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Download THE FIELD OF PSYCHOLOGY
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Psychology Psyche: mind Logos: Knowledge or study of Definition: The scientific study of human and animal behavior and mental processes Behaviors Observable actions and responses Overt – can be directly observed Covert – cannot be directly observed Personality An individual’s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting. Trait Psychology Big 5 Traits – inherited/genetic (extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, openness to experience, emotional stability) Internal/External Locus of Control (learned helplessness) Temperments Reciprocal Determinism – traits, environment, and behavior all interact and influence each other Types of Personalities Type A Type B Feel time pressure. Relaxed and easygoing. Easily angered. But some people fit in Competitive and ambitious. Work hard and play hard. More prone to heart disease than rest of population. neither type. Goals of Psychology Describe behavior Explain/Understand behavior Predict behavior Influence/Control behavior Phrenology – Examining bumps on the skull to determine intellect and character traits (19th century) Past attempts at understanding human behavior (weird or not) have led to what we know today and shaped the current Approaches to Psychology Wilhelm Wundt • “Father of psychology” • Started 1st lab to study humans (1879) • Established Psychology as formal field of study • Introspection – self observation, report thoughts and feelings •Tichener – brought Wundt’s ideas to U.S. and renamed Structuralism William James • “Father of MODERN Psychology” or “Father of Psychology in the U.S.” • Principles in Psychology = 1st Psychology Textbook • Influenced by Darwin • Functionalism Gestalt Psychology • Led by Max Wertheimer, these guys focused not on how we feel, but on how we experience the world. • The whole of an experience can be more than the sum of its parts. This may seem like one picture, but it can be perceived as 3 different faces. Can you find them? Think for a moment of all the reasons that you love your mom. If you add all those reasons up, do they equal your love for your mom? Hopefully not!!! • Psychoanalytic • Behavioral • Humanistic • Cognitive • Biological • Sociocultural PSYCHOANALYTIC • Key ideas • childhood experiences • unconscious forces • Techniques: • Free association • Psychoanalysis (Dr. centered) • Projection/Projective tests TAT • Rorschach Ink Blot • Dream analysis • • Sigmund Freud (1856 – 1939) • Unconscious motivations are responsible for human behavior Sigmund Freud Thanatos vs. Eros Conscious, Subconscious (preconscious), unconscious Iceberg analogy Ego, Superego, ID Libido Freudian Slips Penis envy Fixation More Freud…. Psychosexual Stages of Personality Development Oral Anal Phallic Oedipus Complex Latent Genital Defense Mechanism Repression Denial Displacement Projection Reaction formation Regression Rationalization Sublimation Carl Jung Collective unconscious Archetypes Persona Trickster Hero Anima and animus Erik Erikson Psychosocial stages of personality development Other Neo-Freudians Alfred Adler Dominance/overcoming feelings of inferiority Birth order Karen Horney Love Felt Freud was sexist – womb envy BEHAVIORAL • Key ideas • Observable Behavior • Conditioning/Learning • Prior experience (reward and punishment) • John Watson (1878 – 1958) • Behavior the result of conditioning – “We are what we learn to be” • Little Albert experiments with Rosalie Raynor • B.F. Skinner (1904 – 1990) • Psychology must be tangible and scientific • Operant Conditioning - Reinforcement Behaviorism Continued Pavlov Classical Conditioning Bandura Social Learning Theory Modeling HUMANISTIC • Key ideas • Self-directed (Client-Centered) • Uniqueness • Potential to develop • Emphasis on “self-concept” • Carl Rogers – Unconditional positive regard • Abraham Maslow – Hierarchy of needs Humanism continued… Abraham Maslow Hierarchy of needs COGNITIVE • Key ideas • How we ….. Process, Store, Retrieve information • Thought patterns • Problem solving • Behavior results from memories, expectations • Modern approach is to join this with Behaviorism BIOLOGICAL • A.k.a. Behavioral neuroscience • Key ideas • How the brain, nervous system, hormones, genetics influence behavior SOCIOCULTURAL Key ideas • Cultural influence on behavior • Gender • Socioeconomic status • Traditions Evolutionary Psychology Stemmed from Darwin Survival of the fittest How does our behavior adapt to our environment and help ensure our survival? Eclecticism • By combining information from all of the approaches, psychologists stand a better chance of describing, explaining, predicting, and controlling behavior. Psychologist • Observe, analyze, evaluate behavior • Doctorate degree Psychiatrist • Medical degree + training in psychiatric medicine Clinical Psychologist • diagnoses and treats people with emotional disturbances Counseling Psychologist • help people deal with problems of everyday life Developmental Psychologist • Study changes that occur throughout life Educational Psychologist • helps students learn Industrial/Organizational Psychologist • employed by businesses to boost production, improve working conditions, make the workplace a more satisfying environment Research v. Applied Psychology Research Psychologists – study origins, causes, results of behavior Applied Psychologists – make direct use of the findings of research psychologist; deal directly with clients