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What is Psychology

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Title: What is Psychology


1
What is Psychology?
  • The science of behavior and the mind
  • behavior - observable actions
  • mind - subjective experiences (thoughts,
    feelings, sensations, perceptions, memories,
    dreams, motives)
  • science
  • an objective way to answer questions
  • based on observable facts / data and well
    described methods

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What is Psychology?
  • A set of questions about mental functioning
  • trace back to philosophy
  • Aristotle asked about memory, personality,
    emotions, etc.
  • A set of theories and procedures for asking and
    answering questions
  • the scientific method
  • A product of history
  • religion, philosophy, physiology

4
Philosophical Developments
BIG
  • A Question How are mind and body
    related?
  • Dualism - body and soul are separate but
    interrelated
  • origins in medieval religion
  • Soul seat of thought and intellect
  • mind is product of soul
  • mind not subject to scientific inquiry
  • to challenge this was punishable by death
  • (compare to astronomy (Ptolemy vs. Copernicus,
    Galileo)

5
Philosophical Developments
  • Rene Descartes (1596-1650)
  • since animals have no soul, much behavior does
    not require soul
  • the body can therefore control much behavior
  • led him to study reflexes
  • the souls main function is thought, a uniquely
    human attribute

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Philosophical Developments
  • Materialism Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
  • only matter, energy exist
  • mind product of brain (matter), thus subject to
    natural law
  • Empiricism Locke, Hume
  • knowledge and thought derive from sensory
    experience
  • thought not produced by free will but by
    experience
  • Empiricism vs. Nativism aka Nature vs Nurture

9
Foundations of Modern Psychology
  • Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
  • Theory of natural selection (1859)
  • views traits in light of adaptive function
  • Humans are part/ product of nature and can be
    understood through the methods of science

10
Foundations of Modern Psychology
  • Darwins theory encouraged scientific inquiry of
    human behavior
  • 19th century physiology
  • scientific methods, controlled laboratory
    experiments
  • influential beliefs from early physiology
  • reflexology - all human behaviors occur through
    reflexes
  • localization of brain function

11
Foundations of Modern Psychology
  • Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920)
  • first psychology laboratory Leibzig 1879
  • structuralism - identify atoms of the mind
  • focused on basic sensory and perceptual processes
  • measured reaction times

12
Other Pioneers
  • Edward Titchener
  • structuralism, introspection
  • William James
  • functionalism, introspection not method but
    source of ideas
  • Mary Calkins, Christine Ladd-Franklin, Margaret
    Floy Washburn
  • Max Wertheimer
  • Gestalt psychology
  • phi phenomenon
  • http//psych.purdue.edu/Magniphi/SimpliPhi.html,
    http//psych.purdue.edu/Magniphi/MagniPhi.html

13
  • John Watson
  • Behaviorism S-R psychology (see reflexology)
  • B.F. Skinner
  • operant psychology
  • Konrad Lorenz
  • ethology animal behavior in natural environment
  • Karl Lashley
  • neural basis of learning

14
  • Sigmund Freud
  • psychoanalysis, unconscious mind
  • Carl Rogers, Abraham Maslow
  • humanistic psychology self-actualization drive
  • Cultural and Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Revolution
  • developed from S-O-R behaviorists
  • aided by Piaget, Chomsky

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Other Pioneers
  • Alfred Binet (1857-1911)
  • French intelligence researcher
  • developed first intelligence test
  • Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936)
  • Russian physiologist
  • discovered conditioned reflexes
  • B.F. Skinner (1904-1990)
  • American psychologist at Harvard
  • studied learning and effect of reinforcement
  • behaviorism

17
Perspectives
  • Perspective is a way of viewing phenomena
  • Psychology has multiple perspectives
  • ethological
  • biological
  • psychoanalytic
  • cognitive
  • cross- cultural
  • social

18
Ethology
  • The study of animal behavior in the natural
    environment rather than in a lab setting
  • Influenced by Darwin and the emphasis on innate,
    adaptive behavior patterns
  • European approach to studying behavior founded by
    animal researchers, Lorenz and Tinbergen

19
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

20
Clinical 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

21
Clinical Perspective
  • View of behavior based on experience treating
    patients
  • Humanistic approach
  • 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

22
Cultural Psychology
  • 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?

23
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

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The Profession of Psychology
  • American Psychological Association had 52
    divisions in 1998
  • Some represent areas of training and
    specialization (e.g., developmental, clinical)
  • Some are applied (i.e., teaching in psychology,
    psychology and the law)

26
Areas of Specialization
  • Clinical
  • abnormal behavior and psychological disorders
  • psychologist vs. psychiatrist
  • Health psychology
  • psychological factors in physical health
  • Counseling
  • dealing with normal life situations
  • provide guidance

27
Areas of Specialization
  • Developmental
  • psychological change over the life span
  • social, cognitive, personality
  • School
  • counseling and guidance in school settings
  • Educational
  • learning and teaching

28
Areas of Specialization
  • Psychobiology
  • brain and behavior
  • studied at many levels
  • often uses animals as research model
  • Experimental
  • basic laboratory focus
  • animals or humans
  • learning, memory, motivation
  • Cognitive
  • experimental
  • human memory, perception, etc.

29
Areas of Specialization
  • Social
  • social influences on cognition and emotion
  • attitudes and beliefs
  • Personality
  • individual differences
  • perception by others
  • Industrial/organizational
  • people and work
  • job satisfaction
  • training and selection

30
Professional Work Settings
  • Colleges and universities
  • Clinical settings
  • Elementary and secondary schools
  • Business
  • Government
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