🧱 SECTION B — Methods & Research Approaches (Psychology)

(Mirrors the psychiatry audit for later synthesis.)

Psychology’s methods range from hard‑science experimental paradigms to soft, interpretive, or unreliable techniques. This section exposes that spread cleanly.


GREEN — Empirical, reproducible, substrate‑anchored methods#

These are the parts of psychology that behave like real science. They use controlled experiments, quantifiable data, and falsifiable hypotheses.

Experimental methods (lab‑based cognitive psychology)#

  • Reaction time tasks
  • Memory paradigms
  • Perception experiments
  • Attention studies
    Substrate: measurable behavior, reproducible effects.

Psychometrics (validated instruments)#

  • Reliability testing
  • Factor analysis
  • Item Response Theory
    Substrate: statistical structure, measurement theory.

Behavioral methods (strict behaviorism)#

  • Operant conditioning
  • Classical conditioning
  • Reinforcement schedules
    Substrate: observable behavior.

Neuroscience‑linked methods#

  • fMRI, EEG, MEG
  • Lesion studies
  • Neuropsychological testing
    Substrate: brain activity, circuits, physiology.

Quantitative methods#

  • ANOVA, regression, SEM
  • Computational modeling
    Substrate: mathematical structure.

Why green:
These methods produce reliable, falsifiable, substrate‑anchored data.


⚠️ YELLOW — Mixed validity, partially empirical, partially interpretive#

These methods use empirical tools but rely heavily on theoretical framing, subjective interpretation, or contextual variability.

Self‑report questionnaires#

  • Widely used, but vulnerable to bias
    Substrate: partial; relies on introspection.

Survey research#

  • Empirical but highly sensitive to framing, culture, and sampling
    Substrate: partial.

Qualitative methods#

  • Interviews, thematic analysis
  • Useful for exploration, not falsifiable
    Substrate: interpretive.

Observational studies#

  • Naturalistic observation, coding schemes
  • Empirical but subjective
    Substrate: mixed.

Implicit Association Test (IAT) and similar tools#

  • Empirical but low reliability
    Substrate: partial.

Social psychology experiments#

  • Historically strong, but replication crisis exposed fragility
    Substrate: mixed.

Why yellow:
They produce data, but the constructs and interpretations are not substrate‑anchored.


RED — Non‑scientific, unreliable, or unfalsifiable methods#

These methods do not meet scientific criteria, even if they are still used in some corners of psychology.

Projective tests#

  • Rorschach
  • Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
    Substrate: none; interpretive, low reliability.

Dream analysis#

  • Freudian/Jungian methods
    Substrate: none.

Astrology‑adjacent personality systems#

  • Enneagram, MBTI (as used clinically)
    Substrate: none.

Uncontrolled introspection (as method)#

  • Early Wundtian introspection
    Substrate: none.

Therapeutic “insight” as evidence#

  • Using subjective experience as validation
    Substrate: none.

Why red:
These methods are unfalsifiable, non‑reliable, or conceptually mythic.


🧩 Section B Snapshot (Psychology)#

Zone Represents Psychology’s Methods
Green Scientific methods Experimental psych, psychometrics, behaviorism, neuroscience
Yellow Mixed empirical + interpretive Surveys, self‑reports, qualitative methods, social psych
Red Non‑scientific Projectives, dream analysis, typologies, introspection