Unit 0: History and Scientific Practices of Psychology
Key
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
Sociocultural Perspective
Focus: how culture influences human behavior
Key Concepts: cultural norms, values, beliefs
Example: a researcher comparing the parenting styles of different cultures
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
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
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
Key
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
Sociocultural Perspective
Focus: how culture influences human behavior
Key Concepts: cultural norms, values, beliefs
Example: a researcher comparing the parenting styles of different cultures
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
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
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