November 16th, 2022 11:00 AM

Hypothesis New Content can be used to Magnify and Amplify Old Content

Hypothesis Stronger Hypotheses can be Amplified

Stronger Hypotheses can be Amplified, however it will require a Non Negotiable Non Refundable One or Multiple Time Time Investment

There are improper Hypotheses, scantly clad hypotheses so to speak

and then there are Proper Hypotheses

Notes

What is a Hypothesis? A Hypothesis is a tentative statement saying what you expect to find in your research. It is not just an improper unrefined ineloquent random guess, but a prediction based on existing knowledge, facts, truth, and properly vetted data. Verification and accuracy of knowledge helps insure a better initial direction for Research.

Step 1, Ask a Question

Writing a hypothesis begins with a Research Question you want to answer. It might be worth first reflecting upon whether you want or need the answer to a Research Question. Research takes time, resources, and Non Null Time Investments with the potential for no results or erroneous results at the end.

A question worth asking does not always ideally deliver ready answers.

The question worth asking should be focused, specific, and researchable.

Certain properties lead to questions that are less focused. Concrete Examples help

What is that Phenomena going on on it? That to Orange Spot and it to Jupiter is a clearer question.

Certain properties lead to questions that are less specific. How many rocks in the jar vs how many rocks in the ocean?

Certain properties lead to something that is more researchable. Phenomena on Earth more Researchable than on Jupiter. Top of Everest might be easier than bottom of Marianas Trench. Environmental conditions factor into research. Governments and current Political Climate factor into research in Not Always Fully Appreciated ways.

Step 2 Do some preliminary research

Step 3 Formulate your Hypothesis

Step 4 Refine your Hypothesis

Make sure Specific and Testable

Step 5 Phrase Hypothesis in 3 ways

  1. If …. Then ….
  2. Correlation or Effect “will result in”
  3. Comparing Two Groups

Step 6 Write a Null Hypothesis (assumes no effect between variables)

Input can be lagged by delayed Output, Demand Matters Clogged Pipe Matters

Improved Focus can Lead to Faster Output Time, better able to tackle Next Task vs excessive Interrupts

Published by techinfodebug

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