What is Science
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
What do we think we know and why do we think we know it
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Will it fall?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Can you PROVEit?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Levels of Uncertainty
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Can you prove that I amstanding here?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Can you prove that I amstanding here?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
How do we get as close to the truth as possible?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
methodThe scientific
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Fig. 1.3A
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Fig. 1.3A
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Fig. 1.3A
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
We are always doing science…
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
The Earth sure looks flat…
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Tentative and Fallible
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Scientific finding are tentativeConclusions
and can be incorrect
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
The more data we collect to support Conclusions
a hypothesis,The less uncertain we are about itscorrectness.
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Because the level of uncertainty canConclusions
NEVER be zeroWe can never be certain of anything
and therefore…
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Conclusions
we don’t know anything for sure and what we do know might not be true!
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Graph level of uncertainty vs. observable data
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
DOUBT!(There can always be another explanation)
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
The greatest tool of the scientist:
To make observations that break or add to the current hypotheses/theories getting us one step closer to the…
TRUTH
The job of the scientist:
So is this class really aboutscience?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
GODand
Science
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Basic vs. Applied Research
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Quotes concerning basic research
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Fig. 1.3A
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
What do scientists do with their results?
Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary scientific literature
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Primary literature1. Articles that present NEW data
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
2. Contains personal views of experimenters about the data3. Are Peer reviewed
Primary literature general format
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
1. Title2. Abstract (summary)
3. Introduction (Background) 4. Material and Methods
5. Results 6. Discussion7. Conclusion
8. Acknowledgements 9. References (citations)
The process to get published
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
The author list and the order of the authors, what does it mean?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
If you found one paper, you really found dozens….
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
How to get into a summer lab…Guest speaker? Student who has done this.
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
The process to become a professor/scientist
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
The hierarchy of scientific journals and impact factors
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Getting funding – Grants, grants, grants“Publish or perish”
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Secondary literature1. Derived from primary literature
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Ex. Reviews, textbooks2. NOT Peer reviewed – less reliable
Tertiary literature1. Derived from primary literature and secondary literature
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Ex. Reference books2. NOT Peer reviewed
Ranking of source reliability
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
1. primary articles in journals/periodicals (e.g., Nature, Science, Evolution, Cell) 2. primary articles in books 3. review articles in journals/periodicals 4. book chapters 5. textbooks 6. articles in popular-press periodicals (e.g., Natural History, Scientific American) 7. articles in magazines (e.g., Vogue) 8. newspaper articles 9. laboratory manuals 10. product manuals 11. brochures 12. lecture notes 13. personal communications (e-mail, telephone, etc.) with scientists 14. web sites, rumors, hearsay, voices in your head 15. outright fabrications
How do we find primary/secondary journal articles?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
1. Electronic Databases2. Searching in a specific journal3. Use citations from another paper
Obtaining articles:
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
1. Check if the online journal offers free articles
2. Interlibrary loan system If not…
How to use the Interlibrary loan system:
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
1. Print out ONLY the abstract of the article with volume/issue information (1 page)
How to use the Interlibrary loan system:
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
2. Put your full name and period on the print out
DO NOT BUY ARTICLES!!
3. Bring to DrT for approval signature4. Turn in to Mr. Reader (Librarian)
Citing sources…why?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
1. It is someone else’s intellectual property2. It lends credibility to your work3. Enables readers to locate your information sources
Citing sources…what?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Whenever you use someone else’s intellectual property:
* Exact words (quoting) * Paraphrasing * Concepts and ideas * Facts that are not common knowledge * Pictures, photos, poems, cartoons, or other artwork you did not create yourself
Citing sources…kinds of sources?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
* Books * Articles (from print sources or from online article databases) * Interviews * E-mail or any other correspondence * Web pages * Government documents * Non-print media (videotapes, audiotapes, pictures and images) * Software or any digital formats
Citing sources…how?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
We will use the APA (American Psychological Association) format in research methodsIt has been shown that apes do not actually understand the
syntax and structure of ASL (Smith, 1994, p. 345).
Example in text citation:
Smith, J.A. (1994). Finding ways to overcome college stress. Stress Reliever, 24, 12-16.
Example reference:
What about Wikipedia?
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
Plagiarism
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
* to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own * to use (another's production) without crediting the source * to commit literary theft * to present as new and original an idea or product derived from an existing source.
Plagiarism is an act of fraud. It involves stealing someone else's work and lying about it afterward.
Research MethodsAIM: What is Science?
All of the following are considered plagiarism:
* turning in someone else's work as your own * copying words or ideas from someone else without giving credit * failing to put a quotation in quotation marks * giving incorrect information about the source of a quotation * changing words but copying the sentence structure of a source without giving credit * copying so many words or ideas from a source that it makes up the majority of your work, whether you give credit or not
Most cases of plagiarism can be avoided by citing sources.