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Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches: Modern

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Title: Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches: Modern


1
2 29 07
  • Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • 1. False memories, child abuse
  • 2. Is child abuse bad for you?
  • 3. Modern view of unconscious
  • 4. Object relations theory neo-Freudian

2
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Holly Ramona
  • Counselor Marche Isabella
  • Recovering such memories
  • Sodium amytal, a hypnosis drug
  • Repeated questions, suggestions related to sex
    abuse
  • Subsequently,

3
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Subsequent to allegations
  • Loses wife
  • Loses daughter
  • Loses job
  • Reputation irreparably damaged

4
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Gary Ramona
  • Loftus, an expert witness
  • there is no support that you can be repeatedly
    rapedover a period of years and totally forget
    about it
  • Martin Orne, another expert witness
  • Sodium amytal
  • Results in untrustworthy recall
  • Leads to high states of suggestibility

5
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Gary Ramona case

6
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Do psychoanalysts contribute to false memories of
    abuse?
  • Low self-esteem
  • Self-destructive thoughts
  • Depression
  • Sexual dysfunction
  • Yes, but

7
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Hypnosis
  • Does not actually improve memory accuracy
  • Does make people more suggestible
  • Can lead to imagining rather than remembering
    prior abuse

8
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Loftus 30 years of research
  • Can convince you a stop sign was present when it
    wasnt
  • Can convince people they got lost in a shopping
    mall at an early age
  • Can convince you that you shook hands with Bugs
    Bunny as a child

9
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Memory
  • But this does not mean that the memory was
    repressed?

10
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Creating false memories is easy
  • Learn list
  • Bed, rest, awake, tired, dream, wake, snooze,
    blanket, doze, slumber, snore, nap, peace, yawn,
    drowsy

11
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Test was word on list?
  • Snooze
  • Mother
  • Bed
  • Television
  • Sleep
  • Chair

12
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Test was word on list?
  • Many of the words were semantically-related to
    sleep (bed, slumber, so forth)
  • In learning list, actual words prime sleep
    because related to it
  • Later, sleep remembered as having occurred

13
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Thoughts (either during or after event) also
    become part of event
  • Repeatedly thinking about abuse
  • Talking about abuse
  • Leads to creation of abuse memory

14
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • 54 neglect
  • 23 physical abuse
  • 12 sexual abuse
  • 5.5 psychological abuse, medical neglect
  • 1,100 die from abuse and neglect
  • Most children lt 5

15
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Rind et al. (1998) meta-analysis of effects of
    child abuse
  • reported in Psychological Bulletin
  • Findings
  • Not at the science
  • But at Rind et al for their conclusions

16
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Is child abuse bad for you?
  • (1)
  • Assume that abuse must be present
  • Simply couldnt believe Rind et al conclusions
  • (2)
  • Cited Rind et al
  • See, its not bad for the children
  • (3)
  • Resolution condemning Rind et al (1998)
  • Passed unanimously

17
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Rind et al only looked at college samples
  • Perhaps other abused people never make it to
    college
  • Abuse was retrospective self-reported
  • How many saying they were abused
  • Were actually abused?

18
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Is child abuse bad for you?
  • Perhaps we would distinguish consequences from
    morality

19
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Contemporary views of unconscious
  • Rather
  • Operates by priming, association
  • 100s of social psychology studies

20
Priming Effects in Social Psychology
  • Priming make certain info more accessible
  • - 1) Carver et al. (1983)
  • Incidental hostility priming
  • Subsequently gave more shocks
  • - 2) Bargh et al. (1996)
  • Incidental hostility priming
  • Subsequently interrupted experimenter more often

21
Conception to Action
  • Priming trait constructs should activate relevant
    behaviors
  • - 3) Macrae and Johnson (1998)
  • Incidental altruism priming
  • Helping in staged pencil spill incident
  • - 4) Epley and Gilovich (1999)
  • Incidental priming of conformity concepts
  • More likely to agree with confederate

22
Conception to Action
  • Priming stereotypes should activate relevant
    behaviors
  • - 5) Bargh et al. (1996)
  • Elderly primes (bingo, Florida)
  • Walking slowly out of lab
  • - 6) Arts Dijksterhuis (2001)
  • Priming speed through animal concepts (cheetah
    vs. snail)
  • Walking slowly out of the lab

23
Conception to Action
  • Priming stereotypes should activate relevant
    behaviors
  • - 7) Dijksterhuis van Knippenberg (2000)
  • Priming politician stereotype
  • Wrote longer essays
  • - 8) Dijksterhuis van Knippenberg (1998)
  • Priming professors or soccer hooligans
  • Trivial pursuit
  • Did better if professor primed

24
Conception to Action
  • Smile controllable
  • Foot twitching controllable
  • Walking speed controllable
  • Aggression controllable
  • Intelligence, trivia knowledge not controllable
  • Memory performance not controllable
  • Math test think about Asians for a while
  • Verbal test think about women for a while
  • Being more assertive think about men for a while

25
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • What is important to development
  • Being able to develop meaningful relationships
  • Being able to relate to others authentically
    (rather than selfishly)
  • People internalize significant others
  • Mom is in your head, saying things to you

26
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Harlows studies
  • No mom
  • Just a wire mom that has plenty of food
  • Such monkeys did not develop normally
  • Early relationship important to later social
    functioning

27
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Attachment theory
  • Can be used to diagnose early attachment
  • Stranger enters, mom leaves, mom returns
  • How does infant respond?
  • A bit cautious when mom leaves
  • Very happy when she returns
  • Avoided mom when she returned
  • Presumably, mom cant be relied upon
  • Very anxious when mom leaves
  • But ambivalent upon her return

28
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Internalized expectations of others
  • Secure others are fun, can be trusted
  • Insecure be wary of others
  • Secure healthy relationships
  • Avoidant uncomfortable with commitment,
    intimacy
  • Anxious clingy, needy in relationships

29
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Which is true of you?
  • A. I am typically comfortable with others and
    find it easy to become close friends with people.
    I can easily come to rely on others and enjoy it
    when they rely on me.
  • B. I am sometimes tense when I get too close to
    others. I dont like to trust other people too
    muchPeople often want me to be more personal and
    intimate than I feel like being.
  • C. In relationships, I often worry that the other
    person does not really want to stay with
    medoesnt really love me. I often wish that my
    friends would share moreMaybe I scare people
    away with my readiness to become close

30
Ch 10 Psychoanalytic Approaches Modern
  • Meta-analysis of attachment research
  • Fraley (2002)

31
The pope is in my head
  • Mark Baldwins research
  • Important others (pope, mom, etc.) are in ones
    own head
  • E.g., disapproving parents
  • disapproval of self

32
The pope is in my head
  • Study 1
  • Zajonc
  • Head of department at U Mich
  • Seen as imposing, tough audience

33
The pope is in my head
  • Study 1
  • 16 grad students, 1 postdoc
  • 2 ms, masked exposures
  • Scowling Zajonc (your work is sub-standard)
  • Smiling Ellard (lets be friends nice job)

34
The pope is in my head
  • Study 1
  • Procedure
  • 1. Write down research ideas
  • 2. RT task with subliminal primes (random
    assignment to condition)
  • 3. Evaluate own research ideas

35
The pope is in my head
  • Study 1
  • Thus
  • View of self
  • Influenced by internal audience (either
    supportive or critical)
  • And this internal audience can be primed
    subliminally

36
The pope is in my head
  • Study 2
  • Then random assignment to priming
  • Neutral no faces
  • Critical, not relevant scowling Zajonc
  • Critical, relevant scowling Pope
  • Honest, intelligent, good, talented, etc.

37
The pope is in my head
  • Study 2
  • Main effect for condition on self-evaluation
  • Neutral (no face) 7.02
  • Criticial, unfamililar (Zajonc) 7.09
  • Critical, familiar (Pope) 6.30
  • Thus

38
The pope is in my head
  • Study 2
  • Ss also rate whether they are practicing
    Catholics or not
  • Results
  • not practicing practicing
  • Neutral 6.93 7.11
  • Zajonc 6.64 7.77
  • Pope 6.70 6.00

39
The pope is in my head
  • Conclusions
  • 1.
  • Important others (e.g., Pope)
  • Inside ones head
  • Unconsciously influencing self-evaluation,
    behavior
  • 2.
  • Experiences with caregiver
  • Could give rise to internal working models (of
    self, other, relationships)
  • That are carried throughout life

40
The pope is in my head
  • Conclusions
  • 3.
  • Not sex or death
  • But rather important relationships, self-concept
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