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Psychology 101 (PSYC 101) Virginia Commonwealth University 2025–2026 Running Notes and Exam Guide ,I STUDIED FOR MY TEST 1 & 2 EXAM BY JONES SHAWN

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These comprehensive PSYC 101 notes from Virginia Commonwealth University cover essential topics in introductory psychology, including research methods, neuroscience, sensation and perception, consciousness, learning, memory, development, and social psychology. The content follows weekly lecture material, incorporates key terminology and exam-relevant insights, and provides foundational explanations of core psychological theories and studies. This guide is ideal for exam preparation, class review, or catching up on missed lectures.

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PSYCHOLOGY (Psy 101) COMPLETE
NOTES I STUDIED FOR MY TEST 1 &
2 EXAM BY JONES SHAWN VIRGINIA
COMMONWEALTH UNIVERSITY

, 1

Week 2

- Modern Definition of Psych: science of behavior and mental processes
- “A scientific attitude”-critical thinking* (curiosity, skepticism, humility)
- *analyzing and interpreting rather than just blindly accepting
- Consider the info source
- Consider alternative explanations
- Consider hidden assumptions you may have
- Intuition & Common Sense
- Humans cannot rely solely on intuition and common sense
- Sources of intuition overestimation
- Hindsight bias: after we learn an outcome we think we could have
prevented it
- Overconfidence: people thinking they know more than they do/are
better/etc. ex) most people think they are above average
- Tendency to perceive patterns in random events

- Beyond Intuition: The Scientific Method
- Make observations> think of interesting questions> formulate hypotheses>
(develop testable predictions> gather data to test predictions> refine, alter,
expand or reject hypotheses)> develop theory
- Theory*: a set of principles that helps us organize observations and predict
behavior/events
- Hypothesis: testable prediction, often implied by a theory
- Operational definition: carefully worded statement of the exact procedures used
in a research study
- Replication: repeating the essence of a research study, usually changing the
participants in different situations, to see whether the basic finding extends to
other circumstances and participants
- *Qualities of a good theory: effectively organizes, leads to clear predictions, often
stimulates research, may be replicated
- Research Designs vs. Research Methods
- Research Designs: ways we think of how to organize our research
- Leads us to think about the type of study we are going to be involved in
- The nature of the results we expect to collect from such study
- Driven by our research questions
- Depend on question or problem statement
- 3 primary research designs: Descriptive, correlational,
experimental(causation)



1

, 2


- Descriptive research design is a *systematic, objective
observation of behavior. Goal: to provide a clear, accurate picture
of people’s(or animal) behaviors, thoughts, and attributes.
*Thorough and not influenced by human thought or feelings
- Naturalistic observation records behavior in natural
environment. Describes but does not explain behavior. Can
be revealing.
- Case study examines one or few individuals in depth.
Provides fruitful ideas and potential challenges.
- Surveys and interviews examine many cases in less depth.
Wording effect
- Random sampling of the population for the best results
- Correlational research design: an observation that two traits or
attributes are related to each other. (scientific def: a measure of
how closely two factors vary together, or how well you can predict
change in one from observing a change in the other
- Both survey and observational methods can reveal
correlations
- Positive correlation indicates a direct relationship. Two
things increase together or decrease together
- Negative correlation indicates an inverse relationship. As
one thing increases, the other decreases
- *Correlation coefficient provides a statistical measure of
how closely two things vary from each other
* the closer to 0 (btwn -.3 and .3), the weaker the correlation
*scatterplots show patterns of correlation
- Problems with correlations
- Illusory correlation:
- the perception of a relationship between two
variables when only a minor or no relationship
actually exists
- may be fed by the regression toward the mean
- ex) one taxi driver was mean so now you think all
taxi drivers are rude
- Regression toward the mean:
- the tendency for extreme or unusual scores or
events to fall back (regress) toward the average

- Correlation and causation
- No matter how strong the relationship is, correlation does
not cause causation
- A correlation coefficient helps to provide a clearer view of
the world by revealing the extent to which two things relate

, 3



- Research methods: the specific procedures and tools used to collect data
- Depends on research design

- Experimentation
- With experiments, researchers can focus on the possible
effects of one or more factors in several ways
- They can manipulate the factors of interest to determine
their effects
- They can hold constant (“controlling”) other factors
- Experimental group and control group
- Key variables in an experiment
- Independent variable: factor that is intentionally
manipulated; the variable whose effect is being studied
- Dependent variable: factor that is measured; the variable
that may change when the IV is manipulated
- Confounding variable: a factor other than the IV that might
produce an effect
- Elements of the Experiment
- “blind” procedures to eliminate bias
- Single-blind: the participants don’t know which group they
are in (control or treated), but the researcher does know
- Double-blind: neither the participants nor the experimenter
know which group is control and which is receiving the
treatment
- Placebo effect: results are caused solely by expectations,
not actual change. Participant can believe something so
strongly that it actually results in the effect they expect
- Random Assignment: to discern causation, psychologists
control for confounding variables by random assignment
- randomly assign some participants to an
experimental group(s), others to a control group

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