Title: Social and CognitiveBehavioral Psychology
1Social and Cognitive-Behavioral Psychology
- Crosbie-Burnett, M., Lewis, E. A. (1993).
Theoretical contributions from social and
cognitive-behavioral psychology. In P. G. Boss,
W. J. Doherty, R. LaRossa, W. R. Schumm, S. K.
Steinmetz (Eds.), Sourcebook of family theories
and methods A contextual approach (pp. 531-558).
New York Plenum Press.
2Historical Development
- Behaviorism (emphasis on the work of John B.
Watson) - Modeled his work on principles of classical
conditioning (Pavlov) and operant conditioning
(Thorndike). - Mental processes were considered habits that were
not connected to the brain. - Major contribution theoretical.
- Suggested that conditioned responses were forms
of learning. - Suggested that all behavior was learned children
were not active agents in their own development. - Social Psychology influenced by William James
and Gorddon Allport. - The Second Wave of European Influence
- Psychoanalytic Alfred Adler, and others fleeing
Nazi oppression, settled in the U.S. In contrast
to behaviorism, Adler argued that internal
processes were important. - Gestalt (e.g., Lewin) attacked behaviorism for
its molecular approach and denial of
consciousness
3Historical Development Social Learning Theory
(Social Cognitive Theory)
- Albert Bandura integrated social psychology,
cognitive psychology, and behaviorism. - Reciprocal determinism environment,
intrapersonal factors, and behavior are
interacting determinants of each other (see
Figure 21-1).
4Social-Cognitive TheoryEmphasizes Unique Human
Capabilities
- Ability to use symbols
- allows humans to form guides for future
reference, - generate innovate course of action.
- permits solutions symbolically by estimating
outcomes. - Forethought regulates most behavior which allows
humans to - anticipate consequences,
- set goals,
- plan.
- Vicarious learning allows efficient learning.
- Self-regulation provides humans with the capacity
to compare their behavior to internal standards. - Self-reflection permits analysis of experience
and analysis of thought processes which is used
to judge our own abilities, forming self-efficacy.
5Assumptions About Human Nature
- Behavior is learned human behavior is plastic
and malleable. - Humans actively seek, select, and use information
in order to - construct a view of reality,
- meet their basic needs.
- Cognitive activity can be consciously assessed,
monitored, and altered. - Therapeutic goal overt manipulation of behavior
is ethical.
6Assumptions About Couples and Families
- Their model is descriptive, not prescriptive it
focuses on - how families interact,
- the consequences of these interactions.
- The model is value free, but researchers and
clinicians are not so their descriptions are
influenced by - culture,
- gender,
- socioeconomic class.
- The model does not presume family structure.
- The values of individuals in a family influence
family process.
7Concepts from Social Psychology
- Attributions
- Causal attribution explanations for locus,
stability, and globality of a persons behavior. - Responsibility attribution assessment of blame.
- Coercion the process of controlling someones
behavior by acting aversively to force
compliance. - Dominance and Equity a dominant person has more
control of resources an asymmetrical
distribution of power. - Environment physical and social surroundings.
- Model a person who provides examples for
behavior. - Reciprocity tendency for people to reinforce or
punish each other at approximately equitable
rates.
8Concepts from Cognitive Psychology
- Cognitions include
- selective attention,
- perception,
- memories,
- self-talk,
- imagery,
- attitudes,
- beliefs,
- expectations,
- and attributions.
- Social Cognitions cognitions about persons in
ones environment.
9Concepts from Cognitive Psychology (cont.)
- Cognitive Mediation attribution of meaning to a
stimulus. - Schemata
- A mental structure that is used to acquire and
organize knowledge. - Long-standing, relatively stable basic
assumptions about the world and personal agency. - Behavior any observable action or series of
actions, including spoken and nonverbal
communication. - Behavioral Deficit or Skills Deficit behavioral
skills that a person does not have. - Behavioral Excesses behaviors which are engaged
in frequently enough to be problematic (e.g.,
conversation dominance, interruptions).
10The Model How the Major Concepts Link
- Environments
- Family members share social and physical
environments, to some degree. - There is variability in time spent between family
members. - Space also varies between family members.
- Influence on intrapersonal and behavioral
factors - Physical environment affects behavior and
intrapersonal factors. - Family members serve as models, reinforcers,
punishers. - Unlike other social environments, there are
financial and legal entanglements.
11The Model How the Major Concepts Link (cont.)
- Intrapersonal Factors some are permanent, some
change developmentally, and some change from
moment-to-moment. - Characteristics of individual family members such
as genetic factors which influence - physical appearance,
- mental and physical health,
- temperament,
- and predispositions.
- Personality characteristics.
- Intelligence.
- Abilities.
- Physiological factors.
- Cognitions.
- Emotions.
- Behavior
- Influences sense of competence.
- Can change the physical environment.
12Research with Couples
- Behavior in marriage (based on Gottman, et al.).
Unhappy couples in conflict showed - higher rates of negative behavior,
- more reciprocity of negative behaviors,
- and less variability in their behavior patterns.
- Cognition in marriage
- Studies of beliefs about marriage such as
Fitzpatricks (1988) marital typology. - Studies of attributions use to explain a
partners behavior the message sent by a partner
is not the same as the one received. - Affect in marriage coercive sequences and
reciprocity of negative behaviors is associated
with marital distress, not anger per se (again
based on the work of Gottman and his colleagues).
13Research with Families
- Behavior in families
- Gerald Patterson and his colleagues have
demonstrated that antisocial behavior is often
unintentionally reinforced through repeated
interactional sequences. - This research has only recently simultaneously
considered contextual risk factors (e.g.,
poverty, stress, substance abuse, difficult
temperament in an infant, high-crime
neighborhood, and marital conflict). - Cognition in families although there has been
research on family-related cognitions of
children, the study of cognitions within families
is just beginning.
14Strengths
- Provides tools to study families at the
microscopic level, focusing on family processes. - Research has been self-correcting and clearly
operationalized. - Therapeutic interventions are based on empirical
research. - Characteristics (e.g., depression) can be
conceptualized at the individual and systemic
levels. - Diversity issues can be addressed if there is
attention to schemata. - Provides a basis for public policy.
15Limitations
- May underestimate biological factors.
- It does not address critical periods and stages
of development. - It has difficulty measuring and explaining subtle
behavior which may be subjectively interpreted. - Poor application to triadic or group
relationships. - Development and application of theory has
occurred in Western culture. Generalization of
research to diverse populations is problematic.
16Figure 21-1 Banduras Model of Reciprocal
Determinism
Social Physical Environmental Domain
Behavioral Domain
17Figure 21-2 Social, Cognitve, Behavioral View of
Family Interaction
CULTURE/ COMMUNITY
Behavior
Intrapersonal