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History of Psychology

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Looked for natural remedies. E.G., For melancholia. Tranquility. Sobriety ... of Natural Selection. Species evolve through a process known as natural selection ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: History of Psychology


1
History of Psychology
2
Lecture Overview
  • What is Psychology?
  • History of Psychology
  • Early views of Mental Disorder
  • Origins of Psychological Science
  • Psychological Science Today
  • Levels of analysis

3
What is Psychology?
  • Psychology is the study of the
  • Mind -- mental activity such as thoughts,
    feelings, and subjective experiences
  • Brain an organ in the skull that produces
    mental activity and behavior
  • Behavior any observable action or response

4
History of Psychology
  • Interest in understanding human behavior and
    mental processes has existed for centuries
  • Written documents date back 25 Centuries to Greek
    Philosophers Socrates, Aristotle, Plato
  • In Asia, evidence of interest in exploring
    consciousness and in controlling it with
    meditation and yoga
  • In Africa, personality and mental disorder
    explained based on traditional spiritual beliefs

5
History of Psychology
  • Over time, our understanding of behavior and
    mental processes has evolved
  • Current understanding of behavior and mental
    processes is derived from the science of
    psychology
  • What were the earliest conceptions of disordered
    mental processes (i.e., mental illness)?
  • How did psychology as a science evolve?

6
Early Views of Mental Disorder
  • Earliest conceptions of mental disorder
    displeasure of the gods or demonic possession
  • E.g., Ancient Babylonians insanity resulted
    from possession by the demon Idta

7
Early Views of Mental Disorder
  • Treatment developed out of conception of mental
    disorders
  • Flogging
  • Starvation
  • Drinking unpalatable brews
  • Trephining

8
Trephining
9
Trephining
10
Early Views of Mental Disorder
  • Other forms of treatment
  • Sleeping in the temple of the deity of healing
  • Artistic endeavors
  • Bathing in hot springs
  • Exercise
  • Those who were not cured, however, were chased
    from the temples and/or stoned

11
Early Views of Mental Disorder
  • Hippocrates (460-377 B.C.)
  • Earliest proponent of somatogensis
  • Mental disorder resulted from disturbances of the
    body NOT demonic possession
  • Stress can also damage the mind and body

12
Early Views of Mental Disorder
  • Hippocrates
  • Normal Functioning depended on delicate balance
    of four humors or body fluids
  • Mental Disorder resulted from an imbalance of
    these humors
  • Blood changeable mood
  • Black Bile -- melancholia
  • Yellow Bile (choler) irritable anxious
  • Phlegm sluggish or dull

13
Early Views of Mental Disorder
  • Treatment
  • Looked for natural remedies
  • E.G., For melancholia
  • Tranquility
  • Sobriety
  • Care in choosing food and drink
  • Abstinence from sexual activity

14
History of Psychology
  • Galen (1st Century AD) autopsy of apes ? lead
    to his belief in the role of the brain in mental
    function
  • 3rd Century AD -- Return to demonology mentally
    ill as witches (?) Church had responsibility for
    care of mentally ill
  • 1700s -- move toward Psychogenesis mental
    disorders attributed to psychic malfunctions
  • 1850s -- Return to Somatogenesis with
    publication of Kraeplins classification system

15
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Three major historical debates/theories
    influenced development of psychology as a science
  • Nature vs Nurture
  • Mind vs Body
  • Theory of Evolution

16
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Nature vs Nurture Debate
  • Ongoing debate since the time of the Greeks about
    causes of psychological characteristics
  • Psychological characteristics ? thinking feeling,
    experiencing and behavior

17
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Nurture ? psychological characteristics are
    acquired through learning, experience, or culture
  • John Locke ?
  • Tabula Rasa the mind is a blank slate which is
    written upon through experience
  • View that psychological characteristics are
    entirely determined by experience
  • i.e., ENVIRONMENT IS KEY!

18
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Nature ? psychological characteristics are
    biologically determined or innate that is, we
    are born with it
  • i.e., ITS ALL ABOUT OUR GENES

19
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Schizophrenia as an example
  • Higher rates of concordance for schizophrenia
    between identical than between fraternal twins ?
    nature
  • Schizoprehnogenic mother ? nurture
  • Rates higher when identical twins share a
    placenta than when they each have their own
    placenta ? nurture

20
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Intelligence
  • Highly heritable but also influenced by
  • Education, nutrition, enrichment of environment
  • Nature ? may limit potential to a certain range
    BUT Nurture can influence where individual can
    fall within that range
  • Current thinking ? all behavior is some
    combination of Nature and Nurture

21
Origins of Psychological Science
22
Implications of the Nature/Nurture Debate
  • Thinking, feeling, experiencing, behavior have
    multiple causes
  • Biology is NOT destiny

23
Origins of Psychological Science
  • The Mind vs Body Debate
  • Earliest conceptions were driven by religious
    doctrine
  • The divine and immortal soul is what separated
    humans from animals
  • It controlled the mind and behavior
  • Thus, the mind was seen as distinct from the body

24
Origins of Psychological Science
  • DaVinci (1500 AD)
  • Believed that all sensory experience (i.e.,
    vision, touch, smell) was located in a single
    area of the brain which he believed to be the
    home of thought and judgment
  • He based his beliefs on autopsies he conducted on
    people
  • His method and views were seen as offensive to
    the church because they violated the presumed
    sanctity of the human body

25
Origins of Psychological Science
  • DesCartes(1600 AD)
  • The first to promote the concept of dualism ? the
    mind and the body were separate BUT related
    entities
  • The mind influenced the body
  • The body also influences the mind (considered his
    most radical view)
  • Some mental functions, such as memory and
    imagination, were the result of bodily functions
  • Volitional behavior, which was divine, was
    controlled by the rational mind, and therefore
    was independent of the body

26
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Current advances in biological and medical
    research now suggest that the mind is a function
    of the brain
  • Examples
  • Terry Schiavo
  • Specific brain regions have specific functions
  • Impact of imbalance of one neurotransmitter on
    ability to think and reason
  • Current conception the mind is what the brain
    does!

27
Origins of Psychological Science
  • The relation between the mind, brain, and
    behavior is bidirectional

Brain
Behavior
Mind
28
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29
Origins of Psychological Science
  • The Theory of Natural Selection
  • Species evolve through a process known as natural
    selection
  • Characteristics that were adaptive in specific
    environments had a selective advantage
  • In Darwins words favourable variations would
    tend to be preserved and unfavourable ones to be
    destroyed. The result of this would be the
    formation of a new species.

30
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Genetic variation produces variations in traits
    or characteristics.
  • Traits that increased the likelihood of survival
    of the species were preserved and passed along to
    the next generation
  • These are known as adaptations
  • Maladaptive traits (i.e., decreased the
    likelihood of survival) become extinct, because
    the animal did not survive or did not procreate.

31
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Sir Francis Galton (Darwins cousin) some of the
    traits that evolved were psychological in nature

32
Origins of Psychological Science
  • SO
  • The brain has evolved over millions of years to
    solve adaptive problems such as how does one
    survive during periods of famine or deprivation
  • Then
  • How does this survival mechanism, that evolved
    millions of years ago, affect us in modern
    society?

33
Survival Mechanisms Famine
  • Taste-specific satiety become satiated more
    quickly when exposed to a single flavor than to a
    variety of flavors
  • Adaptive because ? we see out a variety of foods
    to ensure we meet our nutritional needs
  • E.g., We eat more at buffets that at regular
    restaurants
  • Current Implications high rate of obesity

34
Survival Mechanisms Learning
  • Specific area of the brain that recognizes reward
  • This area of the brain lights up when a
    behavior is followed by a biologically relevant
    consequence
  • i.e., consequence that increases our likelihood
    of survival
  • Leads to repetition of the behavior
  • Current Implications ? brain mechanisms that set
    us up for addiction or obesity

35
Survival Mechanisms Sex
  • Gender differences in tendency toward promiscuity
    develops from need to ensure survival of
    offspring
  • Males ? more sexual partners means greater number
    of offspring survive
  • Females ? better sexual partners means greater
    likelihood of offspring survival
  • Remember Biology is NOT destiny

36
Implications of Evolutionary Theory
  • Pioneering research in animals could be used to
    explain human behavior
  • Pavlovs dogs implications for human learning
  • Helmholtz research on nerve impulses in frogs
    could be used to understand nerve impulses in
    humans
  • Animal models of addiction, ADHD and other mental
    disorders allow us to determine brain areas
    involved in these disorders and novel compounds
    for treatment

37
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Wundt and Structuralism
  • Structuralism conscious experience can be
    broken down into its most basic components or
    elements
  • Introspection the process of reporting on ones
    own mental experiences of a stimulus
  • Identified major areas of interest to
    psychologists

38
Origins of Psychological Science
  • James and Functionalism
  • Argued that structuralism was too narrow
  • Functionalism Influenced by Darwinian Theory
    i.e., that the mind evolved to serve adaptive
    functions
  • These adaptive functions should be evident in
    behavior and in daily life thus interested in
    studying the functions of the mind

39
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Freud and Psychoanalysis
  • Freud was a physician
  • Had patients with neurological symptoms that had
    no physical explanation
  • Freud believed that much of mental activity
    occurred outside of the individuals conscious
    awareness ? first to be interested in the
    Unconscious mind
  • Mental disorder unconscious mental forces in
    conflict

40
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Gestalt Theory
  • We perceive information as uniform and whole not
    as separate elements
  • The whole is greater than the sum of its elements

41
Origins of Psychology as a Science
42
Origins of Psychological Science
  • Watson, Skinner, Behaviorism Studying the
    mind is unscientific
  • Observable behavior, not the mind, should be the
    focus of scientific inquiry
  • All behavior is a function of environmental
    influences

43
How do we Understand Behavior?
  • 7 Levels of Analysis
  • Genetic
  • Neurochemical
  • Brain Systems
  • Behavioral
  • Perceptual/Cognitive
  • Individual
  • Social/Cultural
  • 7 Disciplines
  • Biological
  • Developmental
  • Behavioral
  • Cognitive
  • Trait
  • Clinical
  • Sociocultural

44
Understanding Behavior using a Levels of
Analysis Approach
  • Depression
  • Genetics
  • Neurochemistry
  • Developmental
  • Perceptual/Cognitive
  • Academic Performance
  • Genetics
  • Behavioral
  • Developmental
  • Perceptual/cognitive
  • Social/Cultural
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