* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download A Brief History of Psychology
Verbal Behavior wikipedia , lookup
Thin-slicing wikipedia , lookup
Insufficient justification wikipedia , lookup
Occupational health psychology wikipedia , lookup
Neuroeconomics wikipedia , lookup
Buddhism and psychology wikipedia , lookup
Cyberpsychology wikipedia , lookup
Personality psychology wikipedia , lookup
Behavioral modernity wikipedia , lookup
Attribution (psychology) wikipedia , lookup
Operant conditioning wikipedia , lookup
Theory of reasoned action wikipedia , lookup
Theory of planned behavior wikipedia , lookup
Developmental psychology wikipedia , lookup
Psychological behaviorism wikipedia , lookup
Behavior analysis of child development wikipedia , lookup
Cognitive science wikipedia , lookup
Index of psychology articles wikipedia , lookup
Process-oriented psychology wikipedia , lookup
Gestalt psychology wikipedia , lookup
Indigenous psychology wikipedia , lookup
Cultural psychology wikipedia , lookup
Humanistic psychology wikipedia , lookup
Educational psychology wikipedia , lookup
Sociobiology wikipedia , lookup
Theoretical psychology wikipedia , lookup
Behaviorism wikipedia , lookup
Social psychology wikipedia , lookup
Political psychology wikipedia , lookup
Descriptive psychology wikipedia , lookup
International psychology wikipedia , lookup
Abnormal psychology wikipedia , lookup
Experimental psychology wikipedia , lookup
Conservation psychology wikipedia , lookup
Music psychology wikipedia , lookup
Cross-cultural psychology wikipedia , lookup
A Brief History of Psychology Using Alternative approaches and views to get to the heart of psychology Psychology Scientific study of behavior that is tested through scientific research Goals of Psychology Goals of Psychology Description Explanation Prediction Influence Applied or Basic Science Basic Science is research for the sake of research. Includes the first three goals (description, explanation, and prediction) Applied Science uses psychological research to solve immediate problems in the real world. This is the last goal influence! Phrenology The practice of examining bumps on a person’s skull to determine that person’s intellect and character traits – discredited as non-scientific. Greek thought Believed that the heart was more important than the mind. – but began the thought that people were not dominated by gods but were rational. Dualism Seventeenth century philosophers concept that the mind and body are separate and distinct. – Rene Descartes disagreed – said a link existed between the mind and the body. Historical Approaches Structuralism Functionalism Inheritable Traits Gestalt Psychology Structuralism Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920) Structuralist study the basic elements that make up conscious mental experiences. Attempted to map thought processes from observed behavior Structuralism Functionalism William James (1842-1910) – father of psychology in the U.S. Study the function of consciousness. Believed all we think and do is to help us survive. Functionalism Inheritable Traits Sir Francis Galton (1822- 1911) – personality tests Studied how heredity affects behavior. Believed the richest were the most intelligent – what did he forget? Gestalt Psychology Group of German psychologists who felt that perception is more than the sum of its parts Studied how sensation is assembled into perceptual experiences. Gestalt Psychology Gestalt Psychology Gestalt Psychology Contemporary Approaches Psychoanalytic Psychology Behavioral Psychology Humanistic Psychology Cognitive Psychology Biological Psychology Sociocultural Psychology Psychoanalytic Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) Unconscious determinants of behavior Used free association, and dream analysis to discover unconscious determinants Psychoanalytic theory Behavioral Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936) Events in the environment (rewards and punishments) influence our behavior. Pavlov’s dog Behavioral Behavioral (Continued) John B. Watson (1878-1958) Concerned with observable behavior only Even instincts is result of conditioning by environment Behavioral (Continued) B.F. Skinner (1904-1990) Introduced the concept of reinforcement Wanted to apply lab concepts to the world Wrote “Walden Two” Behavioral Humanistic Abraham Maslow, Carl Rogers (1960’s) Individual or self-directed choices influence our behavior, not outside reinforcement. (Selfactualization) Humanistic Cognitive Jean Piaget (1950’s) Behavior is more than a response to a stimulus, it is influenced by a variety of mental processes, including perceptions, memories, and expectations. Biological Psychobiologists (1990’s) study how the brian, nervous system, hormones, and genetics influence our behavior Do genes affect your intelligence and your personality? Sociocultural Leonard Doob (1990’s) Ethnicity, gender, culture and socioeconomic status influence our behavior How do people of different genders and ethnicities interact with one another?