All Verified Solutions.
Objective - Answer Things that you can actually see and take record of
Subjective - Answer Your beliefs that influence how you perceive the world
Phenomenon - Answer Things that occur or happen (ex. lightning)
Mechanism - Answer The way that something occurs, how it happens
Ignaz Semmelewis - Answer He observed two clinics and was the first to make the connection that
surgeons washing their hands reduced the amount of death/disease
Affiliation - Answer Being connected with a company scientifically, such as doing research for them
Funding - Answer Receiving money from someone for research, usually someone that you are affiliated
with
Impact Factor - Answer Number from 1-10 that shows the credibility of the journal (1 - worst, 10 - best)
Theoretical - Answer Quantitative way of research - Newton came up with calculus to explain
observations through numbers
Empirical - Answer A way of observing things without numbers, just on what you can see - used by
Galileo
Abstract - Answer The theme of a scientific paper, at the very beginning
, Introduction - Answer Extension of the ideas presented in the abstract of a scientific paper
Body - Answer Main description of research in a scientific paper
Summary - Answer Explains what this research means to society, located at the end of a scientific
paper
Previous Works/Acknowledgment - Answer Cited at the end of a scientific paper; things that influenced
the research
One Author Cite (example) - Answer Author last name, Year of Publication
Two Author Cite (example) - Answer Author #1 last name, Author #2 last name, Year of Publication
Multiple Author Cite (example) - Answer Author #1 last name et. al, Year of Publication
What is the similarities between Conspiracy Theories and Pseudosciences? - Answer Both are things
that cannot be proved with science, just beliefs
Pattern - Answer Something in science that happens on a regular basis
Noises - Answer Things in science that happen randomly and cannot be predicted
Observations - Answer Something in science that can truly be observed
Interpretation - Answer Things that are gathered from observation data
Assumption - Answer Believing that something in science happened but there is no proof