AP Psychology
Psychology is the scientific study of behavior and mental processes
Do our feelings always match our behaviors?
No
People learn how to monitor their behaviors but not their feelings
History of Psychology
Although the science of psychology started in the late 1800’s the concept has been around for much much longer
There was evidence of trephination back in the stone age
Trephination - drilling holes into a skull to “let evil spirits out”
It's disgusting
Don't look at it
He’ll show a movie clip of it
Waves of Psychology
The science of psychology has gone through waves
Wave One - Introspection
Started with William Wundt
He created the first psychological laboratory
The idea of structuralism was born
The idea that the mind operates by combining subjective emotions and objective sensations
William James wrote The Principles of Psychology and discussed functionalism - What is the purpose of the mind?
In reality these ideas do not have much impact on psychology today
Turned psychology into a science not a philosophy
Wave Two: Gestalt Psychology
Max Wertheimer
Focused not on feelings but how we experience the world
The whole of an experience can be more than the sum of its parts
Wave Three: Psychoanalysis
Started with Sigmund Freud
People believed that most of your feelings come from a hidden place in your mind called the unconscious (the “id”)
We protect ourselves from our real feelings by using defense mechanisms
Wave Four: Behaviorism
People started to ignore how you feel inside
All that mattered was how you acted
If you could change your behavior, who cares how you feel
Very popular during the conservative 1950’s when social appearance mattered more than self expression
Wave Five: Eclectic
All about variety
Psychologists pick and choose what theories to use depending on the situation and the client
I Guess Psychologists Behave Eclectically
Now psychologists pick and choose from 7 perspectives of psychology to help you with your problems
Seven Schools of Psychology
Humanistic Perspective (60s-70s)
Focuses on spirituality and freewill
Striving to be the best we we can be “Self Actualization”
Happiness is defined by the distance between our “Self-Concept” and “Ideal Self”
Psychoanalytic Perspective
Focuses on the unconscious mind
We repress our true feelings and are unaware of them
In order to get better we must bring forward the true feelings we have in our unconscious mind
EX. If a man has intimacy issues and cannot form relationships with others. What do you think someone from this school of psychology would think?
Something in the unconscious mind is keeping him from getting close with others
Maybe he was bullied when he was younger and that caused this fear of close relationships (repressed memories)
Biopsychology/Neuroscience Perspective
All of your feelings and behaviors have an organic root
In other words, they come from your brain, body chemistry, neurotransmitters, etc..
EX. Let us imagine for a second that your dog dies. You become depressed. You stop eating and sleeping. What would a psychologist from this school say is going on and how might they help you?
Medication to alter the chemical balances in your brain
Evolutionary Perspective
Focuses on Darwinism
We behave the way we do because we inherited those behaviors through natural selection
Thus those behaviors must have helped ensure our ancestors survival
EX. Why are we afraid of snakes?
In the past our ancestors were killed by snakes
The ones that were not afraid of snakes were killed by snakes and could not reproduce
Behavioral Perspective
Focuses on observable behavior and sets feelings to the side
We behave in ways because we have been conditioned to do so
To change behaviors we have to recondition the client
EX. Pretend that you fail AP Psychology. You become depressed. In turn you begin to binge eat and gain weight. What would a behaviorist do?
They would progagby ignore that you are depressed and focus on your habits
Cognitive Perspective
Focuses on how we think
How do we see the world?
How did we learn to react to sad or happy events
Cognitive Therapists attempt to change the way that you think
EX. You meet a girl! Hopes are high!! She rejects you.. Not even a number. How do you react?
Some learned get back on the horse and try again
Some learned to give up and live a lonely life of solitude
Social/Cultural Perspective
Says that much of your behavior and your feelings are dictated by the culture you live in
Some cultures kiss each other when greeting, some bow, some shake hands
Does your culture place value on individuals or groups?
Western culture is usually more individualistic
Eastern culture is usually more collectivist
Psychology has three main levels of analysis
Biological Influences
Natural selection
Adaptive traits
Genetic predispositions responding to the environment
Brain mechanisms
Hormonal influences
Social-cultural Influences
Presence of others
Social, cultural, and familial expectations
Peer and other group influences
Compelling models (such as in the media)
Psychological Influences
Learned fears and other learned expectations
Emotional responses
Cognitive processing and perceptual interpretations
Psychology is first and foremost a science - it is based on research
Criticism is important in psychological research
Critical Thinking - Getting to the truth even if we have to put your own ideas aside
Look for hidden assumptions (and decide if you agree)
Look for hidden bias (political values, religious values, social values, and personal connections)
Put aside your own bias and look at the evidence
See if there is a flaw in how the information/data is collected
Consider if there are other possible explanations for the facts or results
Psychologists study a wide variety of topics like:
Language development
Effects of sensory deprivation
Behavior
Psychological Research Subfields
Biological
Developmental
Cognitive
Educational
Personality
Social
Applied Research Subfields:
Industrial/Organizational
Studies and advises on behavior in the workplace
Human Factors
Studies how people and machines interact resulting in the design of machines and environments
Counseling
Helps people cope with problems in living and in achieving greater well-being
Clinical
Studies, assesses, and treats people with psychological disorders
They use scientifically testable models and methods to conduct research
Researchers use the following terms:
Variables - events, characteristics, behaviors, and/or conditions that researchers measure and study
Subjects/Participants - An individual person or animal a researcher studies
Sample - A collection of subjects researchers study. Researchers use samples because they cannot study the entire population
Population - the collection of subjects from which researchers get their sample. They study the sample population and the tested population
Purposes of Research
Three main goals of research
To find ways to measure and describe behavior
To understand why when and how events occur
To apply this knowledge to solving real world problems
Scientific Method
Ask a questions
Do background research
Construct a hypothesis
Test your hypothesis with an experiment
Analyze your data and draw a conclusion
Communicate your result
Psychologists use the scientific method to make observations and conduct research
They have to come up with a theory to explain their observations
Theory - An explanation that organizes separate pieces of information in a coherent way.
Hypothesis
Predicts a relationship between two or more variables
Variables are anything that can vary among participants in a study
In order for a hypothesis to be viable it must be:
Replicable
It can be repeated
Developing a hypothesis - a testable prediction of what will happen after a set of conditions
They must define the research method
Naturalistic observations
Case studies
Surveys
Experiments
Operational definitions make replications possible
Falsifiable
A good theory must be able to be false in some way
This is so researchers don't fall victim to confirmation bias - scientists favoring their hypothesis and twisting the evidence to make it correct
Precise
If hypotheses are precise then they can be easily tested and replicated
Psychologists use operational definitions to define the variables they study
Operational Definitions
Explain what you mean in your hypothesis
How will the variables be measured in “real life” terms
How you define the variables will allow future researchers to replicate your study
Almost over-define everything
Basic Research
Explores questions that you may be curious about, but not intended to be immediately used
Applied Research
Seeks to find practical solutions to real life issues
Correlation Research Methods
We just want to prove that two things are related somehow
As more ice cream is eaten, more people are murdered (TRUE but ice cream is not causing the murders)
Descriptive methods:
Case studies
Surveys
Naturalistic observation
Laboratory observations
Can describe:
Events
Experiences
Behaviors
Remember that correlation is not the same as causation
Scientists have to be careful to confirm if one factor is causing or correlating with the other factor
Measuring Correlation
Correlation coefficient measures the strength of a relationship between two variables
Measured between -1 and +1
Positive correlation (0 - +1) means that as one variable increases the other does as well and vice versa
Negative correlation (-1 - 0) means that as one variable increases the other decreases and vice versa
The larger the absolute value of of that number the stronger the correlation is
Illusory Correlation
The perception of a relationship where no relationship actually exists
Like superstition
If you see a black cat you will have bad luck
Descriptive Research - Any research that observes and records
Doesn’t measure any relationships. It just describes
Case Studies
One/a few subject(s) studied in depth
Does not give us correlation data
No cause and effect
Data collected through
Interviews
Direct observation
Psychological testing
Examination of documents
Records about subjects
Surveys
Can be descriptive or correlational
Getting information about a specific type of behavior, experience, or event
Researchers give out questionnaires or interview subjects
Subjects fill out surveys about themselves. This is called Self-Reporting Data
Can easily
Be cheap
Be anonymous
Be diverse
get random samples
This data can be misleading because the subjects may
Lie intentionally
Give answers based on wishful thinking rather than truth
Fail to understand the questions the survey asks
Forget parts of the experience they need to describe
Low response rate
Wording effects - how the question is worded can affect the results
Should cigarette ads not be allowed on television? (Many said yes)
Should cigarette ads be forbidden to be on television (Many said no)
Naturalistic Observation
Researchers collect information about subjects by observing them unobtrusively
Recording behavior in a natural environment
The subjects will not be interfered with in any way
The downside of this is that researchers may not get a clear view of the events without being noticed by the subjects
No control can be given to the scientists
Laboratory Observation
Set in a lab not a natural setting
Researchers can use sophisticated equipment
Offers a degree of control over the environment of the experiment
Experimental Research
Can provide information about cause and effect relationships between variables
One particular variable is manipulated and controlled
This tested/changed variable is called the independent variable
The affected variable is called the dependent variable
Random sampling makes sure that every individual in a population has an equal chance of being in your sample
Randomly picking subjects out of a population
Random assignment makes sure that your experimental group and control group are randomly assigned on top of the random sampling
A control group is a group where the independent variable is not manipulated. This gives something to compare the dependent variable to.
Researchers try to make the control group and the experimental group as similar as possible to get accurate results
Variables that are not the independent variable but could still influence the dependent variable are called extraneous variables
One way to control these extraneous variables is to use random assignment
This is when subjects have equal chances of being put into the control or experimental group
Confounding Variables are anything that can change the result but are not what is being changed/studied in the experiment
Background
Placebo effect
Family history
Unconscious bias
Experiments usually cannot fully reflect the real world because the situations are artificial
Experiments MUST be kept ethical
Psychological Testing
Psychological tests collect information about
Personality traits
Emotional states
Aptitudes
Interests
Abilities
Values
Behaviors
Psychological Tests must be
Standardized
The test must be pre-tested to a representative sample of people and form a normal distribution or bell curve
Reliable
The extent which a test measures consistent results over time
Valid
Does the test measure what it is supposed to measure
test-retest reliability
If a test is given more than once it should yield about the same results
A reliable test will produce similar results no matter which version of the test is used
A test is valid if it accurately measures the quality of which it claims. The two types of validity are:
Content validity - a test’s ability to measure all important aspects of the measured characteristics. Usually well rounded and cover all parts of the content measured.
Criterion/Predictive validity - Not only measures a trait but uses that measurement to predict another criterion of that trait
Bias in Research
Bias is the distortion of results by a variable there are multiple types of bias
Sampling Bias
When the samples do not correctly represent the population
Subject Bias
Research subject’s expectations affect/change the subject’s behavior
Placebo effect - Subject receives a fake drug/treatment but it actually works even if it is fake. A single-blind experiment is on where the subjects don’t know if their drug/treatment is real or fake.
Social Desirability bias - the tendency of some subjects to describe themselves in an idealized way
Experimenter Bias
An unconscious confounding variable
Occurs when the researchers preference or expectations influence the outcome of their research.
Double-blind procedures neither the experimenter nor the subjects know whether the subject is in the control group or the experimental group
Hindsight Bias
The tendency to believe that you knew the outcome all along (even if they had no idea before the outcome)
Review of Research Methods
Advantages and disadvantages of:
Surveys
Yields a lot of information
Provides a good way to generate hypotheses
Can provide information about many people since its cheap and easy to do
Provide information about many people since its cheap and easy to do
Provides information about behavior that cant be observed directly
Relies on self-report data, which can be misleading
Doesn’t allow conclusions about cause-and-effect relationships
Case Studies
Provides a good way to generate hypotheses
Yields data that other methods can’t provide
Sometimes gives incomplete information
Sometimes relies only on self-report data, which can be misleading
Can be subjective and thus may yield biased results
Doesn’t allow conclusions about cause-and-effect relationships
Naturalistic Observations
Can be useful for generation hypotheses
Provides information about behavior in the natural world
Sometimes yields biased results
May be difficult to do unobtrusively
Doesn’t allow conclusions about cause-and-effect relationships
Laboratory Observations
Enables use of sophisticated equipment for measuring and recording behavior
Can be useful for generating hypotheses
Sometimes yields biased results
Carries the risk that observed behavior is different from natural behavior
Doesn’t allow conclusions about cause-and-effect relationships
Tests
Gives information about characteristics such as personality traits, emotional states, aptitudes, interests, abilities, values, and behaviors
Requires good reliability and validity before it can be used
Doesn’t allow conclusions about cause-and-effect relationships
Experiments
Identifies cause-and-effect relationships
Distinguishes between placebo effects and real effects of a treatment or drug
Can be artificial, so results may not generalize to real-world situations
Statistics - analysis and interpretation of numerical data
Descriptive Statistics
Researchers need to convert their data into numbers
They can use histograms and bar graphs to show how this data can be read
Measuring Central Tendency
This is the
Mean
The most common used
Adding up all of the scores and dividing the sum
Median
The middle score when all the scores are arranged from lowest to highest
Mode
Most frequently occurring score
A distribution of very high scores is called positively skewed distribution
A distribution of very low scores is called negatively skewed distribution
Watch out for extreme outliers
Statistics
Measuring Variation
Range is the difference between the highest and lowest scores in the distribution
Standard deviation provides more information about the amount of variation in scores
APA - American Psychological Association
They determine ethical guidelines for human and animal research
IRB - institutional review board
They review research proposals for ethical violations and procedural errors
They give permission to actually do the experiment
Animal Research
Focus on how animals are treated in laboratory experiments
The APA has provided guidelines
They must have a clear scientific purpose
The research must be specific and important
Animals chosen must be best suited to answer the question
They must care for and house the animals in an ethical and humane way
They must acquire the animals legally
Purchased from accredited companies
Trapped in a humane manner
They must design experimental procedures that employ the least amount of suffering possible
Human Research
All participation must be voluntary
All participants must have complete informed consent
If their complete awareness gets in the way of the study then the deception must not be so extreme as to invalidate their informed consent
Participant’s privacy must be completely protected
If anonymity cannot be assured, complete confidentiality should be given
Participants cannot be put in any significant mental or physical risk
After a study the participants should have a debriefing. In this they should be told the purpose of the study and provide ways for them to contact the researchers about the results
Nature versus nurture debate
Nature (Heredity)
How we are born
Nurture (Environment)
How we are raised
While we know that hair color, height, and other physical characteristics are obviously dependent on genes
Behavior, intelligence, and personality also be dependent on genes
Behavior Genetics
The study of the relative power and limitations of genetic and environmental influences on our behavior
Examines the genetic base of behavior and personality differences among people
They used to use behavioral genetics for racial discrimination - Eugenics
Now geneticists consider political repercussions
Where are genes? What are they made of? What do they do?
In the nucleus of a cell we have chromosomes
On these chromosomes we have DNA
In that DNA are our genes
Genes contain codes for proteins that make us who we are (height, eye color, personality type, speed)
All cells have 46 chromosomes except for gametes
Chromosome breakdown
Chromosomes are “books” (largest)
DNA are “pages”
Genes are “words”
Nucleotides are “letters” (smallest)
Percentages of shared genes
Identical twins 100%
Parents 50%
Siblings + Nonidentical twins 50%
Grandparents 25%
Types of genetic traits
Monogenic
Traits determined by a single gene
Alcoholism
Schizophrenia
Polygenic
Traits determined by many genes
Intelligence
Height
Weight
Heritability
A mathematical estimate that indicates how much of a trait’s variation can be attributed to genes
Three important principles of heritability
Don’t reveal anything about how much genes influence a person’s traits. They only tell us to what extent trait differences between people can be attributed to genes
Depends on the similarity of the environment for a group of people. In groups of people who share similar environments, heritability of a particular trait may be high. However, that same trait may have low heritability in a group of people who operate in different environments
Even if a trait is highly heritable, it can still be influenced by environmental factors
Family studies
Looking at similarities among members of a family
If the trait is genetic then it should be similar in blood relatives
Family studies alone don’t reveal whether a trait is genetically inherited
Caution: a family shares genes but also environments (Correlation does not equal causation)
Twin Studies (Suggest Genetic Influence)
What are the different types of twins?
Identical
Same biological sex
Any difference between them will be nurture not nature because their genes are completely the same
Fraternal
Same or opposite sex
Countless studies have been done on twins to study how similar they are
Whether or not they are raised in the same environment they are usually very alike in many ways
Separated Twin Studies
Twins separated at birth still had so many similarities
This pushes the ideas that psychology can be genetic
Look at the Jim Twins
Experiences and Behavior
Experiences affect behavior partly because environmental stimulation forms and maintains neural connections
Adoption Studies (Suggest Environmental Influence)
Adopted children share genes but their living environments often influence them more than genes
Interaction of Genes and Environment
Highly influential environmental factors include
Prenatal influences
Child-rearing and other parental influences
Nutrition
Experiences throughout life
Peer influences
Culture
Cultural Norms
Set societal expectations that influence behavior
Says what's “Appropriate”
Evolutionary Psychology
Studies the evolution of behavior and mind using principles of natural selection
Surviving and reproducing
Adaptive behaviors are those that promote reproductive success
Theory of Natural Selection
Charles Darwin made this theory
1831 on the HMS Beagle
1859 Darwin published On the Origin of Species
Russian Fox Study 1959
The effort to make a tameable breed of fox
40 males and 100 females were mated and only the tamest foxes were kept
After 40 years later this cycle made a new tameable breed of fox
Reproduction of the Fittest instead of Survival of the Fittest
Reproductive Advantage
Helps an organism mate successfully and pass on its genes to the next generation
Survival Advantage
Helps an organism to live long enough to reproduce and pass on its genes
Inclusive Fitness
W.D. Hamilton in the 1960s
Reproductive fitness of an individual organism plus any effect the organism has on increasing reproductive fitness in related organisms
People might risk their lives to save their children or close relatives because they share genes
Adaptations
Inherited characteristics that become prevalent in a population because it provides a survival or reproductive advantage
Mutations
Essential to evolution
Raw material of genetic variation
Caused by
An error during DNA replication
Random rearrangement of small pieces of DNA in a chromosome pair
Can result in a new trait
Mating Behavior
Studied to investigate aspects of evolutionary psychology
Parental investment
Refers to all of the resources spent to produce and raise each offspring
Sexual selection
The tendency of females to choose mates based on certain characteristics which should then be passed on to the male offspring
Sexuality and the Evolutionary Psychology
Casual sex is more accepted by men
This is because men can have almost infinite children but women can only get pregnant every once in a while
Sperm is cheap
Eggs are not
Men typically look for
Health
Youth
Birthing capability
Women typically look for
Wealth
Power
Safety
Neuroscience chemically and scientifically explains why we feel different feelings
The nervous system is made of
The brain (the center)
Nerves
Electrochemical signals
Hippocrates (460-377 B.C.)
Most famous physician of the ancient world
Theorized that our thoughts, feelings, and ideas came from the brain instead of the common theory at the time that these came from out heart or stomach
Researchers now think that our minds and brains might be separate things
They focus on hormones and experiences
Franz Gall (1800)
Phrenology
He would feel the bumps on people’s skulls and how that represented their mental abilities
His theory was incorrect but this started the thought that the brain was modular
A complex highly coordinated network of tissues that communicate via electrochemical signals
Nervous System Structure
Peripheral Nervous System
Autonomic Nervous System
Sympathetic Nervous System
Parasympathetic Nervous System
Somatic Nervous System
Afferent Nerves
Efferent Nerves
Central Nervous System
Spinal Cord
Brain
Central nervous system
Receives and processes information from the senses
Brain and spinal cord are filled with cerebrospinal fluid
Cushions and nourishes the brain
The brain is the main organ of the nervous system
The blood-brain barrier protects the cerebrospinal fluid
Blocks drugs and toxins
Spinal cord connects the brain to the rest of the body and sends messages around it
Spinal reflexes are automatic behaviors that require no input from the brain
Damage to the Spinal Cord
Can lead to
Paralysis
Loss of feeling
Imparied organ function
Loss of muscular control
These injuries are usually permanent
Peripheral Nervous System
All parts of the nervous system except for the brain and spinal cord
Somatic Nervous System
Takes “som” effort
Nerves that connect the central nervous system to the voluntary skeletal muscles and sense organs
Two Types of Nerves
Afferent Nerves/Sensory Neurons
Carry information from the muscles and sense organs to the central nervous system
Efferent Nerves/Motor Neurons
Carry information from the central nervous system to the muscles and sense organs
Interneurons
Help with communication between sensory and motor neurons
Autonomic Nervous System
Automatic
Nerves that connect the central nervous system to the heart, blood vessels, glands, and smooth muscles
Smooth muscles are involuntary muscles that help organs carry out their functions
Sympathetic Nervous System
arousing
Gets the body ready for emergencies
Slows down digestion
Draws blood from the skin to the skeletal muscles
Releases hormones
Parasympathetic Nervous System
calming
Activates when the body is relaxed
Helps the body conserve and store energy
Slows heartbeat
Decreases blood pressure
Promotes digestion
Crisis Mode
Thumping heart
Sweaty palms
Pale skin
Panting breath
Two types of cells in the nervous system
Glial Cells
Make up the supporting structures of the nervous system
Provide structural support to the neurons
Insulate neurons
Nourish neurons
Remove waste products
Neurons
Communicators of the nervous system
Receive information
Integrate information
Pass information along
Communicate with:
Eachother
Cells in sensory organs
Muscles
Glands
Has a soma, a central area. The soma contains the nucleus and other structures common to all cells
Dendritic trees have dendrite branches that reach out from the neuron.
These branches receive information from other neurons and sense organs
An axon is a long fiber that extends from the neuron
Nerves are actually bundles of axons coming together from many neurons
Some axons have a myelin sheath. This is a coating produced by the glial cells.
When an axon has this shealth impulses travel faster and vice versa
Terminal buttons are bumps at the end of each axon
Terminal buttons release neurotransmitters
Neurotransmitters are chemicals that cross into neighboring neurons and activate them
The junction between an axon and the cell body or dendrite of a different neuron is called a synapse
Role of Myelin
Multiple sclerosis
Disintegrated myelin
Difficulty controlling muscles
Poliomyelitis
Damages myelin
Can lead to paralysis
Communication between Neurons
Alan Hodgkin and Andrew Huxlet 1952
Made discoveries about how neurons transmit information
Studied giant squid
Found that nerve impulses are really electrochemical reactions
The Resting Potential
Nerves are built to transmit electrochemical signals
Fluids inside and outside of the neurons contain charged atoms called ions
Sodium Ions (+)
Potassium Ions (+)
Chloride Ions (-)
An inactive neuron is in its resting state
When the inside of a neuron has a higher concentration of negatively charged ions than the outside
Acts as a store of energy called resting potential (-70 millivolts)
How the Neuron Fires
Electrochemical process
Electrical inside of the neuron
Chemical outside of the neuron
Firing is called Action Potential
The Action Potential
Dendrites receive neurotransmitters from another neuron across the synapse
Once the neurons have reached its threshold it fires
The neuron has portals that open and let in positive ions that mix with its negative ions that are already inside of the neuron
The mixing of positive and negative ions cause an electrical charge that opens up the next portal and close the original portal
The process continues down the axon to the terminal branches and terminal buttons
The terminal buttons turn electrical charge into chemical neurotransmitters and shoot messages to the next neuron across the synapse
The membrane then remains closed and can’t send impulses
This is called the absolute refractory period
It lasts for about 1-2 milliseconds
The All-or-None Law
All neural impulses conform to the all-or-none law
Neurons either fire and generate action potentials or don’t
Neural impulses are always the same strength no matter the strength of the stimuli
Stronger stimuli may send impulses faster
It's like a gun
The Synapse
The gap between two cells at a synapse
The signal-sending neuron is the presynaptic neuron
The signal-receiving neuron is the postsynaptic neuron
Chemical messengers that cross the synaptic cleft/gap after being released by the terminal buttons
Then bind to receptor sites and pass their messages
Reuptake is the absorption of the excess neurotransmitter molecules in the synaptic gap
Examples
Acetylcholine
Muscle action
Learning
Memory
Dopamine
Movement
Learning
Attention
Emotion
Serotonin
Mood
Hunger
Sleep
Arousal
Norepinephrine
Alertness
Arousal
Gamma-aminobutyric acid
Inhibitory neurotransmitter
Glutamate
Excitatory neurotransmitter
Memory
Agonists and Antagonists
Agonists
Chemicals that mimic the actions of particular neurotransmitters
Bind to receptors and generate postsynaptic potential
Example: Nicotine
Acetylcholine agonist
Antagonists
Chemicals that block the action of a particular neurotransmitter
They still bind to receptors but can't produce postsynaptic potentials
They take up the receptor site and prevent neurotransmitters from acting
Example: Paralysis and Poison Arrows
To examine the brain’s function researchers have to study a working brain
Humans can’t have invasive studies done
Invasive animal studies
Lesioning studies
Researchers use an electrode and an electric current to burn a specific small are of the brain
Certain parts of the brain are removed or destroyed
Electric stimulation of the brain
Researchers activate a particular brain structure by using a weak electric current sent along an implanted electrode
Human brain studies
Examining people with brain injuries or diseases and see what they can and can’t do
Phineas Gage
Different parts of the brain have different functions
Electroencephalography (EEG)
Records the overall electrical activity in the brain via electrodes placed on the scalp
Used mainly for sleep and seizure studies
High-tech innovations have made studying human brains easier
Computerized (Axial) Tomography (C(A)T)
X-rays are taken of the brain from different angles
The computer combines the x-rays to produce a picture of a horizontal slice through the brain
Good for tumor location but isn’t useful for function
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
Both brain structure and function can be visualized
Computer-enhanced pictures produced by magnetic fields and radio waves
Functional MRIs look at blood flow and can tell what parts of the brain are active when we are thinking and feeling different things
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
Researchers inject people with a harmless radioactive chemical which collects in active brain areas
The pattern of radioactivity in the brain is monitored using a scanner and computer
Researchers can use this to figure out which parts of the brain are active during specific tasks/movements
Often used to detect cancer,tumors, brain disorders, and heart diseases
The Hindbrain
Medulla (Brain Stem)
Next to the spinal cord
Controls functions outside of conscious awareness
Breathing
Heart Rate
Blood Pressure
Pons (Brain Stem)
Affect sleep, dreaming, waking up
Cerebellum
Back of the brain stem
Controls balance and movement coordination
Processes sensory information
Fine motor skills
The Midbrain
Between the hindbrain and the forebrain
Helps up locate events in space
Releases dopamine
Reticular formation (Brain Stem)
Runs through the hindbrain and midbrain
Involved in sleep, wakefulness, pain perception, breathing, and muscle reflexes
The Forebrain
The biggest and most complex part of the brain
Thalamus
“Sensory Switchboard”
Deals with all sensory information except smell
Directs inputs to their specific place in the cortex
Hypothalamus
Lies under the thalamus and helps control the pituitary gland and the autonomic nervous system
Regulates body temperature, hunger, thirst, sex drive, aggression
Limbic System
Emotions and drives
Hippocampus
Processing and storage of memories
Helps make new memories
Amygdala
Aggression and fear
Emotional memories
Septum
Cerebrum/Cerebral Cortex
Wrinkly part of the brain
Biggest part of the brain
Controls abstract thought and learning
Information processing center of the brain
Corpus callosum
Band of fibers that runs along the cerebrum from the front to the back of the skull
Divides the cerebrum into two halves
Four lobes in each hemisphere/half
Occipital
Visual information
Parietal
Touch
Sensing body position
Made up of association areas
Not involved in motor or sensory functions
Higher mental functions like learning, remembering, thinking, and speaking
Temporal
Auditory information
Wernicke’s area (left lobe)
Language comprehension
Wenicke’s aphasia
Unable to understand language: syntax and grammar jumbled
Frontal
Logic + Reasoning
Muscle movement
Memory
Palling
Goal-setting
Creativity
Rational decision making
Social judgment
Broca’s area (left lobe)
Speech production
Broca’s Aphasia
Damage to Broca's area
Unable to make talking movements
Motor Cortex
Movement
Sensory Cortex
Touch and sensations
Brain Hemispheres
Lateralization
Right and left hemispheres
Left - Verbal/Logic
Writing
Reading
Talking
Right - Nonverbal/Creative
Music
Drawing
Recognizing childhood friends
Roger Sperry + friends
Conducted research in lateralization
Examines people who had gone through split brain surgery
Cut the corpus callosum and separating the two hemispheres
Can treat epileptic seizures
Control of the Body
Left hemisphere controls the right side of the body and vice versa
Vision and hearing is different
What is seen goes to the entire brain
Images in the left side of the visual field stimulate the right side of both eyes then goes to the right hemisphere
Information from the right visual field ends up in the left hemisphere
Auditory
Both hemispheres receive input from each ear
Information goes to the opposite hemisphere first then the closer hemisphere second
The two hemispheres share information via the corpus callosum
Severing the corpus callosum will cause impaired perception
Brain Plasticity
When parts of a brain are damaged other parts will reroute messages to still be able to perform
Children’s brains are more plastic than adults
Split Brain Studies
Studies done to show the differing functions of the separated hemispheres of the brain
Impaired perception caused by a cut corpus callosum will show which side of the brain is connected to what senses and functions
Slower system - deals with hormones not neurotransmitters
Endocrine System
Hormone-secreting glands
Affects communication inside of the body
Pituitary gland
Close to the hypothalamus in the brain
“Master gland” of the endocrine system
Hormones
Chemicals that help regulate bodily functions
Thyroxine
Produced by the thyroid gland
Regulates Metabolic rate
Insulin
Produced by the pancreas
Regulates blood sugar level
Melatonin
Produced by the pineal gland
Regulates biological rhythms and sleep
Cortisol, Norepinephrine, Epinephrine, Adrenaline
Produced by the adrenal glands
Regulates bodily functions during stressful and emotional states
Androgens
Produced by the testes
Regulates male secondary sex characteristics and sexual arousal
Estrogen
Produced by the ovaries
Regulates breast development and menarche
Progesterone
Produced by the ovaries
Regulates preparation of uterus for implantation of a fertilized egg
The study of YOU from womb to the tomb
From conception to death
Physical, social, cognitive, and moral changes over our lifetime
Nature versus nurture returns
Are you who you are because of the way you were born or
Are you who you are because of the way you were raised
Research Methods used for developmental psychology
Cross-sectional Studies
Studying a lot of similar people of different age groups at the same time
Much faster but have flaws (different environments/genetics/etc)
Longitudinal Studies
Studying one group of people over a period of time
Much more reliable but takes much longer to complete
Conception begins with the drop of an egg and the release of about 200 million sperm
The sperm seeks out the egg and attempts to penetrate the eggs surface
Germinal Stage (weeks 0-2)
Once the sperm penetrates the egg we a have a fertilized egg or a zygote
This lasts for about two weeks and consists of rapid cell division
Less than half of zygotes survive the germinal stage
After 10 days the zygote attaches itself to the uterine wall through implantation
The outer part of the zygote becomes a placenta which
filters nutrients and protects the zygote from teratogens
Passes oxygen and nutrients from the mother’s blood into the embryo/fetus
Removes waste materials from the embryo/fetus
Embryonic Stage (weeks 2-8)
The zygote turns into an embryo
Lasts about 6 weeks
The heart begins to beat
Organs begin to develop
Teratogens are chemical agents that harm the prenatal environment
Alcohol
Tobacco
STDs
HiV
Herpes
Genital Warts
Fetal Stage (week 8 - birth)
At this point we have a fetus
By about the 6th month the stomach and other organs have formed enough to survive outside of the mother
The baby can hear, recognize sounds, and respond to light
After one month sex organs begin to form
Brain increases rapidly in size
Respiratory and digestive systems start to work independently
He will show a video of childbirth now so LOOK DOWN
Fetal Viability (22-26 weeks after conception)
The baby has potential to live outside of the womb if born prematurely
The chances of the babies survival increase significantly with each additional week it remains in the womb
Adverse Factors that Affect Fetal Development
Poor nutrition
Use of alcohol
Smoking
Use of certain prescription or over-the-counter drugs
Use of recreational drugs such as cocaine, sedatives, and narcotics
X-rays and other kinds of radiation
Ingested toxins like lead
Illnesses
AIDS
German measles
Syphilis
Cholera
Smallpox
Mumps
Severe flu
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
An incurable condition that occurs if the mother drinks too much during pregnancy
Side effects
Small head size
Heart defects
Irritability
Hyperactivity
Mental abnormality
Slowed motor development
Development - series of age-related changes that happen over a lifespan
These changes can be separated into stages
These stage theories share these assumptions
People pass through stages in a specific order with each stage building on capacities developed in the previous stage
Stages are related to age
Development is discontinuous, with qualitatively different capacities emerging in each stage
Sigmund Freud’s Theory of Personality
Personality develops in stages
Early childhood is the most important
Most personality development is done by age five
Erik Erikson’s Theory of Psychosocial Development
Agreed that childhood development is important but personalities continue to develop over a person's whole lifespan
Stages built off of challenges
Stage 1 - Trust vs Mistrust - 1st year
Having basic needs met
Stage 2 - Autonomy vs Shame and Doubt - 1-3 years
Gaining independence
Stage 3 - Initiative vs Guilt - 3-6 years
Acting in a socially acceptable way
Stage 4 - Industry vs Inferiority - 6-12 years
Competing with peers, preparing for adult roles
Stage 5 - Identity vs Role Confusion - Adolescence
Determining one’s identity
Stage 6 - Intimacy vs Isolation - Early adult
Developing intimate relationships
Stage 7 - Generativity vs Stagnation/Self-Absorption - Middle adult
Being Productive
Stage 8 - Integrity vs Despair - Old Age
Evaluating one’s life
Addresses personality stability and personality change
Doesn’t address differences between individuals
Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development
Thought processes change as people mature and interact with the world around them
Schemas change through
Schemas - mental models that represent the world
Children view the world through schemas (adults do to)
Schemas are the ways we interpret the worlds around us
What we picture in our head when we think of something
Schemas can change
Assimilation
Broadening of an existing schema to include new information
Accommodation
Modification of schema as information is incorporated
Stage 1 - Sensorimotor Period - birth - two years
Children learn by using senses and moving around
By the end of it children become capable of symbolic thought
Children achieve object permanence (knowing that something is still there even if you can’t see it)
Stage 2 - Preoperational Period - two years - seven years
Children are more capable of symbolic thought
Extremely literal
Children are not capable of conservation
The ability to recognize that measurable physical features of objects (length, area, volume) can be the same even when the objects are different
Children still have these weaknesses
Centration
Tendency to focus on one aspect of a problem instead of the problem as a whole
Cannot classify objects on more than one level (hierarchical classification)
Irreversibility
Inability to reverse an operation
Egocentrism
Inability to take someone else’s point of view
Animism - belief that inanimate objects are living
Stage 3 - Concrete Operational Period - seven years - eleven years
Children become capable of performing mental operations
Can only perform operations with tangible objects and real events
Children achieve conservation, reversibility, and decentration during this stage
Reversibility - ability to mentally reverse actions
Decentration - ability to focus on several aspects of a problem
Children become less egocentric
Stage 4 - Formal Operational Period - twelve years - adulthood
Capability of applying mental operations to abstract concepts
Ability to reason, imagine, and make hypotheticals
Abstract, systematic, and logical thought processes
Critiques of Piaget’s Theory
Recent research shows that children have much greater capabilities than Piaget thought
Children can develop skills that are from more than one stage at once
Cultural influences
Some people never develop the capacity for formal reasoning even as adults
Lawrence Kohlberg’s Theory of Moral Development
Level 1 - Preconventional Level
Children depend on adults to show them what is right and wrong
Punishment = wrong
Reward = right
Level 2 - Conventional Level
Children value rules and follow them for social approval
1st Stage
Children only care about the approval of those closest to them
2nd Stage
Children care about the approval of society as a whole
Level 3 - Postconventional Level
People consider what's personally important to them
1st Stage
People still want to follow society’s rules but don’t see them as absolute
2nd Stage
People figure out what's right and wrong for themselves based on abstract ethical principles
Only a small percent of people reach this last stage
Critiques
People often show characteristics of multiple levels at the same time
Favors cultures that value individualism
Can turn their heads towards voices
Can see 8-12 inches from their face
Love to stare at human face like things because those things are “safe” (evolutionary speaking
Reflexes - inborn automatic responses that are tested right after birth
Rooting
Testing if the baby will search out food
Sucking
Testing if the baby will instinctively suck anything that touches the roof of their mouth
Grasping - (Palmer - hands | Plantar - feet)
Testing if the baby with absolutely man handle anything that touches their hands/feet
If this reflex last too long then there may be issues with the nervous system
Moro
Dropping the baby and see if it'll try and grab something to not fall
Babinski
Seeing if the baby can spread out its toes ig
The brain and Infancy
Although the brain does not develop many new cells, the existing cells begin to work more efficiently and form more complex neural networks
Maturation
Biological growth processes that enable orderly changes in behavior, relatively uninfluenced by experience
To a certain extent we all maturate similarly but the time can vary depending on the person
Motor development
Sequence is the same but once again time can vary
Babies learn in this order
Roll over
Sit up unsupported
Crawl
Walk
These are usually explained by maturation but it is also influenced by experience
Walking
25% learn to walk by 11 months
50% within a week of 1st birthday
90% by 15 months
Once its been over a year they are considered late walkers
Walking time varies by culture (NURTURE)
if the culture emphasizes walking then the babies usually learn to walk at younger ages
Identical twins tend to walk on the same day (NATURE)
Toilet Training
NO MATTER WHAT THE BABY NEEDS THE PHYSICAL MATURATION TO HOLD THEIR BLADDER OR BOWEL MOVEMENTS BEFORE TOILET TRAINING
NO TRAINING WILL WORK IF THE CHILD IS NOT PHYSICALLY READY
Why is this in caps? I dont know dont ask me I copied the slides
Temperament
Personality features that babies are born with
Typically from nature not nurture (biological)
Alexander Thomas and Stella Chess found three types of development
Easy - 40%
Happy and adapt easily to change
Have regular sleeping and eating patterns
Slow-to-warm-up - 15%
Cautious about new experiences
Have less regular sleeping and eating patterns
Difficult - 10%
Glum and irritable
Dislike change
Eating and sleeping patterns are irregular
Attachment
The most important social construct an infant must develop is attachment
Contact comfort is comfort derived from physical closeness with a caregiver
Lorenz discovered that some animals form attachments through imprinting
Harry Harlow and his monkeys
Harry showed that monkeys needed touch to dorm attachments
Critical Periods are the optimal period shortly after birth when an organism's exposure to certain stimuli or experiences produce proper development
Those who are deprived of touch have trouble forming attachment when they are older
Attachment Styles
Attachment happens through a complex set of interactions between mothers and infants
Strange Situation - Mary Ainsworth
Mothers brought their infants into unfamiliar rooms
After a while a stranger would come in
After a little while the mother would leave
Then the mother would come back in and the stranger would leave
Then after a while the mother would leave the child alone
Results:
Secure Attachment
Most infants were unhappy when their mothers left but still played with the strangers
Anxious-ambivalent Attachment
Some infants were upset when their mothers left but were not as thrilled when they returned
Avoidant Attachment
Some infants didn’t seem upset when the mothers left
Treated mother and stranger the same way
Culture heavily influences attachment
Most babies experience separation anxiety
Gender
Gender Schema Theory
suggests that we learn a cultural “recipe” of how to be a male or female, which influences our gender based perceptions and behaviors
Social Learning Theory
proposes that we learn gender behavior like any other behavior- reinforcement, punishment, and observation
Biological sex and gender are not the same thing
Gender role
How society expects men and women to behave
Gender Identity
How a person views himself or herself in terms of gender
Gender is a learned distinction between girls and boys attitudes
SOME gender differences exist but not as many as stereotypes suggest
This is probably just due to those stereotypes anyway
Self - Concept
A sense of one’s identity and self-worth
Children with a positive self concept are more confident
Children with a negative self concept are more shy
Physical changes
PuBeRtY
Sexual maturation
Starts at about eleven for girls and thirteen for boys
Primary Sexual Characteristic
Body structures that make reproduction possible
Secondary sex characteristics
Sex-speciic physical characteristics that are not essential for reproduction
Girls
Breasts
Widened pelvic bones
Wider hips
Boys
Facial hair
Broader shoulders
Deeper voices
Menarche
Marks the beginning of puberty for guys
First menstrual period
Average age in America is 12.5
Nocturnal Emissions (wet dreams)
Marks the beginning of puberty for guys
Usually about 14 years of age
Girls usually are fully sexually matured at age sixteen
Guys usually are fully sexually matured at age eighteen
Early onset of puberty
People generally reach puberty earlier not in the US than they did a few generations ago
Menarche for Western Europe and the US - 12-13 years old
Menarche for poorer regions of Africa - 14-17 years old
Varying Maturation Rate
Early-maturing girls and late-maturing boys tend to have more psychological and social problems compared to their peers
In girls there is a correlation between early maturation and poor school performance, early sexual activity, unwanted pregnancies, likelihood of eating disorders
Both boys and girls who mature early tend to use more drugs and alcohol and have more problems with the law compared to their peers
Moral Development
Lawrence Kohlberg’s three stage theory
In 5.3
Identity
James Marcia’s four identity states
Identity Foreclosure
A person prematurely commits to values or roles that others prescribe
Identity Moratorium
A person delays commitment to an identity. They are usually experimenting with various values and roles
Identity Diffusion
When a person lacks a clear sense of identity and still hasn't explored issues related to identity development
Identity Achievement
When a person considers alternative possibilities and commits to a certain identity and path in life
Social clocks indicate the typical life events, behaviors, and issues for a particular age.
A midlife crisis is a time of doubt and anxiety in middle adulthood
The empty nest refers to the time in parents’ lives when their children have grown up and left home
Physical abilities peak by your mid-twenties
Then it all goes downhill
Menopause is the transition out of menstruation that starts around 45-55. Causes hot flashes and sometimes leads to strong emotional reactions
Aging
As people get older they lose more neurons
This sometimes causes dementia
Vision and hearing decline
Some aspects of memory decrease in old age due to a decline in the speed of mental processing it’s not always dementia
Crystallized intelligence
Accumulated knowledge
Intelligence based on a life span of knowledge and skills. Either goes up or stays constant
Physical exercise and mental stimulations can form new connections between neurons in the brains of older adults
Most people’s overall sense of well-being increases as they get older
Fluid Intelligence
Ability to solve problems quickly and think abstractly
Peaks in the 20s and then decreases over time
Life expectancy keeps increasing (its about 75 now)
Women outlive men by about 4 years
We have weaker immune systems but gain antibodies
Recognition stays stable
Recall ability declines
Social Clock
When is it socially acceptable to do things
Erik Erikson
A neo-Freudian (studied and learned from Freudian)
Worked with Anna Freud
Thought that our personality was influenced by our experiences with others
Stages of psychosocial development based on social conflicts (Yes you’ve already seen this in 5.3)
Stage 1 - Trust versus Mistrust - birth - 18 months
Can we learn to trust the world or do we learn that the world is an untrustworthy place
Usually leads to trust with caregivers but mistrust of strangers
Can carry on with the child for the rest of their lives
Stage 2 - Autonomy versus Shame and Doubt - 18 months - 3 years old
Can you control yourself? Will you doubt yourself?
Child’s energies are directed towards physical skills
Children need to learn how to control their emotions
Learn the word “NO”
Stage 3 - Initiative versus Guilt - 3 years - 6 years
Will their curiosity be scolded or encouraged
Learn the word “WHY?”
Want to understand the world and ask questions
Children become more assertive, take initiative, become more forceful
Gain a bit of independency
Stage 4 - Industry versus Inferiority - 6 - 12 years old
Do we feel good or bad about our accomplishments
The children must deal with demands to learn new skills while risking a sense of inferiority and failure
Can lead to us feeling bad about ourselves for the rest of our lives.. An inferiority complex
Stage 5 - Identity versus Role Confusion - Adolescence
WHO AM I??
Teens must achieve self-identity while deciphering their roles in occupation, politics, and religion
If I do not find myself I may develop an identity crisis
Stage 6 - Intimacy versus Isolation - young adult
What are my priorities?
The young adult must develop long term relationships while combating feelings of isolation
Learning how to balance relationships, work, education, money, etc
Marriage (haha thats funny)
Stage 7 - Generativity versus stagnation - middle adult
Is everything going as I planned? Am I happy with my life?
Parenting
Midlife crisis
Wanting to continue your family lineage (welp)
Stage 8 - Integrity versus Despair - old decrepit adult (late adulthood)
Was my life meaningful? Do I have regrets?
Reflecting on life
Accepting your lifetime accomplishments or waste
Passing down wisdom to younger generations
Parenting Styles
Authoritarian Parents
Impose rules and expect obedience
“Why? Because I said so!!”
Permissive/Indulgent Parents
Submit to their children’s desires, make few demands and use little punishment
Neglectful Parents
Dismissive of children’s emotions or opinions
Emotionally unsupportive, but provide for child’s basic needs (food, shelter, clothing, etc)
Authoritative Parents
Parents are both demanding and responsive
Exert control by setting rules but explain reasoning behind the rules
Encourage open discussion
Parenting styles vary with culture
Sensation is the WiNdOw To ThE wOrLd
The process of our sensory receptors and nervous system receiving stimuli from the environment
Perception is how we interpret what we see through that window
The process of our brain organizing and interpreting sensory information letting us recognize objects and events
Bottom-Up Processing
Starting with the basics and needing to decipher it
Like this as a language: 🥲🍑🔋🌼🍓🥱
Top-Down Processing
Using experience and prior knowledge to process it
Lkie tpynig like tihs you can raed tihs cnat you
If we could sense everything then it would not be good
Psychophysicists - study the relationship between physical stimuli and our psychological experiences to them
Selective Attention
The focus of conscious awareness on a particular stimuli
Cocktail Party Effect
In a situation where you are talking to someone and even though everything around you is going insane if you are focused on the person in front of you you can focus only on them and carry on a conversation
Selective Inattention
Missing things because you are too focused on something
This leads to Inattentional Blindness
You know that one video of the basketball players passing the ball and the moonwalking bear that you don’t see if you're watching the basketball? Yeah that one
Or Change Blindness
When you are focused on something you can’t tell if something around you changes.
Absolute Threshold
The minimum stimulation needed to detect a stimulus 50% of the time
Difference Threshold
The minimum difference that a person can detect between two stimuli
Also known as the just noticeable difference
Weber’s Law
The idea that in order to perceive a difference between two stimuli they must differ by a constant percentage instead of a constant amount
Signal Detection Theory
Predicts how we detect a stimulus amid other stimuli
Assumes that we do not have an absolute threshold
We detect stuff based on our experiences, motivations and fatigue level
Subliminal Stimulation
Stimulation that is below one’s absolute threshold for conscious awareness
You might not know that you know it
Can subconsciously influence you in certain ways
Sensory Adaptation
The decrease in sensitivity to an unchanging stimulus. The stimulus does not disappear yet the person becomes less sensitive to them
Ex. Going noseblind
Transduction
The conversion of one form of energy to another
Stimulus energies to neural impulses
Light energy to vision
Chemical energy to smell and taste
Sound waves to sound
Development of the Senses
Babies are born with basic sensory abilities but they fo develop and grow over time
Sensitive Periods
Even innate perceptual skills need the right environment to develop properly
A lack of certain experiences might impair a person’s ability to perceive the world around them
Extrasensory Perception (ESP)
Perception without sensory input
Paranormal phenomena include astrological predictions, psychic healing, communication with the dead, and out-of-body experiences, but most relevant are telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition.
Claims of ESP
Telepathy: Mind-to-mind communication. One person sending thoughts and the other receiving them.
Clairvoyance: Perception of remote events, such as sensing a friend’s house on fire.
Precognition: Perceiving future events, such as a political leader’s death.
Tests of ESP
In an experiment with 28,000 individuals, Wiseman attempted to prove whether or not one can psychically influence or predict a coin toss. People were able to correctly influence or predict a coin toss 49.8% of the time.
Vision is the most thoroughly studied sense and is highly sophisticated due to its constant use
Light is electromagnetic radiation that travels in the form of waves and makes vision possible
People experience three different aspects of light
Color (Hue)
Depends on wavelength
The distance between the peaks of the light waves
Short wavelengths are bluer
Long wavelengths are redder
Brightness
Depends on the intensity of the light or wave amplitude
The height of the wavelengths
Can also be influenced by wavelength - yellow light can usually be “brighter” than violet light
Saturation
Depends on light complexity
The more spectral colors in a light, the lower the saturation
White light is a mixture of all wavelengths of light
The visible spectrum for humans is ROY G. BIV
Ultraviolet light causes sunburns and has too short of a wavelength to be seen by the human eye
Infrared light has a wavelength that is too long to be seen by the human eye
We can only see about 10% of light
Parts of the eye
Cornea
Transparent, protective outer membrane of the eye
Iris
The colored ring of muscle in the eye
Controls the size of the pupil
Pupil
The opening that the iris surrounds. It can restrict in bright light to protect the eye and expand to increase light intake in the dark
Lens
Lies behind the pupil and iris
Accommodation - the lens can adjust its shape to focus light from objects that are near or far away.
Retina
Thin layer of neural tissue
The image on the retina is always upside down
Fovea
The center of the retina and where vision is sharpest
Parallel Processing
The processing of several aspects of a problem simultaneously
Color
Motion
Form
Depth
Eye troubles
Nearsightedness is the inability to clearly see distant objects
Farsightedness is the inability to clearly see close objects
A cataract is a lens that had become opaque and impaired vision
Photoreceptors are specialized cells that respond to light stimuli
Rods
Long narrow cells
Highly sensitive to light and allow vision even in dim conditions
No rods in the fovea
There are many more rods than cones
Cones
Distinguish between different wavelengths of light
Allow people to see color
Don’t work well in dim light
Adaptation to Light
Dark adaptation is the process by which receptor cells sensitive to light and allow clear vision in dim light
Light adaptation is the process by which receptor cells desensitize to light and allow clear vision in bright light
Connection to the Optic Nerve
Rods and cones connect via synapses to bipolar neurons while connects them to ganglion cells
The axons of the ganglion cells come together to make the optic nerve
The optic nerve connects to the eye at a spot in the retina called the optic disk which is also called the blind spot because it has no rods or cones
Transmission of Visual Information
Light reflected from an object hits the retina’s rods and cones
Rods and cones send neural signals to the bipolar cells
Bipolar cells send signals to the ganglion cells
Ganglion cells send signals through the optic nerve to the brain
Bipolar and ganglion cells gather and compress information
Ganglion cells axons from the inner half of each eye cross over to the opposite half of the brain
Signals from the left eye goes to the left hemisphere and vice versa
Visual Processing in the Brain
Visual signals eventually reach the primary visual cortex in the occipital lobe of the brain’s cerebrum.
David Hubel and Tortsen Wiesel - 1960s
Feature detectors are specialized cells that respond to visual signals in the primary visual cortex and respond to specific features of the environment like lines and edges
Visual signals often travel to other parts of the brain from the visual cortex
The deeper the cells the more specialized they generally are
Psychologists theorize that perception occurs when a large number of neurons in different parts of the brain activate
Color Vision
Color is only a psychological experience that occurs because objects reflect light
Our eyes and brains convert these reflections into colors
Color vision happens because of two different processes
Retina - The Trichromatic Theory
Thomas Young
Hermann von Helmholtz
States that the retina has three different types of cones
Red
Green
Blue
Activation of these cones results in color perception
Mixing lights is called additive color mixing
Mixing paints is called subtractive color mixing
Dichromats are sensitive to only two of the three wavelengths of light
Accounts for color blindness
Retinal ganglion cells and in the cells in the thalamus and visual cortex - The Opponent Process Theory
Ewald Hering
States that the visual system has receptors that react in opposite ways
Red vs green
Yellow vs blue
Black vs white
Explains why most people perceive four primary colors
Afterimages are colors perceived after other complementary colors are removed
Form Perception
Gestalt Psychology explores how people organize visual information into patterns and forms. It proposes that the perceived whole sometimes has properties that didn’t exist in the parts that make it up. An example is the phi phenomenon, in which an illusion of movement occurs when images are presented in a series, one after another.
The Phi Phenomenon is an illusion of movement that happens when a series of images is presented and swapped quickly
Gestalt Principles
Figure and ground
Figure
Stands out
Ground
Background that a figure stands on
Proximity
When objects lie close to each other people tend to perceive them as a group
Closure
People tend to fill in objects with gaps to interpret familiar incomplete objects
Similarity
People tend to group similar objects together
Continuity
People tend to perceive objects ad continuous by filling in the gaps
Simplicity
People tend to perceive forms as simple and symmetrical rather than irregular
Depth Perception
Binocular Cues
Require both eyes
Retinal Disparity
Marks the difference between two images
Convergence
Eyes turn inward at objects that are close to the face
Monocular Cues
Only requires one eye
Interposition
When one object is blocking part of another, the viewer sees the blocked object as farther away
Motion Parallax/Relative Motion
When the viewer is moving it looks like still objects are moving the other way. The closer the object the faster it appears to move
Relative Size
People see objects that make a smaller image on the retina as farther away
Relative Clarity
Objects that appear sharper clearer and more detailed are seen as closer
Texture Gradient
Smaller objects that are more thickly clustered appear farther away than objects that are spread out in space
Linear Perspective
Parallel lines that converge appear far away. The more the lines converge, the greater the perceived distance
Light and shadow
Patterns of light and shadow make objects appear three-dimensional, even though images of objects on the retina are two-dimensional
Perceptual Constancy
The ability to recognize that an object remains the same even when it produces different images on the retina
Shape constancy
Objects that appear to have the same shape even though they make differently shaped retinal images, depending on the viewing angle
Size constancy
Objects that appear to be the same size even though their images get larger or smaller as their distance decreases or increases
Brightness constancy
People see objects as having the same brightness even when they reflect different amounts of light as lighting conditions change
Color constancy
Different wavelengths of light are reflected from objects under different lighting conditions
Location constancy
Stationary objects don't appear to move even though their images on the retina shift as the viewer moves around
Visual Illusions
An illusion is a misinterpretation of a sensory stimulus
Muller-Lyer illusion
Two lines that are exactly the same length but look like they are different lengths because of the arrows around them
Perceptual Set
The readiness to see objects in a particular way based on expectations, experiences, emotions, and assumptions
Reversible figures are ambiguous drawings that can be interpreted in more than one way
Selective Attention
The ability to focus on some bites of information and ignore others
Context can influence how we perceive things
Sound waves are changes in pressure generated by vibrating molecules
Sound has three features
Loudness
depends on amplitude
The higher the crest of the wave is the louder the sound is
Volume can be measured in decibels
The absolute threshold of human hearing is 0 decibels
A whisper is about 20 decibels
Sounds over 120 decibels can damage the auditory system
Pitch
Determined by frequency
Number of complete wavelengths that pass through a point at a given time
Timbre
the quality of a sound and depends on the complexity of the sound wave
Frequency is the number of times per second a sound wave cycles
Frequency is measured in hertz
Humans can hear sounds that are between 20 and 20000 hertz
The structure of the ear
Outer Ear
Pinna
The visible part of the ear which collects sound waves
Middle Ear
Chamber between the eardrum and the inner ear
Ossicles
Three bones that vibrate to concentrate the sound into the eardrum
Inner Ear
Cochlea
A fluid-filled tunnel with cilia that are embedded in the basilar membrane
Vibrations that reach the inner ear move the fluid in the cochlea which moves the cilia
The movement of the cilia triggers neurons that form the auditory nerve
Neurons in the ear form the auditory nerve, which sends impulses from the ear to the brain. The thalamus and auditory cortex receive auditory information.
Has semicircular canals and vestibular sacs
Pitch Perception
Place Theory
States that sound waves of different frequencies trigger receptors at different places on the basilar membrane
The brain figures out the pitch of the sound by detecting the position of the hair cells that sent the neural signal
Frequency Theory
Status that sound waves of different frequencies make the whole basilar membrane vibrate at different rates and therefore cause neural impulses to be sent at different rates. Pitch is determined by how fast neural signals move along to the brain
This theory has trouble explaining high pitch sounds because our hairs cannot vibrate at certain speeds.
This problem can be explained using the volley principle.
Locating Sounds
The left ear receives sound waves coming from the left slightly faster than the ones on the right
Hearing Loss
Conduction Hearing Loss - damage to the mechanical system of the ear
Sensorineural hearing loss - damage to the cochlea’s receptor cells or auditory nerves
Taste and Smell are chemical reactions
Taste (Gustation)
Happens when chemicals stimulate receptors in the tongue and throat. These receptors are located inside of taste buds which are located in the tiny papillae of the skin
Traditionally, taste sensations consisted of sweet, salty, sour, and bitter tastes. Recently, receptors for a fifth taste have been discovered called “Umami”.
Smell (Olfaction)
Happens when chemicals in the air enter the nose
Smell receptors lie in the top of the nasal passage and send impulses through the olfactory nerve to the brain
Odorants enter the nasal cavity to stimulate 5 million receptors to sense smell. Unlike taste, there are many different forms of smell.
Smell is closely connected to memory
The brain region for smell is closely connected with the brain regions involved with memory (limbic system). That is why strong memories are made through the sense of smell.
Ability to identify smell peaks during early adulthood, but steadily declines after that. Women are better at detecting odors than men.
Sensory Interaction
When one sense affects another sense, sensory interaction takes place. So, the taste of strawberry interacts with its smell and its texture on the tongue to produce flavor.
Kinesthesis is the sense of position and movement of body parts
The vestibular system senses balance
Made of three fluid-filled tubes in the ear called semicircular canals
The sense of touch encompasses pressure, pain, cold, and warmth.
Pressure has specific receptors.
Gate-Control Theory of Pain (1960s)
Ronald Melzack and Patrick Wall
States that pain signals traveling from the body to the brain must go through a gate in the spinal cord. If this gate is closed then the pain signals will never reach the brain
Pain Control
Pain can be controlled by a number of therapies including, drugs, surgery, acupuncture, exercise, hypnosis, and even thought distraction.
We’ll talk about sleep, drugs, and hypnosis
Consciousness is the awareness we have over ourselves and our environment
Different states of consciousness are associated with with different patterns of brain waves
Brain waves
tracings of electrical activity in the brain
Electroencephalography (EEG) can be used to record these waves by monitoring electrical activity through electrodes placed on the scalp
Four types of brain waves
Alpha Awake and Relaxed
Beta Awake and alert
Theta Lightly asleep
Delta Deeply asleep
Sleep is composed of several different states of consciousness
Biological Rhythms
Rhythms are regular, periodic changes in a body’s functioning
There are three types of biological rhythms
90-minute cycles
Sleep cycles
Broken into parts
We have multiple sleep cycles a night
Circadian rhythms
Occur about every twenty-four hours
What follows this rhythm
Sleep
Hormone secretion
Blood pressure
Body temperature
Urine production
Infradian rhythms
Take longer than twenty four hours to cycle
Women's menstrual cycles occur about every twenty-eight days
Ultradian rhythms
Occur more than once a day
Sleep follows an ultradian rhythm of about ninety minutes
Alertness and hormone levels also follow ultradian rhythms
Annual cycles
Migrations and hibernation
Humans experience seasonal variations in appetite, sleep, and mood
Endogenous biological rhythms synchronize with environmental events like daylight and changes in temperature
Biological clocks exist because of endogenous biological rhythms
The Suprachiasmatic Nucleus (SCN) is the main biological clock in the hypothalamus. The SCN sends signals to the pineal gland, which secretes melatonin, a hormone that regulates the sleep cycle.
Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) is a mood disorder people experience during dark winter months
Jet Lag
While traveling drains energy, time change also contributes to fatigue
People experience jet lag when their biological clocks and the environment does not match up
The Function of Sleep
We spend about ⅓ of our life sleeping
The true function of sleep is unknown but there are some theories
To conserve energy by sleeping periodically
To keep people tucked away from predators at night
Restores and repairs body tissues that are depleted during daily activities
To restore and rebuild memories
The pituitary gland releases growth hormones during sleep.
Sleep Research
The study of sleep is relatively new
Researchers study sleep by monitoring subjects who spend the night in labs
They can use different instruments for different purposes
Electroencephalographs (EEGs) - record brain waves
Electromyographs (EMGs) - record muscle activity
Electrooculographs (EOGs - record eye movements
Electrocardiographs (EKGs) - record the activity of the heart
Other instruments can be used to monitor breathing, temperature, and pulse
Sleep Stages
NREM 1
When people fall asleep they enter into this stage
Only lasts a few minutes
Theta waves
Everything slows down and relaxes
Fantasies or bizarre images might float around in the mind
Mild hallucinations (like a feeling of falling)
NREM 2
Fully asleep
Lasts about twenty minutes
Still Theta waves
Short bursts of brain activity called sleep spindles
NREM 3
Slow wave sleep
Delta waves
Slow and limp body/body functions
When the body restores growth hormones and good overall health
Where sleepwalking is possible
REM (Rapid-Eye-Movement)
People go back through the stages again in reverse then they enter REM sleep
Brain activity is that of an alert awake person
The body is basically paralyzed
Beta waves
Also called paradoxical sleep
People get aroused in their sleep I guess?
Most vivid dreams
When sleep paralysis is possible
People usually go through about four sleep cycles a night
With each cycle the NREM stages get shorter and the REM stage gets longer
Sleep Deprivation
Some people can function with fewer than six hours of sleep a night
Some people need at least nine hours of sleep a night to function
Insufficient sleep can lead to negative effects on health, productivity, and performance
Fatigue and maybe death
Impaired concentration
Emotional irritability
Depressed immune system
Greater vulnerability
REM sleep deprivation leads to an REM rebound effect where the person spends even more time in the REM stage to make up for past losses
You can die from lack of sleep
Aging and Sleep
As people age they tend to sleep less and less
The proportion of REM sleep to NREM sleep decreases over time as well
Sleep Disorders
Insomnia is a chronic problem with falling or staying asleep
Narcolepsy is a tendency to fall asleep periodically during the day. Goes directly to REM sleep
Sleep apnea is when people stop breathing during a night’s sleep. This prevents them from getting enough deep sleep
Night Terrors actually can be a sleep disorder characterized by high arousal and an appearance of being terrified. These occur in NREM 3 sleep and are often not remembered
Sleepwalking is a sleep disorder that affects about 10 percent of all humans at least once in their lives. Usually occurs in NREM 3 sleep
No one knows the exact function of dreams
What do we dream about?
Negative Emotional Content - 8 out of 10 dreams have negative emotional content
Failure Dreams - People commonly dream about failure, being attacked, pursued, rejected, or struck with misfortune
Sexual Dreams - Sex dreams are rare. About 1 in 30 for women and 1 in 10 for men
Dreams of Gender - Women dream about genders equally while men tend to dream about men
Freud’s Dream Theory
Wish fulfillment
Believed that dreams allow people to express unconscious wishes they find unacceptable in real life.
Manifest content
The plot of the dream
Who’s in the dream
What happens
Latent content
They hidden meaning
Symbolic representation
The manifest content is a disguise that masks the real meaning of the dream
Freud theorized that psychological problems stem from repressed sexual urges
Activation-synthesis Theory
Proposes that neurons in the brain randomly activate during REM sleep
Dreams arise when the cortex of the brain tries to make meaning out of these impulses
Dreams are basically just brain sparks
Problem-Solving Dreams
Some researchers believe that dreams express concerns and might help to solve problem in day-to-day life
Dreams might give you clues to help solve the problem
Neural Housekeeping
Dreams come from the brain’s housekeeping functions
Dreams clean up the brain’s “files”
Periodic stimulation and preserving neural pathways
Cognitive Development
Dreams are a part of brain maturation
Dreams reflect our cognitive development
Lucid Dreams are when people are aware that they are dreaming and can control their actions
Some states of consciousness don’t occur naturally
Hypnotic States
Meditative States
Drug Induced States
Hypnosis
Opens people to the power of suggestion
Hypnosis Can
Cause people to be relaxed, have a narrowed focus of attention, and be highly engaged in fantasies
Produce anesthesia and treat a range of psychological and medical problems
Cause hallucinations and distortions in sensory perception
Reduce inhibitions
Cause changes in behavior after the hypnosis has ended
Hypnosis Can’t
Work effectively well for everyone
Force people to do things against their will
Make people act in ways that would normally be beyond their physical or mental abilities
Reliably increase the accuracy of memories
Allow people to actually re-experience past events or lives
Posthypnotic Suggestion - Suggestion carried out after the subject is no longer hypnotized
Posthypnotic Amnesia - When people are instructed to forget what happened during hypnosis will later claim to have no memory of it
Unlike sleep, brain waves do not reliably change like they do in sleep
There are two main theories about hypnosis
Divided Consciousness Theory - Ernest Hilgard
Hypnosis causes people to dissociate or divide their consciousness into two parts
One part responds to the outside world
The other observes but doesn’t participate
Hypnosis can make people not react to pain
Social Influence Theory - Theodore Barber/Nicholas Spanos
Hypnosis happens when a suggestible person plays the role of a hypnotized person. Hypnotized people simply behave as they think they are expected to
Mesmerism
Anton Mesmer noticed that his patients would get in a trancelike state
Meditation
Practice of focusing attention to enhance awareness
Repetitive chanting and breathing exercises
Increase in alpha and theta brain waves
Slowed pulse and breathing
Improves physical and mental health
Psychoactive Drugs
Change sensory experience, perception, mood, thinking, and behavior
Called recreational drugs
Some have legitimate medical uses
Types of psychoactive drugs
Stimulants
Drugs that stimulate the central nervous system
Sedatives/Depressants
Drugs that slow down the central nervous system
Narcotics
Opiates
Drugs that can relieve pain
Hallucinogens
Drugs that cause sensory and perceptual distortions
Some researchers consider cannabis drugs as a separate type of drug because they contain features of more than one type of drug
How do Psychoactive Drugs Work
Psychoactive drugs affect neurotransmitters and how they function
Drugs can
affect multiple neurotransmitters
Cause more or less of a neurotransmitter to be released at a synapses
Block reuptake of a neurotransmitter by presynaptic cells
Stimulate or block neurotransmitter receptors on postsynaptic cells
Hallucinations
Sensory or perceptual experiences without any external stimulus
Trick the brain into perceiving stimuli that aren’t present
Influences on Psychoactive Drug Effects
Psychoactive drugs don’t always have the same effect on different people
Things that can change the effect of a drug
Amount of the drug
Potency of the drug
How the drug is administered
How much previous experience a user has with the drug
The user's age and body weight
The user’s mood, personality, and motivation
The environment in which the drug is used
The user’s expectations about the drug’s effects
Chronic Use of Psychoactive Drugs
When people regularly use a drug they develop a tolerance for it
When people stop using a drug after a long period of regular use they will go through withdrawal
People can become physically (withdrawal) and psychologically (craving) dependent on drugs
Overdoses can be lethal
Some drugs may cause dangerous behavior
Learning is long lasting change in behavior due to experience
There are many different types of learning
Classical conditioning - linking stimuli and anticipating events (basically just any sort of association)
A type of learning in which one learns to link two or more stimuli and anticipate events
Pavlov’s Dogs - Ivan Pavlov
Studied the digestion of dogs
Whenever he brought the dogs food they would start to drool
When the dogs heard him walking towards them they would anticipate food and start to drool regardless of whether he had food or not
He started ringing a bell before feeding them
Whenever he rung the bell the dogs would start to drool even if he didn’t bring them food
The dogs learned to salivate whenever he rung the bell (Conditioned Reflex)
Classical Conditioning is a passive learning process
Starts with an Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS) - Which causes a natural and or reflexive response
The Unconditioned Response (UCR) is the response to the UCS
Food makes dogs drool
Shots make the old lady flinch and say ow
Pills make someone nauseous
Next you find a neutral stimulus (something unrelated to the UCS/UCR)
Then you repetitively present the neutral stimulus with the UCS
The subject will then connect the natural stimulus and the UCS (Acquisition)
Learning has taken place once the neutral stimulus elicits the same response as the UCS
The neutral stimulus is now called the conditioned stimulus (CS) and the unconditional response is now called the conditioned response (CR)
Acquisition does not last forever
Extinction
When the subject no longer associates the CS with the UCS
Spontaneous Recovery
Sometimes after extinction the CR will occasionally appear after the CS is presented
Generalization
When something is similar enough to the CS that you get the CR
Discrimination
When something is different enough to the CS that you do not get the CR
Classical Conditioning in Humans
Baby Albert - John Watson
John Watson picked up some nine month old baby from an orphanage and had no morals apparently
He conditioned this child to be mortified of fluffy white animals
Albert was pretty cute and loved animals including white rats
Then whenever he was brought a white rat Watson would bang some metal pipe with a hammer and would scare Albert
Albert was then mortified of white rats
He was also mortified any other fluffy or white things
Albert was never conditioned to not be afraid of white fluffy things and was just dropped back off at the orphanage
He died at age six
This type of conditioning is also called aversive conditioning
First Order Conditioning
Bell + Meat = Salivation becomes Bell = Salivation
Second/Higher Order Conditioning
After first order conditioning
Light + Bell = Salivation becomes Light = Salivation
Learned Taste Aversions
Food paired with sickness is incredibly strong conditioning
Even when food and sickness are hours apart
Non-passive learning
Learning based on consequences - Rewards and punishments
Edward Thornsike’s Law of Effect
Instrumental learning - behavior changes based on its consequences
Rewards strengthen behavior
Punishments weaken behavior
B.F. Skinner
Nurture over nature
Used skinner boxes or operant conditioning chambers to prove his concepts
Skinner Box
A box with stimuli, punishments, and rewards
There’s a myth that he made one for his own child but this is false
Reinforcers
Anything that increases a behavior
Positive Reinforcement
The addition of something pleasant
Negative Reinforcement
The removal of something unpleasant
Punishment
Anything that decreases a behavior
Positive Punishment
The addition of something unpleasant
Negative Punishment
The removal of something pleasant
Shaping
When the subject does something similar to the desired behavior they will be rewarded
Reinforcing small steps on the way to the desired behavior
Primary Reinforcers
Food, water, affection, naturally satisfying things
Secondary/Conditioned Reinforcers
Money, fast cars, good grades, things you have to learn to value
Money is a generalized reinforcer which means that it can be traded for anything
Primary Punishers
Pain, freezing temperature, naturally unpleasant thing
Secondary/Conditioned Punishers
Failing grades and social disapproval, things you have to learn to not want
Acquisition
the connection between the behavior and the consequence
Token Economy
Every time a desired behavior is performed, a token is given
Tokens can be traded for prizes
Used in homes, prisons, mental institutions, and schools
Premack Principle
You have to take into consideration the reinforcers used
Is the reinforcer wanted? Or at least is it more preferable than the targeted behavior?
Reinforcement Schedules
How often do you give the reinforcer?
Continuous Reinforcement
Reinforce the behavior everytime it is exhibited
Usually done when the subject is first learning to make the association
Acquisition comes fast
Extinction also comes fast
Partial Reinforcement
Reinforce the behavior only sometimes after it is exhibited
Acquisition comes slowly
Extinction is less likely
There are four types of partial reinforcement schedules
Ratio Schedules
Fixed Ratio
Provides reinforcement after a set number of correct behaviors (the dog gets a treat after sitting three times)
Variable Ratio
Provides reinforcement after a random number of correct behaviors (like the lottery or gambling)
Hard to acquire but also very resistant to extinction
Interval Schedules
Fixed Interval
Requires a set amount of time to elapse before giving the reinforcement (She gets a cookie every ten days she works out)
Variable Interval
Requires a random amount of time to elapse before giving the reinforcement (Phone notifications)
Hard to acquire but also very resistant to extinction
Taste Aversion
John Garcia found that aversion to taste is only conditioned by pairing a taste to nausea
This conditioning is extremely quick and strong
This could be an evolutionary adaptation
Instinctive Drift
The tendency for conditioning to be hindered by natural instincts
Keller and Marian Breland found that through operant conditioning they should teach raccoons to put a coin in a box only when using a reinforcement
Conditioning involves some information processing
Robert Rescorla - pairing two stimuli doesn’t always produce the same level of conditioning. Conditioning is more effective when the stimulus acts as a reliable signal that predicts the appearance of the unconditioned stimulus
BoBo Doll Experiment - Albert Bandura
We learn through modeling behavior from others
Observational Learning + Operant Conditioning = Bandura’s Social Learning Theory
Antisocial models (Family, neighborhood, TV) may have antisocial effects in young children
Positive Observational Learning
Prosocial (positive or helpful) models have prosocial effects
Elementary school children who are exposed to violent media at a young age tend to exhibit more violent behavior
Mirror Neurons
Frontal lobe neurons that fire when performing certain actions or when observing another doing so
The brain’s mirroring of another’s action may enable imitation and empathy
Latent Learning
Latent learning is hidden learning
Rat Experiment - Edward Toleman
Sometimes learning is not immediately evident
Rats needed a reason to display what they have learned
Intrinsic Motivation - Internally motivated. Doing it just to do it
Extrinsic Motivation - Externally motivated. Doing it for a reward or to avoid a punishment
Insight Learning
Wolfgang Kohler’s Chimpanzees - Some animals learn through “ah ha” experiences
The persistence of learning over time through the storage and retrieval of information
Memory helps make us who we are
Memory is the capacity for storing and retrieving information
Memories are selected, constructed, and edited by the world around us
Memories can have holes or distortions
Recall
Retrieving the information from memory
Recognition
Identify the information from possible information
Elizabeth Loftus - mac-daddy of memory research
If false memories are implanted, these memories often become fabricated
Memory Construction
While tapping out memories we filter of fill in missing pieces of information to make our recall more coherent
Misinformation and Imagination Effects
Incorporating misleading information into one’s memory of an event
Eyewitnesses often construct incorrect information when asked to recall the scene of the crime
Encoding
The processing of information into the memory system
Structural encoding
Focuses on what words look like
Length
Handwriting
Phonemic encoding
Focuses on how words sound
Semantic encoding
Focuses on the meaning of words
Visual Encoding
The encoding of visual information
Acoustic Encoding
Semantic Encoding
Primacy Effect
Tending to know the first things on a list
Recency Effect
Tending to know the last things on a list
Serial Positioning Effect
Tending to know the most significant things on a list
Storage
The retention of encoded information over time
Richard Atkinson and Richard Shiffrin’s three stage model of memory storage
Sensory Memory
Stores incoming information in detail but only for an instant
The information is unprocessed and dumped after a few seconds
Iconic Memory - visual sensory memory
Echoic Memory - auditory sensory memory
Short-Term Memory/Working Memory
Some of the information from sensory memory is transferred to short-term memory
Holds about seven items for twenty seconds unless rehearsed then it lasts longer (we also remember numbers better than letters)
Can be achieved through rehearsal
ex. Repeating someone’s phone number over and over to remember it for later
Chunking - More can be put to memory if the information is chunked into big familiar pieces of information
HO TB UT TE RE DP OP CO RN IN AB OW L
HOT BUTTERED POPCORN IN A BOWL
Mnemonic Devices -
ROY G. BIV
No-one Eats Soggy Waffles
Dead King Philip Coughed On Fancy Glitter Socks
Working Memory is an active system that can be kept working in order to keep a memory as long as it is needed
Ex. store information while trying to make decisions
Long-Term Memory
Long-Term Memory usually stays with a person for the rest of their life
Sometimes these memories cannot be recalled but are remembered
Unlimited capacity
Organization of Memories
People would never be able to retrieve any memories if they weren’t organized in some way
Psychologists believe that the brain organizes memories by category
Long-Term memory also seems to be organized by familiarity, relevance, or connection to other information
Flashbulb memories are vivid, detailed memories of important events
Retrieval
The process of getting information out of memory storage
Retrieval cues are stimuli that help the process of retrieval
There cues are
Associations
The brain stores information as networks of associated concepts
Priming - recalling a particular word becomes easier if another, related word is recalled first
Context
People can often remember an event by placing themselves in the same context they were in when the event happened
Mood
If people are in the same mood there were in during an event, they will probably be able to recall the event easier
This is also called Mood Congruent Memory
State Dependent Memory
You are more likely to remember something if you are in the same situation as you were when you first experienced it
Lost Memories are not actually lost, just hard to retrieve
Automatic Processing
We process a lot of information effortlessly
Space
While reading a textbook, you automatically encode the place
Time
Frequency
Effortful Processing
Explicit Memory
Conscious, intentional remembering of information
Implicit Memory
Procedural memories - unintentional muscle memory
Conditioned memories - a conditioned response (stopping at a red light)
Declarative Memory
Recall of factual information such as dates, words, faces, events, and concepts
Procedural Memory
Recall of how to do things such as swimming of driving a car
Semantic Memory
Recall of general knowledge and concepts
Episodic Memory
Recall of personal experiences and events
Hermann Ebbinghaus - the first person to do scientific research about forgetting
He used himself as a subject
Spent time memorizing lists then tested his memory and its duration
Meaningful information fades more slowly than nonsense
Retention is the proportion of learned information that is retained or remembered
A Forgetting Curve is a graph that shows how quickly information is forgotten over time
Researchers measure forgetting through
Recall
Remembering without any external cues
Recognition
Identifying learned information using external cues
True/false or multiple choice
Relearning
Seeing how learning something for a second/third+ time affects memory and how long it takes to learn
Causes of Forgetting
Ineffective coding
The way that information is encoded affects the ability to remember it
learning things with meaning usually leads to better memory of them
Decay
Memory can fade over time
If something is in long-term memory then they will not be forgotten while in the long-term memory
Interference
People forget information because of interference from other learned information
Retroactive interference is when newly learned information makes people forget old information
Proactive interference happens when old information makes people forget newly learned information
Retrieval failure
Failing to retrieve information can lead to the memory being lost
Motivated forgetting
People forget because they push unpleasant information deep into their unconscious through repression
Also called psychogenic amnesia
Physical injury/trauma
Anterograde amnesia is the inability to remember events that occur after an injury or traumatic event
Retrograde amnesia is the inability to remember events that occurred before an injury or traumatic event
Source Amnesia
Attributing an event to the wrong source that we experienced, heard, read, or imagined
Not being able to remember where you learned something
False Memories
Children’s Eyewitness Recall is typically unreliable
Memories of abuse are often repressed
Memories of abuse are sometimes constructed
Memory can be lost and forgotten but it can also be enhanced
Processes of memory enhancements
Rehearsal
Practicing material and repeating it for memory
Overlearning
Continuing to practice material even after it is learned
Distributed Practice/Spacing Effect
Learning material in short sessions over a long period of time
The opposite of cramming
Minimizing Interference
People remember material better if they don't learn similar material right before or after
Deep Processing
People remember material better if they learn about its deeper meaning
Elaboration involves associating the material with other materials
Organizing Material
Organizing material in a coherent way helps people to remember it
Mnemonic Devices -
Acronyms
ROY G. BIV
Acrostics
No-one Eats Soggy Waffles
Dead King Philip Coughed On Fancy Glitter Socks
Narrative methods
Involve making up a story to remember words
Rhymes
Visual Imagery
Method of Loci
People picture themselves walking through a familiar place
They imagine each item on their list in a particular place as they walk
They mentally walk around again when they need to remember the items
The Link Method
People associate items on a list with each other
Peg-Word Method
People remember a rhyme that associates numbers with words
Researchers don’t know exactly how and where memory works on a physiological level
The hippocampus and memory
Long term memory involves the hippocampus
Some researchers think that the hippocampus coordinates all elements of memory throughout the brain
Other researchers think that the hippocampus helps with consolidation, the transferring of information into long-term memory
The visual cortex holds memories of visual information and so on
Long-term potential is a lasting change at synapses that occurs when long-term memories form
As you do something over and over again it becomes easier for your brain to signal
Muscle Memory
Memories aren’t exact records and can’t be completely trusted
Schemas or mental models can distort memory
Source Amnesia is when people can’t accurately remember the origin of the information
The Misinformation Effect is when people’s recollections are distorted by information given to them after the event occurred
Hindsight Bias can distort memories
People tend to overestimate their ability to recall information correctly
Confabulation is when people claim to remember something that didn’t happen or think that something happened to them when it actually happened to someone else
Cognitive psychology concerns both language and thought
Popularity originated in the 1950s
René Descartes - “I think, therefore I am”
How does language affect thought?
Why are humans motivated to create art?
Can a “thinking” machine really be made?
Language is a system of symbols and rules that are used for communication
Spoken, written, or gestured words and how we combine them to communicate meaning
Communication must meet this criteria
Uses symbols (sounds, gestures, or written characters) that represent objects, actions, events, and ideas.
Is meaningful and possible to understand by others that know that language
Generative, symbols of a language can be combined to produce an infinite number of messages
Has rules that govern how symbols can be arranged. This allows people to understand the language
The building blocks of language
Phonemes
Smallest distinguishable units of language
Consonants
Vowels
Singular sounds
“Ch” “sh” “th”
Morphemes
Smallest meaningful units of language
“I” or “a”
Prefixes
Suffixes
Word stems
Grammar - a system of rules in a language that enables us to communicate and understand
Syntax
A system of rules that governs how words can be meaningfully arranged to form phrases and sentences
Semantics
Adds meaning to the word
-ed means past tense
Periods and exclamation/question Marks
Language Development in Children
Language development is done in stages
3 months - can distinguish between the phonemes from any language
3-6 months - babbling and producing sounds that resemble any language
6 months - adjusting babbling to their language
12-24 months - children start producing simple sounds from their language (one word language “no” “stop”)
24 months - children begin to combine two or three words to make small sentences. This is usually telegraphic speech
Telegraphic Speech - Contains no articles or prepositions
“Yellow car” “no sleep”
3 years - Children can usually use tenses and plurals
Children’s language abilities continue to grow throughout the school-age years. They grow to recognize tone, puns, metaphors, and sarcasm. These abilities come from metalinguistic awareness.
Metalinguistic Awareness - The ability to think about how language is used
Ambiguous Language - Language is sometimes used correctly but still have an unclear meaning
“Avoid biting dogs”
Nature vs. nurture is here too.
Researchers acknowledge that both play a role in language
Some think that learning influences language acquisition but others believe that the influences are biological
Receptive Language before Expressive Language
Children’s ability to understand language develops faster than their ability to speak it
Receptive language is the ability to understand
Expressive language is the ability to communicate
Environmental Influences on Language Acquisition
Behaviorist B.F. Skinner believed that language is acquired through principles of conditioning (social learning theory)
association, imitation, and reinforcement
Children learn words by associating sounds with objects, actions, and events
Critics of these theories argue that
Learning cannot account for the rapid rate at which children acquire language
There are an infinite number of sentences in a language. They can’t all be learned by imitation
Children make errors like over-regularizing verbs
Children acquire language skills even though adults do not consistently correct their syntax
Neural Networks
Cognitive neuroscientists have created neural networks that can acquire some aspects of language
Using examples of language, the neural networks have been able to learn the language’s statistical structure and accurately make the past tense form of verbs.
The developers of these networks speculate that children may learn language in the same way
Biological Influences on Language Acquisition
Noam Chomsky - argues that human brains have a LAD (language acquisition device). This allows children to develop language skills. All children are born with a universal grammar
We learn language too quickly to learn it through the social learning theory
Evidence
The stages of language development occur at about the same ages in most children despite their environments
Children’s language development follows a similar pattern across cultures
Children generally acquire language quickly and effortlessly
Deaf children who have not been exposed to a language may make up their own language. These new languages resemble each other in sentence structure, even when they are created in different cultures.
Biology and Environment
Some researchers emphasize the importance of both nature and nurture in language
Humans do have an innate ability to acquire the rules of language
Children develop language skills through interaction with others rather than acquire the knowledge automatically
Language, Culture, and Thought
Researchers disagree about the extent to which language and culture influence the way people think
Benjamin Lee Whorf - 1950s - Linguistic Relativity Hypothesis / Linguistic Determinism
Language determines the way people think
Most subsequent research has not supported this hypothesis
It’s probably more accurate to say that language influences the way people think
Semantic slanting
A way of making statements so that they will evoke specific emotional responses
Name Calling
A strategy of labeling people in order to influence their thinking. In anticipatory name calling, it is implied that if someone thinks in a particular way, he or she will receive an unfavorable label
Bilingualism
Some people assume that bilingualism impairs children’s language development, there is no evidence to support this assumption.
Bilingual children develop language at the same rate as children who speak only one language
In general, people who begin learning a second language in childhood master it more quickly and thoroughly than people do in adulthood
Some researchers have tried to teach apes to use sign language
Apes cannot say words due to their lung structure but they can communicate through sign or computers
Koko the gorilla
Honeybees communicate through ✨Dance ✨
Washoe the Chimpanzee
Washoe is a chimpanzee that can speak in sign
She can
Sign meaningful combinations of words
Follow instructions
Respond to questions in ASL
Washoe’s foster child Loulis learned sign language from Washoe
Skepticism about Ape Language
Apes unlike people can be trained to learn only a limited number of words and only with difficulty
Apes use signs or computers to get a reward. They might be taught how to sign/use the computer without real meaning only for the reward
Apes don’t have a sense for syntax
No difference between “me eat apple” and “apple eat me”
Trainers may be reading meanings into signs apes make and unintentionally providing cues that help them respond correctly to questions
Non-primates can communicate
Parrots can communicate meaningfully
They have the ability to distinguish between objects and colors
Can make requests
Alex the African gray parrot can speak hundreds of words and seems to express unique meaningful thoughts
Cognition involves…
Thinking
Knowing
Remembering
Understanding
Problem solving
Decision making
Creativity
The building blocks of cognition
Concepts/Schemas
Mental category that groups similar objects, events, qualities, or actions
Summarize information
Prototypes
A mental image or best example of a category
Think of a bird (Do you see a cardinal)
Used to decide whether a particular instance of something belongs to a concept
Cognitive Schemas
Mental models of different aspects of the world
Contain
Knowledge
Beliefs
Assumptions
Associations
Expectations
Jean Piaget’s Stage Theory
Children’s thinking goes through a set series of four major stages
Cognitive skills unfold naturally as they mature and explore their environment
Lev Vygotsky’s Theory of Social Influences
Children learn to think through playing and interacting with others
Private Speech
Children use language to control their own behavior
First they talk to themselves out loud
Then they learn how to tell themselves how to behave silently as they grow up
Current Research
Children have complex cognitive abilities as early as four months old
Infants seem to understand basic physic
Humans might have been born with some basic cognitive ability
Trial and Error
Keep trying and failing until you get it right
Algorithms
Methodical trial and error
A logical set of rules that guarantee that you solve the problem
Might take longer but success is guaranteed
Deductive Reasoning
Conclusions are drawn from a set of general premises or statements
Inductive Reasoning
A general conclusion is drawn to from examples
Heuristics
A rule-of-thumb strategy that lets us make judgements and solve problems efficiently
Prone to error
Dialectical Reasoning
Pros and cons list
Forming Subgoals
Coming up with intermediate steps to solve a problem
Simplifying the problem
Comparing to similar problems
Problems can be easier if it can be compared to a similar problem
Insight
A sudden “aha!!!” moment where you just get the answer
Additive Strategies
Listing the attributes of each element of the decision, weights them according to importance, and adds them up
Elimination Strategies
Eliminating alternatives based on whether they do or do not possess aspects the decision maker deems desirable
Obstacles to Problem Solving
Representative Heuristic
Your prototype/stereotype might be wrong
Can cause us to ignore important information
Availability Heuristic
Estimating the likelihood of events based on the availability of our memory
If it comes to mind easily we presume it is common
The Gambler’s Fallacy
The mistaken belief that if something happens more frequently than normal during a given period it will happen less frequently in the future
Confirmation Bias
A tendency to search for information that confirms one’s preconceptions
Fixation
The inability to see a problem from a new perspective
Functional Fixedness
You can only think of the one “true function”
You can only buy something with a quarter not use it for anything else thats just silly
Mental Set
A tendency to approach a problem in a particular way especially if it has worked in the past
Why do we need to change it? We’ve always done it that way?
May or may not be a good thing
Overconfidence
The tendency to be more confident than correct
Overestimate the accuracy of your beliefs and judgments
Belief Bias
The tendency for one’s preexisting beliefs to distort logical reasoning
Sometimes making invalid conclusions valid or vice versa
Belief Perseverance
Clinging to your beliefs even when they’ve been disproven
Creativity
Divergent Thinking
Explore possibilities
Going from specific to general
Brainstorming
Think of all possibilities
Convergent Thinking
Deciding what to do
Narrowing down ideas
Characteristics of Creativity
Expertise
Training, knowledge, and expertise
Imaginative Thinking Skills
The ability to see things in novel ways, recognize patterns, and to make connections
Nonconformity
The ability to think independently and not care as much about what people think of you
Curiosity
Persistence
The will to work hard to overcome obstacles and take risks
Seeking new experiences
Tolerate ambiguity and rissks
Preserver in overcoming obstacles
Intrinsic Motivation
Longing for a sense of accomplishment or satisfying curiosity
A creative environment
People best realize their creative potential when they are in a creative environment
What makes us intelligent
Hard work
Practice
Our environment
Genetics
Intelligence is..
The ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to new situations
socially constructed and not the same in every environment (culturally specific)
A concept!! NOT a thing
Everyone has intelligence.. just some people have different kinds of intelligence
Factor Analysis
A statistical procedure that identifies clusters of related items on a test
Charles Spearman - General Intelligence
G - Factor
L.L. Thurstone - Primary Mental Abilities
There is not a single scale of general intelligence
Seven clusters of primary mental abilities
Word Fluency
Verbal Comprehension
Spatial Ability
Perceptual Speed
Numerical Ability
Inductive Reasoning
Memory
Since then there has been evidence that there is a “G”
Howard Gardner - Multiple Intelligences Theory
Also disagreed with the G but in a different way
Studied savants - people with limited mental ability but are exceptional in one area
Gardner’s Eight Multiple Intelligences
Visual/Spatial
Verbal/Linguistic
Logical/Mathematical
Bodily/Kinesthetic
Musical/Rhythmic
Interpersonal
Intrapersonal
Natural
Savant Syndrome
found in some individuals with autism
Exceptional talent in one specific area but poor mental function in other areas
Emotional Intelligence
the ability to perceive, express, understand, and regulate emotions
How do we assess intelligence
Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon
Concept of mental age
They discovered that by discovering someone’s mental age they can predict future performances
Lewis Terman - Stanford-Binet Test
*Intelligence Quotient = (mental age/chronological age )100
Issues with the IQ Formula
Doesn’t work when you’re older (typically older than 12)
Wechsler Tests
More common way to test IQ. does not use the formula but uses the same scoring system (100 is still average)
WAIS - Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale
WISC - Wechsler Index for School Children
WPPSI - Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence
Aptitude versus Achievement Tests
Aptitude
A test designed to predict a person’s future performance
The ability for that person to learn
Achievement
A test designed to assess what a person has learned
Tests must be
Standardized
Tests must be pretested to a representative sample of people
Form a normal distribution or bell curve
Reliable
The extent to which a test yields consistent results over time
Valid
The extent to which a test measures what it is supposed to measure
Content Validity
Does the test sample a behavior of interest
Predictive Validity
Does the test predict future behavior
Sometimes called criterion related validity
Biological tests of intelligence
Reaction time
The amount of time a subject takes to respond to a stimulus
Perceptual speed
The amount of time a person takes to accurately perceive and discriminate between stimuli
The influence of culture
Tests that are constructed primarily by white, middle-class researchers may not be equally relevant to people of all ethnic groups and economic classes
Cultural values and experiences can affect factors such as. attitude toward exams, degree of comfort in the test setting, motivation, competitiveness, rapport with the test administrator, and comfort with problem solving independently rather than as part of a team effort
Cultural stereotypes can affect the motivation to perform well on tests
Many researchers believe that there is a reaction range to IQ
Heredity Influences
Family studies show that intelligence tends to run in families
Twin studies show a higher correlation between identical twins in IQ than between fraternal twins. This holds true even when identical twins reared apart are compared to fraternal twins reared together
Adoption studies show that adopted children somewhat resemble their biological parents in intelligence
Heritability of Intelligence
Heritability estimates don’t reveal anything about the extent to which genes influence a single person’s traits
Heritability depends on how similar the environment is for a group of people
Even with high heritability, a trait can still be influenced by environment
Biological Influences
Brain Anatomy
Studies have shown a +.33 correlation between brain size and intelligence scores (relative to body size)
Neural Processing Speed
People who score high on intelligence tests tend to retrieve information from memory more quickly
+.3-+.5 correlation between speed of taking in perceptual information and intelligence score
Gender Differences in Intelligence
Similarities outnumber differences
Female brain trends
Better with words
Better with object location and have better senses
Better emotion detectors
Male brain trends
Scores vary more than female scores
Better spatial ability
Better with numbers and math
This is probably mostly due to nurture with social views on gender
Ethnic Similarities and Differences in Intelligence Test Scores
Probably all completely due to environmental differences
Environmental Influences
Better environment → Better Intelligence
Evidence
Adoption studies demonstrate that adopted children show some similarity in IQ to their adoptive parents
Siblings raised together are more similar in IQ than siblings raised separately
Biologically unrelated children raised together in the same home have similarity in IQ
IQ declines over time in children raised in deprived environments, such as understaffed orphanages or circumstances of poverty and isolation
People’s performance on IQ tests has improved over time in industrialized countries. This is known as the Flynn Effect
Flynn Effect
Probably due to environmental factors
Smaller families
Improved education
Internet
nutrition
Intelligence tests are biased towards a certain cultural experience
Dynamic of Intelligence
The Stability of Intelligence Over the Lifespan
Increases with age
By age 4 we can begin to predict their adult scores
By age 7 intelligence scores stabilize
An IQ under 70 is considered intellectual disability
An IQ about 130 is considered high intelligence
Early Intervention Effects
Early neglect from caregivers leads children to develop a lack of personal control over the environment and it impoverishes their intelligence
Schooling Effects
Increased schooling at a young age correlates with higher intelligence scores
Projects like Head Start help this
Stereotype Threat
Self-confirming concern that one will be evaluated based on negative stereotypes
Patterns of thoughts, feelings, or behaviors that are deviant, distressful, and dysfunctional
running naked In one culture may be normal while in others it may lead to arrest
Early Theories
Abnormal behavior was considered evil spirits trying to get out
A theory to get rid of these spirits was to make the body extremely uncomfortable
History of Mental Disorders
In the 1800s disturbed people were no longer thought of as madmen but as mentally ill
Early mental hospitals were basically prisons
Someone hospitals would charge admission like a zoo for people to see the mentally ill chained up
Philippe Pinel
French Doctor who was the first to take the chains off and declare that these people are sick and “a cure must be found!!”
Medical Model
Physicians discovered that syphilis led to mental disorders
Etiology
Cause and development of the disorder
Diagnosis
Identifying and distinguishing one disease from another
Treatment
Treating a disorder in a psychiatric hospital
Prognosis
Forecast about the disorder
Vulnerability-Stress Model
Psychological disorders result from an interaction between biological and environmental factors
The Learning Model
Theorizes that psychological disorders result from the reinforcement of abnormal behavior
The Psychodynamic Model
psychological disorders result from maladaptive defenses against unconscious conflicts
Disorder Assessment
Two main methods
Objective Tests
Pencil and paper standardized tests
Projective Tests
Require psychologists to make judgments based on a subject responses to ambiguous stimuli
Rorschach Tests
In which subjects interpret a series of inkblots are examples of projective tests
Bio-psycho-social Perspective
Assumes that biological, socio-cultural, and psychological factors combing and interact to produce psychological disorders
Biological Influences
Evolution
Individual genes
Brain structure and chemistry
Psychological Influences
Stress
Trauma
Learned helplessness
Mood related perceptions and memories
Social-cultural influences
Roles
Expectations
Definitions of normality and disorder
Perspective and Disorders
Psychoanalytic/Psychodynamic
Internal, unconscious causes
Humanistic
Failure to strive to one’s potential or being out of touch with one’s feelings
Behavioral
Reinforcement history and the environment
Cognitive
Irrational, dysfunctional thoughts or ways of thinking
Sociocultural
Dysfunctional society
Biomedical/Neuroscience
Organic problems, biochemical imbalances, genetic predispositions
DSM - Diagnostic Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
Classifies disorders and symptoms
Does NOT includes causes or cures
Most recent is the DSM5 which describes over 300 psychological disorders compared to the 60 in the 1950s
Major Classification
Neurotic Disorders
Distressing but one can still function in society and act rationally
Psychotic Disorders
Person loses contact with reality
Experience hallucinations or delusions
Labeling Psychological Disorders
Critics and DSM argue that labels may stigmatize individuals
Labels may be helpful for healthcare professional when communicating with one another and establishing therapy
“Insanity” labels raise moral and ethical questions about how society should treat people who have disorders and have committed crimes
A group of conditions where the primary symptoms are anxiety or defenses against anxiety
The patient fears something will happen to them
They are in a state of intense apprehension, uneasiness, uncertainty, or fear
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
Persistent and excessive anxiety or worry that lasts at least six months
An anxiety disorder in which a person is continually tense, apprehensive and in a state of autonomic nervous system arousal
The patient may feel constantly tense and worried, feel inadequate, is oversensitive, can’t concentrate, may have insomnia
Panic Disorder
An anxiety disorder marked by a minutes-long episode of intense dread in which a person experiences terror and accompanying chest pain, choking and other frightening sensations
Can cause secondary disorders, such as agoraphobia
Agoraphobia
Anxiety about losing control in public places
Phobias
Persistent, irrational fear and avoidance of a specific object, activity, or situation
Specific Phobia
Intense anxiety when exposed to a particular object or situation
Social Phobia
Intense anxiety when exposed to certain kinds or social or performance situations
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Persistent unwanted thoughts (obsessions) cause someone to feel the need (compulsion) to engage in a particular action
Obsession about dirt and germs may lead to compulsive hand washing
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Haunting memories
Nightmares
Social withdrawal
Jumpy anxiety
Sleep problems
Resilience to PTSD
Only about 10% of women and 20% of men develop PTSD in reaction to traumatic situations
Holocaust survivors show re
Explaining Anxiety Disorders
Genetic Predisposition - Biological
Twin studies suggest that there may be genetic predispositions to anxiety disorders
Concordance rates are used to describe the likelihood that a disorder might be inherited
Identical twins have a higher concordance rate than fraternal
People differ in sensitivity to anxiety - Biological
Neurotransmitters - Biological
There may be a link between anxiety disorders and disturbances in neural circuits that use the neurotransmitters GABA and serotonin
Brain damage to the hippocampus can contribute to PTSD symptoms - Biological
SSRIs and Anxiety Disorder - Biological
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors are a class of drug commonly used to treat anxiety disorders. They raise the level of serotonin in the brain by preventing it from being reabsorbed back into cells that released it
Classical Conditioning - Conditioning and Learning
People can acquire anxiety responses through classical conditioning
Evolutionary predisposition - Conditioning and Learning
Martin Seligman proposed that people are more likely to develop conditioned fears to certain objects and situations due to evolutionary influences
Observational learning - Conditioning and Learning
Children may learn to be afraid of certain objects or situations by observing their parent's’ behavior in the face of those objects or situations
Cognitive Factors
People with certain thinking styles are more susceptible to anxiety disorders than others
Tend to see threats in harmless situations
Focus too much attention on situations that they perceive to be threatening
Tend to recall threatening information better than nonthreatening information
Tend to be more neurotic
Psychological disorders characterized by emotional extremes
Marked disturbances in emotional state which affect thinking, physical symptoms, social relationships, and behavior
Unipolar
Experience moods that are depressive
Bipolar Disorder
Experience moods that are both depressive and manic
Depression: Major depression, suicidal thoughts, self harm
Mania: Wild spending sprees, taking on big projects, becoming very promiscuous, taking extreme risks
Dysthymic Disorder
Experiencing a mild depressed mood for a majority of days over at least two years
Depression
Have a reason
The common cold of psychological disorders
Symptoms
Lethargy and fatigue
Feelings of worthlessness
Loss of interest in family & friends
Loss of interest in activities
Major Depressive Disorder
No apparent reason to be depressed
Episodic periods of at least two weeks
Constant sadness or irritability
Loss of interest in almost all activities
Changes sleeping or eating patterns
Low energy
Feelings of worthlessness or guilt
Difficulty concentrating
Recurrent thoughts about suicide
Seasonal Affective Disorder
A type of depression that is related to changes in seasons
Suicide
More likely when a depressed person begins the process of recovery and becomes more energetic
Bipolar Disorders
At least one distinct period when a person exhibits manic symptoms
Irritability
Feelings of being high
Decreased need for sleep
Inflated self-esteem or grandiosity
Fast and pressured speech
Agitation
Increased interest in pleasurable activities that have the potential for harmful consequences
Usually also experience depressive episodes
Etiology
Biological
Genetic Predisposition
Concordance rate in identical twins versus fraternal
Neurotransmitters
Research shows that the neurotransmitters norepinephrine and serotonin are involved in mood disorders
Brain structure
People with chronic depressions tend to have a smaller hippocampus and amygdala
Cognitive
Learned helplessness
Matin Seligman proposed that depression came from learned helplessness or a tendency to give up passively in the face of unavoidable stressors
Self-blame
Depressed people tend to attribute negative events to internal, stable, and global factors
Low self-esteem
Rumination
Brooding about problems is associated with longer periods of depression
Interpersonal Factors
Lack of social network
Loss of an important relationship
Environmental Stressors
General
Problematic eating patterns
Extreme concerns about body weight
Inappropriate behaviors aimed at controlling body weight
Anorexia Nervosa
Refusal to maintain a body weight in the normal range
intense fear of gaining weight
highly distorted body image
Can result in medical problems
Absence of menstrual periods
Anemia
Kidney and cardiovascular malfunctions
Dental problems
Osteoporosis
Bullimia Nervosa
Habitual binge eating
Unhealthy efforts to control body weight
vomiting
fasting
excessive exercise
use of laxatives, diuretics, and other medications
Typically have a body weight in the normal range
Can result in medical consequences
Fluid and electrolyte imbalances
Dental and gastrointestinal problems
Etiology
Biological Factors
Identical twins are more likely to both suffer from an eating disorder than are fraternal twins
Biological relatives of people with an eating disorder appear to have an increased risk of developing the disorders
Personality Factors
Anorexia nervosa - obsessive, rigid, neurotic, emotionally inhibited
Bulimia nervosa - impulsive, oversensitive and have poor self-esteem
Cultural Factors
Strongly influence the onset of eating disorders
Some countries highly value thinness
Family Influence
Some theorists have suggested that eating disorders are related to insufficient autonomy within the family
Others have proposed that eating disorders might be affected by mothers who place too much emphasis on body weight
Cognitive Factors
People with eating disorders show distortions of thinking such as the tendency to think in rigid all-or-none terms. It is unclear whether this type of thinking causes the eating disorders or results from the eating disorders
Stress
The onset of anorexia nervosa is often associated with stressful events such as leaving home for college
General
Occur when a person has physiological symptoms due to a psychological problem
Medical exams rule out any physical cause
Usually begins before the age of 30
May have unnecessary non-surgical and surgical procedures
Psycho-somatic stuff
Somatization Disorder
Experience a wide variety of physical symptoms such as pain and gastrointestinal, sexual, and pseudo-neurological problems
Hypochondriasis
Frequent physical complaints for which medical doctors are unable to locate the cause
They usually believe that minor issues are indicative and more severe illnesses
Conversion Disorder
Report the existence of severe physical problems with no biological reasoning
Like blindness or paralysis
Typically temporary
Etiology
Personality
Research suggests that people with histrionic personality traits are more likely to have somatoform disorders
Histrionic people tend to be self-focused, excitable, highly open to suggestion, very emotional, and dramatic
Cognitive
People with these disorders may pay too much attention to bodily sensations
They may make catastrophic conclusions when they experience minor symptoms
They may have distorted ideas about good health and expect healthy people to be free of any symptoms or discomfort
Learning
May learn to adopt a sick role because they are reinforced for being sick
General
Means “Split-mind”
One of several psychotic disorders
People with psychotic disorders lose contact with reality and often have delusions or hallucinations
Lack of selective attention - can’t filter out information
Positive symptoms
Presence of altered behaviors
Examples
Delusions
False beliefs that are strongly held despite contradictory evidence
Delusions of persecution or grandeur
Hallucinations
Sensory or perceptual experiences that happen without any external stimulus
Can occur in any sensory modality
Auditory hallucinations are most common in schizophrenia
Disorganized speech
Word salad - words and sentences strung together in an incoherent way
Disorganized behavior
Inappropriate gestures or laughter
agitated pacing
unpredictable violence
Negative Symptoms
Absence or reduction of normal behavior
Examples
Expressionless face
Rigid body
Emotional flatness
Social withdrawal
Spare or uninflected speech
Lack of motivation
Chronic and Acute Schizophrenia
Chronic Schizophrenia
Comes on slowly
Harder to treat
More negative symptoms
Acute Schizophrenia
Rapid
Easier to treat
More positive symptoms
Subtypes of Schizophrenia
Paranoid type
Delusions and/or hallucinations
Persecutory
Involve a belief that one is being oppressed, pursued, or harassed
Grandiose
Involve a belied that one is very important or famous
Relatively normal cognitive and emotional functioning
Disorganized type
Disorganized speech/behavior
Emotional flatness
Inappropriate emotions
Catatonic type
Unnatural movement patterns
Rigid posture
Continual, purposeless movements
Unnatural speech patterns
Absence of speech
Parroting other people’s speech
Very negative view
Undifferentiated type
Combination of the other types
Many and varied symptoms
Does not meet the criteria for other types
Residual type
No longer showing the symptoms
Etiology
Biological Factors
Genetic predisposition
Identical twins - 48% concordance
Fraternal twins - 17% concordance
Two Schizophrenic Parents - 46% chance of developing
General Population - 1% chance of developing
Neurotransmitters
Overabundance/overactivity of dopamine
Some researchers say its dopamine and serotonin
Glutamate may also play a tole
Underdevelopment of glutamate neurons results in the overactivity of dopamine neurons
Brain structure
Inability to filter out irrelevant information which leads to stimulus overload
Brains of people with schizophrenia do differ structurally from the brains of normal people in many ways
More likely to have enlarged ventricles or fluid filled spaces
Abnormalities in the thalamus
Reduces hippocampus volume
Brain Injury
Brain injuries during sensitive periods of development can make people more susceptible to schizophrenia later on in life
Viral infections or malnutrition during the prenatal period and complications during the birthing process can increase the later risk of schizophrenia
Abnormal brain development during adolescence may also play a role in schizophrenia
Stress
Stress seems to play a role if the person is already biologically vulnerable to schizophrenia
Conscious awareness becomes separated from previous memories, thoughts, and feelings
Symptoms
Derealization
Sense of being unreal
Being separated from the body
Watching yourself as in a movie
Psychogenic Amnesia
A person cannot remember things with no physiological basis for the disruption of memory
ONLY retrograde amnesia
NOT organic amnesia or anterograde
Dissociative Fugue
People with Psychogenic Amnesia find themselves in an unfamiliar environment
They often wander around and no nothing about themselves
Dissociative Identity Disorder
Used to be known as Multiple Personality Disorder
A person has several rather than one integrated personality
Much more prevalent in western cultures
People with DID commonly have a history of childhood trauma
General
Characterized by inflexible and enduring behavior patterns that impair social functioning
Doesn’t change
Stable patterns of experience and behavior that differ noticeably from patterns that are considered normal by a person’s culture
Disorders
Paranoid Personality disorder
Constant distrust in others and suspicion that people around you have sinister motives
Search for hidden meanings and find hostile intentions in others
Schizoid personality disorder
Entails social withdrawal and restricted expression of emotions
Avoid relationships and don’t show much emotion
Weak social skills
Don’t have a need for attention or acceptance
Don’t secretly wish for a friend
“Loners”
Borderline personality disorder
characterized by impulsive behavior and unstable relationships, emotions, and self-image
Prone to constant mood swings
Often injure themselves
Quick to anger when their expectations aren’t meant
Histrionic personality disorder
constant attention-seeking behavior and shallow emotions
Often interrupt others in order to dominate the conversation
Narcissistic personality disorder
an exaggerated sense of importance, a strong desire to be admired and a lack of empathy
Self-centeredness
They are generally uninterested in the feelings of others
They exaggerate their achievements expecting others to recognize them as being superior
Avoidant personality disorder
social withdrawal, low self esteem, and extreme sensitivity to negative evaluation
Consider themselves socially inept or unappealing
Extremely shy and sensitive to rejection
Wishes for friends
Avoid social interaction for dear of being ridiculed or humiliated
Antisocial personality disorder
Lack of conscience
Lack of respect for other people’s rights, feelings, and needs, beginning by age fifteen
People with antisocial personality disorder are deceitful and manipulative
Tend to break the law frequently.
They often lack empathy and remorse but can be superficially charming.
Their behavior is often aggressive, impulsive, reckless, and irresponsible
Referred to as sociopathy or psychopathy in the past
Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder
Need order in everything
Psychological inflexibility
Rigid conformity to rules and procedures, perfectionism, and excessive orderliness
Complete perfectionism
Etiology of Antisocial Personality Disorder
Biological factors
Central nervous system abnormalities
May have genetically inherited an inability to control impulses
May be caused by brain damage (prefrontal cortex)
Personality it’s who we are
Origins of personality are a mystery
Theories address
Environment
Genetics
Culture
Traits
Stable characteristics
States
temporary behaviors or feelings that depend on a person’s situation and motives
Ancient Greek Ideas
Personalities depend on the humor most prevalent in their bodies
Sanguine - Blood - Cheerful and passionate
Phlegmatic - Phlegm - Dull and unemotional
Melancholic - Black bile - Unhappy and depressed
Choleric - Yellow bile - Angry and hot-tempered
Trait Theory
Stable characteristics determine how an individual acts
Focused on the differences between individuals
Gordon Allport’s Trait Theory
Cardinal Traits
Dominate the individual’s whole life
The person is known for these traits
rare
Central Traits
Generic and basic foundations
Ex: Intelligent, honest, shy, etc
Secondary Traits
Sometimes related to attitudes of preferences and often appear only in certain situations
Ex: Anxiety when speaking to a larger group
Raymond Cattell’s Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire
Factor Analysis
Narrowed it down to sixteen main traits
Eysenck’s Three Dimensions of Personality
Introversion/Extraversion
Neuroticism/Emotional Stability
Moodiness and even-temperedness
Psychoticism
Difficulty dealing with reality
High → Antisocial, hostile, manipulative
The Five-Factor Theory of Personality
Raymond too many and Eysenck not enough
“Big Five”
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Conscientiousness
Neuroticism
Openness
Assessing the Trait Approach to Personality
Weaknesses
While an individual may score high for a specific trait they may not always exhibit it in every situation
Do not address how or why difference in personality develop or emerge
Sigmund Freud’s Theory of Psychoanalysis
Developed to treat mental disorders
Personalities arise because of attempts to resolve conflicts between unconscious sexual and aggressive impulses and societal demands to restrain those impulses
The Conscious
Contains the information that a person is paying attention to at any given time
The Preconscious
Information outside of a person’s attention but readily available if needed
The Unconscious
Most mental processes are unconscious
Contains thoughts, feelings, desires, and memories of which people have no awareness but that influence every aspect of their day-to-day lives
Freudian Slip
Slip of the tongue showing your unconscious feelings
The Id
Instinctual energy with biological urges such as impulses toward survival, sex, and aggression
Operates according to the pleasure principle, the drive to achieve pleasure and avoid pain.
Illogical, irrational, and motivated by immediate desire
The Ego
Manages the conflict between the id and the real world
Can be unconscious, conscious, and preconscious
Secondary process thinking
The Superego
The moral component of personality
Forces the ego to conform to reality and morality
Conflict
Believed that the id, the ego, and the superego are in constant conflict. Conflicts about sexual and aggressive urges
Anxiety
Anxiety arises when the ego cannot adequately balance the demands of the id and the superego
Defense Mechanisms
Behaviors that protect people from anxiety
Repression
Reaction formation
Projection
Rationalization
Displacement
Denial
Regression
Sublimation
Criticisms
He only studied wealthy women in Austria….?
His results are hard to test/verify
Doesn’t predict anything
Neo-Freudians
Alfred Adler
Childhood is important to personality
Focused on social factors instead of sexual
Our personality is driven by our efforts to conquer inferiority
Inferiority Complex
Karen Horney
Childhood anxiety is cause by a dependent child’s feelings of helplessness
This triggers our desire for love and security
Fought against Freud’s “penis envy” with her “womb envy”
Carl Jung
Less emphasis on social factors
Focused on the unconscious
We have a collective unconscious
A shared well of memories and experiences from our species history
B.F. Skinner’s Ideas
Environment determines behavior
People learn to behave in particular ways
Personality develops over their whole life span not just childhood
Albert Bandura’s Ideas
Personality arises through learning
Social-cognitive learning
We imitate models that we admire
Walter Mischel’s Ideas
Social-cognitive theorist
Researchers should pay attention to both situational and personal characteristics that influence behavior
Environments include opportunities, rewards, punishments, and chance occurrences
Reciprocal determinism
Criticism
Often do research on animals and generalize them to human beings
Behaviorists often underestimate biological factors
In the 1960’s people were sick of Freud’s negativity (only that??)
Abraham Maslow’s Self Actualizing Person
Hierarchy of Needs
Ultimately seek self-actualization
Developed his ideas by studying “healthy people”
Carl Roger’s Person-Centered Perspective
People are basically good
We are little acorns that just need genuineness, acceptance and empathy to grow into a healthy oak tree (how cute)
Self Concept
Who are you?
All of the feelings that we have about ourselves
How is this all tested?
They want to see the difference between your ideal self and your real self
The further apart these things are the more distressed you are
Its not really that scientific
Social-Cognitive Theory
Focus on how we interact with our culture and environment
Albert Bandura
Reciprocal Determinism
People choose their environments
TV you watch
Friends you hang out with
After you choose your environment your environment changes you
Our personalities create situations that we react to
If you expect someone to be angry with you, you may give that person the cold shoulder, creating the very behavior that you expected
Our personalities shape how we interpret and react to events
If you are anxious you are going to pick up more on anxiety inducing factors of a situation
The Self
Spotlight Effect
We overestimate how much attention people are paying to us
Self-Serving Bias
We tend to accept responsibility for good deeds and successes more than for bad deeds and failures
Self-Reference Effect
We tend to recall things better when we can relate them to ourselves
Temperament
A person’s characteristic emotional reactivity and intensity
They remain relatively stable over time
Personal Control
External Locus of Control
The perception that chance or outside forces beyond one’s personal control determine one’s fate
Internal Locus of Control
The perception that we control our own fate
Self-Esteem
Maslow and Rogers argued that success comes from a higher self-esteem
Hans Eysenck Theory
Believes that genetics are the primary determinate of personality
Traits are hierarchical
Studies of Temperament
Temperament refers to innate personality features or dispositions
Heritability Studies
Heritability is the mathematical estimate that indicates how much of a trait’s variation in a population can be attributed to genes
The Influence of Family Environment
Research shows that sharing a family environment does not lead to many similarities in personality
Environmental Influences
The environment has important influences on personality
Personality affects how your environment which affects your personality (cycle)
Evolutionary Approaches
Explain personality in terms of its adaptive value
Some psychologists have noted that some aspects of personality differ across cultural groups
Challenges
Studying and describing cultures without stereotyping
Exaggerating differences among cultures
Reasons for personality assessment
Aids for diagnosing psychological disorders
decide how to best counsel people about normal everyday problems
decide which job candidates are most likely to perform well under pressure
studying personality traits
Objective Personality Tests
Self-report inventories → require people to answer questions about their typical behavior.
The MMPI-2
Minnesota Multi-phasic Personality Inventory
Answer questions with True, False, or Cannot Say
Used to diagnose personality disorders
Most researched test
The 16PF
Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire
187 questions measuring sixteen basic dimensions of personality
The NEO Personality Inventory
Measures five main traits
Extraversion
Openness to experience
Agreeableness
Conscientiousness
Neuroticism
Advantages
Precise and standardized
Disadvantages
Transparent Questions → allows the subjects to lie
Social desirability bias
People might not understand certain questions
People sometimes don’t have the best memory
Projective Personality Tests
Require subjects to respond to ambiguous stimuli
Aims to reveal
Concerns
Needs
Conflicts
Desires
Feelings
The Rorschach Test
The subject is presented with a series of inkblots and is asked to describe what they see
The Thematic Apperception Test
Consists of a series of pictures containing a variety of characters and scenes
They are then asked to make up a story about each picture
The psychologist finds themes in these stories
Advantages
Allow assessments of the unconscious
Disadvantage
Questionable reliability and validity
Assessment Centers
Allow psychologists to access personality in specific situations
Attribution Theory (Fritz Heider)
We have a tendency to give casual explanations for someone’s behavior
Effects of Attribution
How we explain someone’s behavior affects how we react to it
Bad driving
Situational Attribution
“Maybe that driver is ill“ → (proceed cautiously)
Dispositional Attribution
“Crazy driver!” → (Speed up and race past the other driver)
Fundamental Attribution Error
Our tendency to overestimate the impact of personal disposition and underestimate the impact of the situations in analyzing the behaviors of others leads to the fundamental attribution error
Attitude
A belief and feeling that predisposes a person to respond in a particular way to objects, other people, and events
If we believe a person in mean → we may feel dislike for the person and act unfriendly
Attitudes can affect actions
Role Playing Affects Attitudes
Stanford Prison Experiment
Zimbardo
Actions affect attitudes
Cognitive dissonance is when actions don’t reflect attitudes
You believe that cheating is bad but you do it anyway
Do you change your attitude or your actions?
Social Influence
Door-in-the-Face Phenomenon
The tendency for people to comply with a smaller request after rejecting a larger one
“Hey can I have a thousand dollars?” → “Hey can I have a quarter?”
Foot-in-the-Door Phenomenon
The tendency for people who have first agreed to a small request o comply later with a larger request
“Hey can I have a quarter?” → “Hey can I have a dollar?” → “Hey can I have a hundred dollars?”
Persuasion
Central Route Persuasion
Reviews
Facts
Peripheral Route Persuasion
“You should get our hamburger because hot models eat our hamburgers”
Conformity
Adjusting one’s behavior or thinking to coincide with a group standard
Group Pressure + Conformity
Suggestibility is a subtle type of conformity adjusting our behavior of thinking toward some group standard
Conditions that strengthen conformity
One is made to feel incompetent or insecure
The group has at least three people
The group is unanimous
One admires the group’s status and attractiveness
One has no prior commitment or response
The group observes one’s behavior
One’s culture strongly encourages respect for a social standard
Reasons for Conformity
Normative Social Influence
Acting like the rest of the group to gain approval or avoid rejection
Informative Social Influence
Obedience
People comply to social pressures
Stanley Milgram Study
How far are people willing to go if they are commanded to do something
Social Facilitation
If you are being watched you tend to do a little bit better
Social Loafing
The tendency of an individual in a group to exert less effort toward attaining a common goal than when tested individually
Deindividulization
A loss of self-awareness and self-restraint in group situations that foster arousal and anonymity
Group Interaction
Group polarization enhances a group’s prevailing attitudes through a discussion
If a group is like-minded, discussion strengthens its prevailing opinions and attitudes
Group think
A mode of thinking that occurs when the desire for harmony in a decision-making group overrides the realistic appraisal of alternatives
Prejudice
Over the duration of time many prejudices against interracial marriage, gender, homosexuality, and minorities have decreased
Prejudice develops when people have money, power, and prestige and others do not
Social inequality increases prejudive
Ingroup
“Us” - people with whom one shares a common
Scapegoat Theory
The theory that prejudice provides and outlet for anger by providing someone to blame
Psychological Therapy
An interaction between a trained therapist and someone suffering with psychological difficulties
Psychoanalysis
Laying down on a sofa and just talking and talking
The psychoanalyst interpretes the clients words to peer into their unconcious
Psychology is the scientific study of behavior and mental processes
Do our feelings always match our behaviors?
No
People learn how to monitor their behaviors but not their feelings
History of Psychology
Although the science of psychology started in the late 1800’s the concept has been around for much much longer
There was evidence of trephination back in the stone age
Trephination - drilling holes into a skull to “let evil spirits out”
It's disgusting
Don't look at it
He’ll show a movie clip of it
Waves of Psychology
The science of psychology has gone through waves
Wave One - Introspection
Started with William Wundt
He created the first psychological laboratory
The idea of structuralism was born
The idea that the mind operates by combining subjective emotions and objective sensations
William James wrote The Principles of Psychology and discussed functionalism - What is the purpose of the mind?
In reality these ideas do not have much impact on psychology today
Turned psychology into a science not a philosophy
Wave Two: Gestalt Psychology
Max Wertheimer
Focused not on feelings but how we experience the world
The whole of an experience can be more than the sum of its parts
Wave Three: Psychoanalysis
Started with Sigmund Freud
People believed that most of your feelings come from a hidden place in your mind called the unconscious (the “id”)
We protect ourselves from our real feelings by using defense mechanisms
Wave Four: Behaviorism
People started to ignore how you feel inside
All that mattered was how you acted
If you could change your behavior, who cares how you feel
Very popular during the conservative 1950’s when social appearance mattered more than self expression
Wave Five: Eclectic
All about variety
Psychologists pick and choose what theories to use depending on the situation and the client
I Guess Psychologists Behave Eclectically
Now psychologists pick and choose from 7 perspectives of psychology to help you with your problems
Seven Schools of Psychology
Humanistic Perspective (60s-70s)
Focuses on spirituality and freewill
Striving to be the best we we can be “Self Actualization”
Happiness is defined by the distance between our “Self-Concept” and “Ideal Self”
Psychoanalytic Perspective
Focuses on the unconscious mind
We repress our true feelings and are unaware of them
In order to get better we must bring forward the true feelings we have in our unconscious mind
EX. If a man has intimacy issues and cannot form relationships with others. What do you think someone from this school of psychology would think?
Something in the unconscious mind is keeping him from getting close with others
Maybe he was bullied when he was younger and that caused this fear of close relationships (repressed memories)
Biopsychology/Neuroscience Perspective
All of your feelings and behaviors have an organic root
In other words, they come from your brain, body chemistry, neurotransmitters, etc..
EX. Let us imagine for a second that your dog dies. You become depressed. You stop eating and sleeping. What would a psychologist from this school say is going on and how might they help you?
Medication to alter the chemical balances in your brain
Evolutionary Perspective
Focuses on Darwinism
We behave the way we do because we inherited those behaviors through natural selection
Thus those behaviors must have helped ensure our ancestors survival
EX. Why are we afraid of snakes?
In the past our ancestors were killed by snakes
The ones that were not afraid of snakes were killed by snakes and could not reproduce
Behavioral Perspective
Focuses on observable behavior and sets feelings to the side
We behave in ways because we have been conditioned to do so
To change behaviors we have to recondition the client
EX. Pretend that you fail AP Psychology. You become depressed. In turn you begin to binge eat and gain weight. What would a behaviorist do?
They would progagby ignore that you are depressed and focus on your habits
Cognitive Perspective
Focuses on how we think
How do we see the world?
How did we learn to react to sad or happy events
Cognitive Therapists attempt to change the way that you think
EX. You meet a girl! Hopes are high!! She rejects you.. Not even a number. How do you react?
Some learned get back on the horse and try again
Some learned to give up and live a lonely life of solitude
Social/Cultural Perspective
Says that much of your behavior and your feelings are dictated by the culture you live in
Some cultures kiss each other when greeting, some bow, some shake hands
Does your culture place value on individuals or groups?
Western culture is usually more individualistic
Eastern culture is usually more collectivist
Psychology has three main levels of analysis
Biological Influences
Natural selection
Adaptive traits
Genetic predispositions responding to the environment
Brain mechanisms
Hormonal influences
Social-cultural Influences
Presence of others
Social, cultural, and familial expectations
Peer and other group influences
Compelling models (such as in the media)
Psychological Influences
Learned fears and other learned expectations
Emotional responses
Cognitive processing and perceptual interpretations
Psychology is first and foremost a science - it is based on research
Criticism is important in psychological research
Critical Thinking - Getting to the truth even if we have to put your own ideas aside
Look for hidden assumptions (and decide if you agree)
Look for hidden bias (political values, religious values, social values, and personal connections)
Put aside your own bias and look at the evidence
See if there is a flaw in how the information/data is collected
Consider if there are other possible explanations for the facts or results
Psychologists study a wide variety of topics like:
Language development
Effects of sensory deprivation
Behavior
Psychological Research Subfields
Biological
Developmental
Cognitive
Educational
Personality
Social
Applied Research Subfields:
Industrial/Organizational
Studies and advises on behavior in the workplace
Human Factors
Studies how people and machines interact resulting in the design of machines and environments
Counseling
Helps people cope with problems in living and in achieving greater well-being
Clinical
Studies, assesses, and treats people with psychological disorders
They use scientifically testable models and methods to conduct research
Researchers use the following terms:
Variables - events, characteristics, behaviors, and/or conditions that researchers measure and study
Subjects/Participants - An individual person or animal a researcher studies
Sample - A collection of subjects researchers study. Researchers use samples because they cannot study the entire population
Population - the collection of subjects from which researchers get their sample. They study the sample population and the tested population
Purposes of Research
Three main goals of research
To find ways to measure and describe behavior
To understand why when and how events occur
To apply this knowledge to solving real world problems
Scientific Method
Ask a questions
Do background research
Construct a hypothesis
Test your hypothesis with an experiment
Analyze your data and draw a conclusion
Communicate your result
Psychologists use the scientific method to make observations and conduct research
They have to come up with a theory to explain their observations
Theory - An explanation that organizes separate pieces of information in a coherent way.
Hypothesis
Predicts a relationship between two or more variables
Variables are anything that can vary among participants in a study
In order for a hypothesis to be viable it must be:
Replicable
It can be repeated
Developing a hypothesis - a testable prediction of what will happen after a set of conditions
They must define the research method
Naturalistic observations
Case studies
Surveys
Experiments
Operational definitions make replications possible
Falsifiable
A good theory must be able to be false in some way
This is so researchers don't fall victim to confirmation bias - scientists favoring their hypothesis and twisting the evidence to make it correct
Precise
If hypotheses are precise then they can be easily tested and replicated
Psychologists use operational definitions to define the variables they study
Operational Definitions
Explain what you mean in your hypothesis
How will the variables be measured in “real life” terms
How you define the variables will allow future researchers to replicate your study
Almost over-define everything
Basic Research
Explores questions that you may be curious about, but not intended to be immediately used
Applied Research
Seeks to find practical solutions to real life issues
Correlation Research Methods
We just want to prove that two things are related somehow
As more ice cream is eaten, more people are murdered (TRUE but ice cream is not causing the murders)
Descriptive methods:
Case studies
Surveys
Naturalistic observation
Laboratory observations
Can describe:
Events
Experiences
Behaviors
Remember that correlation is not the same as causation
Scientists have to be careful to confirm if one factor is causing or correlating with the other factor
Measuring Correlation
Correlation coefficient measures the strength of a relationship between two variables
Measured between -1 and +1
Positive correlation (0 - +1) means that as one variable increases the other does as well and vice versa
Negative correlation (-1 - 0) means that as one variable increases the other decreases and vice versa
The larger the absolute value of of that number the stronger the correlation is
Illusory Correlation
The perception of a relationship where no relationship actually exists
Like superstition
If you see a black cat you will have bad luck
Descriptive Research - Any research that observes and records
Doesn’t measure any relationships. It just describes
Case Studies
One/a few subject(s) studied in depth
Does not give us correlation data
No cause and effect
Data collected through
Interviews
Direct observation
Psychological testing
Examination of documents
Records about subjects
Surveys
Can be descriptive or correlational
Getting information about a specific type of behavior, experience, or event
Researchers give out questionnaires or interview subjects
Subjects fill out surveys about themselves. This is called Self-Reporting Data
Can easily
Be cheap
Be anonymous
Be diverse
get random samples
This data can be misleading because the subjects may
Lie intentionally
Give answers based on wishful thinking rather than truth
Fail to understand the questions the survey asks
Forget parts of the experience they need to describe
Low response rate
Wording effects - how the question is worded can affect the results
Should cigarette ads not be allowed on television? (Many said yes)
Should cigarette ads be forbidden to be on television (Many said no)
Naturalistic Observation
Researchers collect information about subjects by observing them unobtrusively
Recording behavior in a natural environment
The subjects will not be interfered with in any way
The downside of this is that researchers may not get a clear view of the events without being noticed by the subjects
No control can be given to the scientists
Laboratory Observation
Set in a lab not a natural setting
Researchers can use sophisticated equipment
Offers a degree of control over the environment of the experiment
Experimental Research
Can provide information about cause and effect relationships between variables
One particular variable is manipulated and controlled
This tested/changed variable is called the independent variable
The affected variable is called the dependent variable
Random sampling makes sure that every individual in a population has an equal chance of being in your sample
Randomly picking subjects out of a population
Random assignment makes sure that your experimental group and control group are randomly assigned on top of the random sampling
A control group is a group where the independent variable is not manipulated. This gives something to compare the dependent variable to.
Researchers try to make the control group and the experimental group as similar as possible to get accurate results
Variables that are not the independent variable but could still influence the dependent variable are called extraneous variables
One way to control these extraneous variables is to use random assignment
This is when subjects have equal chances of being put into the control or experimental group
Confounding Variables are anything that can change the result but are not what is being changed/studied in the experiment
Background
Placebo effect
Family history
Unconscious bias
Experiments usually cannot fully reflect the real world because the situations are artificial
Experiments MUST be kept ethical
Psychological Testing
Psychological tests collect information about
Personality traits
Emotional states
Aptitudes
Interests
Abilities
Values
Behaviors
Psychological Tests must be
Standardized
The test must be pre-tested to a representative sample of people and form a normal distribution or bell curve
Reliable
The extent which a test measures consistent results over time
Valid
Does the test measure what it is supposed to measure
test-retest reliability
If a test is given more than once it should yield about the same results
A reliable test will produce similar results no matter which version of the test is used
A test is valid if it accurately measures the quality of which it claims. The two types of validity are:
Content validity - a test’s ability to measure all important aspects of the measured characteristics. Usually well rounded and cover all parts of the content measured.
Criterion/Predictive validity - Not only measures a trait but uses that measurement to predict another criterion of that trait
Bias in Research
Bias is the distortion of results by a variable there are multiple types of bias
Sampling Bias
When the samples do not correctly represent the population
Subject Bias
Research subject’s expectations affect/change the subject’s behavior
Placebo effect - Subject receives a fake drug/treatment but it actually works even if it is fake. A single-blind experiment is on where the subjects don’t know if their drug/treatment is real or fake.
Social Desirability bias - the tendency of some subjects to describe themselves in an idealized way
Experimenter Bias
An unconscious confounding variable
Occurs when the researchers preference or expectations influence the outcome of their research.
Double-blind procedures neither the experimenter nor the subjects know whether the subject is in the control group or the experimental group
Hindsight Bias
The tendency to believe that you knew the outcome all along (even if they had no idea before the outcome)
Review of Research Methods
Advantages and disadvantages of:
Surveys
Yields a lot of information
Provides a good way to generate hypotheses
Can provide information about many people since its cheap and easy to do
Provide information about many people since its cheap and easy to do
Provides information about behavior that cant be observed directly
Relies on self-report data, which can be misleading
Doesn’t allow conclusions about cause-and-effect relationships
Case Studies
Provides a good way to generate hypotheses
Yields data that other methods can’t provide
Sometimes gives incomplete information
Sometimes relies only on self-report data, which can be misleading
Can be subjective and thus may yield biased results
Doesn’t allow conclusions about cause-and-effect relationships
Naturalistic Observations
Can be useful for generation hypotheses
Provides information about behavior in the natural world
Sometimes yields biased results
May be difficult to do unobtrusively
Doesn’t allow conclusions about cause-and-effect relationships
Laboratory Observations
Enables use of sophisticated equipment for measuring and recording behavior
Can be useful for generating hypotheses
Sometimes yields biased results
Carries the risk that observed behavior is different from natural behavior
Doesn’t allow conclusions about cause-and-effect relationships
Tests
Gives information about characteristics such as personality traits, emotional states, aptitudes, interests, abilities, values, and behaviors
Requires good reliability and validity before it can be used
Doesn’t allow conclusions about cause-and-effect relationships
Experiments
Identifies cause-and-effect relationships
Distinguishes between placebo effects and real effects of a treatment or drug
Can be artificial, so results may not generalize to real-world situations
Statistics - analysis and interpretation of numerical data
Descriptive Statistics
Researchers need to convert their data into numbers
They can use histograms and bar graphs to show how this data can be read
Measuring Central Tendency
This is the
Mean
The most common used
Adding up all of the scores and dividing the sum
Median
The middle score when all the scores are arranged from lowest to highest
Mode
Most frequently occurring score
A distribution of very high scores is called positively skewed distribution
A distribution of very low scores is called negatively skewed distribution
Watch out for extreme outliers
Statistics
Measuring Variation
Range is the difference between the highest and lowest scores in the distribution
Standard deviation provides more information about the amount of variation in scores
APA - American Psychological Association
They determine ethical guidelines for human and animal research
IRB - institutional review board
They review research proposals for ethical violations and procedural errors
They give permission to actually do the experiment
Animal Research
Focus on how animals are treated in laboratory experiments
The APA has provided guidelines
They must have a clear scientific purpose
The research must be specific and important
Animals chosen must be best suited to answer the question
They must care for and house the animals in an ethical and humane way
They must acquire the animals legally
Purchased from accredited companies
Trapped in a humane manner
They must design experimental procedures that employ the least amount of suffering possible
Human Research
All participation must be voluntary
All participants must have complete informed consent
If their complete awareness gets in the way of the study then the deception must not be so extreme as to invalidate their informed consent
Participant’s privacy must be completely protected
If anonymity cannot be assured, complete confidentiality should be given
Participants cannot be put in any significant mental or physical risk
After a study the participants should have a debriefing. In this they should be told the purpose of the study and provide ways for them to contact the researchers about the results
Nature versus nurture debate
Nature (Heredity)
How we are born
Nurture (Environment)
How we are raised
While we know that hair color, height, and other physical characteristics are obviously dependent on genes
Behavior, intelligence, and personality also be dependent on genes
Behavior Genetics
The study of the relative power and limitations of genetic and environmental influences on our behavior
Examines the genetic base of behavior and personality differences among people
They used to use behavioral genetics for racial discrimination - Eugenics
Now geneticists consider political repercussions
Where are genes? What are they made of? What do they do?
In the nucleus of a cell we have chromosomes
On these chromosomes we have DNA
In that DNA are our genes
Genes contain codes for proteins that make us who we are (height, eye color, personality type, speed)
All cells have 46 chromosomes except for gametes
Chromosome breakdown
Chromosomes are “books” (largest)
DNA are “pages”
Genes are “words”
Nucleotides are “letters” (smallest)
Percentages of shared genes
Identical twins 100%
Parents 50%
Siblings + Nonidentical twins 50%
Grandparents 25%
Types of genetic traits
Monogenic
Traits determined by a single gene
Alcoholism
Schizophrenia
Polygenic
Traits determined by many genes
Intelligence
Height
Weight
Heritability
A mathematical estimate that indicates how much of a trait’s variation can be attributed to genes
Three important principles of heritability
Don’t reveal anything about how much genes influence a person’s traits. They only tell us to what extent trait differences between people can be attributed to genes
Depends on the similarity of the environment for a group of people. In groups of people who share similar environments, heritability of a particular trait may be high. However, that same trait may have low heritability in a group of people who operate in different environments
Even if a trait is highly heritable, it can still be influenced by environmental factors
Family studies
Looking at similarities among members of a family
If the trait is genetic then it should be similar in blood relatives
Family studies alone don’t reveal whether a trait is genetically inherited
Caution: a family shares genes but also environments (Correlation does not equal causation)
Twin Studies (Suggest Genetic Influence)
What are the different types of twins?
Identical
Same biological sex
Any difference between them will be nurture not nature because their genes are completely the same
Fraternal
Same or opposite sex
Countless studies have been done on twins to study how similar they are
Whether or not they are raised in the same environment they are usually very alike in many ways
Separated Twin Studies
Twins separated at birth still had so many similarities
This pushes the ideas that psychology can be genetic
Look at the Jim Twins
Experiences and Behavior
Experiences affect behavior partly because environmental stimulation forms and maintains neural connections
Adoption Studies (Suggest Environmental Influence)
Adopted children share genes but their living environments often influence them more than genes
Interaction of Genes and Environment
Highly influential environmental factors include
Prenatal influences
Child-rearing and other parental influences
Nutrition
Experiences throughout life
Peer influences
Culture
Cultural Norms
Set societal expectations that influence behavior
Says what's “Appropriate”
Evolutionary Psychology
Studies the evolution of behavior and mind using principles of natural selection
Surviving and reproducing
Adaptive behaviors are those that promote reproductive success
Theory of Natural Selection
Charles Darwin made this theory
1831 on the HMS Beagle
1859 Darwin published On the Origin of Species
Russian Fox Study 1959
The effort to make a tameable breed of fox
40 males and 100 females were mated and only the tamest foxes were kept
After 40 years later this cycle made a new tameable breed of fox
Reproduction of the Fittest instead of Survival of the Fittest
Reproductive Advantage
Helps an organism mate successfully and pass on its genes to the next generation
Survival Advantage
Helps an organism to live long enough to reproduce and pass on its genes
Inclusive Fitness
W.D. Hamilton in the 1960s
Reproductive fitness of an individual organism plus any effect the organism has on increasing reproductive fitness in related organisms
People might risk their lives to save their children or close relatives because they share genes
Adaptations
Inherited characteristics that become prevalent in a population because it provides a survival or reproductive advantage
Mutations
Essential to evolution
Raw material of genetic variation
Caused by
An error during DNA replication
Random rearrangement of small pieces of DNA in a chromosome pair
Can result in a new trait
Mating Behavior
Studied to investigate aspects of evolutionary psychology
Parental investment
Refers to all of the resources spent to produce and raise each offspring
Sexual selection
The tendency of females to choose mates based on certain characteristics which should then be passed on to the male offspring
Sexuality and the Evolutionary Psychology
Casual sex is more accepted by men
This is because men can have almost infinite children but women can only get pregnant every once in a while
Sperm is cheap
Eggs are not
Men typically look for
Health
Youth
Birthing capability
Women typically look for
Wealth
Power
Safety
Neuroscience chemically and scientifically explains why we feel different feelings
The nervous system is made of
The brain (the center)
Nerves
Electrochemical signals
Hippocrates (460-377 B.C.)
Most famous physician of the ancient world
Theorized that our thoughts, feelings, and ideas came from the brain instead of the common theory at the time that these came from out heart or stomach
Researchers now think that our minds and brains might be separate things
They focus on hormones and experiences
Franz Gall (1800)
Phrenology
He would feel the bumps on people’s skulls and how that represented their mental abilities
His theory was incorrect but this started the thought that the brain was modular
A complex highly coordinated network of tissues that communicate via electrochemical signals
Nervous System Structure
Peripheral Nervous System
Autonomic Nervous System
Sympathetic Nervous System
Parasympathetic Nervous System
Somatic Nervous System
Afferent Nerves
Efferent Nerves
Central Nervous System
Spinal Cord
Brain
Central nervous system
Receives and processes information from the senses
Brain and spinal cord are filled with cerebrospinal fluid
Cushions and nourishes the brain
The brain is the main organ of the nervous system
The blood-brain barrier protects the cerebrospinal fluid
Blocks drugs and toxins
Spinal cord connects the brain to the rest of the body and sends messages around it
Spinal reflexes are automatic behaviors that require no input from the brain
Damage to the Spinal Cord
Can lead to
Paralysis
Loss of feeling
Imparied organ function
Loss of muscular control
These injuries are usually permanent
Peripheral Nervous System
All parts of the nervous system except for the brain and spinal cord
Somatic Nervous System
Takes “som” effort
Nerves that connect the central nervous system to the voluntary skeletal muscles and sense organs
Two Types of Nerves
Afferent Nerves/Sensory Neurons
Carry information from the muscles and sense organs to the central nervous system
Efferent Nerves/Motor Neurons
Carry information from the central nervous system to the muscles and sense organs
Interneurons
Help with communication between sensory and motor neurons
Autonomic Nervous System
Automatic
Nerves that connect the central nervous system to the heart, blood vessels, glands, and smooth muscles
Smooth muscles are involuntary muscles that help organs carry out their functions
Sympathetic Nervous System
arousing
Gets the body ready for emergencies
Slows down digestion
Draws blood from the skin to the skeletal muscles
Releases hormones
Parasympathetic Nervous System
calming
Activates when the body is relaxed
Helps the body conserve and store energy
Slows heartbeat
Decreases blood pressure
Promotes digestion
Crisis Mode
Thumping heart
Sweaty palms
Pale skin
Panting breath
Two types of cells in the nervous system
Glial Cells
Make up the supporting structures of the nervous system
Provide structural support to the neurons
Insulate neurons
Nourish neurons
Remove waste products
Neurons
Communicators of the nervous system
Receive information
Integrate information
Pass information along
Communicate with:
Eachother
Cells in sensory organs
Muscles
Glands
Has a soma, a central area. The soma contains the nucleus and other structures common to all cells
Dendritic trees have dendrite branches that reach out from the neuron.
These branches receive information from other neurons and sense organs
An axon is a long fiber that extends from the neuron
Nerves are actually bundles of axons coming together from many neurons
Some axons have a myelin sheath. This is a coating produced by the glial cells.
When an axon has this shealth impulses travel faster and vice versa
Terminal buttons are bumps at the end of each axon
Terminal buttons release neurotransmitters
Neurotransmitters are chemicals that cross into neighboring neurons and activate them
The junction between an axon and the cell body or dendrite of a different neuron is called a synapse
Role of Myelin
Multiple sclerosis
Disintegrated myelin
Difficulty controlling muscles
Poliomyelitis
Damages myelin
Can lead to paralysis
Communication between Neurons
Alan Hodgkin and Andrew Huxlet 1952
Made discoveries about how neurons transmit information
Studied giant squid
Found that nerve impulses are really electrochemical reactions
The Resting Potential
Nerves are built to transmit electrochemical signals
Fluids inside and outside of the neurons contain charged atoms called ions
Sodium Ions (+)
Potassium Ions (+)
Chloride Ions (-)
An inactive neuron is in its resting state
When the inside of a neuron has a higher concentration of negatively charged ions than the outside
Acts as a store of energy called resting potential (-70 millivolts)
How the Neuron Fires
Electrochemical process
Electrical inside of the neuron
Chemical outside of the neuron
Firing is called Action Potential
The Action Potential
Dendrites receive neurotransmitters from another neuron across the synapse
Once the neurons have reached its threshold it fires
The neuron has portals that open and let in positive ions that mix with its negative ions that are already inside of the neuron
The mixing of positive and negative ions cause an electrical charge that opens up the next portal and close the original portal
The process continues down the axon to the terminal branches and terminal buttons
The terminal buttons turn electrical charge into chemical neurotransmitters and shoot messages to the next neuron across the synapse
The membrane then remains closed and can’t send impulses
This is called the absolute refractory period
It lasts for about 1-2 milliseconds
The All-or-None Law
All neural impulses conform to the all-or-none law
Neurons either fire and generate action potentials or don’t
Neural impulses are always the same strength no matter the strength of the stimuli
Stronger stimuli may send impulses faster
It's like a gun
The Synapse
The gap between two cells at a synapse
The signal-sending neuron is the presynaptic neuron
The signal-receiving neuron is the postsynaptic neuron
Chemical messengers that cross the synaptic cleft/gap after being released by the terminal buttons
Then bind to receptor sites and pass their messages
Reuptake is the absorption of the excess neurotransmitter molecules in the synaptic gap
Examples
Acetylcholine
Muscle action
Learning
Memory
Dopamine
Movement
Learning
Attention
Emotion
Serotonin
Mood
Hunger
Sleep
Arousal
Norepinephrine
Alertness
Arousal
Gamma-aminobutyric acid
Inhibitory neurotransmitter
Glutamate
Excitatory neurotransmitter
Memory
Agonists and Antagonists
Agonists
Chemicals that mimic the actions of particular neurotransmitters
Bind to receptors and generate postsynaptic potential
Example: Nicotine
Acetylcholine agonist
Antagonists
Chemicals that block the action of a particular neurotransmitter
They still bind to receptors but can't produce postsynaptic potentials
They take up the receptor site and prevent neurotransmitters from acting
Example: Paralysis and Poison Arrows
To examine the brain’s function researchers have to study a working brain
Humans can’t have invasive studies done
Invasive animal studies
Lesioning studies
Researchers use an electrode and an electric current to burn a specific small are of the brain
Certain parts of the brain are removed or destroyed
Electric stimulation of the brain
Researchers activate a particular brain structure by using a weak electric current sent along an implanted electrode
Human brain studies
Examining people with brain injuries or diseases and see what they can and can’t do
Phineas Gage
Different parts of the brain have different functions
Electroencephalography (EEG)
Records the overall electrical activity in the brain via electrodes placed on the scalp
Used mainly for sleep and seizure studies
High-tech innovations have made studying human brains easier
Computerized (Axial) Tomography (C(A)T)
X-rays are taken of the brain from different angles
The computer combines the x-rays to produce a picture of a horizontal slice through the brain
Good for tumor location but isn’t useful for function
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
Both brain structure and function can be visualized
Computer-enhanced pictures produced by magnetic fields and radio waves
Functional MRIs look at blood flow and can tell what parts of the brain are active when we are thinking and feeling different things
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
Researchers inject people with a harmless radioactive chemical which collects in active brain areas
The pattern of radioactivity in the brain is monitored using a scanner and computer
Researchers can use this to figure out which parts of the brain are active during specific tasks/movements
Often used to detect cancer,tumors, brain disorders, and heart diseases
The Hindbrain
Medulla (Brain Stem)
Next to the spinal cord
Controls functions outside of conscious awareness
Breathing
Heart Rate
Blood Pressure
Pons (Brain Stem)
Affect sleep, dreaming, waking up
Cerebellum
Back of the brain stem
Controls balance and movement coordination
Processes sensory information
Fine motor skills
The Midbrain
Between the hindbrain and the forebrain
Helps up locate events in space
Releases dopamine
Reticular formation (Brain Stem)
Runs through the hindbrain and midbrain
Involved in sleep, wakefulness, pain perception, breathing, and muscle reflexes
The Forebrain
The biggest and most complex part of the brain
Thalamus
“Sensory Switchboard”
Deals with all sensory information except smell
Directs inputs to their specific place in the cortex
Hypothalamus
Lies under the thalamus and helps control the pituitary gland and the autonomic nervous system
Regulates body temperature, hunger, thirst, sex drive, aggression
Limbic System
Emotions and drives
Hippocampus
Processing and storage of memories
Helps make new memories
Amygdala
Aggression and fear
Emotional memories
Septum
Cerebrum/Cerebral Cortex
Wrinkly part of the brain
Biggest part of the brain
Controls abstract thought and learning
Information processing center of the brain
Corpus callosum
Band of fibers that runs along the cerebrum from the front to the back of the skull
Divides the cerebrum into two halves
Four lobes in each hemisphere/half
Occipital
Visual information
Parietal
Touch
Sensing body position
Made up of association areas
Not involved in motor or sensory functions
Higher mental functions like learning, remembering, thinking, and speaking
Temporal
Auditory information
Wernicke’s area (left lobe)
Language comprehension
Wenicke’s aphasia
Unable to understand language: syntax and grammar jumbled
Frontal
Logic + Reasoning
Muscle movement
Memory
Palling
Goal-setting
Creativity
Rational decision making
Social judgment
Broca’s area (left lobe)
Speech production
Broca’s Aphasia
Damage to Broca's area
Unable to make talking movements
Motor Cortex
Movement
Sensory Cortex
Touch and sensations
Brain Hemispheres
Lateralization
Right and left hemispheres
Left - Verbal/Logic
Writing
Reading
Talking
Right - Nonverbal/Creative
Music
Drawing
Recognizing childhood friends
Roger Sperry + friends
Conducted research in lateralization
Examines people who had gone through split brain surgery
Cut the corpus callosum and separating the two hemispheres
Can treat epileptic seizures
Control of the Body
Left hemisphere controls the right side of the body and vice versa
Vision and hearing is different
What is seen goes to the entire brain
Images in the left side of the visual field stimulate the right side of both eyes then goes to the right hemisphere
Information from the right visual field ends up in the left hemisphere
Auditory
Both hemispheres receive input from each ear
Information goes to the opposite hemisphere first then the closer hemisphere second
The two hemispheres share information via the corpus callosum
Severing the corpus callosum will cause impaired perception
Brain Plasticity
When parts of a brain are damaged other parts will reroute messages to still be able to perform
Children’s brains are more plastic than adults
Split Brain Studies
Studies done to show the differing functions of the separated hemispheres of the brain
Impaired perception caused by a cut corpus callosum will show which side of the brain is connected to what senses and functions
Slower system - deals with hormones not neurotransmitters
Endocrine System
Hormone-secreting glands
Affects communication inside of the body
Pituitary gland
Close to the hypothalamus in the brain
“Master gland” of the endocrine system
Hormones
Chemicals that help regulate bodily functions
Thyroxine
Produced by the thyroid gland
Regulates Metabolic rate
Insulin
Produced by the pancreas
Regulates blood sugar level
Melatonin
Produced by the pineal gland
Regulates biological rhythms and sleep
Cortisol, Norepinephrine, Epinephrine, Adrenaline
Produced by the adrenal glands
Regulates bodily functions during stressful and emotional states
Androgens
Produced by the testes
Regulates male secondary sex characteristics and sexual arousal
Estrogen
Produced by the ovaries
Regulates breast development and menarche
Progesterone
Produced by the ovaries
Regulates preparation of uterus for implantation of a fertilized egg
The study of YOU from womb to the tomb
From conception to death
Physical, social, cognitive, and moral changes over our lifetime
Nature versus nurture returns
Are you who you are because of the way you were born or
Are you who you are because of the way you were raised
Research Methods used for developmental psychology
Cross-sectional Studies
Studying a lot of similar people of different age groups at the same time
Much faster but have flaws (different environments/genetics/etc)
Longitudinal Studies
Studying one group of people over a period of time
Much more reliable but takes much longer to complete
Conception begins with the drop of an egg and the release of about 200 million sperm
The sperm seeks out the egg and attempts to penetrate the eggs surface
Germinal Stage (weeks 0-2)
Once the sperm penetrates the egg we a have a fertilized egg or a zygote
This lasts for about two weeks and consists of rapid cell division
Less than half of zygotes survive the germinal stage
After 10 days the zygote attaches itself to the uterine wall through implantation
The outer part of the zygote becomes a placenta which
filters nutrients and protects the zygote from teratogens
Passes oxygen and nutrients from the mother’s blood into the embryo/fetus
Removes waste materials from the embryo/fetus
Embryonic Stage (weeks 2-8)
The zygote turns into an embryo
Lasts about 6 weeks
The heart begins to beat
Organs begin to develop
Teratogens are chemical agents that harm the prenatal environment
Alcohol
Tobacco
STDs
HiV
Herpes
Genital Warts
Fetal Stage (week 8 - birth)
At this point we have a fetus
By about the 6th month the stomach and other organs have formed enough to survive outside of the mother
The baby can hear, recognize sounds, and respond to light
After one month sex organs begin to form
Brain increases rapidly in size
Respiratory and digestive systems start to work independently
He will show a video of childbirth now so LOOK DOWN
Fetal Viability (22-26 weeks after conception)
The baby has potential to live outside of the womb if born prematurely
The chances of the babies survival increase significantly with each additional week it remains in the womb
Adverse Factors that Affect Fetal Development
Poor nutrition
Use of alcohol
Smoking
Use of certain prescription or over-the-counter drugs
Use of recreational drugs such as cocaine, sedatives, and narcotics
X-rays and other kinds of radiation
Ingested toxins like lead
Illnesses
AIDS
German measles
Syphilis
Cholera
Smallpox
Mumps
Severe flu
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
An incurable condition that occurs if the mother drinks too much during pregnancy
Side effects
Small head size
Heart defects
Irritability
Hyperactivity
Mental abnormality
Slowed motor development
Development - series of age-related changes that happen over a lifespan
These changes can be separated into stages
These stage theories share these assumptions
People pass through stages in a specific order with each stage building on capacities developed in the previous stage
Stages are related to age
Development is discontinuous, with qualitatively different capacities emerging in each stage
Sigmund Freud’s Theory of Personality
Personality develops in stages
Early childhood is the most important
Most personality development is done by age five
Erik Erikson’s Theory of Psychosocial Development
Agreed that childhood development is important but personalities continue to develop over a person's whole lifespan
Stages built off of challenges
Stage 1 - Trust vs Mistrust - 1st year
Having basic needs met
Stage 2 - Autonomy vs Shame and Doubt - 1-3 years
Gaining independence
Stage 3 - Initiative vs Guilt - 3-6 years
Acting in a socially acceptable way
Stage 4 - Industry vs Inferiority - 6-12 years
Competing with peers, preparing for adult roles
Stage 5 - Identity vs Role Confusion - Adolescence
Determining one’s identity
Stage 6 - Intimacy vs Isolation - Early adult
Developing intimate relationships
Stage 7 - Generativity vs Stagnation/Self-Absorption - Middle adult
Being Productive
Stage 8 - Integrity vs Despair - Old Age
Evaluating one’s life
Addresses personality stability and personality change
Doesn’t address differences between individuals
Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development
Thought processes change as people mature and interact with the world around them
Schemas change through
Schemas - mental models that represent the world
Children view the world through schemas (adults do to)
Schemas are the ways we interpret the worlds around us
What we picture in our head when we think of something
Schemas can change
Assimilation
Broadening of an existing schema to include new information
Accommodation
Modification of schema as information is incorporated
Stage 1 - Sensorimotor Period - birth - two years
Children learn by using senses and moving around
By the end of it children become capable of symbolic thought
Children achieve object permanence (knowing that something is still there even if you can’t see it)
Stage 2 - Preoperational Period - two years - seven years
Children are more capable of symbolic thought
Extremely literal
Children are not capable of conservation
The ability to recognize that measurable physical features of objects (length, area, volume) can be the same even when the objects are different
Children still have these weaknesses
Centration
Tendency to focus on one aspect of a problem instead of the problem as a whole
Cannot classify objects on more than one level (hierarchical classification)
Irreversibility
Inability to reverse an operation
Egocentrism
Inability to take someone else’s point of view
Animism - belief that inanimate objects are living
Stage 3 - Concrete Operational Period - seven years - eleven years
Children become capable of performing mental operations
Can only perform operations with tangible objects and real events
Children achieve conservation, reversibility, and decentration during this stage
Reversibility - ability to mentally reverse actions
Decentration - ability to focus on several aspects of a problem
Children become less egocentric
Stage 4 - Formal Operational Period - twelve years - adulthood
Capability of applying mental operations to abstract concepts
Ability to reason, imagine, and make hypotheticals
Abstract, systematic, and logical thought processes
Critiques of Piaget’s Theory
Recent research shows that children have much greater capabilities than Piaget thought
Children can develop skills that are from more than one stage at once
Cultural influences
Some people never develop the capacity for formal reasoning even as adults
Lawrence Kohlberg’s Theory of Moral Development
Level 1 - Preconventional Level
Children depend on adults to show them what is right and wrong
Punishment = wrong
Reward = right
Level 2 - Conventional Level
Children value rules and follow them for social approval
1st Stage
Children only care about the approval of those closest to them
2nd Stage
Children care about the approval of society as a whole
Level 3 - Postconventional Level
People consider what's personally important to them
1st Stage
People still want to follow society’s rules but don’t see them as absolute
2nd Stage
People figure out what's right and wrong for themselves based on abstract ethical principles
Only a small percent of people reach this last stage
Critiques
People often show characteristics of multiple levels at the same time
Favors cultures that value individualism
Can turn their heads towards voices
Can see 8-12 inches from their face
Love to stare at human face like things because those things are “safe” (evolutionary speaking
Reflexes - inborn automatic responses that are tested right after birth
Rooting
Testing if the baby will search out food
Sucking
Testing if the baby will instinctively suck anything that touches the roof of their mouth
Grasping - (Palmer - hands | Plantar - feet)
Testing if the baby with absolutely man handle anything that touches their hands/feet
If this reflex last too long then there may be issues with the nervous system
Moro
Dropping the baby and see if it'll try and grab something to not fall
Babinski
Seeing if the baby can spread out its toes ig
The brain and Infancy
Although the brain does not develop many new cells, the existing cells begin to work more efficiently and form more complex neural networks
Maturation
Biological growth processes that enable orderly changes in behavior, relatively uninfluenced by experience
To a certain extent we all maturate similarly but the time can vary depending on the person
Motor development
Sequence is the same but once again time can vary
Babies learn in this order
Roll over
Sit up unsupported
Crawl
Walk
These are usually explained by maturation but it is also influenced by experience
Walking
25% learn to walk by 11 months
50% within a week of 1st birthday
90% by 15 months
Once its been over a year they are considered late walkers
Walking time varies by culture (NURTURE)
if the culture emphasizes walking then the babies usually learn to walk at younger ages
Identical twins tend to walk on the same day (NATURE)
Toilet Training
NO MATTER WHAT THE BABY NEEDS THE PHYSICAL MATURATION TO HOLD THEIR BLADDER OR BOWEL MOVEMENTS BEFORE TOILET TRAINING
NO TRAINING WILL WORK IF THE CHILD IS NOT PHYSICALLY READY
Why is this in caps? I dont know dont ask me I copied the slides
Temperament
Personality features that babies are born with
Typically from nature not nurture (biological)
Alexander Thomas and Stella Chess found three types of development
Easy - 40%
Happy and adapt easily to change
Have regular sleeping and eating patterns
Slow-to-warm-up - 15%
Cautious about new experiences
Have less regular sleeping and eating patterns
Difficult - 10%
Glum and irritable
Dislike change
Eating and sleeping patterns are irregular
Attachment
The most important social construct an infant must develop is attachment
Contact comfort is comfort derived from physical closeness with a caregiver
Lorenz discovered that some animals form attachments through imprinting
Harry Harlow and his monkeys
Harry showed that monkeys needed touch to dorm attachments
Critical Periods are the optimal period shortly after birth when an organism's exposure to certain stimuli or experiences produce proper development
Those who are deprived of touch have trouble forming attachment when they are older
Attachment Styles
Attachment happens through a complex set of interactions between mothers and infants
Strange Situation - Mary Ainsworth
Mothers brought their infants into unfamiliar rooms
After a while a stranger would come in
After a little while the mother would leave
Then the mother would come back in and the stranger would leave
Then after a while the mother would leave the child alone
Results:
Secure Attachment
Most infants were unhappy when their mothers left but still played with the strangers
Anxious-ambivalent Attachment
Some infants were upset when their mothers left but were not as thrilled when they returned
Avoidant Attachment
Some infants didn’t seem upset when the mothers left
Treated mother and stranger the same way
Culture heavily influences attachment
Most babies experience separation anxiety
Gender
Gender Schema Theory
suggests that we learn a cultural “recipe” of how to be a male or female, which influences our gender based perceptions and behaviors
Social Learning Theory
proposes that we learn gender behavior like any other behavior- reinforcement, punishment, and observation
Biological sex and gender are not the same thing
Gender role
How society expects men and women to behave
Gender Identity
How a person views himself or herself in terms of gender
Gender is a learned distinction between girls and boys attitudes
SOME gender differences exist but not as many as stereotypes suggest
This is probably just due to those stereotypes anyway
Self - Concept
A sense of one’s identity and self-worth
Children with a positive self concept are more confident
Children with a negative self concept are more shy
Physical changes
PuBeRtY
Sexual maturation
Starts at about eleven for girls and thirteen for boys
Primary Sexual Characteristic
Body structures that make reproduction possible
Secondary sex characteristics
Sex-speciic physical characteristics that are not essential for reproduction
Girls
Breasts
Widened pelvic bones
Wider hips
Boys
Facial hair
Broader shoulders
Deeper voices
Menarche
Marks the beginning of puberty for guys
First menstrual period
Average age in America is 12.5
Nocturnal Emissions (wet dreams)
Marks the beginning of puberty for guys
Usually about 14 years of age
Girls usually are fully sexually matured at age sixteen
Guys usually are fully sexually matured at age eighteen
Early onset of puberty
People generally reach puberty earlier not in the US than they did a few generations ago
Menarche for Western Europe and the US - 12-13 years old
Menarche for poorer regions of Africa - 14-17 years old
Varying Maturation Rate
Early-maturing girls and late-maturing boys tend to have more psychological and social problems compared to their peers
In girls there is a correlation between early maturation and poor school performance, early sexual activity, unwanted pregnancies, likelihood of eating disorders
Both boys and girls who mature early tend to use more drugs and alcohol and have more problems with the law compared to their peers
Moral Development
Lawrence Kohlberg’s three stage theory
In 5.3
Identity
James Marcia’s four identity states
Identity Foreclosure
A person prematurely commits to values or roles that others prescribe
Identity Moratorium
A person delays commitment to an identity. They are usually experimenting with various values and roles
Identity Diffusion
When a person lacks a clear sense of identity and still hasn't explored issues related to identity development
Identity Achievement
When a person considers alternative possibilities and commits to a certain identity and path in life
Social clocks indicate the typical life events, behaviors, and issues for a particular age.
A midlife crisis is a time of doubt and anxiety in middle adulthood
The empty nest refers to the time in parents’ lives when their children have grown up and left home
Physical abilities peak by your mid-twenties
Then it all goes downhill
Menopause is the transition out of menstruation that starts around 45-55. Causes hot flashes and sometimes leads to strong emotional reactions
Aging
As people get older they lose more neurons
This sometimes causes dementia
Vision and hearing decline
Some aspects of memory decrease in old age due to a decline in the speed of mental processing it’s not always dementia
Crystallized intelligence
Accumulated knowledge
Intelligence based on a life span of knowledge and skills. Either goes up or stays constant
Physical exercise and mental stimulations can form new connections between neurons in the brains of older adults
Most people’s overall sense of well-being increases as they get older
Fluid Intelligence
Ability to solve problems quickly and think abstractly
Peaks in the 20s and then decreases over time
Life expectancy keeps increasing (its about 75 now)
Women outlive men by about 4 years
We have weaker immune systems but gain antibodies
Recognition stays stable
Recall ability declines
Social Clock
When is it socially acceptable to do things
Erik Erikson
A neo-Freudian (studied and learned from Freudian)
Worked with Anna Freud
Thought that our personality was influenced by our experiences with others
Stages of psychosocial development based on social conflicts (Yes you’ve already seen this in 5.3)
Stage 1 - Trust versus Mistrust - birth - 18 months
Can we learn to trust the world or do we learn that the world is an untrustworthy place
Usually leads to trust with caregivers but mistrust of strangers
Can carry on with the child for the rest of their lives
Stage 2 - Autonomy versus Shame and Doubt - 18 months - 3 years old
Can you control yourself? Will you doubt yourself?
Child’s energies are directed towards physical skills
Children need to learn how to control their emotions
Learn the word “NO”
Stage 3 - Initiative versus Guilt - 3 years - 6 years
Will their curiosity be scolded or encouraged
Learn the word “WHY?”
Want to understand the world and ask questions
Children become more assertive, take initiative, become more forceful
Gain a bit of independency
Stage 4 - Industry versus Inferiority - 6 - 12 years old
Do we feel good or bad about our accomplishments
The children must deal with demands to learn new skills while risking a sense of inferiority and failure
Can lead to us feeling bad about ourselves for the rest of our lives.. An inferiority complex
Stage 5 - Identity versus Role Confusion - Adolescence
WHO AM I??
Teens must achieve self-identity while deciphering their roles in occupation, politics, and religion
If I do not find myself I may develop an identity crisis
Stage 6 - Intimacy versus Isolation - young adult
What are my priorities?
The young adult must develop long term relationships while combating feelings of isolation
Learning how to balance relationships, work, education, money, etc
Marriage (haha thats funny)
Stage 7 - Generativity versus stagnation - middle adult
Is everything going as I planned? Am I happy with my life?
Parenting
Midlife crisis
Wanting to continue your family lineage (welp)
Stage 8 - Integrity versus Despair - old decrepit adult (late adulthood)
Was my life meaningful? Do I have regrets?
Reflecting on life
Accepting your lifetime accomplishments or waste
Passing down wisdom to younger generations
Parenting Styles
Authoritarian Parents
Impose rules and expect obedience
“Why? Because I said so!!”
Permissive/Indulgent Parents
Submit to their children’s desires, make few demands and use little punishment
Neglectful Parents
Dismissive of children’s emotions or opinions
Emotionally unsupportive, but provide for child’s basic needs (food, shelter, clothing, etc)
Authoritative Parents
Parents are both demanding and responsive
Exert control by setting rules but explain reasoning behind the rules
Encourage open discussion
Parenting styles vary with culture
Sensation is the WiNdOw To ThE wOrLd
The process of our sensory receptors and nervous system receiving stimuli from the environment
Perception is how we interpret what we see through that window
The process of our brain organizing and interpreting sensory information letting us recognize objects and events
Bottom-Up Processing
Starting with the basics and needing to decipher it
Like this as a language: 🥲🍑🔋🌼🍓🥱
Top-Down Processing
Using experience and prior knowledge to process it
Lkie tpynig like tihs you can raed tihs cnat you
If we could sense everything then it would not be good
Psychophysicists - study the relationship between physical stimuli and our psychological experiences to them
Selective Attention
The focus of conscious awareness on a particular stimuli
Cocktail Party Effect
In a situation where you are talking to someone and even though everything around you is going insane if you are focused on the person in front of you you can focus only on them and carry on a conversation
Selective Inattention
Missing things because you are too focused on something
This leads to Inattentional Blindness
You know that one video of the basketball players passing the ball and the moonwalking bear that you don’t see if you're watching the basketball? Yeah that one
Or Change Blindness
When you are focused on something you can’t tell if something around you changes.
Absolute Threshold
The minimum stimulation needed to detect a stimulus 50% of the time
Difference Threshold
The minimum difference that a person can detect between two stimuli
Also known as the just noticeable difference
Weber’s Law
The idea that in order to perceive a difference between two stimuli they must differ by a constant percentage instead of a constant amount
Signal Detection Theory
Predicts how we detect a stimulus amid other stimuli
Assumes that we do not have an absolute threshold
We detect stuff based on our experiences, motivations and fatigue level
Subliminal Stimulation
Stimulation that is below one’s absolute threshold for conscious awareness
You might not know that you know it
Can subconsciously influence you in certain ways
Sensory Adaptation
The decrease in sensitivity to an unchanging stimulus. The stimulus does not disappear yet the person becomes less sensitive to them
Ex. Going noseblind
Transduction
The conversion of one form of energy to another
Stimulus energies to neural impulses
Light energy to vision
Chemical energy to smell and taste
Sound waves to sound
Development of the Senses
Babies are born with basic sensory abilities but they fo develop and grow over time
Sensitive Periods
Even innate perceptual skills need the right environment to develop properly
A lack of certain experiences might impair a person’s ability to perceive the world around them
Extrasensory Perception (ESP)
Perception without sensory input
Paranormal phenomena include astrological predictions, psychic healing, communication with the dead, and out-of-body experiences, but most relevant are telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition.
Claims of ESP
Telepathy: Mind-to-mind communication. One person sending thoughts and the other receiving them.
Clairvoyance: Perception of remote events, such as sensing a friend’s house on fire.
Precognition: Perceiving future events, such as a political leader’s death.
Tests of ESP
In an experiment with 28,000 individuals, Wiseman attempted to prove whether or not one can psychically influence or predict a coin toss. People were able to correctly influence or predict a coin toss 49.8% of the time.
Vision is the most thoroughly studied sense and is highly sophisticated due to its constant use
Light is electromagnetic radiation that travels in the form of waves and makes vision possible
People experience three different aspects of light
Color (Hue)
Depends on wavelength
The distance between the peaks of the light waves
Short wavelengths are bluer
Long wavelengths are redder
Brightness
Depends on the intensity of the light or wave amplitude
The height of the wavelengths
Can also be influenced by wavelength - yellow light can usually be “brighter” than violet light
Saturation
Depends on light complexity
The more spectral colors in a light, the lower the saturation
White light is a mixture of all wavelengths of light
The visible spectrum for humans is ROY G. BIV
Ultraviolet light causes sunburns and has too short of a wavelength to be seen by the human eye
Infrared light has a wavelength that is too long to be seen by the human eye
We can only see about 10% of light
Parts of the eye
Cornea
Transparent, protective outer membrane of the eye
Iris
The colored ring of muscle in the eye
Controls the size of the pupil
Pupil
The opening that the iris surrounds. It can restrict in bright light to protect the eye and expand to increase light intake in the dark
Lens
Lies behind the pupil and iris
Accommodation - the lens can adjust its shape to focus light from objects that are near or far away.
Retina
Thin layer of neural tissue
The image on the retina is always upside down
Fovea
The center of the retina and where vision is sharpest
Parallel Processing
The processing of several aspects of a problem simultaneously
Color
Motion
Form
Depth
Eye troubles
Nearsightedness is the inability to clearly see distant objects
Farsightedness is the inability to clearly see close objects
A cataract is a lens that had become opaque and impaired vision
Photoreceptors are specialized cells that respond to light stimuli
Rods
Long narrow cells
Highly sensitive to light and allow vision even in dim conditions
No rods in the fovea
There are many more rods than cones
Cones
Distinguish between different wavelengths of light
Allow people to see color
Don’t work well in dim light
Adaptation to Light
Dark adaptation is the process by which receptor cells sensitive to light and allow clear vision in dim light
Light adaptation is the process by which receptor cells desensitize to light and allow clear vision in bright light
Connection to the Optic Nerve
Rods and cones connect via synapses to bipolar neurons while connects them to ganglion cells
The axons of the ganglion cells come together to make the optic nerve
The optic nerve connects to the eye at a spot in the retina called the optic disk which is also called the blind spot because it has no rods or cones
Transmission of Visual Information
Light reflected from an object hits the retina’s rods and cones
Rods and cones send neural signals to the bipolar cells
Bipolar cells send signals to the ganglion cells
Ganglion cells send signals through the optic nerve to the brain
Bipolar and ganglion cells gather and compress information
Ganglion cells axons from the inner half of each eye cross over to the opposite half of the brain
Signals from the left eye goes to the left hemisphere and vice versa
Visual Processing in the Brain
Visual signals eventually reach the primary visual cortex in the occipital lobe of the brain’s cerebrum.
David Hubel and Tortsen Wiesel - 1960s
Feature detectors are specialized cells that respond to visual signals in the primary visual cortex and respond to specific features of the environment like lines and edges
Visual signals often travel to other parts of the brain from the visual cortex
The deeper the cells the more specialized they generally are
Psychologists theorize that perception occurs when a large number of neurons in different parts of the brain activate
Color Vision
Color is only a psychological experience that occurs because objects reflect light
Our eyes and brains convert these reflections into colors
Color vision happens because of two different processes
Retina - The Trichromatic Theory
Thomas Young
Hermann von Helmholtz
States that the retina has three different types of cones
Red
Green
Blue
Activation of these cones results in color perception
Mixing lights is called additive color mixing
Mixing paints is called subtractive color mixing
Dichromats are sensitive to only two of the three wavelengths of light
Accounts for color blindness
Retinal ganglion cells and in the cells in the thalamus and visual cortex - The Opponent Process Theory
Ewald Hering
States that the visual system has receptors that react in opposite ways
Red vs green
Yellow vs blue
Black vs white
Explains why most people perceive four primary colors
Afterimages are colors perceived after other complementary colors are removed
Form Perception
Gestalt Psychology explores how people organize visual information into patterns and forms. It proposes that the perceived whole sometimes has properties that didn’t exist in the parts that make it up. An example is the phi phenomenon, in which an illusion of movement occurs when images are presented in a series, one after another.
The Phi Phenomenon is an illusion of movement that happens when a series of images is presented and swapped quickly
Gestalt Principles
Figure and ground
Figure
Stands out
Ground
Background that a figure stands on
Proximity
When objects lie close to each other people tend to perceive them as a group
Closure
People tend to fill in objects with gaps to interpret familiar incomplete objects
Similarity
People tend to group similar objects together
Continuity
People tend to perceive objects ad continuous by filling in the gaps
Simplicity
People tend to perceive forms as simple and symmetrical rather than irregular
Depth Perception
Binocular Cues
Require both eyes
Retinal Disparity
Marks the difference between two images
Convergence
Eyes turn inward at objects that are close to the face
Monocular Cues
Only requires one eye
Interposition
When one object is blocking part of another, the viewer sees the blocked object as farther away
Motion Parallax/Relative Motion
When the viewer is moving it looks like still objects are moving the other way. The closer the object the faster it appears to move
Relative Size
People see objects that make a smaller image on the retina as farther away
Relative Clarity
Objects that appear sharper clearer and more detailed are seen as closer
Texture Gradient
Smaller objects that are more thickly clustered appear farther away than objects that are spread out in space
Linear Perspective
Parallel lines that converge appear far away. The more the lines converge, the greater the perceived distance
Light and shadow
Patterns of light and shadow make objects appear three-dimensional, even though images of objects on the retina are two-dimensional
Perceptual Constancy
The ability to recognize that an object remains the same even when it produces different images on the retina
Shape constancy
Objects that appear to have the same shape even though they make differently shaped retinal images, depending on the viewing angle
Size constancy
Objects that appear to be the same size even though their images get larger or smaller as their distance decreases or increases
Brightness constancy
People see objects as having the same brightness even when they reflect different amounts of light as lighting conditions change
Color constancy
Different wavelengths of light are reflected from objects under different lighting conditions
Location constancy
Stationary objects don't appear to move even though their images on the retina shift as the viewer moves around
Visual Illusions
An illusion is a misinterpretation of a sensory stimulus
Muller-Lyer illusion
Two lines that are exactly the same length but look like they are different lengths because of the arrows around them
Perceptual Set
The readiness to see objects in a particular way based on expectations, experiences, emotions, and assumptions
Reversible figures are ambiguous drawings that can be interpreted in more than one way
Selective Attention
The ability to focus on some bites of information and ignore others
Context can influence how we perceive things
Sound waves are changes in pressure generated by vibrating molecules
Sound has three features
Loudness
depends on amplitude
The higher the crest of the wave is the louder the sound is
Volume can be measured in decibels
The absolute threshold of human hearing is 0 decibels
A whisper is about 20 decibels
Sounds over 120 decibels can damage the auditory system
Pitch
Determined by frequency
Number of complete wavelengths that pass through a point at a given time
Timbre
the quality of a sound and depends on the complexity of the sound wave
Frequency is the number of times per second a sound wave cycles
Frequency is measured in hertz
Humans can hear sounds that are between 20 and 20000 hertz
The structure of the ear
Outer Ear
Pinna
The visible part of the ear which collects sound waves
Middle Ear
Chamber between the eardrum and the inner ear
Ossicles
Three bones that vibrate to concentrate the sound into the eardrum
Inner Ear
Cochlea
A fluid-filled tunnel with cilia that are embedded in the basilar membrane
Vibrations that reach the inner ear move the fluid in the cochlea which moves the cilia
The movement of the cilia triggers neurons that form the auditory nerve
Neurons in the ear form the auditory nerve, which sends impulses from the ear to the brain. The thalamus and auditory cortex receive auditory information.
Has semicircular canals and vestibular sacs
Pitch Perception
Place Theory
States that sound waves of different frequencies trigger receptors at different places on the basilar membrane
The brain figures out the pitch of the sound by detecting the position of the hair cells that sent the neural signal
Frequency Theory
Status that sound waves of different frequencies make the whole basilar membrane vibrate at different rates and therefore cause neural impulses to be sent at different rates. Pitch is determined by how fast neural signals move along to the brain
This theory has trouble explaining high pitch sounds because our hairs cannot vibrate at certain speeds.
This problem can be explained using the volley principle.
Locating Sounds
The left ear receives sound waves coming from the left slightly faster than the ones on the right
Hearing Loss
Conduction Hearing Loss - damage to the mechanical system of the ear
Sensorineural hearing loss - damage to the cochlea’s receptor cells or auditory nerves
Taste and Smell are chemical reactions
Taste (Gustation)
Happens when chemicals stimulate receptors in the tongue and throat. These receptors are located inside of taste buds which are located in the tiny papillae of the skin
Traditionally, taste sensations consisted of sweet, salty, sour, and bitter tastes. Recently, receptors for a fifth taste have been discovered called “Umami”.
Smell (Olfaction)
Happens when chemicals in the air enter the nose
Smell receptors lie in the top of the nasal passage and send impulses through the olfactory nerve to the brain
Odorants enter the nasal cavity to stimulate 5 million receptors to sense smell. Unlike taste, there are many different forms of smell.
Smell is closely connected to memory
The brain region for smell is closely connected with the brain regions involved with memory (limbic system). That is why strong memories are made through the sense of smell.
Ability to identify smell peaks during early adulthood, but steadily declines after that. Women are better at detecting odors than men.
Sensory Interaction
When one sense affects another sense, sensory interaction takes place. So, the taste of strawberry interacts with its smell and its texture on the tongue to produce flavor.
Kinesthesis is the sense of position and movement of body parts
The vestibular system senses balance
Made of three fluid-filled tubes in the ear called semicircular canals
The sense of touch encompasses pressure, pain, cold, and warmth.
Pressure has specific receptors.
Gate-Control Theory of Pain (1960s)
Ronald Melzack and Patrick Wall
States that pain signals traveling from the body to the brain must go through a gate in the spinal cord. If this gate is closed then the pain signals will never reach the brain
Pain Control
Pain can be controlled by a number of therapies including, drugs, surgery, acupuncture, exercise, hypnosis, and even thought distraction.
We’ll talk about sleep, drugs, and hypnosis
Consciousness is the awareness we have over ourselves and our environment
Different states of consciousness are associated with with different patterns of brain waves
Brain waves
tracings of electrical activity in the brain
Electroencephalography (EEG) can be used to record these waves by monitoring electrical activity through electrodes placed on the scalp
Four types of brain waves
Alpha Awake and Relaxed
Beta Awake and alert
Theta Lightly asleep
Delta Deeply asleep
Sleep is composed of several different states of consciousness
Biological Rhythms
Rhythms are regular, periodic changes in a body’s functioning
There are three types of biological rhythms
90-minute cycles
Sleep cycles
Broken into parts
We have multiple sleep cycles a night
Circadian rhythms
Occur about every twenty-four hours
What follows this rhythm
Sleep
Hormone secretion
Blood pressure
Body temperature
Urine production
Infradian rhythms
Take longer than twenty four hours to cycle
Women's menstrual cycles occur about every twenty-eight days
Ultradian rhythms
Occur more than once a day
Sleep follows an ultradian rhythm of about ninety minutes
Alertness and hormone levels also follow ultradian rhythms
Annual cycles
Migrations and hibernation
Humans experience seasonal variations in appetite, sleep, and mood
Endogenous biological rhythms synchronize with environmental events like daylight and changes in temperature
Biological clocks exist because of endogenous biological rhythms
The Suprachiasmatic Nucleus (SCN) is the main biological clock in the hypothalamus. The SCN sends signals to the pineal gland, which secretes melatonin, a hormone that regulates the sleep cycle.
Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) is a mood disorder people experience during dark winter months
Jet Lag
While traveling drains energy, time change also contributes to fatigue
People experience jet lag when their biological clocks and the environment does not match up
The Function of Sleep
We spend about ⅓ of our life sleeping
The true function of sleep is unknown but there are some theories
To conserve energy by sleeping periodically
To keep people tucked away from predators at night
Restores and repairs body tissues that are depleted during daily activities
To restore and rebuild memories
The pituitary gland releases growth hormones during sleep.
Sleep Research
The study of sleep is relatively new
Researchers study sleep by monitoring subjects who spend the night in labs
They can use different instruments for different purposes
Electroencephalographs (EEGs) - record brain waves
Electromyographs (EMGs) - record muscle activity
Electrooculographs (EOGs - record eye movements
Electrocardiographs (EKGs) - record the activity of the heart
Other instruments can be used to monitor breathing, temperature, and pulse
Sleep Stages
NREM 1
When people fall asleep they enter into this stage
Only lasts a few minutes
Theta waves
Everything slows down and relaxes
Fantasies or bizarre images might float around in the mind
Mild hallucinations (like a feeling of falling)
NREM 2
Fully asleep
Lasts about twenty minutes
Still Theta waves
Short bursts of brain activity called sleep spindles
NREM 3
Slow wave sleep
Delta waves
Slow and limp body/body functions
When the body restores growth hormones and good overall health
Where sleepwalking is possible
REM (Rapid-Eye-Movement)
People go back through the stages again in reverse then they enter REM sleep
Brain activity is that of an alert awake person
The body is basically paralyzed
Beta waves
Also called paradoxical sleep
People get aroused in their sleep I guess?
Most vivid dreams
When sleep paralysis is possible
People usually go through about four sleep cycles a night
With each cycle the NREM stages get shorter and the REM stage gets longer
Sleep Deprivation
Some people can function with fewer than six hours of sleep a night
Some people need at least nine hours of sleep a night to function
Insufficient sleep can lead to negative effects on health, productivity, and performance
Fatigue and maybe death
Impaired concentration
Emotional irritability
Depressed immune system
Greater vulnerability
REM sleep deprivation leads to an REM rebound effect where the person spends even more time in the REM stage to make up for past losses
You can die from lack of sleep
Aging and Sleep
As people age they tend to sleep less and less
The proportion of REM sleep to NREM sleep decreases over time as well
Sleep Disorders
Insomnia is a chronic problem with falling or staying asleep
Narcolepsy is a tendency to fall asleep periodically during the day. Goes directly to REM sleep
Sleep apnea is when people stop breathing during a night’s sleep. This prevents them from getting enough deep sleep
Night Terrors actually can be a sleep disorder characterized by high arousal and an appearance of being terrified. These occur in NREM 3 sleep and are often not remembered
Sleepwalking is a sleep disorder that affects about 10 percent of all humans at least once in their lives. Usually occurs in NREM 3 sleep
No one knows the exact function of dreams
What do we dream about?
Negative Emotional Content - 8 out of 10 dreams have negative emotional content
Failure Dreams - People commonly dream about failure, being attacked, pursued, rejected, or struck with misfortune
Sexual Dreams - Sex dreams are rare. About 1 in 30 for women and 1 in 10 for men
Dreams of Gender - Women dream about genders equally while men tend to dream about men
Freud’s Dream Theory
Wish fulfillment
Believed that dreams allow people to express unconscious wishes they find unacceptable in real life.
Manifest content
The plot of the dream
Who’s in the dream
What happens
Latent content
They hidden meaning
Symbolic representation
The manifest content is a disguise that masks the real meaning of the dream
Freud theorized that psychological problems stem from repressed sexual urges
Activation-synthesis Theory
Proposes that neurons in the brain randomly activate during REM sleep
Dreams arise when the cortex of the brain tries to make meaning out of these impulses
Dreams are basically just brain sparks
Problem-Solving Dreams
Some researchers believe that dreams express concerns and might help to solve problem in day-to-day life
Dreams might give you clues to help solve the problem
Neural Housekeeping
Dreams come from the brain’s housekeeping functions
Dreams clean up the brain’s “files”
Periodic stimulation and preserving neural pathways
Cognitive Development
Dreams are a part of brain maturation
Dreams reflect our cognitive development
Lucid Dreams are when people are aware that they are dreaming and can control their actions
Some states of consciousness don’t occur naturally
Hypnotic States
Meditative States
Drug Induced States
Hypnosis
Opens people to the power of suggestion
Hypnosis Can
Cause people to be relaxed, have a narrowed focus of attention, and be highly engaged in fantasies
Produce anesthesia and treat a range of psychological and medical problems
Cause hallucinations and distortions in sensory perception
Reduce inhibitions
Cause changes in behavior after the hypnosis has ended
Hypnosis Can’t
Work effectively well for everyone
Force people to do things against their will
Make people act in ways that would normally be beyond their physical or mental abilities
Reliably increase the accuracy of memories
Allow people to actually re-experience past events or lives
Posthypnotic Suggestion - Suggestion carried out after the subject is no longer hypnotized
Posthypnotic Amnesia - When people are instructed to forget what happened during hypnosis will later claim to have no memory of it
Unlike sleep, brain waves do not reliably change like they do in sleep
There are two main theories about hypnosis
Divided Consciousness Theory - Ernest Hilgard
Hypnosis causes people to dissociate or divide their consciousness into two parts
One part responds to the outside world
The other observes but doesn’t participate
Hypnosis can make people not react to pain
Social Influence Theory - Theodore Barber/Nicholas Spanos
Hypnosis happens when a suggestible person plays the role of a hypnotized person. Hypnotized people simply behave as they think they are expected to
Mesmerism
Anton Mesmer noticed that his patients would get in a trancelike state
Meditation
Practice of focusing attention to enhance awareness
Repetitive chanting and breathing exercises
Increase in alpha and theta brain waves
Slowed pulse and breathing
Improves physical and mental health
Psychoactive Drugs
Change sensory experience, perception, mood, thinking, and behavior
Called recreational drugs
Some have legitimate medical uses
Types of psychoactive drugs
Stimulants
Drugs that stimulate the central nervous system
Sedatives/Depressants
Drugs that slow down the central nervous system
Narcotics
Opiates
Drugs that can relieve pain
Hallucinogens
Drugs that cause sensory and perceptual distortions
Some researchers consider cannabis drugs as a separate type of drug because they contain features of more than one type of drug
How do Psychoactive Drugs Work
Psychoactive drugs affect neurotransmitters and how they function
Drugs can
affect multiple neurotransmitters
Cause more or less of a neurotransmitter to be released at a synapses
Block reuptake of a neurotransmitter by presynaptic cells
Stimulate or block neurotransmitter receptors on postsynaptic cells
Hallucinations
Sensory or perceptual experiences without any external stimulus
Trick the brain into perceiving stimuli that aren’t present
Influences on Psychoactive Drug Effects
Psychoactive drugs don’t always have the same effect on different people
Things that can change the effect of a drug
Amount of the drug
Potency of the drug
How the drug is administered
How much previous experience a user has with the drug
The user's age and body weight
The user’s mood, personality, and motivation
The environment in which the drug is used
The user’s expectations about the drug’s effects
Chronic Use of Psychoactive Drugs
When people regularly use a drug they develop a tolerance for it
When people stop using a drug after a long period of regular use they will go through withdrawal
People can become physically (withdrawal) and psychologically (craving) dependent on drugs
Overdoses can be lethal
Some drugs may cause dangerous behavior
Learning is long lasting change in behavior due to experience
There are many different types of learning
Classical conditioning - linking stimuli and anticipating events (basically just any sort of association)
A type of learning in which one learns to link two or more stimuli and anticipate events
Pavlov’s Dogs - Ivan Pavlov
Studied the digestion of dogs
Whenever he brought the dogs food they would start to drool
When the dogs heard him walking towards them they would anticipate food and start to drool regardless of whether he had food or not
He started ringing a bell before feeding them
Whenever he rung the bell the dogs would start to drool even if he didn’t bring them food
The dogs learned to salivate whenever he rung the bell (Conditioned Reflex)
Classical Conditioning is a passive learning process
Starts with an Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS) - Which causes a natural and or reflexive response
The Unconditioned Response (UCR) is the response to the UCS
Food makes dogs drool
Shots make the old lady flinch and say ow
Pills make someone nauseous
Next you find a neutral stimulus (something unrelated to the UCS/UCR)
Then you repetitively present the neutral stimulus with the UCS
The subject will then connect the natural stimulus and the UCS (Acquisition)
Learning has taken place once the neutral stimulus elicits the same response as the UCS
The neutral stimulus is now called the conditioned stimulus (CS) and the unconditional response is now called the conditioned response (CR)
Acquisition does not last forever
Extinction
When the subject no longer associates the CS with the UCS
Spontaneous Recovery
Sometimes after extinction the CR will occasionally appear after the CS is presented
Generalization
When something is similar enough to the CS that you get the CR
Discrimination
When something is different enough to the CS that you do not get the CR
Classical Conditioning in Humans
Baby Albert - John Watson
John Watson picked up some nine month old baby from an orphanage and had no morals apparently
He conditioned this child to be mortified of fluffy white animals
Albert was pretty cute and loved animals including white rats
Then whenever he was brought a white rat Watson would bang some metal pipe with a hammer and would scare Albert
Albert was then mortified of white rats
He was also mortified any other fluffy or white things
Albert was never conditioned to not be afraid of white fluffy things and was just dropped back off at the orphanage
He died at age six
This type of conditioning is also called aversive conditioning
First Order Conditioning
Bell + Meat = Salivation becomes Bell = Salivation
Second/Higher Order Conditioning
After first order conditioning
Light + Bell = Salivation becomes Light = Salivation
Learned Taste Aversions
Food paired with sickness is incredibly strong conditioning
Even when food and sickness are hours apart
Non-passive learning
Learning based on consequences - Rewards and punishments
Edward Thornsike’s Law of Effect
Instrumental learning - behavior changes based on its consequences
Rewards strengthen behavior
Punishments weaken behavior
B.F. Skinner
Nurture over nature
Used skinner boxes or operant conditioning chambers to prove his concepts
Skinner Box
A box with stimuli, punishments, and rewards
There’s a myth that he made one for his own child but this is false
Reinforcers
Anything that increases a behavior
Positive Reinforcement
The addition of something pleasant
Negative Reinforcement
The removal of something unpleasant
Punishment
Anything that decreases a behavior
Positive Punishment
The addition of something unpleasant
Negative Punishment
The removal of something pleasant
Shaping
When the subject does something similar to the desired behavior they will be rewarded
Reinforcing small steps on the way to the desired behavior
Primary Reinforcers
Food, water, affection, naturally satisfying things
Secondary/Conditioned Reinforcers
Money, fast cars, good grades, things you have to learn to value
Money is a generalized reinforcer which means that it can be traded for anything
Primary Punishers
Pain, freezing temperature, naturally unpleasant thing
Secondary/Conditioned Punishers
Failing grades and social disapproval, things you have to learn to not want
Acquisition
the connection between the behavior and the consequence
Token Economy
Every time a desired behavior is performed, a token is given
Tokens can be traded for prizes
Used in homes, prisons, mental institutions, and schools
Premack Principle
You have to take into consideration the reinforcers used
Is the reinforcer wanted? Or at least is it more preferable than the targeted behavior?
Reinforcement Schedules
How often do you give the reinforcer?
Continuous Reinforcement
Reinforce the behavior everytime it is exhibited
Usually done when the subject is first learning to make the association
Acquisition comes fast
Extinction also comes fast
Partial Reinforcement
Reinforce the behavior only sometimes after it is exhibited
Acquisition comes slowly
Extinction is less likely
There are four types of partial reinforcement schedules
Ratio Schedules
Fixed Ratio
Provides reinforcement after a set number of correct behaviors (the dog gets a treat after sitting three times)
Variable Ratio
Provides reinforcement after a random number of correct behaviors (like the lottery or gambling)
Hard to acquire but also very resistant to extinction
Interval Schedules
Fixed Interval
Requires a set amount of time to elapse before giving the reinforcement (She gets a cookie every ten days she works out)
Variable Interval
Requires a random amount of time to elapse before giving the reinforcement (Phone notifications)
Hard to acquire but also very resistant to extinction
Taste Aversion
John Garcia found that aversion to taste is only conditioned by pairing a taste to nausea
This conditioning is extremely quick and strong
This could be an evolutionary adaptation
Instinctive Drift
The tendency for conditioning to be hindered by natural instincts
Keller and Marian Breland found that through operant conditioning they should teach raccoons to put a coin in a box only when using a reinforcement
Conditioning involves some information processing
Robert Rescorla - pairing two stimuli doesn’t always produce the same level of conditioning. Conditioning is more effective when the stimulus acts as a reliable signal that predicts the appearance of the unconditioned stimulus
BoBo Doll Experiment - Albert Bandura
We learn through modeling behavior from others
Observational Learning + Operant Conditioning = Bandura’s Social Learning Theory
Antisocial models (Family, neighborhood, TV) may have antisocial effects in young children
Positive Observational Learning
Prosocial (positive or helpful) models have prosocial effects
Elementary school children who are exposed to violent media at a young age tend to exhibit more violent behavior
Mirror Neurons
Frontal lobe neurons that fire when performing certain actions or when observing another doing so
The brain’s mirroring of another’s action may enable imitation and empathy
Latent Learning
Latent learning is hidden learning
Rat Experiment - Edward Toleman
Sometimes learning is not immediately evident
Rats needed a reason to display what they have learned
Intrinsic Motivation - Internally motivated. Doing it just to do it
Extrinsic Motivation - Externally motivated. Doing it for a reward or to avoid a punishment
Insight Learning
Wolfgang Kohler’s Chimpanzees - Some animals learn through “ah ha” experiences
The persistence of learning over time through the storage and retrieval of information
Memory helps make us who we are
Memory is the capacity for storing and retrieving information
Memories are selected, constructed, and edited by the world around us
Memories can have holes or distortions
Recall
Retrieving the information from memory
Recognition
Identify the information from possible information
Elizabeth Loftus - mac-daddy of memory research
If false memories are implanted, these memories often become fabricated
Memory Construction
While tapping out memories we filter of fill in missing pieces of information to make our recall more coherent
Misinformation and Imagination Effects
Incorporating misleading information into one’s memory of an event
Eyewitnesses often construct incorrect information when asked to recall the scene of the crime
Encoding
The processing of information into the memory system
Structural encoding
Focuses on what words look like
Length
Handwriting
Phonemic encoding
Focuses on how words sound
Semantic encoding
Focuses on the meaning of words
Visual Encoding
The encoding of visual information
Acoustic Encoding
Semantic Encoding
Primacy Effect
Tending to know the first things on a list
Recency Effect
Tending to know the last things on a list
Serial Positioning Effect
Tending to know the most significant things on a list
Storage
The retention of encoded information over time
Richard Atkinson and Richard Shiffrin’s three stage model of memory storage
Sensory Memory
Stores incoming information in detail but only for an instant
The information is unprocessed and dumped after a few seconds
Iconic Memory - visual sensory memory
Echoic Memory - auditory sensory memory
Short-Term Memory/Working Memory
Some of the information from sensory memory is transferred to short-term memory
Holds about seven items for twenty seconds unless rehearsed then it lasts longer (we also remember numbers better than letters)
Can be achieved through rehearsal
ex. Repeating someone’s phone number over and over to remember it for later
Chunking - More can be put to memory if the information is chunked into big familiar pieces of information
HO TB UT TE RE DP OP CO RN IN AB OW L
HOT BUTTERED POPCORN IN A BOWL
Mnemonic Devices -
ROY G. BIV
No-one Eats Soggy Waffles
Dead King Philip Coughed On Fancy Glitter Socks
Working Memory is an active system that can be kept working in order to keep a memory as long as it is needed
Ex. store information while trying to make decisions
Long-Term Memory
Long-Term Memory usually stays with a person for the rest of their life
Sometimes these memories cannot be recalled but are remembered
Unlimited capacity
Organization of Memories
People would never be able to retrieve any memories if they weren’t organized in some way
Psychologists believe that the brain organizes memories by category
Long-Term memory also seems to be organized by familiarity, relevance, or connection to other information
Flashbulb memories are vivid, detailed memories of important events
Retrieval
The process of getting information out of memory storage
Retrieval cues are stimuli that help the process of retrieval
There cues are
Associations
The brain stores information as networks of associated concepts
Priming - recalling a particular word becomes easier if another, related word is recalled first
Context
People can often remember an event by placing themselves in the same context they were in when the event happened
Mood
If people are in the same mood there were in during an event, they will probably be able to recall the event easier
This is also called Mood Congruent Memory
State Dependent Memory
You are more likely to remember something if you are in the same situation as you were when you first experienced it
Lost Memories are not actually lost, just hard to retrieve
Automatic Processing
We process a lot of information effortlessly
Space
While reading a textbook, you automatically encode the place
Time
Frequency
Effortful Processing
Explicit Memory
Conscious, intentional remembering of information
Implicit Memory
Procedural memories - unintentional muscle memory
Conditioned memories - a conditioned response (stopping at a red light)
Declarative Memory
Recall of factual information such as dates, words, faces, events, and concepts
Procedural Memory
Recall of how to do things such as swimming of driving a car
Semantic Memory
Recall of general knowledge and concepts
Episodic Memory
Recall of personal experiences and events
Hermann Ebbinghaus - the first person to do scientific research about forgetting
He used himself as a subject
Spent time memorizing lists then tested his memory and its duration
Meaningful information fades more slowly than nonsense
Retention is the proportion of learned information that is retained or remembered
A Forgetting Curve is a graph that shows how quickly information is forgotten over time
Researchers measure forgetting through
Recall
Remembering without any external cues
Recognition
Identifying learned information using external cues
True/false or multiple choice
Relearning
Seeing how learning something for a second/third+ time affects memory and how long it takes to learn
Causes of Forgetting
Ineffective coding
The way that information is encoded affects the ability to remember it
learning things with meaning usually leads to better memory of them
Decay
Memory can fade over time
If something is in long-term memory then they will not be forgotten while in the long-term memory
Interference
People forget information because of interference from other learned information
Retroactive interference is when newly learned information makes people forget old information
Proactive interference happens when old information makes people forget newly learned information
Retrieval failure
Failing to retrieve information can lead to the memory being lost
Motivated forgetting
People forget because they push unpleasant information deep into their unconscious through repression
Also called psychogenic amnesia
Physical injury/trauma
Anterograde amnesia is the inability to remember events that occur after an injury or traumatic event
Retrograde amnesia is the inability to remember events that occurred before an injury or traumatic event
Source Amnesia
Attributing an event to the wrong source that we experienced, heard, read, or imagined
Not being able to remember where you learned something
False Memories
Children’s Eyewitness Recall is typically unreliable
Memories of abuse are often repressed
Memories of abuse are sometimes constructed
Memory can be lost and forgotten but it can also be enhanced
Processes of memory enhancements
Rehearsal
Practicing material and repeating it for memory
Overlearning
Continuing to practice material even after it is learned
Distributed Practice/Spacing Effect
Learning material in short sessions over a long period of time
The opposite of cramming
Minimizing Interference
People remember material better if they don't learn similar material right before or after
Deep Processing
People remember material better if they learn about its deeper meaning
Elaboration involves associating the material with other materials
Organizing Material
Organizing material in a coherent way helps people to remember it
Mnemonic Devices -
Acronyms
ROY G. BIV
Acrostics
No-one Eats Soggy Waffles
Dead King Philip Coughed On Fancy Glitter Socks
Narrative methods
Involve making up a story to remember words
Rhymes
Visual Imagery
Method of Loci
People picture themselves walking through a familiar place
They imagine each item on their list in a particular place as they walk
They mentally walk around again when they need to remember the items
The Link Method
People associate items on a list with each other
Peg-Word Method
People remember a rhyme that associates numbers with words
Researchers don’t know exactly how and where memory works on a physiological level
The hippocampus and memory
Long term memory involves the hippocampus
Some researchers think that the hippocampus coordinates all elements of memory throughout the brain
Other researchers think that the hippocampus helps with consolidation, the transferring of information into long-term memory
The visual cortex holds memories of visual information and so on
Long-term potential is a lasting change at synapses that occurs when long-term memories form
As you do something over and over again it becomes easier for your brain to signal
Muscle Memory
Memories aren’t exact records and can’t be completely trusted
Schemas or mental models can distort memory
Source Amnesia is when people can’t accurately remember the origin of the information
The Misinformation Effect is when people’s recollections are distorted by information given to them after the event occurred
Hindsight Bias can distort memories
People tend to overestimate their ability to recall information correctly
Confabulation is when people claim to remember something that didn’t happen or think that something happened to them when it actually happened to someone else
Cognitive psychology concerns both language and thought
Popularity originated in the 1950s
René Descartes - “I think, therefore I am”
How does language affect thought?
Why are humans motivated to create art?
Can a “thinking” machine really be made?
Language is a system of symbols and rules that are used for communication
Spoken, written, or gestured words and how we combine them to communicate meaning
Communication must meet this criteria
Uses symbols (sounds, gestures, or written characters) that represent objects, actions, events, and ideas.
Is meaningful and possible to understand by others that know that language
Generative, symbols of a language can be combined to produce an infinite number of messages
Has rules that govern how symbols can be arranged. This allows people to understand the language
The building blocks of language
Phonemes
Smallest distinguishable units of language
Consonants
Vowels
Singular sounds
“Ch” “sh” “th”
Morphemes
Smallest meaningful units of language
“I” or “a”
Prefixes
Suffixes
Word stems
Grammar - a system of rules in a language that enables us to communicate and understand
Syntax
A system of rules that governs how words can be meaningfully arranged to form phrases and sentences
Semantics
Adds meaning to the word
-ed means past tense
Periods and exclamation/question Marks
Language Development in Children
Language development is done in stages
3 months - can distinguish between the phonemes from any language
3-6 months - babbling and producing sounds that resemble any language
6 months - adjusting babbling to their language
12-24 months - children start producing simple sounds from their language (one word language “no” “stop”)
24 months - children begin to combine two or three words to make small sentences. This is usually telegraphic speech
Telegraphic Speech - Contains no articles or prepositions
“Yellow car” “no sleep”
3 years - Children can usually use tenses and plurals
Children’s language abilities continue to grow throughout the school-age years. They grow to recognize tone, puns, metaphors, and sarcasm. These abilities come from metalinguistic awareness.
Metalinguistic Awareness - The ability to think about how language is used
Ambiguous Language - Language is sometimes used correctly but still have an unclear meaning
“Avoid biting dogs”
Nature vs. nurture is here too.
Researchers acknowledge that both play a role in language
Some think that learning influences language acquisition but others believe that the influences are biological
Receptive Language before Expressive Language
Children’s ability to understand language develops faster than their ability to speak it
Receptive language is the ability to understand
Expressive language is the ability to communicate
Environmental Influences on Language Acquisition
Behaviorist B.F. Skinner believed that language is acquired through principles of conditioning (social learning theory)
association, imitation, and reinforcement
Children learn words by associating sounds with objects, actions, and events
Critics of these theories argue that
Learning cannot account for the rapid rate at which children acquire language
There are an infinite number of sentences in a language. They can’t all be learned by imitation
Children make errors like over-regularizing verbs
Children acquire language skills even though adults do not consistently correct their syntax
Neural Networks
Cognitive neuroscientists have created neural networks that can acquire some aspects of language
Using examples of language, the neural networks have been able to learn the language’s statistical structure and accurately make the past tense form of verbs.
The developers of these networks speculate that children may learn language in the same way
Biological Influences on Language Acquisition
Noam Chomsky - argues that human brains have a LAD (language acquisition device). This allows children to develop language skills. All children are born with a universal grammar
We learn language too quickly to learn it through the social learning theory
Evidence
The stages of language development occur at about the same ages in most children despite their environments
Children’s language development follows a similar pattern across cultures
Children generally acquire language quickly and effortlessly
Deaf children who have not been exposed to a language may make up their own language. These new languages resemble each other in sentence structure, even when they are created in different cultures.
Biology and Environment
Some researchers emphasize the importance of both nature and nurture in language
Humans do have an innate ability to acquire the rules of language
Children develop language skills through interaction with others rather than acquire the knowledge automatically
Language, Culture, and Thought
Researchers disagree about the extent to which language and culture influence the way people think
Benjamin Lee Whorf - 1950s - Linguistic Relativity Hypothesis / Linguistic Determinism
Language determines the way people think
Most subsequent research has not supported this hypothesis
It’s probably more accurate to say that language influences the way people think
Semantic slanting
A way of making statements so that they will evoke specific emotional responses
Name Calling
A strategy of labeling people in order to influence their thinking. In anticipatory name calling, it is implied that if someone thinks in a particular way, he or she will receive an unfavorable label
Bilingualism
Some people assume that bilingualism impairs children’s language development, there is no evidence to support this assumption.
Bilingual children develop language at the same rate as children who speak only one language
In general, people who begin learning a second language in childhood master it more quickly and thoroughly than people do in adulthood
Some researchers have tried to teach apes to use sign language
Apes cannot say words due to their lung structure but they can communicate through sign or computers
Koko the gorilla
Honeybees communicate through ✨Dance ✨
Washoe the Chimpanzee
Washoe is a chimpanzee that can speak in sign
She can
Sign meaningful combinations of words
Follow instructions
Respond to questions in ASL
Washoe’s foster child Loulis learned sign language from Washoe
Skepticism about Ape Language
Apes unlike people can be trained to learn only a limited number of words and only with difficulty
Apes use signs or computers to get a reward. They might be taught how to sign/use the computer without real meaning only for the reward
Apes don’t have a sense for syntax
No difference between “me eat apple” and “apple eat me”
Trainers may be reading meanings into signs apes make and unintentionally providing cues that help them respond correctly to questions
Non-primates can communicate
Parrots can communicate meaningfully
They have the ability to distinguish between objects and colors
Can make requests
Alex the African gray parrot can speak hundreds of words and seems to express unique meaningful thoughts
Cognition involves…
Thinking
Knowing
Remembering
Understanding
Problem solving
Decision making
Creativity
The building blocks of cognition
Concepts/Schemas
Mental category that groups similar objects, events, qualities, or actions
Summarize information
Prototypes
A mental image or best example of a category
Think of a bird (Do you see a cardinal)
Used to decide whether a particular instance of something belongs to a concept
Cognitive Schemas
Mental models of different aspects of the world
Contain
Knowledge
Beliefs
Assumptions
Associations
Expectations
Jean Piaget’s Stage Theory
Children’s thinking goes through a set series of four major stages
Cognitive skills unfold naturally as they mature and explore their environment
Lev Vygotsky’s Theory of Social Influences
Children learn to think through playing and interacting with others
Private Speech
Children use language to control their own behavior
First they talk to themselves out loud
Then they learn how to tell themselves how to behave silently as they grow up
Current Research
Children have complex cognitive abilities as early as four months old
Infants seem to understand basic physic
Humans might have been born with some basic cognitive ability
Trial and Error
Keep trying and failing until you get it right
Algorithms
Methodical trial and error
A logical set of rules that guarantee that you solve the problem
Might take longer but success is guaranteed
Deductive Reasoning
Conclusions are drawn from a set of general premises or statements
Inductive Reasoning
A general conclusion is drawn to from examples
Heuristics
A rule-of-thumb strategy that lets us make judgements and solve problems efficiently
Prone to error
Dialectical Reasoning
Pros and cons list
Forming Subgoals
Coming up with intermediate steps to solve a problem
Simplifying the problem
Comparing to similar problems
Problems can be easier if it can be compared to a similar problem
Insight
A sudden “aha!!!” moment where you just get the answer
Additive Strategies
Listing the attributes of each element of the decision, weights them according to importance, and adds them up
Elimination Strategies
Eliminating alternatives based on whether they do or do not possess aspects the decision maker deems desirable
Obstacles to Problem Solving
Representative Heuristic
Your prototype/stereotype might be wrong
Can cause us to ignore important information
Availability Heuristic
Estimating the likelihood of events based on the availability of our memory
If it comes to mind easily we presume it is common
The Gambler’s Fallacy
The mistaken belief that if something happens more frequently than normal during a given period it will happen less frequently in the future
Confirmation Bias
A tendency to search for information that confirms one’s preconceptions
Fixation
The inability to see a problem from a new perspective
Functional Fixedness
You can only think of the one “true function”
You can only buy something with a quarter not use it for anything else thats just silly
Mental Set
A tendency to approach a problem in a particular way especially if it has worked in the past
Why do we need to change it? We’ve always done it that way?
May or may not be a good thing
Overconfidence
The tendency to be more confident than correct
Overestimate the accuracy of your beliefs and judgments
Belief Bias
The tendency for one’s preexisting beliefs to distort logical reasoning
Sometimes making invalid conclusions valid or vice versa
Belief Perseverance
Clinging to your beliefs even when they’ve been disproven
Creativity
Divergent Thinking
Explore possibilities
Going from specific to general
Brainstorming
Think of all possibilities
Convergent Thinking
Deciding what to do
Narrowing down ideas
Characteristics of Creativity
Expertise
Training, knowledge, and expertise
Imaginative Thinking Skills
The ability to see things in novel ways, recognize patterns, and to make connections
Nonconformity
The ability to think independently and not care as much about what people think of you
Curiosity
Persistence
The will to work hard to overcome obstacles and take risks
Seeking new experiences
Tolerate ambiguity and rissks
Preserver in overcoming obstacles
Intrinsic Motivation
Longing for a sense of accomplishment or satisfying curiosity
A creative environment
People best realize their creative potential when they are in a creative environment
What makes us intelligent
Hard work
Practice
Our environment
Genetics
Intelligence is..
The ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to new situations
socially constructed and not the same in every environment (culturally specific)
A concept!! NOT a thing
Everyone has intelligence.. just some people have different kinds of intelligence
Factor Analysis
A statistical procedure that identifies clusters of related items on a test
Charles Spearman - General Intelligence
G - Factor
L.L. Thurstone - Primary Mental Abilities
There is not a single scale of general intelligence
Seven clusters of primary mental abilities
Word Fluency
Verbal Comprehension
Spatial Ability
Perceptual Speed
Numerical Ability
Inductive Reasoning
Memory
Since then there has been evidence that there is a “G”
Howard Gardner - Multiple Intelligences Theory
Also disagreed with the G but in a different way
Studied savants - people with limited mental ability but are exceptional in one area
Gardner’s Eight Multiple Intelligences
Visual/Spatial
Verbal/Linguistic
Logical/Mathematical
Bodily/Kinesthetic
Musical/Rhythmic
Interpersonal
Intrapersonal
Natural
Savant Syndrome
found in some individuals with autism
Exceptional talent in one specific area but poor mental function in other areas
Emotional Intelligence
the ability to perceive, express, understand, and regulate emotions
How do we assess intelligence
Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon
Concept of mental age
They discovered that by discovering someone’s mental age they can predict future performances
Lewis Terman - Stanford-Binet Test
*Intelligence Quotient = (mental age/chronological age )100
Issues with the IQ Formula
Doesn’t work when you’re older (typically older than 12)
Wechsler Tests
More common way to test IQ. does not use the formula but uses the same scoring system (100 is still average)
WAIS - Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale
WISC - Wechsler Index for School Children
WPPSI - Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence
Aptitude versus Achievement Tests
Aptitude
A test designed to predict a person’s future performance
The ability for that person to learn
Achievement
A test designed to assess what a person has learned
Tests must be
Standardized
Tests must be pretested to a representative sample of people
Form a normal distribution or bell curve
Reliable
The extent to which a test yields consistent results over time
Valid
The extent to which a test measures what it is supposed to measure
Content Validity
Does the test sample a behavior of interest
Predictive Validity
Does the test predict future behavior
Sometimes called criterion related validity
Biological tests of intelligence
Reaction time
The amount of time a subject takes to respond to a stimulus
Perceptual speed
The amount of time a person takes to accurately perceive and discriminate between stimuli
The influence of culture
Tests that are constructed primarily by white, middle-class researchers may not be equally relevant to people of all ethnic groups and economic classes
Cultural values and experiences can affect factors such as. attitude toward exams, degree of comfort in the test setting, motivation, competitiveness, rapport with the test administrator, and comfort with problem solving independently rather than as part of a team effort
Cultural stereotypes can affect the motivation to perform well on tests
Many researchers believe that there is a reaction range to IQ
Heredity Influences
Family studies show that intelligence tends to run in families
Twin studies show a higher correlation between identical twins in IQ than between fraternal twins. This holds true even when identical twins reared apart are compared to fraternal twins reared together
Adoption studies show that adopted children somewhat resemble their biological parents in intelligence
Heritability of Intelligence
Heritability estimates don’t reveal anything about the extent to which genes influence a single person’s traits
Heritability depends on how similar the environment is for a group of people
Even with high heritability, a trait can still be influenced by environment
Biological Influences
Brain Anatomy
Studies have shown a +.33 correlation between brain size and intelligence scores (relative to body size)
Neural Processing Speed
People who score high on intelligence tests tend to retrieve information from memory more quickly
+.3-+.5 correlation between speed of taking in perceptual information and intelligence score
Gender Differences in Intelligence
Similarities outnumber differences
Female brain trends
Better with words
Better with object location and have better senses
Better emotion detectors
Male brain trends
Scores vary more than female scores
Better spatial ability
Better with numbers and math
This is probably mostly due to nurture with social views on gender
Ethnic Similarities and Differences in Intelligence Test Scores
Probably all completely due to environmental differences
Environmental Influences
Better environment → Better Intelligence
Evidence
Adoption studies demonstrate that adopted children show some similarity in IQ to their adoptive parents
Siblings raised together are more similar in IQ than siblings raised separately
Biologically unrelated children raised together in the same home have similarity in IQ
IQ declines over time in children raised in deprived environments, such as understaffed orphanages or circumstances of poverty and isolation
People’s performance on IQ tests has improved over time in industrialized countries. This is known as the Flynn Effect
Flynn Effect
Probably due to environmental factors
Smaller families
Improved education
Internet
nutrition
Intelligence tests are biased towards a certain cultural experience
Dynamic of Intelligence
The Stability of Intelligence Over the Lifespan
Increases with age
By age 4 we can begin to predict their adult scores
By age 7 intelligence scores stabilize
An IQ under 70 is considered intellectual disability
An IQ about 130 is considered high intelligence
Early Intervention Effects
Early neglect from caregivers leads children to develop a lack of personal control over the environment and it impoverishes their intelligence
Schooling Effects
Increased schooling at a young age correlates with higher intelligence scores
Projects like Head Start help this
Stereotype Threat
Self-confirming concern that one will be evaluated based on negative stereotypes
Patterns of thoughts, feelings, or behaviors that are deviant, distressful, and dysfunctional
running naked In one culture may be normal while in others it may lead to arrest
Early Theories
Abnormal behavior was considered evil spirits trying to get out
A theory to get rid of these spirits was to make the body extremely uncomfortable
History of Mental Disorders
In the 1800s disturbed people were no longer thought of as madmen but as mentally ill
Early mental hospitals were basically prisons
Someone hospitals would charge admission like a zoo for people to see the mentally ill chained up
Philippe Pinel
French Doctor who was the first to take the chains off and declare that these people are sick and “a cure must be found!!”
Medical Model
Physicians discovered that syphilis led to mental disorders
Etiology
Cause and development of the disorder
Diagnosis
Identifying and distinguishing one disease from another
Treatment
Treating a disorder in a psychiatric hospital
Prognosis
Forecast about the disorder
Vulnerability-Stress Model
Psychological disorders result from an interaction between biological and environmental factors
The Learning Model
Theorizes that psychological disorders result from the reinforcement of abnormal behavior
The Psychodynamic Model
psychological disorders result from maladaptive defenses against unconscious conflicts
Disorder Assessment
Two main methods
Objective Tests
Pencil and paper standardized tests
Projective Tests
Require psychologists to make judgments based on a subject responses to ambiguous stimuli
Rorschach Tests
In which subjects interpret a series of inkblots are examples of projective tests
Bio-psycho-social Perspective
Assumes that biological, socio-cultural, and psychological factors combing and interact to produce psychological disorders
Biological Influences
Evolution
Individual genes
Brain structure and chemistry
Psychological Influences
Stress
Trauma
Learned helplessness
Mood related perceptions and memories
Social-cultural influences
Roles
Expectations
Definitions of normality and disorder
Perspective and Disorders
Psychoanalytic/Psychodynamic
Internal, unconscious causes
Humanistic
Failure to strive to one’s potential or being out of touch with one’s feelings
Behavioral
Reinforcement history and the environment
Cognitive
Irrational, dysfunctional thoughts or ways of thinking
Sociocultural
Dysfunctional society
Biomedical/Neuroscience
Organic problems, biochemical imbalances, genetic predispositions
DSM - Diagnostic Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
Classifies disorders and symptoms
Does NOT includes causes or cures
Most recent is the DSM5 which describes over 300 psychological disorders compared to the 60 in the 1950s
Major Classification
Neurotic Disorders
Distressing but one can still function in society and act rationally
Psychotic Disorders
Person loses contact with reality
Experience hallucinations or delusions
Labeling Psychological Disorders
Critics and DSM argue that labels may stigmatize individuals
Labels may be helpful for healthcare professional when communicating with one another and establishing therapy
“Insanity” labels raise moral and ethical questions about how society should treat people who have disorders and have committed crimes
A group of conditions where the primary symptoms are anxiety or defenses against anxiety
The patient fears something will happen to them
They are in a state of intense apprehension, uneasiness, uncertainty, or fear
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
Persistent and excessive anxiety or worry that lasts at least six months
An anxiety disorder in which a person is continually tense, apprehensive and in a state of autonomic nervous system arousal
The patient may feel constantly tense and worried, feel inadequate, is oversensitive, can’t concentrate, may have insomnia
Panic Disorder
An anxiety disorder marked by a minutes-long episode of intense dread in which a person experiences terror and accompanying chest pain, choking and other frightening sensations
Can cause secondary disorders, such as agoraphobia
Agoraphobia
Anxiety about losing control in public places
Phobias
Persistent, irrational fear and avoidance of a specific object, activity, or situation
Specific Phobia
Intense anxiety when exposed to a particular object or situation
Social Phobia
Intense anxiety when exposed to certain kinds or social or performance situations
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Persistent unwanted thoughts (obsessions) cause someone to feel the need (compulsion) to engage in a particular action
Obsession about dirt and germs may lead to compulsive hand washing
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Haunting memories
Nightmares
Social withdrawal
Jumpy anxiety
Sleep problems
Resilience to PTSD
Only about 10% of women and 20% of men develop PTSD in reaction to traumatic situations
Holocaust survivors show re
Explaining Anxiety Disorders
Genetic Predisposition - Biological
Twin studies suggest that there may be genetic predispositions to anxiety disorders
Concordance rates are used to describe the likelihood that a disorder might be inherited
Identical twins have a higher concordance rate than fraternal
People differ in sensitivity to anxiety - Biological
Neurotransmitters - Biological
There may be a link between anxiety disorders and disturbances in neural circuits that use the neurotransmitters GABA and serotonin
Brain damage to the hippocampus can contribute to PTSD symptoms - Biological
SSRIs and Anxiety Disorder - Biological
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors are a class of drug commonly used to treat anxiety disorders. They raise the level of serotonin in the brain by preventing it from being reabsorbed back into cells that released it
Classical Conditioning - Conditioning and Learning
People can acquire anxiety responses through classical conditioning
Evolutionary predisposition - Conditioning and Learning
Martin Seligman proposed that people are more likely to develop conditioned fears to certain objects and situations due to evolutionary influences
Observational learning - Conditioning and Learning
Children may learn to be afraid of certain objects or situations by observing their parent's’ behavior in the face of those objects or situations
Cognitive Factors
People with certain thinking styles are more susceptible to anxiety disorders than others
Tend to see threats in harmless situations
Focus too much attention on situations that they perceive to be threatening
Tend to recall threatening information better than nonthreatening information
Tend to be more neurotic
Psychological disorders characterized by emotional extremes
Marked disturbances in emotional state which affect thinking, physical symptoms, social relationships, and behavior
Unipolar
Experience moods that are depressive
Bipolar Disorder
Experience moods that are both depressive and manic
Depression: Major depression, suicidal thoughts, self harm
Mania: Wild spending sprees, taking on big projects, becoming very promiscuous, taking extreme risks
Dysthymic Disorder
Experiencing a mild depressed mood for a majority of days over at least two years
Depression
Have a reason
The common cold of psychological disorders
Symptoms
Lethargy and fatigue
Feelings of worthlessness
Loss of interest in family & friends
Loss of interest in activities
Major Depressive Disorder
No apparent reason to be depressed
Episodic periods of at least two weeks
Constant sadness or irritability
Loss of interest in almost all activities
Changes sleeping or eating patterns
Low energy
Feelings of worthlessness or guilt
Difficulty concentrating
Recurrent thoughts about suicide
Seasonal Affective Disorder
A type of depression that is related to changes in seasons
Suicide
More likely when a depressed person begins the process of recovery and becomes more energetic
Bipolar Disorders
At least one distinct period when a person exhibits manic symptoms
Irritability
Feelings of being high
Decreased need for sleep
Inflated self-esteem or grandiosity
Fast and pressured speech
Agitation
Increased interest in pleasurable activities that have the potential for harmful consequences
Usually also experience depressive episodes
Etiology
Biological
Genetic Predisposition
Concordance rate in identical twins versus fraternal
Neurotransmitters
Research shows that the neurotransmitters norepinephrine and serotonin are involved in mood disorders
Brain structure
People with chronic depressions tend to have a smaller hippocampus and amygdala
Cognitive
Learned helplessness
Matin Seligman proposed that depression came from learned helplessness or a tendency to give up passively in the face of unavoidable stressors
Self-blame
Depressed people tend to attribute negative events to internal, stable, and global factors
Low self-esteem
Rumination
Brooding about problems is associated with longer periods of depression
Interpersonal Factors
Lack of social network
Loss of an important relationship
Environmental Stressors
General
Problematic eating patterns
Extreme concerns about body weight
Inappropriate behaviors aimed at controlling body weight
Anorexia Nervosa
Refusal to maintain a body weight in the normal range
intense fear of gaining weight
highly distorted body image
Can result in medical problems
Absence of menstrual periods
Anemia
Kidney and cardiovascular malfunctions
Dental problems
Osteoporosis
Bullimia Nervosa
Habitual binge eating
Unhealthy efforts to control body weight
vomiting
fasting
excessive exercise
use of laxatives, diuretics, and other medications
Typically have a body weight in the normal range
Can result in medical consequences
Fluid and electrolyte imbalances
Dental and gastrointestinal problems
Etiology
Biological Factors
Identical twins are more likely to both suffer from an eating disorder than are fraternal twins
Biological relatives of people with an eating disorder appear to have an increased risk of developing the disorders
Personality Factors
Anorexia nervosa - obsessive, rigid, neurotic, emotionally inhibited
Bulimia nervosa - impulsive, oversensitive and have poor self-esteem
Cultural Factors
Strongly influence the onset of eating disorders
Some countries highly value thinness
Family Influence
Some theorists have suggested that eating disorders are related to insufficient autonomy within the family
Others have proposed that eating disorders might be affected by mothers who place too much emphasis on body weight
Cognitive Factors
People with eating disorders show distortions of thinking such as the tendency to think in rigid all-or-none terms. It is unclear whether this type of thinking causes the eating disorders or results from the eating disorders
Stress
The onset of anorexia nervosa is often associated with stressful events such as leaving home for college
General
Occur when a person has physiological symptoms due to a psychological problem
Medical exams rule out any physical cause
Usually begins before the age of 30
May have unnecessary non-surgical and surgical procedures
Psycho-somatic stuff
Somatization Disorder
Experience a wide variety of physical symptoms such as pain and gastrointestinal, sexual, and pseudo-neurological problems
Hypochondriasis
Frequent physical complaints for which medical doctors are unable to locate the cause
They usually believe that minor issues are indicative and more severe illnesses
Conversion Disorder
Report the existence of severe physical problems with no biological reasoning
Like blindness or paralysis
Typically temporary
Etiology
Personality
Research suggests that people with histrionic personality traits are more likely to have somatoform disorders
Histrionic people tend to be self-focused, excitable, highly open to suggestion, very emotional, and dramatic
Cognitive
People with these disorders may pay too much attention to bodily sensations
They may make catastrophic conclusions when they experience minor symptoms
They may have distorted ideas about good health and expect healthy people to be free of any symptoms or discomfort
Learning
May learn to adopt a sick role because they are reinforced for being sick
General
Means “Split-mind”
One of several psychotic disorders
People with psychotic disorders lose contact with reality and often have delusions or hallucinations
Lack of selective attention - can’t filter out information
Positive symptoms
Presence of altered behaviors
Examples
Delusions
False beliefs that are strongly held despite contradictory evidence
Delusions of persecution or grandeur
Hallucinations
Sensory or perceptual experiences that happen without any external stimulus
Can occur in any sensory modality
Auditory hallucinations are most common in schizophrenia
Disorganized speech
Word salad - words and sentences strung together in an incoherent way
Disorganized behavior
Inappropriate gestures or laughter
agitated pacing
unpredictable violence
Negative Symptoms
Absence or reduction of normal behavior
Examples
Expressionless face
Rigid body
Emotional flatness
Social withdrawal
Spare or uninflected speech
Lack of motivation
Chronic and Acute Schizophrenia
Chronic Schizophrenia
Comes on slowly
Harder to treat
More negative symptoms
Acute Schizophrenia
Rapid
Easier to treat
More positive symptoms
Subtypes of Schizophrenia
Paranoid type
Delusions and/or hallucinations
Persecutory
Involve a belief that one is being oppressed, pursued, or harassed
Grandiose
Involve a belied that one is very important or famous
Relatively normal cognitive and emotional functioning
Disorganized type
Disorganized speech/behavior
Emotional flatness
Inappropriate emotions
Catatonic type
Unnatural movement patterns
Rigid posture
Continual, purposeless movements
Unnatural speech patterns
Absence of speech
Parroting other people’s speech
Very negative view
Undifferentiated type
Combination of the other types
Many and varied symptoms
Does not meet the criteria for other types
Residual type
No longer showing the symptoms
Etiology
Biological Factors
Genetic predisposition
Identical twins - 48% concordance
Fraternal twins - 17% concordance
Two Schizophrenic Parents - 46% chance of developing
General Population - 1% chance of developing
Neurotransmitters
Overabundance/overactivity of dopamine
Some researchers say its dopamine and serotonin
Glutamate may also play a tole
Underdevelopment of glutamate neurons results in the overactivity of dopamine neurons
Brain structure
Inability to filter out irrelevant information which leads to stimulus overload
Brains of people with schizophrenia do differ structurally from the brains of normal people in many ways
More likely to have enlarged ventricles or fluid filled spaces
Abnormalities in the thalamus
Reduces hippocampus volume
Brain Injury
Brain injuries during sensitive periods of development can make people more susceptible to schizophrenia later on in life
Viral infections or malnutrition during the prenatal period and complications during the birthing process can increase the later risk of schizophrenia
Abnormal brain development during adolescence may also play a role in schizophrenia
Stress
Stress seems to play a role if the person is already biologically vulnerable to schizophrenia
Conscious awareness becomes separated from previous memories, thoughts, and feelings
Symptoms
Derealization
Sense of being unreal
Being separated from the body
Watching yourself as in a movie
Psychogenic Amnesia
A person cannot remember things with no physiological basis for the disruption of memory
ONLY retrograde amnesia
NOT organic amnesia or anterograde
Dissociative Fugue
People with Psychogenic Amnesia find themselves in an unfamiliar environment
They often wander around and no nothing about themselves
Dissociative Identity Disorder
Used to be known as Multiple Personality Disorder
A person has several rather than one integrated personality
Much more prevalent in western cultures
People with DID commonly have a history of childhood trauma
General
Characterized by inflexible and enduring behavior patterns that impair social functioning
Doesn’t change
Stable patterns of experience and behavior that differ noticeably from patterns that are considered normal by a person’s culture
Disorders
Paranoid Personality disorder
Constant distrust in others and suspicion that people around you have sinister motives
Search for hidden meanings and find hostile intentions in others
Schizoid personality disorder
Entails social withdrawal and restricted expression of emotions
Avoid relationships and don’t show much emotion
Weak social skills
Don’t have a need for attention or acceptance
Don’t secretly wish for a friend
“Loners”
Borderline personality disorder
characterized by impulsive behavior and unstable relationships, emotions, and self-image
Prone to constant mood swings
Often injure themselves
Quick to anger when their expectations aren’t meant
Histrionic personality disorder
constant attention-seeking behavior and shallow emotions
Often interrupt others in order to dominate the conversation
Narcissistic personality disorder
an exaggerated sense of importance, a strong desire to be admired and a lack of empathy
Self-centeredness
They are generally uninterested in the feelings of others
They exaggerate their achievements expecting others to recognize them as being superior
Avoidant personality disorder
social withdrawal, low self esteem, and extreme sensitivity to negative evaluation
Consider themselves socially inept or unappealing
Extremely shy and sensitive to rejection
Wishes for friends
Avoid social interaction for dear of being ridiculed or humiliated
Antisocial personality disorder
Lack of conscience
Lack of respect for other people’s rights, feelings, and needs, beginning by age fifteen
People with antisocial personality disorder are deceitful and manipulative
Tend to break the law frequently.
They often lack empathy and remorse but can be superficially charming.
Their behavior is often aggressive, impulsive, reckless, and irresponsible
Referred to as sociopathy or psychopathy in the past
Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder
Need order in everything
Psychological inflexibility
Rigid conformity to rules and procedures, perfectionism, and excessive orderliness
Complete perfectionism
Etiology of Antisocial Personality Disorder
Biological factors
Central nervous system abnormalities
May have genetically inherited an inability to control impulses
May be caused by brain damage (prefrontal cortex)
Personality it’s who we are
Origins of personality are a mystery
Theories address
Environment
Genetics
Culture
Traits
Stable characteristics
States
temporary behaviors or feelings that depend on a person’s situation and motives
Ancient Greek Ideas
Personalities depend on the humor most prevalent in their bodies
Sanguine - Blood - Cheerful and passionate
Phlegmatic - Phlegm - Dull and unemotional
Melancholic - Black bile - Unhappy and depressed
Choleric - Yellow bile - Angry and hot-tempered
Trait Theory
Stable characteristics determine how an individual acts
Focused on the differences between individuals
Gordon Allport’s Trait Theory
Cardinal Traits
Dominate the individual’s whole life
The person is known for these traits
rare
Central Traits
Generic and basic foundations
Ex: Intelligent, honest, shy, etc
Secondary Traits
Sometimes related to attitudes of preferences and often appear only in certain situations
Ex: Anxiety when speaking to a larger group
Raymond Cattell’s Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire
Factor Analysis
Narrowed it down to sixteen main traits
Eysenck’s Three Dimensions of Personality
Introversion/Extraversion
Neuroticism/Emotional Stability
Moodiness and even-temperedness
Psychoticism
Difficulty dealing with reality
High → Antisocial, hostile, manipulative
The Five-Factor Theory of Personality
Raymond too many and Eysenck not enough
“Big Five”
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Conscientiousness
Neuroticism
Openness
Assessing the Trait Approach to Personality
Weaknesses
While an individual may score high for a specific trait they may not always exhibit it in every situation
Do not address how or why difference in personality develop or emerge
Sigmund Freud’s Theory of Psychoanalysis
Developed to treat mental disorders
Personalities arise because of attempts to resolve conflicts between unconscious sexual and aggressive impulses and societal demands to restrain those impulses
The Conscious
Contains the information that a person is paying attention to at any given time
The Preconscious
Information outside of a person’s attention but readily available if needed
The Unconscious
Most mental processes are unconscious
Contains thoughts, feelings, desires, and memories of which people have no awareness but that influence every aspect of their day-to-day lives
Freudian Slip
Slip of the tongue showing your unconscious feelings
The Id
Instinctual energy with biological urges such as impulses toward survival, sex, and aggression
Operates according to the pleasure principle, the drive to achieve pleasure and avoid pain.
Illogical, irrational, and motivated by immediate desire
The Ego
Manages the conflict between the id and the real world
Can be unconscious, conscious, and preconscious
Secondary process thinking
The Superego
The moral component of personality
Forces the ego to conform to reality and morality
Conflict
Believed that the id, the ego, and the superego are in constant conflict. Conflicts about sexual and aggressive urges
Anxiety
Anxiety arises when the ego cannot adequately balance the demands of the id and the superego
Defense Mechanisms
Behaviors that protect people from anxiety
Repression
Reaction formation
Projection
Rationalization
Displacement
Denial
Regression
Sublimation
Criticisms
He only studied wealthy women in Austria….?
His results are hard to test/verify
Doesn’t predict anything
Neo-Freudians
Alfred Adler
Childhood is important to personality
Focused on social factors instead of sexual
Our personality is driven by our efforts to conquer inferiority
Inferiority Complex
Karen Horney
Childhood anxiety is cause by a dependent child’s feelings of helplessness
This triggers our desire for love and security
Fought against Freud’s “penis envy” with her “womb envy”
Carl Jung
Less emphasis on social factors
Focused on the unconscious
We have a collective unconscious
A shared well of memories and experiences from our species history
B.F. Skinner’s Ideas
Environment determines behavior
People learn to behave in particular ways
Personality develops over their whole life span not just childhood
Albert Bandura’s Ideas
Personality arises through learning
Social-cognitive learning
We imitate models that we admire
Walter Mischel’s Ideas
Social-cognitive theorist
Researchers should pay attention to both situational and personal characteristics that influence behavior
Environments include opportunities, rewards, punishments, and chance occurrences
Reciprocal determinism
Criticism
Often do research on animals and generalize them to human beings
Behaviorists often underestimate biological factors
In the 1960’s people were sick of Freud’s negativity (only that??)
Abraham Maslow’s Self Actualizing Person
Hierarchy of Needs
Ultimately seek self-actualization
Developed his ideas by studying “healthy people”
Carl Roger’s Person-Centered Perspective
People are basically good
We are little acorns that just need genuineness, acceptance and empathy to grow into a healthy oak tree (how cute)
Self Concept
Who are you?
All of the feelings that we have about ourselves
How is this all tested?
They want to see the difference between your ideal self and your real self
The further apart these things are the more distressed you are
Its not really that scientific
Social-Cognitive Theory
Focus on how we interact with our culture and environment
Albert Bandura
Reciprocal Determinism
People choose their environments
TV you watch
Friends you hang out with
After you choose your environment your environment changes you
Our personalities create situations that we react to
If you expect someone to be angry with you, you may give that person the cold shoulder, creating the very behavior that you expected
Our personalities shape how we interpret and react to events
If you are anxious you are going to pick up more on anxiety inducing factors of a situation
The Self
Spotlight Effect
We overestimate how much attention people are paying to us
Self-Serving Bias
We tend to accept responsibility for good deeds and successes more than for bad deeds and failures
Self-Reference Effect
We tend to recall things better when we can relate them to ourselves
Temperament
A person’s characteristic emotional reactivity and intensity
They remain relatively stable over time
Personal Control
External Locus of Control
The perception that chance or outside forces beyond one’s personal control determine one’s fate
Internal Locus of Control
The perception that we control our own fate
Self-Esteem
Maslow and Rogers argued that success comes from a higher self-esteem
Hans Eysenck Theory
Believes that genetics are the primary determinate of personality
Traits are hierarchical
Studies of Temperament
Temperament refers to innate personality features or dispositions
Heritability Studies
Heritability is the mathematical estimate that indicates how much of a trait’s variation in a population can be attributed to genes
The Influence of Family Environment
Research shows that sharing a family environment does not lead to many similarities in personality
Environmental Influences
The environment has important influences on personality
Personality affects how your environment which affects your personality (cycle)
Evolutionary Approaches
Explain personality in terms of its adaptive value
Some psychologists have noted that some aspects of personality differ across cultural groups
Challenges
Studying and describing cultures without stereotyping
Exaggerating differences among cultures
Reasons for personality assessment
Aids for diagnosing psychological disorders
decide how to best counsel people about normal everyday problems
decide which job candidates are most likely to perform well under pressure
studying personality traits
Objective Personality Tests
Self-report inventories → require people to answer questions about their typical behavior.
The MMPI-2
Minnesota Multi-phasic Personality Inventory
Answer questions with True, False, or Cannot Say
Used to diagnose personality disorders
Most researched test
The 16PF
Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire
187 questions measuring sixteen basic dimensions of personality
The NEO Personality Inventory
Measures five main traits
Extraversion
Openness to experience
Agreeableness
Conscientiousness
Neuroticism
Advantages
Precise and standardized
Disadvantages
Transparent Questions → allows the subjects to lie
Social desirability bias
People might not understand certain questions
People sometimes don’t have the best memory
Projective Personality Tests
Require subjects to respond to ambiguous stimuli
Aims to reveal
Concerns
Needs
Conflicts
Desires
Feelings
The Rorschach Test
The subject is presented with a series of inkblots and is asked to describe what they see
The Thematic Apperception Test
Consists of a series of pictures containing a variety of characters and scenes
They are then asked to make up a story about each picture
The psychologist finds themes in these stories
Advantages
Allow assessments of the unconscious
Disadvantage
Questionable reliability and validity
Assessment Centers
Allow psychologists to access personality in specific situations
Attribution Theory (Fritz Heider)
We have a tendency to give casual explanations for someone’s behavior
Effects of Attribution
How we explain someone’s behavior affects how we react to it
Bad driving
Situational Attribution
“Maybe that driver is ill“ → (proceed cautiously)
Dispositional Attribution
“Crazy driver!” → (Speed up and race past the other driver)
Fundamental Attribution Error
Our tendency to overestimate the impact of personal disposition and underestimate the impact of the situations in analyzing the behaviors of others leads to the fundamental attribution error
Attitude
A belief and feeling that predisposes a person to respond in a particular way to objects, other people, and events
If we believe a person in mean → we may feel dislike for the person and act unfriendly
Attitudes can affect actions
Role Playing Affects Attitudes
Stanford Prison Experiment
Zimbardo
Actions affect attitudes
Cognitive dissonance is when actions don’t reflect attitudes
You believe that cheating is bad but you do it anyway
Do you change your attitude or your actions?
Social Influence
Door-in-the-Face Phenomenon
The tendency for people to comply with a smaller request after rejecting a larger one
“Hey can I have a thousand dollars?” → “Hey can I have a quarter?”
Foot-in-the-Door Phenomenon
The tendency for people who have first agreed to a small request o comply later with a larger request
“Hey can I have a quarter?” → “Hey can I have a dollar?” → “Hey can I have a hundred dollars?”
Persuasion
Central Route Persuasion
Reviews
Facts
Peripheral Route Persuasion
“You should get our hamburger because hot models eat our hamburgers”
Conformity
Adjusting one’s behavior or thinking to coincide with a group standard
Group Pressure + Conformity
Suggestibility is a subtle type of conformity adjusting our behavior of thinking toward some group standard
Conditions that strengthen conformity
One is made to feel incompetent or insecure
The group has at least three people
The group is unanimous
One admires the group’s status and attractiveness
One has no prior commitment or response
The group observes one’s behavior
One’s culture strongly encourages respect for a social standard
Reasons for Conformity
Normative Social Influence
Acting like the rest of the group to gain approval or avoid rejection
Informative Social Influence
Obedience
People comply to social pressures
Stanley Milgram Study
How far are people willing to go if they are commanded to do something
Social Facilitation
If you are being watched you tend to do a little bit better
Social Loafing
The tendency of an individual in a group to exert less effort toward attaining a common goal than when tested individually
Deindividulization
A loss of self-awareness and self-restraint in group situations that foster arousal and anonymity
Group Interaction
Group polarization enhances a group’s prevailing attitudes through a discussion
If a group is like-minded, discussion strengthens its prevailing opinions and attitudes
Group think
A mode of thinking that occurs when the desire for harmony in a decision-making group overrides the realistic appraisal of alternatives
Prejudice
Over the duration of time many prejudices against interracial marriage, gender, homosexuality, and minorities have decreased
Prejudice develops when people have money, power, and prestige and others do not
Social inequality increases prejudive
Ingroup
“Us” - people with whom one shares a common
Scapegoat Theory
The theory that prejudice provides and outlet for anger by providing someone to blame
Psychological Therapy
An interaction between a trained therapist and someone suffering with psychological difficulties
Psychoanalysis
Laying down on a sofa and just talking and talking
The psychoanalyst interpretes the clients words to peer into their unconcious