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Introduction and Research Methods

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Title: Introduction and Research Methods


1
Chapter 1
  • Introduction and Research Methods

2
What is Psychology?
  • Psychology
  • Psyche Mind
  • Logos Knowledge or study
  • Definition The scientific study of behavior and
    mental processes
  • Behaviorobservable actions
  • Overt i.e., can be directly observed (crying)
  • Covert i.e., cannot be directly observed
    (remembering) private, internal
  • Mindthoughts, feelings, sensations, perceptions,
    memories, dreams, motives and other subjective
    experiences

3
Philosophical Developments
BIG
  • A Question How are mind and body
    related?
  • René Descartes (15961650)Interactive dualism
  • The mind and body interact to produce conscious
    experience

4
Philosophical Developments
BIG
  • Another Question Nature vs. Nurture
  • Are abilities determined by our genes or our
    experiences?
  • What are the interactions between genetics and
    environment?
  • What effect does it have on behavior?

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Foundations of Modern Psychology
  • Wilhelm Wundt (18321920)
  • Leipzig, Germany
  • wrote the first psychology textbook
  • 1879 Set up first lab to study conscious
    experience
  • applied laboratory techniques to study of the
    mind.
  • Introspection Looking inward (i.e., examining
    and
  • reporting your thoughts, feelings, etc.)

7
Wilhelm Wundt (18321920)
8
Other Pioneers
  • Edward Titchener (18671927)
  • Wundts student, professor at Cornell University
  • structuralismidentify atoms of the mind
  • focused on basic sensory and perceptual processes
  • measured reaction times
  • William James (18421910)
  • started psychology at Harvard in 1870s
  • opposed Wundts and Titcheners approach
  • functionalism influenced by Darwin to focus on
    how behaviors help us adapt to the environment

9
E. B. Titchener (18671927)
10
William James (18421910)
11
Other Pioneers
  • Sigmund Freud (18561939)
  • Austrian physician that focused on illness
  • psychoanalytic theory of mental disorders
  • Our behavior is largely influenced by our
    unconscious wishes, thoughts, and desires,
    especially sex and aggression
  • All thoughts and actions are determined nothing
    is an accident
  • Freud performed dream analysis and was an
    interactionist (combination of our biology and
    environment make us who we are)
  • Recent research has hypothesized that our
    unconscious mind is partially responsible for our
    behaviors

12
Other Pioneers
  • John B. Watson (18781958)
  • psychologists should study overt
    behavior-Psychology must study observable
    behavior objectively
  • B. F. Skinner (19041990)
  • American psychologist at Harvard
  • studied learning and effect of reinforcement
  • behaviorism

13
John B. Watson (18781958)
14
B. F. Skinner (19041990)
15
  • Gestalt Perspective
  • The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
  • Key names Wertheimer, Perls
  • Wertheimer Mistake to analyze psychological
    events into pieces many experiences cannot be
    broken into smaller units

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Biological Perspective
  • Study the physiological mechanisms in the brain
    and nervous system that organize and control
    behavior
  • Focus may be at various levels
  • individual neurons
  • areas of the brain
  • specific functions like eating, emotion, or
    learning
  • Interest in behavior distinguishes biological
    psychology from many other biological sciences

19
Evolutionary Perspective
  • Influenced by Darwin and the emphasis on innate,
    adaptive behavior patterns
  • Application of principles of evolution to explain
    behavior and psychological processes

20
Behavioral Perspective
  • View of behavior based on experience or learning
  • Classical conditioning
  • Operant conditioning

21
Cognitive Perspective
  • How is knowledge acquired, organized, remembered,
    and used to guide behavior?
  • Influences include
  • Piaget studied intellectual development
  • Chomsky studied language
  • Cybernetics science of information processing

22
Psychodynamic Perspective
  • View of behavior based on experience treating
    patients
  • Psychoanalytic approach (Sigmund Freud)
  • both a method of treatment and a theory of the
    mind
  • behavior reflects combinations of conscious and
    unconscious influences
  • drives and urges within the unconscious component
    of mind influence thought and behavior
  • early childhood experiences shape unconscious
    motivations

23
Humanistic Perspective
  • Developed by Abraham Maslow and Carl Rogers
  • behavior reflects innate actualization
  • focus on conscious forces and self perception
  • more positive view of basic forces than Freuds
  • Goal of psychology is to study unique aspects of
    the person focuses
  • on subjective human experience.
  • Each person has innate goodness and is able to
    make free choices (contrast with Skinner and
    Freud).

24
Carl Rogers (19021987)
Abraham Maslow (19081970)
25
Cross-Cultural Perspective
  • The study of psychological differences among
    people living in different cultural groups
  • How are peoples thoughts, feelings and behavior
    influenced by their culture?
  • What are the common elements across culture? Are
    these innate?

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28
The Science of Psychology
29
Goals of Psychology
  • Describe
  • Explain
  • Predict
  • Control
  • behavior and mental processes

30
Scientific Method
  • Formulate testable questions
  • Develop hypotheses
  • Design study to collect data
  • Experimental
  • Descriptive
  • Analyze data to arrive at conclusions
  • Use of statistical procedures
  • Use of meta-analysis
  • Report results
  • Publication
  • Replication

31
Theory
  • Tentative explanation for observed findings
  • Results from accumulation of findings of
    individual studies
  • Tool for explaining observed behavior
  • Reflects self-correcting nature of scientific
    method.

32
Science vs. Common Sense
  • Science helps build explanations that are
    consistent and predictive rather than conflicting
    and postdictive (hindsight)
  • Science is based on
  • knowledge of facts
  • developing theories
  • testing hypotheses
  • public and repeatable procedures

33
Research Strategies
  • Descriptivestrategies for observing and
    describing behavior
  • Naturalistic observation
  • Case studies
  • Surveys
  • Correlational methods
  • Experimentalstrategies for inferring cause and
    effect relationships among variables

34
Definitions
  • Hypothesistentative statement about the
    relationship between variables
  • Variablesfactors that can vary in ways that can
    be observed, measured, and verified (independent
    versus dependent)
  • Operational definitionprecise description of how
    the variables will be measured

35
Descriptive Study
  • Describes a set of facts
  • Does not look for relationships between facts
  • Does not predict what may influence the facts
  • May or may not include numerical data
  • Example measure the percentage of new students
    from out-of-state each year since 1980

36
Naturalistic Observation
  • Researchers directly observe and record behavior
    rather than relying on subject descriptions. In
    naturalistic observation, researcher records
    behavior as it occurs naturally.

37
Case Study Method
  • Highly detailed description of a single
    individual
  • Generally used to investigate rare, unusual, or
    extreme conditions

38
Survey Methods
  • Designed to investigate opinions, behaviors, or
    characteristics of a particular group. Usually in
    self-report form.

39
Samples and Sampling
  • Populationlarge (potentially infinite) group
    represented by the sample. Findings are
    generalized to this group.
  • Sampleselected segment of the population
  • Representative sampleclosely parallels the
    population on relevant characteristics
  • Random selectionevery member of larger group has
    equal change of being selected for the study
    sample

40
Correlational Study
  • Collects a set of facts organized into two or
    more categories
  • measure parents disciplinary style
  • measure childrens behavior
  • Examine the relationship between categories
  • Correlation reveals relationships among facts
  • e.g., more democratic parents have children who
    behave better

41
Correlational Study
  • Correlation cannot prove causation
  • Do democratic parents produce better behaved
    children?
  • Do better behaved children encourage parents to
    be democratic?
  • May be an unmeasured common factor
  • e.g., good neighborhoods produce democratic
    adults and well-behaved children

42
Coefficient of Correlation
  • Numerical indication of magnitude and direction
    of the relationship between two variables
  • Positive correlationtwo variables vary
    systematically in the SAME direction
  • Negative correlationtwo variables vary
    systematically in OPPOSITE directions

43
Experiments
  • Direct way to test a hypothesis about a
    cause-effect relationship between factors
  • Factors are called variables
  • One variable is controlled by the experimenter
  • e.g., democratic vs. authoritarian classroom
  • The other is observed and measured
  • e.g., cooperative behavior among students

44
Experimental Variables
  • Independent variable (IV)
  • the controlled factor in an experiment (i.e. the
    one you manipulate)
  • hypothesized to cause an effect on another
    variable
  • Dependent variable (DV)
  • the measured facts
  • hypothesized to be influenced by IV

45
Independent Variable
  • Must have at least two levels
  • categories male vs. female
  • numeric ages 10, 12, 14
  • Simplest is experimental vs. control group
  • experimental gets treatment
  • control does not

46
Experimental Design
  • Random sampleevery member of the population
    being studied should have an equal chance of
    being selected for the study
  • Random assignmentevery subject in the study
    should have an equal chance of being placed in
    either the experimental or control group
  • Randomization helps avoid false results

47
Sources of Bias
  • Expectancy effectschange in DV produced by
    subjects expectancy that change should happen
  • Demand characteristicssubtle cues or signals by
    the researcher that communicate type of responses
    that are expected.

48
Control of Bias
  • Placebo control groupexposed to a fake IV
    (placebo), the effects of which are compared to
    group receiving the actual IV.
  • Double-blind studytechnique in which neither the
    experimenter nor participant is aware of the
    group to which participant is assigned

49
Ethical Guidelines
  • Informed consent and voluntary participation
  • Students as participants
  • Use of deception
  • Confidentiality of records
  • Information about the study and debriefing
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