dvd vcr Apple Computer Dvd Vcr Logo

Welcome to
dvdvcr.net

National Resource Center
dvd vcr Apple Computer Dvd Vcr division
301 Union Ave
Altoona, PA 16602

Your source for information about dvd vcr Apple Computer Dvd Vcr

People who visit dvdvcr.net are also interested in: dvd, video, televisions, consumer electronics, dvd vcr, home theater, PC, vhs, Electronics, accessories and dvd.



dvd vcr
Apple Computer Dvd Vcr
Related Topics:
dvd
video
televisions
consumer electronics
dvd vcr
home theater
PC
vhs
Electronics
accessories
theatre
mp3 players
speaker stands
entertainment centers
pal
software
satellite tv
shelf systems
service
secam
satellite dish
scanners
stereos
compact disc
to
TigerDirect.com
Sony
cordless phones
desks
desktops
digital cameras
digital recording
digital video recorders
support
subwoofers
receivers
fax
radios
personal computers
pdas





Apple Computer Dvd Vcr dvd vcr

.

Apple Computer Dvd Vcr dvd vcr Information

Toward a Cognitive Psychology of Science: Recent Research and Its Implications
In the article written by Ryan Tweney, he is contemplating the idea of whether there is a cognitive significance to scientific thinking. Many different studies are mentioned to try and answer this contemplation. One study on discovering the complexity of the universe found that subjects did the best if they confirmed evidence supporting their hypothesis early, and disconfirmed evidence later; this explains the persistence of many scientists. Another study found that the subjects could be divided into "experimenters" or "theorists." Yet another study showed that cognitive science and history influence each other. This finding should not at all be surprising. To answer his initial contemplation of whether scientific thinking is cognitively significant, Tweney says yes and no. On one hand, cognitive science is a special domain in which many fields intersect, but everyday thinking is also core to scientific thinking. We can now hopefully expect more opportunities for improving science education, with psychology holding its role of supporting science.
In my child development class this semester, we learned a lot about the psychologist Jean Piaget and his work with children. Interestingly enough, Tweney mentions Piaget for his ideas of the "child as scientist." The theories of Piaget actually fit right in with Tweney's ideas of cognitive thought and science. Piaget was a student of biology, psychology and philosophy and he used those fields to construct his idea of "symbolic thought," which is the coordination of thought and action by children as they construct knowledge from the world and people. This actually falls under the ideas of genetic epistemology, which is the experimental science of the acquisition of knowledge.
A result from one of the studies mentioned struck my attention. It was found that it was better for scientists to ignore disconfirming evidence early in their tasks, and disconfirm their hypothesis later only if they had a lot of confirmatory evidence. HOW is this strategy better??!!
If a scientist is on the wrong track with an experiment, they should DEFINITELY pay attention to disconfirming evidence early on in an experiment. Perseverance in the face of evidence to the contrary is usually not a good idea.




Site Links --- Google Sitemap --- Yahoo Sitemap --- Human Sitemap --- Related Links --- States

This site is designed and maintained by Links are Blue and Get 50+ Free Text Links