history & approaches
empiricism: knowledge comes from pexperience, obeservation and experimentation enable scientific knowledge
introspection: process of looking inward to directly observe one’s own psychological process
wundt: structuralism
structuralism: idea that the mind operates by subjective emotions + objective sensations
wiliam james: published 1st book of psychology; made functionalism by examining wundt’s structures in our lives
functionalism: explored how mental and behavioral processes function
mary whilton calkins: first woman president of APA. pioneer memory researcher
marageret floy washburn: 1st woman in a pHD in psych. animal behavior research in The Animal Mind
g. stanely hall: pioneer of childhood dev. & 1st prez of APA & first formal psychological labratory
aruged structuralism & functionalism
observed person’s total experience
therpaists apply this concept by seeing patients difficulty and context
structuralsim focuses on the little, while gestalt psychology focuses on the big picture
max wethiemer: contributor to gestalt psychology
freud: made psychoanalytic theory
emphasized unconscious mind and repression affect our behavior
wanted to make psychology limited to observable phenomena, behavior
pavlov: operant conditioning
watson: studied pavlov’s experiements
b.f. skinner: reinforcement. rejected introspection and studied how consequences shape behavior.
dominant school of thought in 1920s - 1960s
maslow: made hierarchy of needs to obtain self-actualization
carl rogers: founder of humanistic theory. made client-centered behavior
constrasts deterministic behaviorists: “behaviors are caused by conditioning only”
ex. an introverted person is introverted because they find social needs are satisfied by just close friends instead of a large group
add more info when we get to that unit
ex. an introverted person avoids social situations because of a repressed memory of trauama in childhood that embarrasses them
genes, hormones, neurotransmitters
ex. an extraverted person is extraverted because tey inherited it from their parents
similar to biopsychology perspecive in some ways
evolutionary psychologists are also caleld sociobiologists
behavior genetics: study of relative power and limits of genetic and environmental influence on behavior
ex. an extraverted person is extraverted because this characteristic impvoved their chances of survival, wchih is passed on to the next generation
reward and punishment
ex. an extraverted person is extraverted because they were awarded when they were outgoing and punished if they weren’t.
jean piaget: made cognitive devleopment theory.
cognitive neuroscience: interdisciplinary study of the brain activity linkd with cognition
perception, thinking, memory, language
ex. an extraverted person is extraverted because they interpret being outgoing makes sense to them
thoughts and behaviors vary through cultures
ex. a person is extraverted because in their culture they act outgoing and louder than in another culture
genetics, conditioning, social influence
modern
ex. there’s a genetic tendency for extroversion, this person is conditioned for extraverted behavior, social pressures make them extroverted
electic: claims that no one perspective has all the answers to why we think and behave
testing effect: enhanced memory after retrieving, rather than simply rereading information. referred to as retrieval practice effect or test-enhanced learning
SQ3R: study method incorporation five steps: survey, question read, retrieve, review
psychometrics: study of measurement of human abilities, attitudes, and traits
basic research: pure science that aims to increase scientific knowledge base
developmental psychology: studies physical, cognitive, and social change throughout life span
educational psychology: study of how psychological processes affect and can enhance teaching and learning
personality psychology: study of individuals characteristic patterns of thinking, feeling, and acting
social psychology: study of how we think about, influence, and relate to one another
applied research: aims to solve practical problems
industrial-organizational (i/o) psychology: application of psychological concepts and methods for better human behavior in workspaces
human factors psychology: field of psychology with i/o that explores how people and machines interact and how machines and physical environments can be made safe and easy to use
counseling psychology: basically therapy and counseling
clinical psychology: treats people with psychological disorders
psychiatry: the medical part of psychological disorders. only by physicians
community psychology: studies how people interact with social environments and how social institutions affect individual and group
hindsight bias: “i knew it all along” phenomenon
theory: aims to explain some phenomenon
operational definition: explains the measure of variables. carefully worded statement of the exact procedures (operations) used in a research study
replication: repeating the essence of a study, usually with different people and environments, to see if a study is consistent (reliable)
case study: full detailed picture of participant/small group. findings can’t be generalteized to larger population
naturalistic observation: observing natural environment with participant with no manipulation.
survey: has lots of confounding variables, but convenient. but, the random sample has a low response rate
sampling bias: researcher’s unconscious bias to pick a group of participants that isn’t accurate to a representative population
population: those in a group being studied, from which samples may be drawn
random sample: participants picked (sample) in random selection. random meaning that it is pureley by chance; computer, name in hat, random numbers, etc.
correlation: relationship between two variables not because of a cause
positive correlation: variable a’s presence means variable b is there too
negative correlation: variable a’s presence means variable b is absent
correlation coefficient: measurement of the strength of correlation. ranges from -1 and +1, where -1 is perfect negative correlation and +1 means perfect positive correlation. 0 = no correlation.
illusory correlation: when people think there’s a correlation involved but actually isn’t or not as strong as they put it as
regression toward the mean: tendency for extreme or unusual scores or evets to fall back toward the average
experiment: cause & effect relationships are tested
field experiment: out in the world, realistic experiments
lab experiment: highly controlled environment and lots of manipulation for experiment.
experimental group: group exposed to the treatment, the one version of the independent variable
control group: group not exposed to treatment. serves as comparison to experimental group
random assignment: participants are equal chance for any group
double-blind procedure: neither researcher or participants know which group they’re a part of
single blind procedure: only participants don’t know which group they’re a part of
confounding variable: variables that aren’t intended to affect the outcome of the research.
participant confounding variables: participants aren’t assigned randomly because of participants messing it up
situation-relavent confounding variable: participants aren’t assigned randomly because of the situation and environment messing it up. this can include experimenter bias.
validity: accurate data
reliability: can be replicated and still consistent results
informed consent: giving potential participants enough information abt study for consent if they wish to participate
debriefing: tells the purpose of experiment/research after the study
descriptive statistics: describes set of data
positive skew: extreme score is high, meaning more data is more low, less high. shifts right
negative skew: extreme score is low, meaning more data is less low, more high. shifts left
standard deviation: measure of how much scores vary around the mean score.
normal curve: bell shaped curve. symmetrical
inferential statistics: measures whether or not findings can be applied to larger population
statistical significance: stronger correlation + larger pop. = more statistically sig.
basic research: pure research, not for immediate real-world applications
applied research: practical use research
representative sample: a group of people in a certain population that reprsents it
stratified sampling: represents population with criteria. ex. a study how diff. racial groups react a certain way. it has criteria
counterbalancing: using control group also as experimental group
group matching: assures groups are equivalent on some criterion. splits groups equivalent. ex. half males and half females in each group
experimenter bias: unconscious tendency for researchers to treat members of the experimental and control groups differently to increase the change of confirming their hypothesis
social desirability: tendency to try to give answers that reflect well upon them
participant or response bias: tendency for subjects to behave certain ways
Hawthorne effect: selecting group affects performance
z score: measure distance of score from mean in standard deviation units
sampling error: extent to which sample differs from population
p value: probability that difference between groups is due to chance. should be 0.5 or less to be statistically significant. means 5% change exists that its because of chance. it can never be 0%, because data isn’t 100% with no chance.
institutional review board (irb): reviews ethics in research proposals
coercion: involuntary
anonymity: no name
confidentiality: no identity
demand characteristics: cues that might indicate purpose of study for the participants, causing confounding variables
central tendency: marks center distrubution
ex post facto (quasi-experimental) study: research that’s not an experiment that has controlling aspects of variables
empiricism: knowledge comes from pexperience, obeservation and experimentation enable scientific knowledge
introspection: process of looking inward to directly observe one’s own psychological process
wundt: structuralism
structuralism: idea that the mind operates by subjective emotions + objective sensations
wiliam james: published 1st book of psychology; made functionalism by examining wundt’s structures in our lives
functionalism: explored how mental and behavioral processes function
mary whilton calkins: first woman president of APA. pioneer memory researcher
marageret floy washburn: 1st woman in a pHD in psych. animal behavior research in The Animal Mind
g. stanely hall: pioneer of childhood dev. & 1st prez of APA & first formal psychological labratory
aruged structuralism & functionalism
observed person’s total experience
therpaists apply this concept by seeing patients difficulty and context
structuralsim focuses on the little, while gestalt psychology focuses on the big picture
max wethiemer: contributor to gestalt psychology
freud: made psychoanalytic theory
emphasized unconscious mind and repression affect our behavior
wanted to make psychology limited to observable phenomena, behavior
pavlov: operant conditioning
watson: studied pavlov’s experiements
b.f. skinner: reinforcement. rejected introspection and studied how consequences shape behavior.
dominant school of thought in 1920s - 1960s
maslow: made hierarchy of needs to obtain self-actualization
carl rogers: founder of humanistic theory. made client-centered behavior
constrasts deterministic behaviorists: “behaviors are caused by conditioning only”
ex. an introverted person is introverted because they find social needs are satisfied by just close friends instead of a large group
add more info when we get to that unit
ex. an introverted person avoids social situations because of a repressed memory of trauama in childhood that embarrasses them
genes, hormones, neurotransmitters
ex. an extraverted person is extraverted because tey inherited it from their parents
similar to biopsychology perspecive in some ways
evolutionary psychologists are also caleld sociobiologists
behavior genetics: study of relative power and limits of genetic and environmental influence on behavior
ex. an extraverted person is extraverted because this characteristic impvoved their chances of survival, wchih is passed on to the next generation
reward and punishment
ex. an extraverted person is extraverted because they were awarded when they were outgoing and punished if they weren’t.
jean piaget: made cognitive devleopment theory.
cognitive neuroscience: interdisciplinary study of the brain activity linkd with cognition
perception, thinking, memory, language
ex. an extraverted person is extraverted because they interpret being outgoing makes sense to them
thoughts and behaviors vary through cultures
ex. a person is extraverted because in their culture they act outgoing and louder than in another culture
genetics, conditioning, social influence
modern
ex. there’s a genetic tendency for extroversion, this person is conditioned for extraverted behavior, social pressures make them extroverted
electic: claims that no one perspective has all the answers to why we think and behave
testing effect: enhanced memory after retrieving, rather than simply rereading information. referred to as retrieval practice effect or test-enhanced learning
SQ3R: study method incorporation five steps: survey, question read, retrieve, review
psychometrics: study of measurement of human abilities, attitudes, and traits
basic research: pure science that aims to increase scientific knowledge base
developmental psychology: studies physical, cognitive, and social change throughout life span
educational psychology: study of how psychological processes affect and can enhance teaching and learning
personality psychology: study of individuals characteristic patterns of thinking, feeling, and acting
social psychology: study of how we think about, influence, and relate to one another
applied research: aims to solve practical problems
industrial-organizational (i/o) psychology: application of psychological concepts and methods for better human behavior in workspaces
human factors psychology: field of psychology with i/o that explores how people and machines interact and how machines and physical environments can be made safe and easy to use
counseling psychology: basically therapy and counseling
clinical psychology: treats people with psychological disorders
psychiatry: the medical part of psychological disorders. only by physicians
community psychology: studies how people interact with social environments and how social institutions affect individual and group
hindsight bias: “i knew it all along” phenomenon
theory: aims to explain some phenomenon
operational definition: explains the measure of variables. carefully worded statement of the exact procedures (operations) used in a research study
replication: repeating the essence of a study, usually with different people and environments, to see if a study is consistent (reliable)
case study: full detailed picture of participant/small group. findings can’t be generalteized to larger population
naturalistic observation: observing natural environment with participant with no manipulation.
survey: has lots of confounding variables, but convenient. but, the random sample has a low response rate
sampling bias: researcher’s unconscious bias to pick a group of participants that isn’t accurate to a representative population
population: those in a group being studied, from which samples may be drawn
random sample: participants picked (sample) in random selection. random meaning that it is pureley by chance; computer, name in hat, random numbers, etc.
correlation: relationship between two variables not because of a cause
positive correlation: variable a’s presence means variable b is there too
negative correlation: variable a’s presence means variable b is absent
correlation coefficient: measurement of the strength of correlation. ranges from -1 and +1, where -1 is perfect negative correlation and +1 means perfect positive correlation. 0 = no correlation.
illusory correlation: when people think there’s a correlation involved but actually isn’t or not as strong as they put it as
regression toward the mean: tendency for extreme or unusual scores or evets to fall back toward the average
experiment: cause & effect relationships are tested
field experiment: out in the world, realistic experiments
lab experiment: highly controlled environment and lots of manipulation for experiment.
experimental group: group exposed to the treatment, the one version of the independent variable
control group: group not exposed to treatment. serves as comparison to experimental group
random assignment: participants are equal chance for any group
double-blind procedure: neither researcher or participants know which group they’re a part of
single blind procedure: only participants don’t know which group they’re a part of
confounding variable: variables that aren’t intended to affect the outcome of the research.
participant confounding variables: participants aren’t assigned randomly because of participants messing it up
situation-relavent confounding variable: participants aren’t assigned randomly because of the situation and environment messing it up. this can include experimenter bias.
validity: accurate data
reliability: can be replicated and still consistent results
informed consent: giving potential participants enough information abt study for consent if they wish to participate
debriefing: tells the purpose of experiment/research after the study
descriptive statistics: describes set of data
positive skew: extreme score is high, meaning more data is more low, less high. shifts right
negative skew: extreme score is low, meaning more data is less low, more high. shifts left
standard deviation: measure of how much scores vary around the mean score.
normal curve: bell shaped curve. symmetrical
inferential statistics: measures whether or not findings can be applied to larger population
statistical significance: stronger correlation + larger pop. = more statistically sig.
basic research: pure research, not for immediate real-world applications
applied research: practical use research
representative sample: a group of people in a certain population that reprsents it
stratified sampling: represents population with criteria. ex. a study how diff. racial groups react a certain way. it has criteria
counterbalancing: using control group also as experimental group
group matching: assures groups are equivalent on some criterion. splits groups equivalent. ex. half males and half females in each group
experimenter bias: unconscious tendency for researchers to treat members of the experimental and control groups differently to increase the change of confirming their hypothesis
social desirability: tendency to try to give answers that reflect well upon them
participant or response bias: tendency for subjects to behave certain ways
Hawthorne effect: selecting group affects performance
z score: measure distance of score from mean in standard deviation units
sampling error: extent to which sample differs from population
p value: probability that difference between groups is due to chance. should be 0.5 or less to be statistically significant. means 5% change exists that its because of chance. it can never be 0%, because data isn’t 100% with no chance.
institutional review board (irb): reviews ethics in research proposals
coercion: involuntary
anonymity: no name
confidentiality: no identity
demand characteristics: cues that might indicate purpose of study for the participants, causing confounding variables
central tendency: marks center distrubution
ex post facto (quasi-experimental) study: research that’s not an experiment that has controlling aspects of variables