general/scientific-method
Surf WikiScientific methodology
Method of determining the quantity of chemical substances
Theory of science, reconstructing empirical theories
Practice of researchers trying procedures on themselves
Making a "prediction" about the past
Theory of science, reconstructing empirical theories
Practice of researchers trying procedures on themselves
Use of science to increase knowledge
1=Overview of and topical guide to scientific method
Scientific methodology
Credit for first discovery
Scientific methodology
Making a "prediction" about the past
Method of determining the quantity of chemical substances
Method of determining the quantity of chemical substances
Critical experiment
Philosophy of science concept emphasizing the need for alternative hypotheses
Evidence that either supports or counters a scientific theory
Classification of scientific research projects
Making a "prediction" about the past
Theory of science, reconstructing empirical theories
Practice of researchers trying procedures on themselves
Philosophical ideals for the practice of science
Method of determining the quantity of chemical substances
Theory of science, reconstructing empirical theories
Scientific methodology
Practice of researchers trying procedures on themselves
Making a "prediction" about the past
Theory of science, reconstructing empirical theories
Method of determining the quantity of chemical substances
Practice of researchers trying procedures on themselves
Scientific methodology
A violation paradigm is a scientific method where the scientist perturbs an expected factor to look at the subject's following reactions. These reactions are believed to be relevant to the process studied. For example, creating wrong word segmentations in a text will destabilize the reader. This warns the researcher that the respondent's brain considers the characters are united into words, and not just as a succession of given sets of letters. The process was originally developed by Danks, Bohn & Fear (1983), and proved valid (Chen 1999).
Making a "prediction" about the past
Loop of dependence between theory and evidence