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Unit 0: History and Scientific Practices of Psychology

Key

Science of Psychology

Psychology as a science

  • psychology uses the tools of science to: describe, predict, explain, and control behavior and mental processes

The ‘rat is always right’

  • facts speak for themselves

  • results have to be accepted even if the hypothesis is wrong

Key elements of the scientific attitude

  • curiosity: asking questions

  • skepticism: sifting reality from fantasy and demanding evidence

  • humility: accepting incorrect predictions

Critical Thinking

  • examining assumptions

  • appraising the source

  • discerning hidden biases

  • evaluating evidence

  • assessing conclusions

History of Psychology

The beginnings of Psychology

  • Socrates and Plato

    • mind and body are separate

    • mind continues after death

  • Aristotle

    • data is required to prove anything

  • Descartes

    • agreed with Socrates

  • Francis Bacon

    • founder of modern science

    • empiricism: all knowledge is derived from sense experiences

  • John Locke

    • tabula rasa: the mind at birth is a blank slate upon which experience writes

First Psychologists

  • Wilheim Wundt (1832-1920)

    • established the first psychology lab

    • wanted to measure ‘atoms of the mind’ the fasted mental processes

    • trained 160 psychology students

      • Edward Bradford Titchener (1867-1927)

        • introduced structuralism to study the events of the mind

        • used introspection

        • structuralism: early school focused on identifying the elements of thought and mind structures

        • introspection: the process of looking inward to directly observe one’s own psychological process

Milestones in Psychology

  • Charles Darwin (1809-1882)

    • natural selection of mental and physical traits

    • adaptive evolution

    • influenced William James

  • William James (1842-1910)

    • introduced functionalism

    • functionalism: assumes structures of consciousness must serve a function that helps the organism adapt, survive, and flourish

  • Mary Whiton Calkins (1863-1930)

    • student of William James

    • denied her PhD due to her gender

    • researched memory

    • first female president of the APA

  • Margaret Floy Washburn

    • student of Titchener

    • first female to earn a PhD in psychology

    • researched the animal mind

  • John B Watson

  • BF Skinner

    • Behaviorism: psychology should be an objective science, observable behavior is important to study but not unseen mental processes

  • Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)

    • developed an influential treatment process called psychoanalysis

    • psychoanalysis: unconscious forces and childhood experiences affect our behavior and mental processes

  • Abraham Maslow

  • Carl Rogers

    • humans strive to reach their full potential

    • personal growth

    • humanism: rejects behaviorism and psychoanalysis and studies the potential of personal growth in humans

Today’s Psychology

  • Psychology: the scientific study of behavior and mental processes of humans and animals

    • behavior: consists of any observable and measurable action taken by a person or other animal (anything a person DOES)

    • mental processes: consists of the internal, subjective experiences inferred from behavior (sensations, perceptions, dreams, thoughts, beliefs, feelings)

  • Ulric Neisser (1967)

    • cognitive psychology: the study of mental processes

  • psychology is growing and globalizing

    • contemporary psychology is influenced by biology, experience, culture, gender, and human flourishing

    • uses structuralism and combines ideas from many different psychologists

  • Nature vs Nurture

    • is it genes or experience?

    • nature: behavior and mental processes occur because they are inborn or innate

      • Evolutionary psychology

        • evolutionary psychology: the study of how behaviors and mental processes present in species today exist because they were naturally selected

        • behavior genetics: the study of the relative influence and it’s limits of genetic and environmental influences on behaviors and mental processes

    • nurture: behaviors and mental processes occur as a result of experience or the environment

      • Twin Studies

        • identical twins share 100% of the same DNA

        • studies have been done on them to study nature vs nurture

  • WEIRD cultures

    • WEIRD: western, educated, industrialized, rich, democratic

    • studies done only in one culture give a deep understanding into that culture, whereas studies done on multiple cultures provide a good comparison on how they are similar/different

  • Contemporary Psychology approaches

    • positive psychology: the scientific study of human flourishing

    • goal of discovering and promoting human strengths and virtues

    • strengthening individuals and communities

    • Martin Seligman

  • Biopsychosocial approach: understanding behavior and mental processes from three key viewpoints

    • biological factors

    • psychological factors

    • social-cultural factors

Types of Psychologists

  • cognitive psychologists: They study human thinking and might work as a professor

    or a corporate consultant

  • developmental psychologists: They study how our behavior changes as we age

  • educational psychologists: They study how we learn in different environments and in

    different ways

  • experimental psychologists: They conduct experiments to understand our behaviors

    and mental processes

  • psychometric psychologists: They use math and statistics to create, administer, score

    and interpret tests

  • social psychologists: They study how we interact with others and how groups impact us individually

  • forensic psychologists: They bring law and psychology together. They might develop public policy for the mentally ill, consult on jury selection or help law enforcement in criminal cases

  • environmental psychologists: They study how we are influenced and affected by our natural or built (urban) surroundings

  • health psychologists: They work to promote health and prevent disease

  • I/O psychologists: They study the relationship between people and our work environments

  • neuropsychologists: They study how our brain impacts our behavior and thoughts. They might treat Alzheimer’s or stroke, work with athletes and concussions or with people with autism or ADHD

  • rehabilitation psychologists: They help individuals who have lost functioning after an

    accident or illness

  • school psychologists: They work with kids in school dealing with problems that may negatively impact learning in the classroom

  • sports psychologists: They work with athletes to help them improve their performance

  • clinical psychologists: They promote psychological health in individuals, groups, or organizations. May specialize in specific psychiatric disorders

  • community psychologists: They work with larger groups and communities and focusing on crisis management

  • counseling psychologists: They help individuals cope with or make difficult life changes

7 Perspectives of Psychology

  1. Psychodynamic Perspective

    • Focus: unconscious mind, early childhood experiences, interpersonal relationships

    • Key Concepts: defense mechanisms, psychosexual stages, id, ego, superego

    • Example: a therapist helping a patient understand their childhood trauma and how it affects their current relationships

  2. Behavioral Perspective

    • Focus: learned behaviors, conditioning, reinforcement

    • Key Concepts: classical conditioning, operant conditioning, positive and negative reinforcement

    • Example: a teacher using a reward system to encourage students to complete their work

  3. Cognitive Perspective

    • Focus: mental processes, memory, thinking, problem-solving

    • Key Concepts: Attention, perception, language, decision-making

    • Example: a therapist helping a patient identify and change negative thought patterns

  4. Biological Perspective

    • Focus: physical and biological bases of behavior

    • Key Concepts: brain structure, neurotransmitters, genetics

    • Example: a researcher studying the effects of s new drug on brain activity

  5. Sociocultural Perspective

    • Focus: how culture influences human behavior

    • Key Concepts: cultural norms, values, beliefs

    • Example: a researcher comparing the parenting styles of different cultures

  6. Evolutionary Perspective

    • Focus: How the theory of evolution can explain psychological processes

    • Key Concepts: natural selection, adaptation, survival of the fittest

    • Example: a researcher studying the evolution of mating processes

  7. Humanistic Perspective

    • Focus: motivation, self-actualization, personal growth

    • Key Concepts: Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, unconditional positive regard

    • Example: a therapist helping a patient develop a stronger sense of self-worth

Types of Biases

  • Hindsight Bias: the tendency to believe, after learning an outcome, that one would have foreseen it

    • I-knew-it-all-along phenomenon

  • Cognitive Bias: systemic errors in thinking- like shortcuts our brains take to make processing info easier and quicker, but they often lead us to incorrect ideas

  • Confirmation Bias: the tendency to search for, interpret and remember information that confirms our preexisting beliefs or opinions

    • instead of objectively evaluating all evidence, we give more weight to information that supports what we already think and discount evidence that contradicts our views

  • Overconfidence: having too much faith in our own judgement

    • occurs when we overestimate the accuracy of our own knowledge and judgement

Research Methods

Ethics

Statistics

ES

Unit 0: History and Scientific Practices of Psychology

Key

Science of Psychology

Psychology as a science

  • psychology uses the tools of science to: describe, predict, explain, and control behavior and mental processes

The ‘rat is always right’

  • facts speak for themselves

  • results have to be accepted even if the hypothesis is wrong

Key elements of the scientific attitude

  • curiosity: asking questions

  • skepticism: sifting reality from fantasy and demanding evidence

  • humility: accepting incorrect predictions

Critical Thinking

  • examining assumptions

  • appraising the source

  • discerning hidden biases

  • evaluating evidence

  • assessing conclusions

History of Psychology

The beginnings of Psychology

  • Socrates and Plato

    • mind and body are separate

    • mind continues after death

  • Aristotle

    • data is required to prove anything

  • Descartes

    • agreed with Socrates

  • Francis Bacon

    • founder of modern science

    • empiricism: all knowledge is derived from sense experiences

  • John Locke

    • tabula rasa: the mind at birth is a blank slate upon which experience writes

First Psychologists

  • Wilheim Wundt (1832-1920)

    • established the first psychology lab

    • wanted to measure ‘atoms of the mind’ the fasted mental processes

    • trained 160 psychology students

      • Edward Bradford Titchener (1867-1927)

        • introduced structuralism to study the events of the mind

        • used introspection

        • structuralism: early school focused on identifying the elements of thought and mind structures

        • introspection: the process of looking inward to directly observe one’s own psychological process

Milestones in Psychology

  • Charles Darwin (1809-1882)

    • natural selection of mental and physical traits

    • adaptive evolution

    • influenced William James

  • William James (1842-1910)

    • introduced functionalism

    • functionalism: assumes structures of consciousness must serve a function that helps the organism adapt, survive, and flourish

  • Mary Whiton Calkins (1863-1930)

    • student of William James

    • denied her PhD due to her gender

    • researched memory

    • first female president of the APA

  • Margaret Floy Washburn

    • student of Titchener

    • first female to earn a PhD in psychology

    • researched the animal mind

  • John B Watson

  • BF Skinner

    • Behaviorism: psychology should be an objective science, observable behavior is important to study but not unseen mental processes

  • Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)

    • developed an influential treatment process called psychoanalysis

    • psychoanalysis: unconscious forces and childhood experiences affect our behavior and mental processes

  • Abraham Maslow

  • Carl Rogers

    • humans strive to reach their full potential

    • personal growth

    • humanism: rejects behaviorism and psychoanalysis and studies the potential of personal growth in humans

Today’s Psychology

  • Psychology: the scientific study of behavior and mental processes of humans and animals

    • behavior: consists of any observable and measurable action taken by a person or other animal (anything a person DOES)

    • mental processes: consists of the internal, subjective experiences inferred from behavior (sensations, perceptions, dreams, thoughts, beliefs, feelings)

  • Ulric Neisser (1967)

    • cognitive psychology: the study of mental processes

  • psychology is growing and globalizing

    • contemporary psychology is influenced by biology, experience, culture, gender, and human flourishing

    • uses structuralism and combines ideas from many different psychologists

  • Nature vs Nurture

    • is it genes or experience?

    • nature: behavior and mental processes occur because they are inborn or innate

      • Evolutionary psychology

        • evolutionary psychology: the study of how behaviors and mental processes present in species today exist because they were naturally selected

        • behavior genetics: the study of the relative influence and it’s limits of genetic and environmental influences on behaviors and mental processes

    • nurture: behaviors and mental processes occur as a result of experience or the environment

      • Twin Studies

        • identical twins share 100% of the same DNA

        • studies have been done on them to study nature vs nurture

  • WEIRD cultures

    • WEIRD: western, educated, industrialized, rich, democratic

    • studies done only in one culture give a deep understanding into that culture, whereas studies done on multiple cultures provide a good comparison on how they are similar/different

  • Contemporary Psychology approaches

    • positive psychology: the scientific study of human flourishing

    • goal of discovering and promoting human strengths and virtues

    • strengthening individuals and communities

    • Martin Seligman

  • Biopsychosocial approach: understanding behavior and mental processes from three key viewpoints

    • biological factors

    • psychological factors

    • social-cultural factors

Types of Psychologists

  • cognitive psychologists: They study human thinking and might work as a professor

    or a corporate consultant

  • developmental psychologists: They study how our behavior changes as we age

  • educational psychologists: They study how we learn in different environments and in

    different ways

  • experimental psychologists: They conduct experiments to understand our behaviors

    and mental processes

  • psychometric psychologists: They use math and statistics to create, administer, score

    and interpret tests

  • social psychologists: They study how we interact with others and how groups impact us individually

  • forensic psychologists: They bring law and psychology together. They might develop public policy for the mentally ill, consult on jury selection or help law enforcement in criminal cases

  • environmental psychologists: They study how we are influenced and affected by our natural or built (urban) surroundings

  • health psychologists: They work to promote health and prevent disease

  • I/O psychologists: They study the relationship between people and our work environments

  • neuropsychologists: They study how our brain impacts our behavior and thoughts. They might treat Alzheimer’s or stroke, work with athletes and concussions or with people with autism or ADHD

  • rehabilitation psychologists: They help individuals who have lost functioning after an

    accident or illness

  • school psychologists: They work with kids in school dealing with problems that may negatively impact learning in the classroom

  • sports psychologists: They work with athletes to help them improve their performance

  • clinical psychologists: They promote psychological health in individuals, groups, or organizations. May specialize in specific psychiatric disorders

  • community psychologists: They work with larger groups and communities and focusing on crisis management

  • counseling psychologists: They help individuals cope with or make difficult life changes

7 Perspectives of Psychology

  1. Psychodynamic Perspective

    • Focus: unconscious mind, early childhood experiences, interpersonal relationships

    • Key Concepts: defense mechanisms, psychosexual stages, id, ego, superego

    • Example: a therapist helping a patient understand their childhood trauma and how it affects their current relationships

  2. Behavioral Perspective

    • Focus: learned behaviors, conditioning, reinforcement

    • Key Concepts: classical conditioning, operant conditioning, positive and negative reinforcement

    • Example: a teacher using a reward system to encourage students to complete their work

  3. Cognitive Perspective

    • Focus: mental processes, memory, thinking, problem-solving

    • Key Concepts: Attention, perception, language, decision-making

    • Example: a therapist helping a patient identify and change negative thought patterns

  4. Biological Perspective

    • Focus: physical and biological bases of behavior

    • Key Concepts: brain structure, neurotransmitters, genetics

    • Example: a researcher studying the effects of s new drug on brain activity

  5. Sociocultural Perspective

    • Focus: how culture influences human behavior

    • Key Concepts: cultural norms, values, beliefs

    • Example: a researcher comparing the parenting styles of different cultures

  6. Evolutionary Perspective

    • Focus: How the theory of evolution can explain psychological processes

    • Key Concepts: natural selection, adaptation, survival of the fittest

    • Example: a researcher studying the evolution of mating processes

  7. Humanistic Perspective

    • Focus: motivation, self-actualization, personal growth

    • Key Concepts: Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, unconditional positive regard

    • Example: a therapist helping a patient develop a stronger sense of self-worth

Types of Biases

  • Hindsight Bias: the tendency to believe, after learning an outcome, that one would have foreseen it

    • I-knew-it-all-along phenomenon

  • Cognitive Bias: systemic errors in thinking- like shortcuts our brains take to make processing info easier and quicker, but they often lead us to incorrect ideas

  • Confirmation Bias: the tendency to search for, interpret and remember information that confirms our preexisting beliefs or opinions

    • instead of objectively evaluating all evidence, we give more weight to information that supports what we already think and discount evidence that contradicts our views

  • Overconfidence: having too much faith in our own judgement

    • occurs when we overestimate the accuracy of our own knowledge and judgement

Research Methods

Ethics

Statistics

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