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Chapter 1 Introduction to Psychology

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Title: Chapter 1 Introduction to Psychology


1
Chapter 1Introduction to Psychology
  • WHAT IS PSYCHOLOGY?

2
Definition of Psychology
Psychology the science of behavior and mental
processes.
3
Goals of Psychology (4)
4
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5
Two types of research help psychologists
accomplish the four goals
  • Basic Research
  • Applied Research
  • Research conducted to seek new knowledge and to
    explore and advance general scientific
    understanding.
  • Explores such topics as the nature of memory,
    brain function, motivation and emotional
    expression.
  • Research conducted specifically to solve
    practical problems and improve the quality of
    life.
  • Focuses on finding methods to improve memory or
    increase motivation, therapies to treat
    psychological disorders, ways to decrease stress,
    and so on.
  • Influence because it specifies ways and means of
    changing behavior.

6
  • The first formal school of thought in psychology,
    aimed at analyzing the basic elements, or
    structures, of conscious mental experience
  • School of psychology that sought to determine the
    structure of the mind through controlled
    introspection.

7
Wilhelm Wundt Structuralism
  • Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920) is generally thought of
    as the father of psychology.
  • Established the first psychological laboratory at
    the University of Leipzig in Germany in 1879, an
    event considered to mark the birth of psychology
    as a formal discipline.
  • Wanted to identify the basic elements that make
    up conscious experience (pure sensations such as
    sweetness, coldness, or redness) and form
    perceptions.
  • They used the process of introspection to look
    inward at ones own consciousness.

8
Edward Titchner Structuralism
  • Edward Titchner (1867-1927) was Wundts student
  • He took the field to the United States, where he
    set up a psychological laboratory at Cornell
    University.
  • He gave the name structuralism to this school
    of thought.
  • Thought that consciousness could be reduced to
    its basic elements just as water (h2o) can be
    broken down into its constituent
    elements---hydrogen (h) and oxygen (o).

9
Introspection
  • Even though these skydivers share the same
    sensations---the feeling of falling, the rush of
    the air on their faces as they fall, and the
    sudden lurch of their parachutes opening---their
    reported introspections of the experience would
    probably differ.
  • Criticism its not objective but rather
    subjective.

10
Functionalism
  • Functionalism An early school of psychology that
    was concerned with how humans and animals use
    mental processes in adapting to their
    environment.
  • Influence by Charles Darwin about ideas of
    evolution and the continuity of species.
  • William James (1842-1910) taught the first
    Psychology course in 1875 taught that mental
    processes are fluid and have continuity, rather
    than fixed/rigid (structuralists suggested)
  • He viewed mental processes as existent only on
    the basis of their requirement for our survival
    as a species.
  • The functions of the mind, not its raw elements,
    were the subject matter of psychology for the
    functionalists.

11
Contemporary Psychological Perspectives
  • The view of modern psychologists are frequently
    difficult to categorize into traditional schools
    of thought.
  • Psychological Perspectives general points of
    view used for explaining peoples behavior and
    thinking, whether normal or abnormal.

12
Contemporary Psychological Perspectives
  • Behaviorism
  • Psychoanalysis
  • Humanistic Psychology
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Evolutionary Psychology
  • Biological (Physiological) Psychology
  • Sociocultural Approach

13
Behaviorism
  • Behaviorism The school of psychology that views
    observable, measureable behavior and emphasizes
    the key role of the environment as a determinant
    of a behavior.
  • Ivan Pavlov (behaviorist) Started the idea of
    conditioning, where an inherited reflex comes to
    be triggered by a stimulus that has nothing to do
    with that reflex. He showed that even inherited
    reflexes could be influenced dramatically by
    learning experiences.
  • John Watson (1878-1958) postulated that concepts
    such as the mind, consciousness, and feelings are
    neither objective or measurable.
  • B. .F Skinner (1904-1990) argued that these
    concepts are not needed to explain behavior. One
    can explain behavior, he claimed, by analyzing
    the conditions that are present before a behavior
    occurs and then analyzing the consequences that
    follow the behavior. (operant conditioning
    reinforcement)

14
Psychoanlysis
  • Psychoanalysis technique of helping people with
    emotional problems based on Freuds theory of the
    unconscious mind (based on case studied of his
    pts)
  • Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) believed that
    individuals do not consciously control their
    thoughts, feelings and behavior these are
    instead determined by unconscious forces.
  • Unconscious Mind all mental activity of which we
    are unaware.
  • He believed that the roots of psychological
    problems were innate motives, internal states
    that activate behavior, particularly sexual and
    aggressive ones.
  • He believed that these motives and the conflicts
    surrounding them influence us, even though we do
    not know they exist.
  • Motives internal state or conditions that
    activate behavior and give it direction.

15
Humanistic Psychology
  • Humanistic Psychology The school of psychology
    that focuses on the uniqueness of human beings
    and their capacity for choice, growth and
    psychological health.
  • Carl Rogers (1902-1987) believe that while the
    unconscious mind can defeat the efforts of the
    conscious mind, the conscious mind of human
    beings are more likely to determine their own
    fate.
  • They believe that self-concept is the key element
    in decision making. Society, however, makes it
    difficult to have an accurate self-concept.
  • People are capable of making conscious rational
    choices and are innately good and possess free
    will.

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Cognitive Psychology
  • Cognitive Psychology the school of psychology
    that studies mental processes such as memory,
    problem solving, reasoning, decision making,
    perception, language, and other forms of
    cognition.
  • Gestalt Psychology The school of psychology that
    emphasizes that individuals perceive objects and
    patterns as whole units and that the perceived
    whole units is more than the sum of its parts.
  • Information-Processing Theory An approach to the
    study of mental processes that uses the computer
    as a model for human thinking.

18
Gestalt Psychology
  • Led by Max Wertheimer who based his approach to
    psychology on the German concept of the Gestalt,
    or whole, form, pattern.
  • Perception has meaning only when its seen as
    whole rather than as a simple collection of
    elements, as the structuralists implied
  • Phi Phenomenon the perception of apparent
    movement between two stationary stimuli.

19
What do you see?
  • 1. the white silhouette  figures of two heads
  • 2. a black chalice?
  • image of a womans face
  • 2. the profile of a jazzman saxophone player

20
Gestalt Phi Phenomenon
  • Two light bulbs are placed a short distance apart
    in a dark room. The 1st light is flashing the
    lights on and off just as the 2nd light is
    flashed on. As this pattern of flashing lights on
    and off continues, an observer sees what appears
    to be a single light moving back and forth from
    one position to another.
  • For example motion pictures are based on phi
    phenomenon, a series of still images that change
    slightly in each frame is projected on screen so
    quickly they appear to move
  • http//www.yorku.ca/eye/balls.htm

21
Information-Processing Theory
  • According to this view, the brain processes
    information in sequential steps, similar to a
    computer does serial processing, that is, one
    step at a time.
  • Parallel processing managing multiple bits of
    information at once.

22
Evolutionary Psychology
  • Evolutionary Psychology The school of psychology
    that studies how human behaviors required for
    survival have adapted in the face of
    environmental pressures over the long course of
    evolution.
  • Influence by Charles Darwins theory which
    asserts that individual members of a given
    species who possesses characteristics that help
    them survive are the most likely to pass on the
    genes underlying those characteristics to
    subsequent generations (survival of the fittest)

23
Biological (Physiological) Psychology
  • Biological (Physiological) Psychology The school
    of psychology that looks for links between
    specific behaviors and equally specific
    biological processes that often help explain
    individual differences.
  • Study the structures of the brain and central
    nervous system, the functioning of the neurons,
    neurotransmitters and hormones, and heredity.

24
Evolutionary Psychology versus Biological
Psychology
  • Evolutionary Psychology provides explanations of
    how certain biologically based behaviors came to
    be common in an entire species focuses on
    universals, traits that exist in every member of
    a species.
  • By contrast, biological psychologists look for
    links between specific behaviors and particular
    biological factors that often help explain
    individual differences.

25
Sociocultural Approach
  • Sociocultural Approach emphasizes social and
    cultural influences on human behavior and
    stresses the importance of understanding those
    influences when interpretating the behaviors of
    others.
  • Cultural relativity promotes the view that
    different cultures, ethnic groups, genders, and
    sexual orientations are simply different from,
    rather than inferior to, others.

26
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28
Which school of psychology is correct?
  • Psychologists do not limit themselves to just one
    perspective or approach, but rather take an
    eclectic approach, choosing a combination of
    approaches.
  • For example, a childs unruly behavior in school
    may be seen as maintained by teacher attention (a
    behavioral explanation) but as initially caused
    by an emotional reaction to a family event such
    as divorce (a psychoanalytic explanation).

29
Basic Areas of Modern Psychologytend to
specialize in the study of a single psychological
process
  • Biological Psychology study the ways in which
    the nervous system and other organs provide the
    basis for behavior and mental processes. They
    also study nonhuman animal behavior, both to
    compare it with human behavior and to gain a
    better understanding of other species.
  • Sensation and Perception concerned with how the
    sense organs operate and how to interpret
    incoming sensory information.
  • Learning and Memory the ways in which we learn
    and remember new information and new skills.
  • Cognition study thinking, perceiving, planning,
    imagining, creating, dreaming, speaking,
    listening, and problem solving.

30
Basic Areas of Modern Psychologytend to
specialize in the study of a single psychological
process
  • 5. Developmental Psychology concerned with
    changes that take place in people during their
    life span, as we grow from birth through old age.
  • 6. Motivation and Emotion study the needs and
    states that activate and guide behavior, such as
    hunger, sex, and the need for achievement, and
    the need to have relationships with others.
  • 7. Personality focuses on the relatively
    consistent ways of behaving that characterize our
    individual personalities.
  • 8. Social Psychology study the influence of
    other people on our behavior interpersonal
    attraction and intimate relationships and
    attitudes and prejudice toward others.

31
Applied Areas of Modern Psychologysubspecialties
  • Clinical Psychology try to understand and treat
    serious emotional and behavioral problems.
  • Counseling Psychology help people with personal
    or school problems and with career choices.
  • Educational Psychology concerned with the ways
    children learn in the classroom and with the
    construction of psychological/educational tests.
  • 3. School Psychology consult with teachers
    about children who are experiencing learning or
    behavioral problems and test children to see
    whether they could benefit from special
    educational programs.

32
Applied Areas of Modern Psychologysubspecialties
  • 4. Industrial and Organizational Psychology
    focuses on ways to match employees to jobs, to
    train and motivate workers, and to promote job
    satisfaction and good relationships among
    workers.
  • 5. Health Psychology focus on the ways in which
    stress and other factors influence our health.
    They seek to prevent health problems such as
    heart disease by teaching people to relax,
    exercise, control their diets, and stop high-risk
    behaviors, such as smoking.

33
Relationship between Psychology Psychiatry
  • Psychiatrist completed medical school and
    obtained a M.D. (doctor of medicine) degrees and
    completed residency training in psychiatry.
    Prescribe medication.
  • Clinical Psychologist completed graduate school
    and obtained a degree of PsyD (doctor of
    psychology) or PhD (doctor of philosophy), and
    completed an internship in clinical psychology.
  • As of January 2009, properly trained and
    qualified, licensed psychologists in New Mexico
    and Louisiana are authorized to prescribe certain
    medications for the treatment of mental health
    disorders. In addition, there are many efforts
    within the field to expand this authority.

34
The True Nature of Humans
  • 1. Human beings are biological creatures.
  • 2. Every person is different, yet all people are
    much the same.
  • 3. People can be understood fully only in the
    context of their cultures and other social
    influences.
  • 4. Human lives are a continuous process of
    change.
  • 5. Behavior is motivated.
  • 6. Humans are social animals.
  • 7. People play an active part in creating their
    experiences.
  • 8. Behavior can be adaptive or maladaptive.

35
Your School of PsychologyStrongly Disagree
12.3.4..5.6.7 Strongly Agree
  • People are free spirits, and science will never
    be able to really understand what causes
    behavior.
  • Our personalities are shaped and determined by
    things that happen to us during our lives.
  • Most of the time we do what we do in order to
    defend ourselves against threats that come from
    inside our own brains.
  • Most peoples personalities are set by the time
    they are five or six years old. People really
    dont change much after that.
  • 5. All that talk of deep-rooted forces seems like
    bunk. We should just worry about what people
    actually do.

36
Your School of Psychology
Strongly Disagree 12.3.4..5.6.7
Strongly Agree
  • 6. Science makes a mistake when it tries to take
    everything apart. If you want to understand a
    person, you have to look at the whole, not the
    parts.
  • 7. The best thing about people is that we are
    free to make choices and direct our lives.
  • 8. Strong drives such as sex cause people to
    behave in certain ways.
  • 9. I think that anyone could grow up to be a
    criminal of he or she were raised in the wrong
    environment.
  • 10. I think people are not really conscious of
    the kinds of forces that direct their behavior.
  • 11. Someday we will be able to explain behavior
    in the same way that we can explain events in
    biology and chemistry.
  • 12. Thinking and feeling are the most important
    causes of behavior.

37
Results
  • Psychoanalytic Score add the scores from 3, 4,
    8, 10
  • Behaviorism Score add the scores from 2, 5, 9,
    11
  • Humanistic Score add the scores from 1, 6, 7, 12
  • __________________________________________________
    ____
  • The psychoanalytic approach understands us from
    the point of view of the unconscious and early
    childhood experiences (id, ego, superego).
  • The behavioralist approach measures observable
    behaviors.
  • The humanist approach emphasizes the study of the
    whole person (free will).
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