Psychology of science : implicit and explicit processes : 2nd Purdue Symposium on Psychological Sciences

Bibliographic Information

Psychology of science : implicit and explicit processes : 2nd Purdue Symposium on Psychological Sciences

edited by Robert W. Proctor and E.J. Capaldi

Oxford University Press, c2012

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Symposium held at Purdue University, June 4-5, 2010

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The study of science, sometimes referred to as metascience, is a new and growing field that includes the philosophy of science, history of science, sociology of science, and anthropology of science. In the last ten years, the formal study of the psychology of science has also emerged. The psychology of science focuses on the individual scientist, influenced by intelligence, motivation, personality, and the development of scientific interest, thought, ability, and achievement over a lifespan. Science can be defined as explicitly and systematically testing hypotheses. Defined more broadly, science includes wider processes, such as theory construction and the hypothesis testing seen in children and "non-scientific" adults. Most prior work in the study of science has emphasized the role of explicit reasoning; however, contemporary research in psychology emphasizes the importance of implicit processes in decision-making and choice and assumes that the performance of many tasks involves a complex relationship between implicit and explicit processes. Psychology of Science brings together contributions from leaders in the emerging discipline of the psychology of science with other experts on the roles of implicit and explicit processes in thinking. Highlighting the role of implicit processes in the creation of scientific knowledge, this volume links the psychology of science to many strands of psychology , including cognitive, social, and developmental psychology, as well as neuroscience. Ultimately, this volume raises awareness of the psychology of science among psychologists, philosophers, and sociologists of science, and anyone interested in the metasciences.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Implicit and Explicit Processes in the Psychology of Science
  • Robert W. Proctor and E. J. Capaldi
  • Part 1: Role of the Psychology of Science and its Methods
  • Chapter 1
  • The Psychology of Science is Off and Running but Where Do We Go from Here?
  • Gregory Feist
  • Chapter 2
  • Psychology of Science: Influence on the Philosophy of Science
  • E. J. Capaldi and Robert W. Proctor
  • Chapter 3
  • Methodological Approaches to Scientific and Technological Thinking
  • Michael E. Gorman
  • Part 2: Agency and Reasoning in the Psychology of Science
  • Chapter 4
  • The Role of Psychology in an Agent-Based Theory of Science
  • Ronald N. Giere
  • Chapter 5
  • The Acting Person in Scientific Practice
  • Lisa Osbeck and Nancy J. Nersessian
  • Chapter 6
  • Inference to the Best Explanation (IBE) and the Causal and Scientific Reasoning of Non-scientists
  • Barbara Koslowski
  • Chapter 7
  • Classifying and Remediating Late Elementary and Middle School Students' Errors and Misconceptions about Experimental Design
  • Stephanie A. Siler and David Klahr
  • Part 3: Implicit and Explicit Processes in the Cognitive Psychology of Science
  • Chapter 8
  • What are Implicit and Explicit Processes?
  • Jan De Houwer and Agnes Moors
  • Chapter 9
  • How Should We Understand the Implicit and Explicit Processes in Scientific Thinking?
  • Donelson E. Dulany
  • Chapter 10
  • The Interaction of Implicit vs. Explicit Processing and Problem Difficulty in a Scientific Discovery Task
  • Corinne Zimmerman and Jean E. Pretz
  • Part 4: Psychological Perspectives: Influence on Science
  • Chapter 11
  • Implicit Cognition and Researcher Conflict of Interest
  • Anthony G. Greenwald
  • Chapter 12
  • Science, Feminism, and the Psychology of Investigating Gender
  • Alice H. Eagly
  • Chapter 13
  • The Theory Ladenness of the Mental Processes used in the Scientific Enterprise: Evidence from Cognitive Psychology and the History of Science
  • William F. Brewer
  • Chapter 14
  • The Practice of Psychological Science in Social-Personality Research: Are We Still a Science of Two Disciplines?
  • Jessica L. Tracy, Richard W. Robins, and Jeffrey W. Sherman
  • Part 5: Scientific Creativity
  • Chapter 15
  • Scientific Creativity as Blind Variation: Explicit and Implicit Procedures, Mechanisms, and Processes
  • Dean Keith Simonton
  • Chapter 16
  • Creative Combination of Representations: Scientific Discovery and Technological Invention
  • Paul Thagard
  • Chapter 17
  • On the Unreasonable Reasonableness of Mathematical Physics: A Cognitive View
  • Ryan Tweney
  • Chapter 18
  • Digging into Implicit/Explicit States and Processes: The Case of Cognitive/Social Process Interaction in Scientific Groups
  • Susannah B. F. Paletz and Christian D. Schunn
  • Part 6: Unconventional Perspectives on the Conduct of Science
  • Chapter 19
  • Implicit Ontological Reasoning: The Problems of Dualism in Psychological Science
  • Brent D. Slife, Jeffrey S. Reber, and James E. Faulconer
  • Chapter 20
  • Notre Trahison Des Clercs: Implicit Aspirations - Explicit Exploitations
  • Peter A. Hancock

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