Pure research is merely to find out what is going on. Applied research is to find out what is going on so you can use it for some purpose.
applied research
give an example of a basic and applied research
Pure research is done simply to know or search if why something happens. On the other hand, an applied research is taking knowledge in order to apply or use the research to improve life.
To understand applied research you need to understand "pure" research. Pure research is research for research's sake. It is intended just simply to understand whatever you are studying. Applied research in contrast is research that can be used in the real world of commerce.
Pure chemistry involves research in pursuit of knowledge. Applied chemistry involves research directed toward a specific goal. Pure research can lead directly to an application; an application can exist before research is done to explain how it works.
Applied research tries to solves a particular problem. Like how can we make a better widget. Research funds are allocated and the scientists are usually expected to have an answer by the end of the project and is often expected to show a profit. Pure research is science for just finding something new without knowing what that will be. The Hubble space telescope is a good example of that. Pure research leads to new discoveries. Applied research tries to make practical uses for some of those discoveries. Pure research discovered something called Giant magnetoresistance applied research turned that discovery into a hard disc drive that can hold thousands of songs, movies and pictures.
Both. I'm attaching a link in which Professor Carol Dweck of Stanford University discusses some of her research. You will notice that some of the research is pure in the sense that it is intended to establish that so-called mindset has an effect on behaviour, and some of the research in applied in the it investigates whether mindset can be manipulated to influence educational and other outcomes.
It is applied math. Math is the purest form there is. psychology is applied biology, which is applied chemistry, which is applied physics, which is applied math, which is pure PURE
Pure science is research for its own sake; the idea is to expand our general body of knowledge. Applied science is research with a specific goal in mind, such as a new drug or more efficient vehicle. Pure science can lead to applied science by making a discovery which has an immediate or obvious practical application. One famous example would be nylon stockings, which grew out of polymer experiments in the then-new science of plastics.
Applied research tries to solve a particular problem. Like how can we make a better widget? Research funds are allocated and the scientists are usually expected to have an answer by the end of the project and are often expected to show a profit. Pure research is science for just finding something new without knowing what that will be. The Hubble space telescope is a good example of that. Pure research leads to new discoveries. Applied research tries to make practical uses for some of those discoveries. Pure research discovered something called Giant magneto resistance applied research turned that discovery into a hard disc drive that can hold thousands of songs, movies and pictures. * Is conducted in relation to actual problems and under the conditions in which they are found in practice; * Employs methodology that is not as rigorous as that of basic research; * Yields findings that can be evaluated in terms of local applicability and not in terms of universal validity.
Practical use of scientific information of pure and applied research can be named technology. So, research and advancements in rockets is technology.
applied anthropology participated in efforts related to WWII, it uses theories, methods, data developed by the whole discipline, has stimulated interests in new areas of research, contribute to new theory. Pure anthropologists share some concern for practical implications of their research, are indepted to applied anthropology for stimulating interest in new areas of research.