al. (1997)
  • 46. p of hypothesis that effect deviates from zero (i.e., probability that both therapies are the same) Wampold et al. (1997)
  • 47. “Small” effect size (d of .21 equivalent to r = .1, or 1% of variance) Wampold et al. (1997)
  • 48.
  • 49. Wampold, B. E., Imel, Z. E., and Miller, S. D. (2009). Barriers to the dissemination of empirically supported treatments: Matching evidence to messages. The Behavior Therapist, 32, 144-155
  • 50.
  • 51.
  • 52.
  • 53.
  • 54.
  • 55.
  • 57.
  • 58.
  • 59.
  • 60. “Peer-reviewed journals, positivist epistemology, and quantitative methods work… to reduce women’s participation in psychology.” (p. 96) “*In addressing discrimination against women+ the new Qualitative Methods in Psychology Section should also provide an important forum…” (p. 96) The Psychologist (2006) On behalf of the British Psychological Society’s Standing Committee for the Promotion of Equal Opportunities
  • 62. Validity Construct validity External validity Internal validity Reliability Inter-rater reliability Test-retest reliability
  • 63. Group vs. Individual Differences
  • 64. Group vs. Individual Differences
  • 65. Group vs. Individual Differences
  • 66. Tendency to notice sex differences and to under- emphasize ‘sex similarities’ File-drawer problem
  • 67. Psychology, done Psychologists, and scientifically, can the societies they teach us much about work in, will have the world… social value-systems And value-systems …but in doing so influence the way requires prioritisation we form subjective of objectivity over judgements values! brian.hughes@nuigalway.ie http://thesciencebit.net
  • 68. Psychology, done Psychologists, and scientifically, can the societies they teach us much about work in, will have the world… social value-systems And value-systems …but in doing so influence the way requires prioritisation we form subjective of objectivity over judgements values! brian.hughes@nuigalway.ie http://thesciencebit.net