Examples of inference in the following topics:
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- Statistical inference makes claims about a population of individuals or things, using data drawn from a smaller subset of the population known as a sample.
- When psychologists want to test a research hypothesis, they will usually need to use statistical inference.
- Statistical inference makes propositions about a population by using a sample, which is data drawn from that population.
- Statistical inference therefore literally helps us make inferences about the characteristics of populations (their parameters) from characteristics of our sample (statistics).
- Because it is typically impossible to study an entire population, a sample gets us as close as possible, and statistical inference enables us to infer the characteristics of our population.
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- Reason is how we form inferences about the world; there are different types of reasoning, which have different advantages.
- We use reason to form inferences—conclusions drawn from propositions or assumptions that are supposed to be true.
- There is more than one way to start with information and arrive at an inference; thus, there is more than one way to reason.
- Inductive reasoning makes broad inferences from specific cases or observations.
- In this video, we see the famous literary character Sherlock Holmes use both inductive and deductive reasoning to form inferences about his friends.
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- Psychologists have attempted to study and explain how people reason, which cognitive processes are engaged, and how cultural factors affect the inferences that people draw.
- Abduction is a form of logical inference that goes from an observation to a hypothesis that accounts for the observation.
- Unlike deductive reasoning, the premise does not guarantee the conclusion, and is considered an inference to the best explanation.
- Analogy is an inference, or an argument, from one particular subject to another.
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- They help to interpret other's actions so that additional information can be quickly inferred in order to predict behavior.
- It describes an individual's understanding of other's mental states, such as beliefs, desires, and knowledge, to allow an individual to make inferences about such other's thoughts, motivations, and emotions.
- It is an essential tool for social perception since it gives an individual the ability to infer what another may be thinking or experiencing.
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- The goal of statistics is to summarize data in a manner that allows for easy descriptions or inferences to be made.
- The goal of statistics is to summarize data in a manner that allows for easy descriptions or inferences to be made.
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- Experimental research goes a step further beyond descriptive and correlational research and randomly assigns people to different conditions, using hypothesis testing to make inferences about how these conditions affect behavior.
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- Several key thinking processes emerge during this stage, including reversibility, seriation, and transitive inference.
- Transitive inference is a relational concept in which children can understand how objects are related to one another; for example, if a dog is a mammal, and a boxer is a dog, then a boxer must also be a mammal.
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- Motion perception is the process of inferring the speed and direction of elements in a scene based on visual input.
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- Other adaptations might include the abilities to infer others' emotions, to discern kin from non-kin, to identify and prefer healthier mates, to cooperate with others, and so on.
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- For example, damage to a part of the brain called Broca’s area causes patients to lose the ability to speak; knowing this, we can infer that that part of the brain is in some way related to language production.