He is the best teacher I have ever seen in my life! I really appreciate the way he explains….makes life easy. Thank you so very much for your videos! Please please keep making more videos it helps me a lot. Instead of cramming books it is better to watch your videos before any quiz.
Nice, dude. That was spot on-what a coincidence. You ended with the very words I am dealing with in my study-emotions and intelligence. Great teacher! I love your other video on variables, too!!
Pure gold! What a content! I am fascinated by Skinner's work, which pushed me towards behavior analysis, and as an amateur, I am trying to find my way in it. This is the third video I have watched on your channel, and I am extremely grateful and excited because they have helped me understand certain key aspects of measuring behavior in a simple way. Thank you once again! Incredible work!
Operational definition of intelligence: Define in terms of what an intelligent behaviour looks like- - based on rational thought - engaged in purposefully - effective on the environment For example: • aiming a gun at a target and squeezing the trigger only when the sight is locked on the target (intelligent) • aiming a gun toward a target but not keeping the sight locked on the target before squeezing the trigger (non-intelligent) • differentiation I from NI: count of shots within a certain radius from the bullseye in the target This is essentially what intelligence tests do: they count behaviour to measure consistency of behaviour across several tasks in order to determine the likelihood that the person being tested behaved intelligently during testing. IQ does not indicate how clever one is: it indicates how consistent one is. Higher consistency means higher probability that examinee's behaviour during testing fulfilled the definition (due to Wechsler) above.
Sir you saved me from my professor otherwise he will give me zero pls make all the research related topic videos you are the best sir 🥺🥺🖤 Love from India
Check your understanding: Which of the following represents an operational definition of happiness? A. The feeling of a strong emotion, such as pleasure or joy B. Counting the number of smiles people make C. Feeling satisfied with your life D. Showing gratitude E. Experiencing more positive feelings than negative
@@PsychExplained2. What is the students’ feedback to cad courses in university? feedback/response measurable=survey(satisfaction1-5scale and open-ended questions), but what is observable? 3. How do labor markets affect students’ learning choice about cad software? learning choice measurable=survey to see what kind of software they will learn and how, but what is observable? i was confusing with this for almost one week. still didn't figure it out
Do you have a workbook or pdf with numerous practice examples to gain an understanding of creating operational definitions? I will gladly purchase a tutorial tool from you! I’m truly lost 😞 and my professor has moved on.
@@PsychExplained Thank you. Operational definitions have been hard for me to grasp. From your and other videos, this is what I've come up with. I would greatly appreciative if you would please correct me if I've misunderstood anything: Hypothesis: The desire to be reunited increases as time apart from a significant other increases. Predictor Variable: Time apart. Criterion Variable: Desire to be reunited. Operational Definition: For this study, time apart means the duration of separation of significant others. The desire to be reunited means to want to be able to physically interact with their significant other. Participants self-reported their belief that the desire to be reunited grows stronger as time apart increases by answering yes or no.
@@Ariana_VT Great stuff! Love the study. Few thoughts: 1. Be specific on "time apart". For example, longer than 2 years? 5 years? 6 months? 2. What do you mean by significant others? Friends? Relationships? Family members? 3. Rather than "yes/no", I would create a Likert scale - "On a scale of 1-10, how much do you desire/miss your significant other after time apart". Somehow you need to quantify "desire".
@@stevenkushner8348 Thank you for the feedback! I'll definitely incorporate it all. Regarding 3, I was confusing correlational with qualitative (but yes / no is closed-ended so it wouldn't even be qualitative)... I also need to write this study using the experimental method wherein I decided to use a 1-5 scale instead of yes or no because I was confusing experimental with quantitative. My goal was to have both be quantitative. Thank you so much for the help! I feel much better about all of this now!
He is the best teacher I have ever seen in my life! I really appreciate the way he explains….makes life easy. Thank you so very much for your videos! Please please keep making more videos it helps me a lot. Instead of cramming books it is better to watch your videos before any quiz.
Wow, thank you! 🙏🏻
Such kind words. Happy learning 😎😎😎
Gotta be honest. You taught this better than my grad professor
Nice, dude. That was spot on-what a coincidence. You ended with the very words I am dealing with in my study-emotions and intelligence. Great teacher! I love your other video on variables, too!!
Glad it helped!
@@PsychExplained Indeed, you explained the concepts with humor, simplicity, and sensitivity to your audience - an artist.
Pure gold! What a content! I am fascinated by Skinner's work, which pushed me towards behavior analysis, and as an amateur, I am trying to find my way in it. This is the third video I have watched on your channel, and I am extremely grateful and excited because they have helped me understand certain key aspects of measuring behavior in a simple way. Thank you once again! Incredible work!
Thank you! I appreciate the kind words. Behaviorism is an old school perspective that still holds relevancy today. Good luck in your studying!
love it. You have articulated this incredibly! Good job. keep it coming.
YOu rocked my learning of operational definitions. Thank you very much (your name here) for your excellent job.
Glad I could help! (Steven Kushner)
Operational definition of intelligence:
Define in terms of what an intelligent behaviour looks like-
- based on rational thought
- engaged in purposefully
- effective on the environment
For example:
• aiming a gun at a target and squeezing the trigger only when the sight is locked on the target (intelligent)
• aiming a gun toward a target but not keeping the sight locked on the target before squeezing the trigger (non-intelligent)
• differentiation I from NI: count of shots within a certain radius from the bullseye in the target
This is essentially what intelligence tests do: they count behaviour to measure consistency of behaviour across several tasks in order to determine the likelihood that the person being tested behaved intelligently during testing. IQ does not indicate how clever one is: it indicates how consistent one is. Higher consistency means higher probability that examinee's behaviour during testing fulfilled the definition (due to Wechsler) above.
Amazing! Thank you so much!!!
Sir you saved me from my professor otherwise he will give me zero pls make all the research related topic videos you are the best sir 🥺🥺🖤
Love from India
Happy to help
Love from Chicago, IL USA
wow just excellent explanation. I got the topic
Check your understanding:
Which of the following represents an operational definition of happiness?
A. The feeling of a strong emotion, such as pleasure or joy
B. Counting the number of smiles people make
C. Feeling satisfied with your life
D. Showing gratitude
E. Experiencing more positive feelings than negative
B?
B?
B
B
B
How would this be applicable to an extended literature? What would be the approach?
Can you explain?
Thank you for sharing this video. It's very informative. :D
This entire video helped me better understand how to write my literature review. THANK YOU!!!!👍
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you soo much
you explained in an awesome way
You're most welcome
Great explanation, Thank you so much
You are welcome!
Very Fruitful. From where do you buy your pens, please? I badly need them
Expo markers are the best :)
WOW YOU ARE HELLA AWESOME!! THANK U SO MUCH
Thank you for watching 🧠 🧠 🧠
🙏 Thanks Sir for such a great video.
paper in half an hour, taught me stuff in 20 minutes clearly than i couldnt learn in 2 years
thank you so much, but in a survey research , how can it be measurable
Great question. What are your variables?
@@PsychExplained2. What is the students’ feedback to cad courses in university? feedback/response measurable=survey(satisfaction1-5scale and open-ended questions), but what is observable?
3. How do labor markets affect students’ learning choice about cad software?
learning choice measurable=survey to see what kind of software they will learn and how, but what is observable? i was confusing with this for almost one week. still didn't figure it out
Perfectly explained.
Glad it was helpful!
Really informative ❤️ thanku
Do you have a workbook or pdf with numerous practice examples to gain an understanding of creating operational definitions?
I will gladly purchase a tutorial tool from you!
I’m truly lost 😞 and my professor has moved on.
Not yet! I will work on it :)
He has very good penmanship.
Wouldn't 19 be included since it ends in teen?
Related videos:
Experimental design: th-cam.com/video/xDWdJI_XT3k/w-d-xo.htmlsi=RSGnVN82TxGLvRtp
Independent variables and Dependent variables: th-cam.com/video/sbN-ymC6w3k/w-d-xo.htmlsi=NXWlApUGvPAKUBuh
thank you
You’re welcome 😇
Did this video include any operational definitions, or was it just talking about how to make one without providing an example of one?
In this video I explain what are operational definitions by using a social media example.
@@PsychExplained Thank you. Operational definitions have been hard for me to grasp.
From your and other videos, this is what I've come up with. I would greatly appreciative if you would please correct me if I've misunderstood anything:
Hypothesis: The desire to be reunited increases as time apart from a significant other increases.
Predictor Variable: Time apart.
Criterion Variable: Desire to be reunited.
Operational Definition: For this study, time apart means the duration of separation of significant others. The desire to be reunited means to want to be able to physically interact with their significant other. Participants self-reported their belief that the desire to be reunited grows stronger as time apart increases by answering yes or no.
@@Ariana_VT Great stuff! Love the study. Few thoughts:
1. Be specific on "time apart". For example, longer than 2 years? 5 years? 6 months?
2. What do you mean by significant others? Friends? Relationships? Family members?
3. Rather than "yes/no", I would create a Likert scale - "On a scale of 1-10, how much do you desire/miss your significant other after time apart". Somehow you need to quantify "desire".
@@stevenkushner8348 Thank you for the feedback! I'll definitely incorporate it all.
Regarding 3, I was confusing correlational with qualitative (but yes / no is closed-ended so it wouldn't even be qualitative)... I also need to write this study using the experimental method wherein I decided to use a 1-5 scale instead of yes or no because I was confusing experimental with quantitative. My goal was to have both be quantitative.
Thank you so much for the help! I feel much better about all of this now!
but 19 ends in "teen"
Rip 19 lol