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What is Psychology?

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Title: What is Psychology?


1
What is Psychology?
  • What is the definition of psychology?
  • What are the origins of Psychology?
  • Wilhelm Wundt and the first experiment.
  • Wilhelm Wundt defined psychology as the study of
    consciousness and emphasized the use of
    experimental methods to study and measure
    consciousness
  • Edward B. Titchener and structuralism and
    introspection.
  • complex conscious experiences can be broken down
    into elemental structures, or component parts of
    sensations and feelings.

2
  • William James and functionalism.
  • William James was an American physiologist and
    psychologist and his ideas became the basis for a
    school of psychology called functionalism
  • Functionalism stressed the importance of how
    behavior functions to allow people and animals to
    adapt to their environments.
  • Functionalists examined how psychology could be
    applied to areas such as education, child
    rearing, and the work environment and primarily
    the influence of the workings of the British
    naturalist Charles Darwin

3
Psychology 1sts
  • G. Stanley Hall
  • G. Stanley Hall received the first PhD in
    psychology in the United States and he
    established the first psychology research
    laboratory in the United States at Johns Hopkins
    University in 1833. He also began publishing the
    American Journal of Psychology in 1892.
  • Mary Whiton Calkins
  • Mary Whiton Calkins was an American psychologist
    who conducted research on memory, personality,
    and dreams and she established a psychological
    laboratory at Welesley College in 1891 she was
    also the first woman to be elected president of
    the APA and although she completed all the
    requirement for a PhD in psychology from Harvard,
    Harvard refused to grant her the degree because
    she was a woman.
  • Margaret Washburn
  • Margaret Wasburn was the first American woman to
    officially earn a PhD in psychology and she
    published the text The Animal Mind and was the
    second woman to be elected president of the APA.
  • Francis Summer
  • Francis Summer was the first African American to
    receive a PhD in psychology and he later
    published a wide variety of topics and chaired
    the psychology department at Howard University.
    One of Summers students, Kenneth Bancroft Clark
    was the first black president of the American
    Psychological Association in 1970.

4
Perspectives in Psychology
  • Psychodynamic
  • Behaviorism
  • Humanistic
  • Cognitive
  • Psychosocial
  • Sociocultural
  • Behavioral neuroscience

5
Mental Health Professionals
  • What do clinical psychologists do?
  • What is the role of Psychiatrists?
  • What is the difference between psychologists and
    psychiatrists?

6
Areas of Research
  • Biological
  • Clinical
  • Cognitive
  • Counseling
  • Educational
  • Experimental
  • Developmental
  • Forensic
  • Health
  • Industrial/organizational
  • Personality
  • Rehabilitation
  • Social
  • Sports
  • School
  • Military

7
Ethics in Research
  • Why do we need ethics in research?
  • What are some elements of ethics?

8
Ethics in Research
  • So why do we need ethics in research?
  • What are some elements of ethics?
  • Some ethical practices include
  • Informed consent
  • Debriefing
  • Confidentiality
  • Deception?
  • There are also ethical guidelines for special
    populations

9
Understanding the Themes of Psychology
  •  
  • Psychology is empirical.
  • Psychology is theoretically diverse.
  • Psychology changes because society and history
    change this is why psychology is said to be
    sociohistorical in context.
  • Psychology is multifactorial, or affected by many
    factors.
  • Our cultural backgrounds also exert influence
    over our behavior (sociocultural) culture is a
    shared custom, belief, values, norms, transmitted
    socially across a generation.
  • Heredity and environment influence our behaviors.
  • Because of each individuals background, one
    persons perception will be different from
    another persons perception perception is highly
    subjective.

10
Wha
11
  • Why is there a need for Psychological Science?
  • People tend to overestimate or become
    overconfident in the individuals abilities.the
    overconfidence bias
  • The hindsight bias is the tendency to believe,
    after learning an outcome, that one would have
    forseen itbasically, the I knew it all along
    phenomenon

12
The Importance of the Scientific Method
  • What is the scientific method and why do we use
    it?
  • The scientific method is a five step process
  • Formulate a hypothesis
  • Design a study
  • Collect research information (data) how?
  • Analyze data and draw conclusion
  • Report the findings

13
Experiments
  • What is an experiment?
  • An experiment is a carefully regulated procedure
    in which one or more factors believed to
    influence the behavior being studied are
    manipulated while all other factors are held
    constant
  • There are two components of an experiment
  • Independent and dependent variables

14
The Experiment
  • The independent variable is the variable that is
    manipulated in the experiment.
  • The dependent variable is the factor that is
    observed and changes in an experiment in response
    to changes in the independent variable
  • Experiments involve one or more experimental
    groups or one or more control groups

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  • The experimental group is the group that receives
    the treatment
  • The control group is the group that does not
    receive the treatment
  • Extraneous variables are any variable other than
    the independent variable that may influence the
    dependent variable in a specific study
  • Cofounding of variables occurs when two variables
    are linked in a way that makes it difficult to
    sort out their specific effects

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18
An Experiment
  • You are conducting an experiment to test your
    hypothesis that drinking orange juice 20 minutes
    prior to taking an exam will enhance retention.
  • 1. What is the independent variable?
  • 2. What is the dependent variable?
  • 3. Which group receives the IV?
  • 4. What is the function of the control group?

19
Types of Research
  • There are three basic types of research used in
    psychology descriptive, correlational, and
    experimental.
  • Descriptive research-serves the purpose of
    observing and recording behavior and mental
    states
  • Descriptive methods include observation, surveys,
    and interviews, standardized tests, and case
    studies.

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21
Laboratory has some disadvantages
  • 1. It is not only almost impossible to conduct
    research without the participants knowledge, but
    in some cases it can be unethical
  • 2. The laboratory setting is unnatural and can
    influence the results
  • 3. The participants who are willing to go to a
    university to participate in the research are not
    necessarily representative of the population
  • 4. Some of the aspects of research, in
    particular questions of the mind and behavior,
    may not be able to be observed in the lab
  •  
  • Observing behavior in real-world setting without
    benefit of manipulation is naturalistic
    observation

22
  • Qualitative research- research that asks
    open-ended questions
  • What are some examples of qualitative research?
  • Quantitative research-uses numbers to correlate
    research results
  • What are some examples of quantitative research?

23
Biases
  • Sometimes when researchers want to adhere to the
    integrity of the research, they account for any
    bias that might contaminate the research
    findings.
  • Experimenter bias occurs when the expectations of
    the experimenter or researcher influences the
    research
  • Research participant bias describes when the
    behavior of the participant during the experiment
    is influenced by how they think they are supposed
    to behave
  • So how do researchers account for both
    experimenter bias and research participant bias?
  • By designing a double-blind experiment

24
Double-blind experiments
  • By designing a double-blind experiment, an
    experiment in which neither the participant nor
    the researcher knows in which group the
    participant until the results are calculated
  • What might a double-blind experiment look like?

25
How do we ensure the research is fair?
  • Random assignment
  • Procuring an accurate sample size from the
    population
  • Do not become overconfidentleads to confidence
    bias and making incorrect inferences

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27
Brain-imaging techniques
  • Three commonly used brain-imaging techniques
  •  
  • (1) Positron emission tomography (PET scan)
    generates images of the brains activity by
    tracking the brains use of radioactively tagged
    compounds that have been injected into the
    bloodstream.
  •  
  • (2) Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) uses
    electrical signals generated by the brain in
    response to magnetic fields to produce highly
    detailed images of the brains structure.
  •  
  • (3) Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
    uses magnetic fields to track changes in blood
    flow and oxygen levels in the brain. It provides
    a picture of brain activity averaged over seconds
    rather than the several minutes required by PET
    scans.

28
Correlation coefficient
  • The degree of relationship between two variables
    is expressed as a numerical value called
    correlation coefficient
  • The closer the number is to 1.00, the stronger
    the relation
  • The further away the number is from 1.00, the
    weaker the relation
  • Negative and positive indicate the direction, not
    the strength
  • In correlational research, the focus is the
    strength of the relationship between two
    variables, events, or characteristics
  • The correlational coefficient is the numerical
    value assigned to express the degree of the
    relationship between two variables
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