QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- how are scientific theories typically developed?
a. by guessing the outcome of an experiment
b. by only observing one experiment
c. by rejecting all evidence
d. through extensive observation, experimentation, and reasoning
- what does a scientific law provide?
a. a detailed prediction of future events
b. a description of a consistent and universal relationship observed in nature
c. a hypothesis that can be tested
d. an explanation of why phenomena occur
- what is one of the key challenges in ensuring data integrity?
a. avoiding the use of controls in research
b. collecting data from a single experiment
c. ignoring peer review
d. ensuring that data is not manipulated under pressure
- what is informed consent?
a. forcing participants to join a study
b. conducting experiments without participant knowledge
c. ensuring that participants understand and agree to the risks and benefits of the study
d. manipulating participants to agree with the study
- what does the term ‘societal implications’ refer to in scientific research?
a. conducting research in isolation
Question 6
Scientific theories are developed through systematic processes. Guessing (a), one - experiment observation (b), and rejecting evidence (c) are not valid. Extensive observation, experimentation, and reasoning (d) align with the scientific method.
Scientific laws describe consistent, universal relationships (e.g., Newton's laws). They don't predict details (a), are not testable hypotheses (c), and don't explain why (that's theories), so (b) is correct.
Data integrity means data is accurate and unmanipulated. Avoiding controls (a), single - experiment data (b), and ignoring peer review (c) are not data integrity challenges. Preventing manipulation under pressure (d) is a key challenge.
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d. Through extensive observation, experimentation, and reasoning