Subject recruitment for the shy

24 April 2007 at 2:52 am | In Main | Leave a Comment

You have important questions to research. Why let those loudmouth gregarious go-getter types snag all your potential subjects? The StudyResponse Project will distribute your call for participants to its list of pre-screened adult volunteers, for mere pennies per participant (minimum $79 charge–see their rate calculation on the Researcher Registration page.) It’s run out of the Syracuse University School of Information Studies. As you contemplate mental images of homogeneous populaces of upstate white people, remember not only that the university is as diverse as any major university, but also that Syracuse has been a favorite “average North American” city for market researchers for a couple of generations.

You need evidence of institutional review board (human subject research) approval, and they’re set up to take your grant money. :-{)}

Limitations of present-day cognitive psychology

23 April 2007 at 2:32 am | In Main | Leave a Comment

The bleeding edge can be ragged and messy sometimes. Two ways to advance cognitive science have been taking fMRI images of brains doing various things, and brain-based education. The former is a popular activity almost everywhere, including at my university. How much has it turned up? Still not much detailing complex cognition—the whole brain lights up for a lot of tasks, or the phenomena studied are emotions. A promising area, though: social psychology of agreeableness, consensus, and collaboration (the opposite of conflict, which is, of course, a major topic of psychological study). See the work of Jared Kenworthy, for example. Now if we could only get them to study people’s agreement about concepts, instead of more primal urges.

 

Brain-based education still has a ways to go, too. A look through the databases suggests the idea ran out of steam by 2005.

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