Chapter 1: The Science of Psychology
Cognitive Neuroscience
Focuses on the brain activity underlying mental processes
Cultures
In which individuals grow up shapes their beliefs,values,thoughts, and actions
Behaviorist Thought
Seeks to describe the effects of the environment on behavior
Personality Psychologist
Studies the enduring characteristics of traits of people across settings
Critical Thinking
the process of viewing information systematically to evaluate the truth of the claim
What major advances in the field of psychology have advanced our understanding of biological basis of human behavior?
Neuroscience Mapping the Human Genome Brain Chemistry
Counseling Psychologists
seek to improved the lives of people facing difficult circumstances
Watson and Skinner
Dismissed psychology's focus on conscious and unconscious mental processes as unscientific, and instead focused on environmental effects on observable behavior
Behaviorism
People who approach studies the effects of consequences and the environment on behavior
Globalization
The flow of commodities, and financial instruments among all regions of the world
Forensic Psychologist
Trained in criminal behavior,jury behavior,courtrooms, and the legal system
Free association
a technique to gain access into the unconscious
Amiable Skepticism
looks for scientific evidence to back new claims using openminded scrutiny
Wundt
Set up the first psychological lab, and used reaction time to measure mental activity
Cognitive Psychology
Concerned with how people think,remember things, and make decisions ex) psychologist interested in how adolescents make decisions to win at chess
Evolutionary Psychology
Seeks to explain mental activity including memory, perception, and language as a product of natural selection
Psychoanalytic Thought
Seeks to uncover unconscious conflicts, which may be displayed in dreams
Personality Approach
Studies one's enduring characteristics
Self-serving bias
one in which a person uses explanations that support a positive view of himself
Miller and Neisser
studied mental processes including memory,thinking, decision making, and language
Types of Psychologists
Neuroscience/Biological Cognitive Developmental Personality Social Cultural Clinical Counseling School Industrial and Organizational Forensic Sports
Individual Analysis
Studies individual differences in development, cognition,behavior, and personality that affect how people know and perceive the world
Rogers and Maslow
believed in the uniqueness of each individual and pioneered ways of questioning and listening that are staples of modern therapy
James
Emphasized that the mind and behavior evolved to perform specific functions "stream of consciousness"
Hindsight bias
causes us to reinterpret old evidence to make sense of the outcome, though we could not have predicted the outcome
Freud
Believed that unconscious conflicts,often sexual in nature, had a strong influence on behavior -Sought to uncover unconscious conflicts
Examples of Structuralism
Describing a sound by talking about its pitch,its tone, and its clarity
Biological development
the physical changes that occur over a lifetime;differences in biological development
Confirmation Bias
causes people to restrict themselves to information that supports their beliefs
Wertheimer and Kohlet
looked at context and individual differences in people's experiences and perceptions,focusing on the whole experience rather than its parts
Lewin
studied how other people and specific situations affect a person's behavior and thoughts
Natural Selection
the process by which the adaptive characteristics of a species are selected for due to the increased survival rate of the animals with those characteristics
Titchener
Established structuralism as a school of thought that broke conscious experiences down into their discrete parts
Introspection
People's subjective experience of the physical world,asking them to contemplate a series of objects and state which one they found more pleasant
Gestalt Theory
the whole of personal experience is not simply the sum of its constituent elements -the whole is different from the sum of its parts
Survival of the Fittest
A phrase that summarizes the theory of evolution. Those who are born with adaptive mutations are more likely to survive to reproductive age, passing their genes-and the adaptive mutation-to the next generation