Title: Survey of Modern Psychology
1Survey of Modern Psychology
2What is this class about? Refer to syllabus
- We will cover
- What psychology is
- The history of psychology
- An overview of the major fields of psychology
- The focus of the course will be on mental illness
and clinical psychology
3What is (and is not!) psychology
- Psychology is defined as the study of the mind
4Psychology is not
- Mind reading
- Mind control
- All about therapy therapy is only one part of
psychology
5Ancient Greece Hippocrates
- Took an advanced view of mental illness by
attributing it to physical causes - HOWEVER
- He believed that physical cause to be an
imbalance of four fluids in the body
6Ancient Greece Humors
- A greater amount of a particular humor resulted
in the following personality types - Sanguine strong, warm blood cheerful
- Choleric yellow bile in the liver anger
- Melancholic - black bile in the liver
depressive - Phlegmatic mucus in the brain cool, aloof,
slow, unemotional
7Religious Views
- Middle ages through today
- Disagreed with physiological explanations,
believed that mental illness was caused by
demonic possession
8Religious Views
- Cures could be burning witches or exorcisms
- Exorcism is still used as a treatment for
Tourrettes Syndrome - However
- Scientists today believe that some prophets may
have been schizophrenic, and hallucinations were
interpreted as divine communication
9Trepanation
- Prehistoric times through today
- Based on the ideas that mental illness was caused
by demons that were stuck inside the head, or by
a buildup of pressure in the brain
10Trepanation
- This was advanced for its time because it
correctly focused on the brain. - However
- Trepanation is the practice of drilling a hole in
the skull.
11Trepanation
- Interestingly, trepanation does have practical
use in modern medicine, but in the realm of brain
injury or surgery.
12Phrenology
- Initiated by Franz Joseph Gall in the 1800s in
Austria - Used the shape of a persons head/bumps on the
head to predict their personality, traits, and
flaws - Was used in employment decisions and to determine
marital partners
13Bedlam
- Starting in the middle ages, people began to view
mental illness as a form of real illness - However
- The mentally ill were put in hospitals in
inhumane conditions (including cages and chains)
14Bedlam
- While conditions in psychiatric hospitals have
been notoriously bad, some changes in the
treatment approach began in 1793, when Philippe
Pinel (who was put in charge of hospitals in
Paris) ordered that patients be unchained. - When they were treated like people, patients did
respond positively!
15The Talking Cure
- Term popularized in America by Sigmund Freud in
the early 1900s - Believed that symptoms were genuinely felt and
real to the person - Acknowledged to some degree the influence of
biology and environment
16Social Psychology
- In the 1940s 1950s (after WWII), there was
increased interest in peoples behavior in groups - This contrasted with the previous focus on
pathology
17Psychology Today
- Medical model of mental illness
- Mental illness is real and treatable
- The study of behavior and mental processes
- This includes behaviors that are observed, and a
persons inner experience
18Major Perspectives(Zimbardo, Johnson Weber
Psychology Core Concepts Fifth Edition)
- Biological/Physiological
- We are essentially complex biological systems
that respond to both hereditary and environmental
influences
19Major Perspectives Biological (Zimbardo,
Johnson Weber Psychology Core Concepts Fifth
Edition)
- Behavior is determined by brain structure and
chemicals and by inborn responses to external
cues for survival and reproduction
20Major Perspectives Biological (Zimbardo,
Johnson Weber Psychology Core Concepts Fifth
Edition)
- Questions for study
- How do the nervous system, endocrine system
produce behavior and mental processes? - Evolutionary psychologists seek to learn how
behaviors may be linked to evolutionary changes
that conferred a survival or reproductive
advantage on our ancestors
21Major Perspectives (Zimbardo, Johnson Weber
Psychology Core Concepts Fifth Edition)
- Developmental
- People undergo predictable patterns of change
throughout their lives - Behavior is determined by the interaction of
nature and nurture (heredity and environment)
22Major Perspectives Developmental (Zimbardo,
Johnson Weber Psychology Core Concepts Fifth
Edition)
- Questions for study
- What are the patterns that characterize
developmental change? - What are the genetic and environmental influences
underlying these patterns
23Major Perspectives (Zimbardo, Johnson Weber
Psychology Core Concepts Fifth Edition)
- Cognitive
- Often paired with behavioral psychology
- People are information processing systems
- Behavior is the result of our mental
interpretations of our experience
24Major Perspectives Cognitive (Zimbardo, Johnson
Weber Psychology Core Concepts Fifth Edition)
- Questions for study
- What factors influence our mental processes,
including sensation, perception, learning,
memory, and language?
25Major Perspectives (Zimbardo, Johnson Weber
Psychology Core Concepts Fifth Edition)
- Behavioral
- Our behavior is primarily shaped by learning
- Based on laws of behavioral learning, we respond
to stimulus cues and to our history of rewards
and punishments
26Major Perspectives Behavioral (Zimbardo,
Johnson Weber Psychology Core Concepts Fifth
Edition)
- Questions for study
- What are the laws that associate our responses
with stimulus conditions? - How can they be applied to improve the human
condition?
27Major Perspectives(Zimbardo, Johnson Weber
Psychology Core Concepts Fifth Edition)
- Trait or Personality
- Individual differences result from differences in
our underlying patterns of stable characteristics
(traits) - Behavior results from each persons unique
combination of traits
28Major Perspectives Personality (Zimbardo,
Johnson Weber Psychology Core Concepts Fifth
Edition)
- Questions for study
- How many fundamental traits are there?
- How can we use trait patterns to predict behavior?
29Major Perspectives (Zimbardo, Johnson Weber
Psychology Core Concepts Fifth Edition)
- Sociocultural or Social Psychology
- People are social animals, so human behavior must
be interpreted in its social context - Behavior is heavily influenced by culture, social
norms and expectations, and social learning - Note Social Psychology focuses on the
individual, as opposed to Sociology which studies
the group
30Major Perspectives Social Psychology(Zimbardo,
Johnson Weber Psychology Core Concepts Fifth
Edition)
- Questions for study
- Under what conditions is the social and cultural
situation predictive of behavior? - How are social influences different across
cultures?
31Major Perspectives (Zimbardo, Johnson Weber
Psychology Core Concepts Fifth Edition)
- Clinical
- Psychodynamic view
- Humanistic view
- Clinical psychology encompasses what is commonly
referred to as abnormal psychology
32Major Perspectives Clinical (Zimbardo, Johnson
Weber Psychology Core Concepts Fifth Edition)
- Psychodynamic
- Emphasizes negative forces in the unconscious
- Sees behavior arising from unconscious needs,
conflicts, repressed memories, and childhood
experiences
33Major Perspectives Clinical Psychology -
Psychodynamic(Zimbardo, Johnson Weber
Psychology Core Concepts Fifth Edition)
- Questions for study
- How can our understanding of the unconscious help
us understand and treat mental disorders?
34Major Perspectives Clinical (Zimbardo, Johnson
Weber Psychology Core Concepts Fifth Edition)
- Humanistic
- Emphasizes human growth and potential
- Focuses on the influence of self-concept,
perceptions, interpersonal relationships, and
need for personal growth
35Major Perspectives Clinical Psychology -
Humanistic (Zimbardo, Johnson Weber
Psychology Core Concepts Fifth Edition)
- Questions for study
- What factors encourage high self esteem and
mental health? - How can this knowledge be used in counseling and
therapy?
36Summary of Class Demonstration
- The first students who came in were instructed to
sit on the floor. - Students who came in later often sat on the floor
too even without explicit instructions to do so - Students followed the order to sit on the floor
because of a fear of getting in trouble and it
wasnt a big deal
37Obedience
- The most notable research on obedience comes from
Stanley Milgrim. - This research began in 1963, and lead to his book
Obedience to Authority in 1974. - The research began during the time of Nazi war
crime trials.
38Milgrim
- A participant went to the laboratory and met
another participant (actually a confederate)
and the experimenter. - The experiment was supposedly about the effects
of punishment on learning. - The participant was assigned to the role of
teacher, the confederate was assigned to the role
of learner. - A confederate is a person who is working with
the experimenter and poses as a participant. The
actual participants are not aware of this until
the study is over
39Milgrim
- The participant and the confederate were put in
separate rooms - The participant was instructed to test the
leaners memory and give increasingly strong
electric shocks each time the learner made a
mistake. - The participant was given a sample shock to show
that the shocks were real and let the participant
know the intensity of the shocks. - The confederate was not actually receiving shocks
and was in no real danger - The learner told the experimenter (in front of
the participant) about having heart problems, but
the experimenter assured both that it was safe.
40Milgrim
- As the experiment went on, the learner began
making more mistakes, and the participant was
instructed to give higher and higher voltage
shocks. - The mechanism for administering the shocks
claimed to start at 15 volts and increased by
increments of 15 volts up to 450
41Milgrim
- Beginning at 75 volts, the learner complained
about the shocks being painful. - At 150 volts, the learner complained of heart
related chest pains and asked to be let out - At 300 volts the learner refused to continue
- At 300 volts the learner begged to be let out,
screamed in pain, and then went silent
42Milgrim
- When the participant questioned whether he should
continue to give shocks, the experimenter told
him that he must go on for the experiment - 65 of participants reached the maximum of 450
volts before stopping - Many seemed to be in distress about continuing,
but still did
43Milgrim - Variations
- When the experimenter did not encourage the
participant to continue, the participant stopped
giving shocks early on - Three factors that influenced obedience were
- The authority figure
- The proximity of the victim
- The experimental procedure
44The Authority Figure
- While the experimenter was not actually a
powerful authority figure, he was seen as someone
to be respected - When the experiment was done in a rundown office
building (as opposed to laboratories at Yale)
only 48 of participants were completely obedient
45The Authority Figure
- When the experimenter was presented as another
participant (as opposed to a researcher) only 20
were obedient - When the experimenter gave orders by telephone or
was otherwise unable to watch the participant,
only 21 were fully obedient - Some participants feigned obedience by only
pressing the button for 15 volt shocks
46The Victim
- In the original study, participants were in a
separate room from the learner - When they were in the same room, 40 obeyed
- When the participant had to physically place the
learners hand on a shock plate, 30 obeyed
47The Experimental Procedure
- The structure of the experiment allowed to
participant to avoid feeling personally
responsible for his actions he could blame the
authority figure - When participants were led to believe that they
were responsible for their own actions, they
became less obedient
48The Experimental Procedure
- Kilham and Mann (1974) did a similar study in
which the participant was either - The transmitter took orders from the
experimenter and passed them on - Or
- The executant had to follow out the orders
- Transmitters were more compliant than executants
- (54 vs. 28)
49Final Thoughts on Milgrim
- Part of what made the experiment so successful
was the gradual escalation/foot in the door
approach. - By the time participants began to question their
actions, they had fully committed themselves to
the task and each subsequent step seemed smaller.
50Final Thoughts on Milgrim
- Similarly to the Asch experiments, when other
participants (confederates) refused to obey the
participant was also less likely to obey.
51Conformity
- The tendency to change our perceptions, opinions,
or behaviors in ways that are consistent with
group norms
52Conformity
- Even though we may feel that we are individuals
and can think for ourselves, we follow certain
social customs and find it hard to break these
rules.
53Conformity
- In an attempted study on breaching social norms,
psychology research assistants were assigned to
ask subway passengers to give up their seats. - Even though they knew what the purpose of the
study was, many could not perform the task and
feigned illness so their request would seem
acceptable.
54Solomon Asch
- Conducted a study were participants were put in a
room with a group of other people and told that
the experimenter was studying the ability to make
visual discriminations. - The experimenter then showed the participants a
sample line and set of three other lines and
asked them which line was of the same length as
the sample. - The participant was seated so he or she would
answer second to last.
55Asch
- In each example, the correct answer was obvious.
- On the first two trials, everyone agreed on the
same answer. - Starting on the third trial, the other people
gave a clearly wrong answer. - The other people were confederates, who were
affiliated with the experimenter and instructed
to give wrong answers.
56Asch
- The participants went along with the majority 37
of the time - Of the remaining 63
- Only 25 refused to agree on any incorrect answer
- 50 went along on at least half of the incorrect
answers - The remaining 25 conformed on some trials
57Asch
Comparison lines A B C
58Asch
- In later interviews, participants said that they
went along with the majority even though they
were not always convinced that the majority was
right. - Those who refused to conform reported feeling
conspicuous, crazy, and like a misfit - Others actually did come to believe the rest of
the group
59Why People Conform
- Informational influence
- People want to be correct, and assume that if so
many others agree the others must be right - Normative influence
- People fear the consequences of not conforming
because we want to be accepted and liked - Disagreement can be stressful
- Sometimes its more useful to reach a consensus
quickly
60Types of Conformity
- Private conforming
- True acceptance
- Outside influences actually cause the person to
change their mind, not just their behavior - Public conformity
- Compliance
- Pretending to agree, even when one does not
61Conformity
- Having even one ally makes dissent more likely
- In a later version of the Asch study, a
confederate disagreed with the majority and the
participant - The participant was still more likely to disagree
with the majority, even though no one agreed with
him or her