UNIT 2 PSYCH
Kaplan and Kaplan Suggest that babies go through four stages to produce words
Crying
Cooing
Babbling
Speech
Verbal Communication
speaking-oral
writing
Non- Verbal Communication
body language and gestures
facial expressions
space and touch
clothing
eye contact
Stages of Written Language
Pictography
Ideaography
Phonology
Advantages using Pictography
takes up less space
not language specific
don’t need to able to read
Disadvantage using Pictography
open to interpretation
lacks detail
no abstract ideas
3 Influences on Facial Expressions
our culture tells us how to feel about what happens to us
Our culture teaches us about when to control our facial expressions
Our culture teacher es what to do after we have shown an expression
Agents of Socialization
family
friends
school
the media
The 5 Big Personality Traits (OCEAN)
openness
conscientiousness
extroverted ness
agreeableness
neuroticism
Eriksons Stages of development
Birth- trust vs mistrust
1-3 yrs Autonomy vs doubt
3-5 yrs Initiative vs guilt
6- 11 yrs Industriousness vs Conformity
12- 18 yrs Identity vs Role Confusion
19- 30 yrs Intimacy vs Isolation
30- 60 yrs Productivity vs Stagnation
60 yrs + Ego integrity vs despair
Sigmund Freud’s Psychoanalytic Theory
The ID - uses no logic or value, and only works on pleasure
The EGO - manager of personality, tries to satisfy the id in a socially acceptable way
The SUPEREGO - develops at 5, usually what we call conscious and tells us what is right or wrong - feeling guilty and only deals with ego not id
How is Sigmund Freud’s theory related to an iceberg
water level represents the level of conscious
we are only aware of a little of it
most of the iceberg is hidden- the id and superego
only the tip of the iceberg is visible representing the ego
Carl Jung
did not agree with Freud on theories of sexual motivation
he felt that human behavior revolved around Good vs Evil, Man vs Women
he felt that the unconscious mind did not only hold personal experience but common cultural experiences as well - collective unconscious
Alfred Adler
he shared with Freud that early childhood experiences have a big impact on a person’s life
Unlike Freud, he believes that much of what motivates people is the need to overcome feelings of inferiority that are usually perceived by unconscious mind
Karen Horney
agreed with Freud about motivation coming from unconscious
she believed that motivation comes from feelings of unsafe, unloved or undervalues
she believed that children who are loved and feel safe develop positive personality traits and those who are not, use defense mechanisms to protect themselves
strongly disagree with Freud about women’s envy of men
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Maslow did the complete opposite of Freud’s theory
Maslow believed that we need to meet each of the lower needs on the hierarchy before we can turn our attention to the next one
once we have met our needs at a certain level, we may go back to lower need levels
Physiological, Safety, love and belonging, esteem, and self- actualization
3 Components of an emotion
cognitive
physical/ physiological
behavioural
3 Factors that shape Emotions
heredity
learning
maturity
James Lang’s Theory of Emotions
eliciting stimulus → Overt behavioural Response → Physiological Arousal → Perceived Arousal → Emotion
5 Categories of Mental Illness
Anxiety Disorders- OCD, GAD, Eating disorders, phobias
Mood Disorder - Bipolar Disorder, depression, Mania, SAD
Schizophrenic Disorders- schizophrenia, paranoid schizophrenia
Personality Disorders- borderline personality disorder, antisocialpd, ODD< psycopathy, sociopathy
Substance Related Disorders- alcohol use disorder, opioid use disorder,
Kaplan and Kaplan Suggest that babies go through four stages to produce words
Crying
Cooing
Babbling
Speech
Verbal Communication
speaking-oral
writing
Non- Verbal Communication
body language and gestures
facial expressions
space and touch
clothing
eye contact
Stages of Written Language
Pictography
Ideaography
Phonology
Advantages using Pictography
takes up less space
not language specific
don’t need to able to read
Disadvantage using Pictography
open to interpretation
lacks detail
no abstract ideas
3 Influences on Facial Expressions
our culture tells us how to feel about what happens to us
Our culture teaches us about when to control our facial expressions
Our culture teacher es what to do after we have shown an expression
Agents of Socialization
family
friends
school
the media
The 5 Big Personality Traits (OCEAN)
openness
conscientiousness
extroverted ness
agreeableness
neuroticism
Eriksons Stages of development
Birth- trust vs mistrust
1-3 yrs Autonomy vs doubt
3-5 yrs Initiative vs guilt
6- 11 yrs Industriousness vs Conformity
12- 18 yrs Identity vs Role Confusion
19- 30 yrs Intimacy vs Isolation
30- 60 yrs Productivity vs Stagnation
60 yrs + Ego integrity vs despair
Sigmund Freud’s Psychoanalytic Theory
The ID - uses no logic or value, and only works on pleasure
The EGO - manager of personality, tries to satisfy the id in a socially acceptable way
The SUPEREGO - develops at 5, usually what we call conscious and tells us what is right or wrong - feeling guilty and only deals with ego not id
How is Sigmund Freud’s theory related to an iceberg
water level represents the level of conscious
we are only aware of a little of it
most of the iceberg is hidden- the id and superego
only the tip of the iceberg is visible representing the ego
Carl Jung
did not agree with Freud on theories of sexual motivation
he felt that human behavior revolved around Good vs Evil, Man vs Women
he felt that the unconscious mind did not only hold personal experience but common cultural experiences as well - collective unconscious
Alfred Adler
he shared with Freud that early childhood experiences have a big impact on a person’s life
Unlike Freud, he believes that much of what motivates people is the need to overcome feelings of inferiority that are usually perceived by unconscious mind
Karen Horney
agreed with Freud about motivation coming from unconscious
she believed that motivation comes from feelings of unsafe, unloved or undervalues
she believed that children who are loved and feel safe develop positive personality traits and those who are not, use defense mechanisms to protect themselves
strongly disagree with Freud about women’s envy of men
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Maslow did the complete opposite of Freud’s theory
Maslow believed that we need to meet each of the lower needs on the hierarchy before we can turn our attention to the next one
once we have met our needs at a certain level, we may go back to lower need levels
Physiological, Safety, love and belonging, esteem, and self- actualization
3 Components of an emotion
cognitive
physical/ physiological
behavioural
3 Factors that shape Emotions
heredity
learning
maturity
James Lang’s Theory of Emotions
eliciting stimulus → Overt behavioural Response → Physiological Arousal → Perceived Arousal → Emotion
5 Categories of Mental Illness
Anxiety Disorders- OCD, GAD, Eating disorders, phobias
Mood Disorder - Bipolar Disorder, depression, Mania, SAD
Schizophrenic Disorders- schizophrenia, paranoid schizophrenia
Personality Disorders- borderline personality disorder, antisocialpd, ODD< psycopathy, sociopathy
Substance Related Disorders- alcohol use disorder, opioid use disorder,