Title: Prologue to Chapter 1
1Prologue to Chapter 1
- Our text surveys the basics of psychological
principles and shows how these principles can be
applied to solve human problems. - You will find the text covering most areas in
psychology but, as this is an introductory
course, we will not be able to go into extreme
depth with any particular topic. - If you have any questions, ask them!
2Psyche and Science Psychology
- Definition of psychology
- Psychology is the science of behavior and mental
processes - What is science?
- realizing problems, making initial observations,
hypothesizing, testing hypotheses - What is behavior?
- any activity which is directly observable
- What are mental processes?
- not directly observable e.g., thinking,
motivation
3Psyche and Science Psychology
- Goals of psychology
- To describe human and animal behavior and mental
processes - To understand human and animal behavior and
mental processes - To predict human and animal behavior and mental
processes - To influence/control human and animal behavior
and mental processes
4The Many Faces of Psychology
- The Early Psychologists
- Although Wilhelm Wundt is usually credited with
formally establishing psychology as a separate
scientific discipline, many individuals with
diverse interests and talents helped to found
psychology. - We will look at some of these individuals now
5The Many Faces of Psychology
- Wilhelm Wundt and Edward Bradford Titchener The
structure of the mind - They sought to determine the structure of the
mind through use of analytic introspection - Their school of thought is called Structuralism
- Wundt at the University of Leipzig in 1879
Titchener in America - Structuralism vs Functionalism
6The Many Faces of Psychology
- William James The functions of consciousness
- James interested in the functions of
consciousness - wrote the first psychology textbook in 1890
- may have had the first psychology laboratory in
America circa 1876 - established functionalism as a school of
thought in psychology
7The Many Faces of Psychology
- Ivan Pavlov and John B. Watson Behaviorism
- Pavlov received Nobel Prize in 1905 for his work
on salivating dogs and the serendipitious
discovery of classical conditioning - Watson established radical behaviorism circa
1912 in the United States - Both interested in behavior and its precise
measurement rather than consciousness of Wundt
and James
8The Many Faces of Psychology
- Hermann Ebbinghaus Studies of Memory
- Ebbinghaus used experimental methods to measure
memory in the late 1800s - interested in how memory works, how it is
established, how does forgetting happen, how
memories deteriorate with interference, and other
facets of memory
9The Many Faces of Psychology
- Max Wertheimer Gestalt Psychology
- Interested in perception, I.e., how do we make
sense out of the world around us - Gestalt, a German word, means The whole is
greater than the sum of its parts. - He believed the mind must be studied in terms of
large meaningful units instead of the small units
of structuralism - Why do we see things the way we do?
10The Many Faces of Psychology
- Alfred Binet Measuring intelligence
- Binet sought to establish methods whereby the
minds intellectual capacities could be measured - Developed the first IQ test, used to assess how
well students would do in academic settings, in
France circa 1905 - The Standford-Binet IQ Test is, along with
collaborative efforts of others, Binets test
11The Many Faces of Psychology
- Sigmund Freud The Psychoanalytic School
- Established psychoanalysis via work with female
clients in Vienna, Austria, circa 1910 - Believed roots of psychological problems were
motives that reside in the part of the mind of
which we are unaware called the unconscious - His over-emphasis on sex resulted in the
Neo-Freudians, e.g., Erikson, Jung, Sullivan,
Horney, Adler, and others.
12The Many Faces of Psychology
- Pioneers of psychology include people from Europe
and America, as well as African-Americans,
Latins, and other ethnic minorities, both male
and female. - Your text articulates information about some of
these individuals. - We will now look at contemporary perspectives in
psychology.
13Contemporary Perspectives in Psychology
- Contemporary Behaviorism and Social Learning
Theory - Behaviorism still generally rules out the study
of mental processes because these are
unobservable - Social Learning Theory believes that mental
processes can be subjected to scientific inquiry - Albert Bandura aggression and modeling
- Patricia Devine emotional/cognitive factors that
influence formation and maintenance of prejudice
14Contemporary Perspectives in Psychology
- The Sociocultural Perspective
- Culture, ethnicity, and gender identity are
important to understand a person - What is normal is a culturally-relative term
- How do you define normal?
- All sociocultural variables must be taken into
account to fully understand someone all
judgments concerning normal must be relative to
the culture in which one lives.
15Contemporary Perspectives in Psychology
- Contemporary Psychoanalysis
- Most modern psychoanalysts disagree with Freuds
emphasis on sexual and aggressive motives for
human behavior. - Most believe that other motives are responsible
for human behavior, e.g., Erik Erikson believed
that how we are treated and how we react to
developmental stressors has much to do with why
we do what we do.
16Contemporary Perspectives in Psychology
- Contemporary Psychoanalysis
- Most contemporary psychoanalysts believe that
cognitive processes also mediate why we do what
we do, e.g., Alfred Adlers notion of the
inferiority complex and its effects on our
behavior.
17Contemporary Perspectives in Psychology
- Contemporary Cognitive Perspective
- Increasingly popular since the mid-1970s, this
perspective studies the processes involved in
perceiving, believing, thinking, and other
cognitive activities using sophisticated
scientific instrumentation. - For example, is there a particular neural network
in the brain responsible for allowing you to
perceive your grandmother? Particular neural
circuits involved in experiencing prejudice?
18Contemporary Perspectives in Psychology
- Contemporary Humanistic Psychology
- Considered the Third Force in psychology
(behind psychoanalysis and behaviorism). - Believes that individuals determine their own
fates through decisions they make - Carl Rogers, Abraham Maslow are examples of
humanistic psychologists - Not as scientifically oriented as other branches
of psychology
19Contemporary Perspectives in Psychology
- Contemporary Biological Perspective
- Interested in the role of the brain in
psychological processes - Interested in the role of heredity in
psychological processes - sociobiology
- heredity in psychological abnormality
- heredity in cognitive skills, etc.
20Contemporary Perspectives in Psychology
- Specialty fields in modern psychology
- Basic areas of psychology
- the domain of psychology that is involved in the
generation of new knowledge upon which later
applications can be built - psychological research done in many field areas
- Applied areas of psychology
- these psychologists apply the basic knowledge to
solve human problems - applied areas include counseling, clinical, and
educational psychology
21Contemporary Perspectives in Psychology
- The relationship between psychology and
psychiatry - A psychologist usually has a Ph.D. in psychology
from an accredited graduate school. It requires - 4 years of undergraduate work in psychology
- 2 years of Masters-level graduate work
- 3 years of Ph.D.-level graduate work
22Contemporary Perspectives in Psychology
- The relationship between psychology and
psychiatry - A psychiatrist has an M.D. and residency in
psychology. It requires - 4-year undergraduate degree
- 4-year medical degree
- 3-year residency in psychology
- The pecking order in psychology is M.S., M.S.W.,
Ph.D., M.D./P.C.
23Questions?
- Do you have any questions about Chapter One?
24Chapter 2
- Scientific Research/Methods
25Scientific Methods
- How do we learn about human behavior?
- What is science?
- How do we do science?
- Where does basic psychological information come
from? - How is basic psychological knowledge applied
scientifically?
26Scientific Methods
- Science is the use of systematic observation of
phenomena in an effort to detect orderly
relationships (laws) governing interrelationships
of variables. It involves description as its
most simple tool and experimentation as its most
complex tool.
27Scientific Methods
- Descriptive methods include
- Survey method the use of interviews and
questionnaires in studying human behavior - Naturalistic observation involves the careful
observation and recording of behavior in
real-life settings - Clinical method observation of people while a
psychologist is helping them with a problem
28Scientific Methods
- Correlations methods the examination of the
quantitative relationships between two or more
variables - how does one behavior relate to the occurrence of
another behavior? - if we know one behaviors pattern can we then, in
turn, predict the pattern of occurrence of
another behavior?
29Scientific Methods
- Formal Experiments deliberately determining the
cause-effect relationships between two or more
variables - correlation methods preclude establishing
cause-effect relationships formal experiments
will determine precise cause-effect relationships
between variables - there are many experimental designs that
psychologists use
30Scientific Methods
- Ethical Principles of research with human
subjects - freedom from coercion
- informed consent
- guidelines for deception of subjects and
debriefing after experiments - confidentiality
31Scientific Methods
- Ethical principles of research with animal
subjects - only use animals when it is necessary
- maintain the health of animals in experiments and
animal compounds - humane treatment of animals is absolutely
important no animal should be sacrificed unless
data critical to helping humans
32What we know about human behavior
- Human beings are biological creatures.
- Each person is different, yet much the same.
- People can be understood only in the context of
their culture, ethnic identity, and gender
identity. - Human lives are a continual process of change.
- Human behavior is motivated.
33What we know about human behavior
- Humans are social animals.
- People play an active part in creating their
experiences. - Behavior has multiple causes.
- Behavior can be adaptive or maladaptive.
- Human behavior and mental processes can be
studied by the scientific method.
34Application of Psychology
- Psychology applied to your own study skills
- Your textbook uses the SQ3R method of pedagogy
(developed by educational psychologists) - Good study techniques include
- spacing out your study time dont cram
- study in the same place all the time
- use mneumonic (memory) devices to help you retain
information learned
35Questions?
- Any questions about Chapter 2?