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====Empiricism==== | ====Empiricism==== |
| What it is | The idea that all knowledge comes from experience -- the senses. | | | What it is | The idea that all knowledge comes from experience -- the senses. \\ In AI it also means that this experience comes from the physical world, through physical sensors. | |
| Why it matters | Before the emphasis on empirical knowledge, science did not have a chance to rise in any obvious way above "other sources of knowledge," including old scriptures, intuition, religious beliefs, or information produced by oracles. | | | Why it matters | Before the emphasis on empirical knowledge, science did not have a chance to rise in any obvious way above "other sources of knowledge," including old scriptures, intuition, religious beliefs, or information produced by oracles. | |
| Empiricism & Science | The fundamental source of information in (empirical, i.e. experimental) science is experience, which eventually became the formalized **comparative experiment**. | | | Empiricism & Science | The fundamental source of information in (empirical, i.e. experimental) science is experience, which eventually became the formalized **comparative experiment**. | |
| [[https://sciencing.com/calculate-significance-level-7610714.html|Comparative Experiment]] | A method whereby two experimental conditions are compared, were they are identical except for one or a few strategic differences that the experimenters make. The outcome of the comparison is used to infer causal relations. Often called "the scientific method", this is the most dependable method for creating reliable, sharable knowledge that humanity has come up with. | | | \\ [[https://sciencing.com/calculate-significance-level-7610714.html|Comparative Experiment]] | A method whereby two experimental conditions are compared, were they are identical except for one or a few strategic differences that the experimenters make. The outcome of the comparison is used to infer causal relations. Often called "the scientific method", this is the most dependable method for creating reliable, sharable knowledge that humanity has come up with. | |
| [[https://www.britannica.com/topic/logical-positivism|Logical Positivism]] | Philosophical school of thought closely related to empirical science. | | | [[https://www.britannica.com/topic/logical-positivism|Logical Positivism]] | Philosophical school of thought closely related to empirical science. | |
| [[https://www.britannica.com/topic/rationalism|Rationalism]] | Historically a philosophically opposing view to empiricism, contending that knowledge is produced through innate knowledge, not through experience. | | | [[https://www.britannica.com/topic/rationalism|Rationalism]] | Historically a philosophically opposing view to empiricism, contending that knowledge is produced through innate knowledge, not through experience. | |
| Theory | A scientific (empirical) theory is a "story" about how certain phenomena relate to each other. The more details, the more accurately, and the larger scope the theory covers, the better it is. | | | Theory | A scientific (empirical) theory is a "story" about how certain phenomena relate to each other. The more details, the more accurately, and the larger scope the theory covers, the better it is. | |
| Hypothesis | A statement about how the world works, derived from a theory. | | | Hypothesis | A statement about how the world works, derived from a theory. | |
| Experimental design | A planned interference in the natural order of events. | | | Experimental design | A planned interference in the natural order of events. | |
| Subject(s) | Subject of interest - that to be studied, whether people, technology, natural phenomena, or other | | | Subject(s) | Subject of interest - that to be studied, whether people, technology, natural phenomena, or other | |
| Sample | Typically you can't study all the **individuals** of a particular subject pool (set), so in your experiment you use a **sample** (subset) and hope that the results gathered using this subset generalize to the rest of the set (subject pool). | | | Sample | Typically you can't study all the **individuals** of a particular subject pool (set), so in your experiment you use a **sample** (subset) and hope that the results gathered using this subset generalize to the rest of the set (subject pool). | |
| Between subjects vs. within subjects design | Between subjects: Two separate groups of subject/phenomena measured \\ Within subjects: Same subjects/phenomena measured twice, on different occasions | | | Between subjects vs. within subjects design | Between subjects: Two separate groups of subject/phenomena measured \\ Within subjects: Same subjects/phenomena measured twice, on different occasions | |
| Quasi-Experimental | When conditions do not permit an **ideal** design to be used (a properly controlled experiment is not possible), there may still be some way to control some of the variables. This is called quasi-experimental design. | | | Quasi-Experimental | When conditions do not permit an **ideal** design to be used (a properly controlled experiment is not possible), there may still be some way to control some of the variables. This is called quasi-experimental design. | |
| Dependent variable | The measured variable(s) of the phenomenon which you are studying | | | Dependent variable | The measured variable(s) of the phenomenon which you are studying | |
| Independent variable | The variable(s) that you manipulate in order to systematically affect (or avoid affecting) the dependent variable(s) | | | Independent variable | The variable(s) that you manipulate in order to systematically affect (or avoid affecting) the dependent variable(s) | |
| Internal validity | How likely is it that the manipulation of the independent variables caused the effect in dependent variables? | | | Internal validity | How likely is it that the manipulation of the independent variables caused the effect in dependent variables? | |
| External validity | How likely is it that the results generalize to other instances of the phenomenon under study? | | | External validity | How likely is it that the results generalize to other instances of the phenomenon under study? | |
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====Controlled Experiment==== | ====Controlled Experiment==== |
| What is it? | A fairly recent research method, historically speaking, for testing hypotheses / theories | | | What is it? | A fairly recent research method, historically speaking, for testing hypotheses / theories | |
| When | When it is possible to control and select everything of importance to the subject of study | | | When | When it is possible to control and select everything of importance to the subject of study | |
| How | Select subjects freely, randomize samples, remove experimenter effect through double-blind procedure, use control groups, select independent and dependent variables as necessary to answer the questions raised. | | | How | Select subjects freely, randomize samples, remove experimenter effect through double-blind procedure, use control groups, select independent and dependent variables as necessary to answer the questions raised. | |