A History of Psychology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

A History of Psychology

Description:

A History of Psychology Chapter 5: Structuralism Introduction Wundt: (experimental psychology) 1. organization of elements 2. through Apperception 3. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:103
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: abc175
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: A History of Psychology


1
A History of Psychology

Chapter 5 Structuralism
2
Introduction
  • Wundt
  • (experimental psychology)
  • 1. organization of elements
  • 2. through Apperception
  • 3. Mind has the power to organize mental elements
    voluntarily
  • Titchener
  • (structuralism)
  • 1. focused on elements
  • 2. through Association
  • 3. Analyze consciousness into its component parts
    and determine its structure.

3
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • A. His life
  • 1. Born in England
  • 2. Attended at Oxford U.
  • a. philosophy and the classics
  • b. research assistant in physiology
  • c. interested in Wundts psychology

4
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 2. 1892, studied with Wundt and earned Ph.D at
    Leipzig
  • 3. Back to Oxford U. and wished to become the
    English pioneer of Wundts psychology.
  • 4. However, his colleagues were skeptical of
    scientific approach to philosophical issues.
    Thus, he left England to Cornell U.

5
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 5. Cornell University (1893-1927)
  • a. 1893-1900 established lab, did research, and
    wrote articles.
  • b. supervised more than 50 doctoral candidates
  • c. directed students research topics
  • d. built his system of structuralism
  • e. translated Wundts books such as Principles of
    Physiological Psychology

6
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • B. His work
  • 1. His books
  • a. 1896 An Outline of Psychology
  • b. 1898 Primer of Psychology
  • c. 1901-1905 Experimental Psychology A Manual
    of Lab Practice
  • 1) stimulated growth of lab work in US
  • 2) influenced a generation of experimental
    psychology
  • 3) popular text, translated in to 5 languages

7
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 2. 1904 Titchener Experimentalists organized
    men only.
  • 3. Accepted women in psychology graduate programs
  • a. one-third of his doctoral students were women
  • b. Margaret F. Washburn
  • 1) first woman Ph.D in psychology
  • 2) wrote important book on comparative psychology
    (The Animal Mind, 1908)
  • 3) first woman psychologist elected to National
    Academy of Sciences
  • 4) president of the APA

8
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • C. the content of conscious experience
  • 1. Subject matter of psychology
  • a. conscious experience
  • b. as that experience is dependent on the person
    who is actually experiencing it.
  • 2. Dependent on the experiencing individual
  • Other sciences independent of experiencing
    persons (e.g., temperature)

9
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 3. Consider phenomena in terms of how human
    observe and experience these phenomena, e.g.,
    light and sound.
  • 4. Stimulus error
  • Confusing the mental process with the object we
    are observing.
  • See an apple and describe that object as an apple
    instead of reporting the elements of color,
    brightness, and shape they are experiencing.

10
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 5. Immediate versus mediate experience
  • Color, brightness, or shape (immediate
    experience)
  • Other than color, brightness, or shape (mediate
    experience interpreting the object)

11
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 6. Consciousness the sum of our experiences as
    they exist at a given time
  • 7. Mind the sum of our experiences accumulated
    over a lifetime

12
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 8. Pure science
  • a. only legitimate purpose to discover the facts
    (structure) of the mind
  • b. no applied aspects
  • c. only normal adult humans

13
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • D. Introspection
  • 1. Self-observation
  • 2. Relied on trained observers
  • reporting the elements of their conscious state
  • 3. Adopted Kulpes label, systematic
    experimental introspection
  • Used detailed, qualitative, subjective report of
    mental activities during the act of introspecting

14
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 4. Opposed Wundts approach
  • Wundt synthesis (Whole)
  • Titchener component parts (Parts)
  • 5. Goal analysis to discover the atoms of the
    mind

15
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 6. Mechanist
  • subjects were reagents and were like mechanical
    recording instruments
  • 7. Proposed an experimental approach to
    introspective observation in psychology
  • an experiment is an observations that can be
    repeated, isolated, and varied

16
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • E. Elements of consciousness
  • 1. Defined three essential problems for
    psychology
  • a. reduce conscious processes to simplest
    components
  • b. determine laws by which elements were
    associated
  • c. connect the elements with their physiological
    conditions

17
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 2. Aims the same as those of the natural
    sciences
  • 3. Proposed three elementary states of
    consciousness
  • a. sensations
  • basic element of perception, e.g., sound or smell
  • b. images
  • the element of idea, e.g., memory of past
    experiences
  • c. affective states
  • the element of emotion, e.g., love, hate, and
    sadness

18
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 4. Discovered 44,500 basic elements of sensation
  • a. each is conscious
  • b. each is distinct from all others
  • c. each could combine with others to form
    perceptions and ideas

19
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 5. characteristics of mental elements
  • A. quality
  • B. intensity
  • C. duration
  • D. clearness
  • 6. Rejected Wundts tridimensional theory,
    suggested only pleasure/displeasure

20
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 7. 1918
  • a. dropped concept of mental elements
  • b. suggested study of dimensions instead of basic
    elements
  • 8. Early 1920s
  • a. questioned term structural psychology
  • b. called his approach as existential
    psychology
  • c. considered replacement of introspection with
    phenomenological approach (i.e., examining
    experience just as it occurs, without trying to
    break it down into elements)

21
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • III. Criticisms of Structuralism
  • A. Introspection
  • 1. Method of introspection
  • If the mind were capable of observing its own
    activities, it needs to have two parts.
  • 2. Definition of introspection
  • Difficulty defining exactly what he meant

22
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 3. Definition of psychology
  • Animal psychology and child psychology (not
    psychology)
  • 4. Precise task of trained observer is
    unclear/unknown
  • a. unreliability within and between subjects
  • b. special vocabulary

23
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford
Titchener(1867-1927)
  • 5. Introspection is retrospection
  • Artificial
  • 6. Could not explore the unconscious mind

24
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford Titchener
(1867-1927)
  • IV. Contributions of Structuralism
  • 1. Subject matter clearly defined
  • 2. Research methods good science
  • Observation, experimentation, or measurement
  • The most appropriate method for studying
    conscious experience was self-observation

25
Structuralism---- Edward Bradford Titchener
(1867-1927)
  • 3. Introspection method is still used in many
    areas of psychology
  • Clinical reports from patients on personality
    tests are introspective in nature
  • 4. Impact on cognitive psychology
  • Introspective reports involving cognitive
    processes such as reasoning
  • 5. Strong base against which others could rebel
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com