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Title: Historical Approaches


1
Historical Approaches
  • Understanding Behaviors

2
Life Before Psychology
  • Philosophy believed in dualism
  • a separation of the mind and body as
  • two individual parts yet somehow linked.
  • Mind controlled the body..but how???

René Descartes (1596-1650)
Problem - No scientific way of studying problems
Physiology asks similar questions about the mind.
Scientists applied the
in an attempt to explain behaviors. and the mind
body connection.
SCIENTIFIC METHOD
3
Phrenology The 1800s
  • Phrenology- examine bumps to determine intellect
    and character traits
  • Phrenology inspired scientist to study the role
    of the brain
  • rather than the heart
  • to explain human behavior.

4
Psychology Is Born
First Experimental Psych Lab (1879)
Focuses on the scientific (systematic) s study of
the mind. WW insists that Psych methods be as
rigorous as the methods of chemistry physics.
Wundts students start labs across USA (1880-1900)
Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920)
University of Leipzig Harvard University Yale
University Columbia University Catholic
University Univ of Pennsylvania Cornell
University Stanford University
5
Structuralism vs Functionalism
Structuralism focused on the mind
Analyze consciousness into basic elements and
study how they are related
Introspection - self-observation of ones own
thoughts and feelings
Wilhelm Wundt
Functionalism
Investigate the function, or purpose of
consciousness rather than its structure
How do people adapt to function in new
environments?
William James (1842-1910)
6
Inheritable Traits
  • Sir Frances Galton (1822-1911)
  • Wanted to understand how heredity influences a
    persons ability
  • Heredity includes all the traits and properties
    that are passed along from parents to children
  • He thought the world would be a better place if
    we got rid of less desirable people
  • Most fit were those with high intelligence
  • Galton assumed wealthiest people were the most
    intelligent

7
Gestalt Psychology
The whole is different than the sum of its
parts.
Max Wertheimer (1880-1943)
A reaction against Structuralism An attempt to
focus attention back onto conscious
experience (i.e., the mind)
WHY?
8
Today's Approaches
  • Psychoanalytical
  • Behavioral
  • Humanistic
  • Cognitive
  • Biological
  • Sociocultural

9
Freud Psychoanalysis
Proposes the idea of the UNCONSCIOUS
Thoughts, memories desires exist below
conscious awareness and exert an influence on
our behavior
Unconscious expressed in dreams slips of the
tongue
Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
Psychoanalytic Theory attempts to
explain personality, mental disorders
motivation using the unconscious
10
Freud and Free Association
  • Patient said anything that came to mind
  • Psychoanalyst is a psychologist that studies how
    the unconscious motives and conflicts determine
    human behavior, feelings and thoughts
  • Dreams are an expression of the most primitive
    unconscious urges Freud used dream analysis
    which is free association applied to dreams
  • Case study analyze the thoughts, feelings,
    beliefs, experiences, behaviors and problems of
    individual

11
Behaviorism
Scientific Psychology should focus on observable
behavior.
Mental Processes cannot be studied directly
John Watson (1878-1958)
Stimulus Response Psychology
Ivan Pavlov
12
Watson
  • John Watson (1878-1958)
  • Concern with only observable behaviors
  • All behavior is result of conditioning and occurs
    because the appropriate stimulus is present in
    the environment

13
Ivan Pavlov
  • Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936)
  • Pavlov dogs Pavlov rang a tuning fork each time
    he gave dog meat. The dog would normally drool
    when he got the meat. After Pavlov repeated the
    procedure many times, the dogs would drool when
    it heard the ring of the tuning fork, even if no
    food appeared. It had been conditioned to
    associate the sound with the food.
  • This is known as conditioning or the conditional
    reflex

14
B.F.Skinner
  • B. F. Skinner (1904-1990)
  • Introduced concept of reinforcement
  • Response to a behavior that increases likelihood
    that the behavior will be repeated (rewards)

15
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16
Behavioral/Clinical Perspective
Focus How we learn from observable responses. How
to best study, assess and treat troubled people.
  • Sample Issues
  • How do we learn to fear particular objects or
    situations?
  • What is the most effective way to alter certain
    behaviors?
  • What are the underlying causes of
  • Anxiety Disorders
  • Phobic Disorders
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders

17
Humanistic
  • Developed as a reaction to behavioral psychology
  • 1960s Maslow, Rogers
  • Humans not controlled by environment or
    unconscious forces
  • Environment and the outside forces serve as a
    background to our own internal growth
  • Each person is unique and has a self concept and
    potential to develop fully

18
Cognitive Psychology
Cognition the mental processes involved in
acquiring, processing, storing retrieving
information
Cognitive Psychologists return to the study of
learning, memory, perception, language, developmen
t problem solving
19
Cognitive Perspective
Focus How we process, store and retrieve
information.
  • Sample Issues
  • How do we use info in remembering and
    reasoning?
  • How do our senses govern the nature of
    perception?
  • (Is what you see really what you get?)
  • How much do infants know when they are born?

20
NEW Perspectives in Psychology
Psychobiological
Social-Cultural Psychology
21
Biological Perspective
Focus How the body and brain create emotions,
memories, and sensory experiences. How physical
and chemical changes in our bodies influence our
behavior
  • Sample Issues
  • How do evolution and heredity influence
    behavior?
  • How are messages transmitted within the body?
  • How is blood chemistry linked with moods and
    motives?
  • Use tools like MRI CT
  • Recent discoveries between chemicals in brain
    (neurotransmitters)
  • and human behavior
  • EX autisitic children share a genetic defect
    in regulation
  • neurotransmitter Serontin serontin plays a
    role in brain function

22
Social-Cultural Perspective
Focus How behavior and thinking vary across
situations and cultures.
  • Sample Issues
  • How are we, as members of different races and
  • nationalities, alike as members of one human
    family?
  • How do we differ, as products of different
    social contexts?
  • Why do people sometimes act differently in
    groups than
  • when alone?

23
  • Is our ways of thinking, feeling and behaving
    dependent on the culture in which we belong?
  • What is the impact of millions of immigrants who
    come to U.S. each year?
  • How do genders and socioeconomics influence our
    behaviors, male-female, rich-poor?

24
Psychology is Empirical
Knowledge acquired through observation
Psych conclusions based on research NOT tradition
or common sense
25
Psych Is Theoretically Diverse
A system of interrelated ideas used to explain a
set of observations
Theory
Biological Psychology Perspective
Clinical Psychoanalytic Perspective
Dreams
26
Psych Sociohistorical Context
Trends Issues In Society
Advances In Psychology
Psychology develops in both a social historical
context
Early Psychology Affected by physics physiology
Society Today Affected by psychological
testing (IQ, SAT, GRE)
27
What Causes Behavior?
Behavior
28
Behavior is Shaped by Culture
Personal Space
Value of Education
Punctuality
Social Norms
29
Influence of Heredity Environment
Nature versus Nurture
30
Perception Is Subjective
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