Planning a Psychology Assignment on Sleep and Dreams — Cambridge IELTS 16 Academic 2021 TEST 2 — IELTS Test

Cambridge IELTS 16 Academic 2021 TEST 2

Planning a Psychology Assignment on Sleep and Dreams

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(0:00) Part 3. You will hear two psychology students called Luke and Susie discussing their assignment (0:07) on sleep and dreams. First you have some time to look at questions 21 to 24. (0:45) Now listen carefully and answer questions 21 to 24.
(0:53) So Luke, for our next psychology assignment we have to do something on sleep and dreams. (0:59) Right. I've just read an article suggesting why we tend to forget most of our dreams (1:06) soon after we wake up.
I mean, most of my dreams aren't that interesting anyway.
(1:11) But what it said was that if we remembered everything, we might get mixed up about what (1:17) actually happened and what we dreamed. So it's a sort of protection.
I hadn't heard that idea before.
(1:25) I'd always assumed that it was just that we didn't have room in our memories for all that stuff. (1:30) Me too.
What do you think about the idea that our dreams may predict the future?
(1:36) It's a belief that you get all over the world. (1:39) Yeah. Lots of people have a story of it happening to them.
But the explanation I've read is that
(1:46) for each dream that comes true, we have thousands that don't. But we don't notice those. (1:52) We don't even remember them.
We just remember the ones where something in the real world,
(1:58) like a view or an action, happens to trigger a dream memory. (2:03) Right. So it's just a coincidence really.
(2:07) Something else I read about is what they call segmented sleeping. That's a theory that hundreds (2:13) of years ago, people used to get up in the middle of the night and have a chat or something to eat, (2:19) then go back to bed. So I tried it myself.
(2:23) Why? (2:24) Well, it's meant to make you more creative. I don't know why, but I gave it up after a week. (2:30) It just didn't fit in with my lifestyle.
(2:33) But most preschool children have a short sleep in the day, don't they? There was an experiment some (2:40) students did here last term to see at what age kids should stop having naps, but they didn't (2:46) really find an answer. They spent a lot of time working out the most appropriate methodology, (2:52) but the results didn't seem to show any obvious patterns. (2:56) Right.
Anyway, let's think about our assignment. Last time I had problems with the final stage,
(3:04) where we had to describe and justify how successful we thought we'd been. (3:08) I struggled a bit with the action plan too.
(3:11) I was OK with the planning, but I got marked down for the self-assessment as well. (3:17) And I had big problems with the statistical stuff. That's where I really lost marks.
(3:23) Right. (3:27) Before you hear the rest of the discussion, you have some time to look at questions 25 to 30. (4:03) Now listen and answer questions 25 to 30.
(4:11) So, shall we plan what we have to do for this assignment? (4:14) OK. (4:16) First, we have to decide on our research question. So, how about… (4:22) Is there a relationship between hours of sleep and number of dreams? (4:28) OK.
Then we need to think about who we'll do the study on. About 12 people?
(4:35) Right. And shall we use other psychology students? (4:39) Let's use people from a different department.
What about history?
(4:44) Yes, they might have interesting dreams. Or literature students? (4:50) I don't really know any. (4:52) OK, forget that idea.
Then we have to think about our methodology.
(4:58) So, we could use observation, but that doesn't seem appropriate. (5:02) No, it needs to be self-reporting, I think.
And we could ask them to answer questions online.
(5:10) But in this case, paper might be better, as they'll be doing it straight after they wake up. (5:17) In fact, while they're still half asleep.
(5:20) Right. And we'll have to check the ethical guidelines for this sort of research. (5:26) Because our experiment involves humans, so there are special regulations.
(5:32) Yes. I had a look at those for another assignment I did. (5:37) There's a whole section on risk assessment.
(5:40) And another section on making sure they aren't put under any unnecessary stress. (5:45) Let's hope they don't have any bad dreams. (5:48) Yeah.
(5:50) Then, when we've collected all our data, we have to analyse it and calculate the correlation (5:56) between our two variables. That's time sleeping and number of dreams. (6:03) And then present our results visually in a graph.
(6:06) Right. And the final thing is to think about our research and evaluate it. (6:11) So, that seems quite straightforward.
(6:14) Yeah. So, now let's get... (6:19) That is the end of part three. (6:22) You now have half a minute to check your answers to part three.

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