[tips] Top 10 Reasons Research needed to determine Efficacy

2013-01-13 Thread Annette Taylor
A somewhat dated but still great article is by Beyerstein, Why bogus therapies 
seem to work. It is an older volume of skeptical inquirer and you can find it 
here: http://www.csicop.org/SI/show/why_bogus_therapies_seem_to_work/

Annette

Annette Kujawski Taylor, Ph. D.
Professor, Psychological Sciences
University of San Diego
5998 Alcala Park
San Diego, CA 92110
tay...@sandiego.edu
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RE:[tips] Top 10 Reasons Research needed to determine Efficacy

2013-01-13 Thread Michael Palij
 Date: Sat, 12 Jan 2013 17:38:16 +, Scott O. Lilienfeld wrote:

 Hi Jim...I know that this is more than you asked for, but just in
case, here's a Table (attached) we compiled for a recently
submitted review article (probably best not to cite just yet,
but of course feel free to draw from).  As we note in the article,
the list is surely not comprehensive, but it may be a good
working start.   ...Scott

Uh, what table?  I get Tips in digest form and there was no
table and Scott's post does not show up on mail-archive.

-Mike Palij
New York University
m...@nyu.edu

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RE:[tips] Top 10 Reasons Research needed to determine Efficacy

2013-01-13 Thread Jim Clark
Hi

As Annette noted a few days ago, digest readers do NOT get attachments.

Take care
Jim


James M. Clark
Professor  Chair of Psychology
j.cl...@uwinnipeg.ca
Room 4L41A
204-786-9757
204-774-4134 Fax
Dept of Psychology, U of Winnipeg
515 Portage Ave, Winnipeg, MB
R3B 0R4  CANADA


 Michael Palij m...@nyu.edu 13-Jan-13 8:12 AM 
 Date: Sat, 12 Jan 2013 17:38:16 +, Scott O. Lilienfeld wrote:

 Hi Jim...I know that this is more than you asked for, but just in
case, here's a Table (attached) we compiled for a recently
submitted review article (probably best not to cite just yet,
but of course feel free to draw from).  As we note in the article,
the list is surely not comprehensive, but it may be a good
working start.   ...Scott

Uh, what table?  I get Tips in digest form and there was no
table and Scott's post does not show up on mail-archive.

-Mike Palij
New York University
m...@nyu.edu 

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RE:[tips] Top 10 Reasons Research needed to determine Efficacy

2013-01-13 Thread Dr. Bob Wildblood
I don't get the digest version, and I didn't get an
attachment either.
 Original message 

  From: Michael Palij Uh, what table? I get Tips in
  digest form and there was notable and Scott's
  post does not show up on mail-archive.-Mike
  PalijNew York Universitym...@nyu.edu---

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RE:[tips] Top 10 Reasons Research needed to determine Efficacy

2013-01-13 Thread Jim Clark
Hi

Thanks Scott, Gary, and Annette for the great help.  Here's what I ended up 
with based on your suggestions and some searching around to see what students 
would find with Google.  In the process I came across the nice paper by Joan 
McCord on Cures that Harm in the area of delinquency prevention.  See

http://www.unc.edu/~gsmunc/JoanMcCord/CuresThatHarm2003.pdf

ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY - ACTIVITY 2
ORIGINS OF FALSE BELIEFS ABOUT TREATMENT EFFICACY

Historically and even today, people have unwarranted confidence in the 
effectiveness (efficacy) of untested treatments for various medical and 
psychological disorders. Below are some factors that could bias such false 
beliefs. Select 6 randomly, find an explanation for the bias, and then describe 
briefly how it could lead to false beliefs about the effectiveness (or lack of 
effectiveness) of treatment.  Submit a brief summary to j.cl...@uwinnipeg.ca 
with psy3700-02-### in the subject line, where ### is your student 
number.  We will discuss this exercise next Monday in class, including how 
different biases may be similar.

1.  Regression to the Mean
2.  Placebo Effect
3.  Spontaneous Recovery
4.  Misdiagnosis
5.  Confounding Variables
6.  History as Threat to Validity
7.  Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
8.  Resentful Demoralization
9.  Confirmation Bias
10. Illusory Correlation
11. Selective Memory Failures
12. Demand Characteristics
13. Missing Counterfactual
14. Cognitive Dissonance
15. Maturation as Threat to Validity
16. Availability Heuristic
17. Survivor Bias


Thanks again.

Take care
Jim


James M. Clark
Professor  Chair of Psychology
j.cl...@uwinnipeg.ca
Room 4L41A
204-786-9757
204-774-4134 Fax
Dept of Psychology, U of Winnipeg
515 Portage Ave, Winnipeg, MB
R3B 0R4  CANADA



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[tips] Top 10 Reasons Research needed to determine Efficacy

2013-01-12 Thread Jim Clark
Hi

I'm curious what people would identify as among the top 10 (or 5 or whatever) 
reasons that we need research to determine the efficacy of treatments for 
psychological disorders.  I'm thinking of an exercise were students try to 
explain why people once believed in ineffective and even harmful treatments 
(e.g., bloodletting), setting the stage for understanding the need for well 
designed research.  Or if people know of a concise statement of these, that 
would be great as well.

Take care
Jim


James M. Clark
Professor  Chair of Psychology
j.cl...@uwinnipeg.ca
Room 4L41A
204-786-9757
204-774-4134 Fax
Dept of Psychology, U of Winnipeg
515 Portage Ave, Winnipeg, MB
R3B 0R4  CANADA



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Re: [tips] Top 10 Reasons Research needed to determine Efficacy

2013-01-12 Thread Gerald Peterson
I emphasize the problems of confirmation biases, post hoc fallacies, illusory 
correlations, and self-serving biases as promoting the overconfidence typically 
seen when treatment advocates are not concerned about systematically assessing 
efficacy. I stress the idea of control/comparison groups and predictive 
hypotheses to help overcome (some of) these biases. Thus, students can see one 
major problem was not thinking/noticing conditions where people did NOT 
improve, or those that improved WITHOUT treatment (I have them think of this 
four-fold table).

Also good opportunity to discuss problems with naive observation/intuition and 
personal experiences versus systematic and controlled tests of our ideas.

 
G.L. (Gary) Peterson,Ph.D
Psychology@SVSU


On Jan 12, 2013, at 12:17 PM, Jim Clark j.cl...@uwinnipeg.ca wrote:

 Hi
 
 I'm curious what people would identify as among the top 10 (or 5 or whatever) 
 reasons that we need research to determine the efficacy of treatments for 
 psychological disorders.  I'm thinking of an exercise were students try to 
 explain why people once believed in ineffective and even harmful treatments 
 (e.g., bloodletting), setting the stage for understanding the need for well 
 designed research.  Or if people know of a concise statement of these, that 
 would be great as well.
 
 Take care
 Jim
 
 
 James M. Clark
 Professor  Chair of Psychology
 j.cl...@uwinnipeg.ca
 Room 4L41A
 204-786-9757
 204-774-4134 Fax
 Dept of Psychology, U of Winnipeg
 515 Portage Ave, Winnipeg, MB
 R3B 0R4  CANADA
 
 
 
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