Psychology Chapter 1
Gestalt
"pattern" or "organized whole"
Social psychologists
Concerned with the nature and causes of individuals' thoughts, feelings, and behavior in social situations.
Kenneth Bancroft Clark and Mamie Phipps Clark
Conducted research that showed the negative effects of school segregation on African American children.
B. F. Skinner
Contributed to behaviorism. Believed that organisms learn to behave in certain ways because they have been reinforced for doing so.
Applied research
Designed to find solutions to specific personal or social problems.
Sigmund Freud
Developed psychoanalysis
Random sample
Each member of a population has an equal chance of being selected to participate
School psychologists
Employed by school systems to identify and assist students who have problems that interfere with learning.
1879 psychology as a laboratory science - Wilhelm Wundt
Established the first psychological laboratory in Leipzig, Germany.
Theories
Interwoven descriptive terms and concepts that propose reasons for relationships among events.
Mary Whiton Calkins
Introduced the method of paired associates to study memory, discovered the primacy and recency effects, and engaged in research into the role of the frequency of repetition in the vividness of memories.
Psychodynamic perspecitve
Liberating the expression of unconscious ideas.
Contemporary Freud theory followers
Likely call themselves neoanalysts.
Human factors psychologists
Make technical systems such as automobile dashboards and computer keyboards more user-friendly.
Critical thinking
Means taking nothing for granted - not believing things just because they are in print or uttered. Refers to a process of thoughtfully analyzing and probing the questions, statements, and arguments of others.
Psychoanalysis
Name of both the theory of personality and the method of psychotherapy. Proposes that much of our lives is governed by unconscious ideas and impulses that originate in childhood conflicts.
Functionalists adapt Darwin's theory
Proposed that adaptive behavior patterns are learned and maintained. Maladaptive behavior patterns tend to drop out, and only the fittest behavior patterns survive.
Consumer psychologists
Study the behavior of shoppers in an effort to predict and influence their behavior.
Humanism
Stresses the human capacity for self-fulfillment and the central roles of consciousness, self-awareness, and decision making.
Developmental psychologists
Study the changes - physical, cognitive, social, and emotional - that occur throughout the life span.
Health psychologists
Study the effects of stress on health problems such as headaches, cardiovascular disease, and cancer. And guide clients toward healthier behavior patterns.
Environmental psychologists
Study the ways that people and the environment, both natural and human-made, influence one another.
Social-cognitive theorists
Suggest that people can modify and create their environments. Grant cognition a key role. Note that people engage in intentional learning by observing others.
Democritus
Suggested that we could think of behavior in terms of a body and a mind. He pointed out that our behavior is influenced by external stimulation.
Socrates
Suggested we should rely on rational thought and introspection to gain self-knowledge, and pointed out that people are social creatures who influence one another.
Correlation coefficient
A number that varies from r = +1.00 to r = -1.00
Sociocultural perspective
Addresses many of the ways that people differ from one another. Studies the influences of ethnicity, gender, culture, and socioeconomic status on behavior and mental processes.
Scientific method
An organized way of using experience and testing ideas to expand and refine knowledge.
Forensic psychologists
Apply psychology to the criminal justice system.
Practicing psychology
Applying psychological knowledge to help individuals change their behavior so that they can meet their own goals more effectively.
Education psychologists
Attempt to facilitate learning but they usually focus on course planning and instructional methods for a school system rather than on individual children.
Structuralism
Attempted to break conscious experience down into objective sensations and subjective feelings.
Structuralists
Believe the mind functions by combing objective and subjective elements of experience.
Aristotle
Believed human behavior is subject to rules and laws.
Several broad influential perspectives in psychology today
Biological, cognitive, humanistic-existential, psychodynamic, learning, and sociocultural.
Case studies
Collect information about individuals and small groups.Many are clinical which have descriptions of a person's psychological problems and how a psychologist treated them.
Introspection
Careful examination of one's own thoughts and emotions.
Humanistic-existential perspective
Cognitive, but emphasizes the role of subjective experience. Humanism stresses the human capacity for self-fulfillment and the central roles of consciousness, self-awareness, and decision making. Existentialism views people as free to choose and as being responsible for choosing ethical conduct.
Gestalt psychologists' view of learning
Demonstrated that much learning, especially in problem solving, is accomplished by insight, not by mechanical repetition.
Karen Horney and Erick Erikson
Famous neoanalysts who focused less on unconscious processes and more on conscious choice and self-direction.
Gestalt therapists (can be found today thought Gestalt psychologists are few)
Focus on helping clients integrate conflicitng parts of their personality.
Industrial psychologists
Focus on the relationships between people and work.
Gestalt psychologists
Focused on perception and how perception influences thinking and problem solving. See perceptions as wholes that give meaning to parts.
Functionalism
Focuses on behavior as well as the mind or consciousness. Looks at how experience helps us function more adaptively in our environments.
Broadus Watson
Founded American behaviorism because he believed psychology is a natural science that must limit itself to observable, measurable events.
Carl Rogers and Abraham Maslow
Founded humanistic-existential perspective.
William James
Founder of the school of functionalism
Ms Wertheimer, Kurt Koffka, and Wolfgang Kohler
Founders of Gestalt psychology.
Sport psychologists
Help athletes concentrate on their performance and no on the crown, using cognitive strategies.
Goal of psychoanalysis
Help patients gain insight into their conflicts and to find socially acceptable ways of expressing wishes and gratifying needs.
Clinical psychologists
Help people with psychological disorders adjust to the demands of life.
Personality psychologists
Identify and measure human traits and determine influences on human thought processes, feelings, and behavior.
1860 psychology as a laboratory science - Gustav Theodor Fechner
Published Elements of Psychophysics, which showed how physical events are related to psychological sensation and perception.
Mary Slater Ainsworth
Revolutionized our understanding of attachment between parents and children by means of her cross-cultural studies.
Biological perspective
Seek the relationships between the brain, hormones, heredity, and evolution, on the one hand, and behavior and mental processes on the other.
Goal of psychology
Seeks to describe, explain, predict, and control behavior and mental processes.
Stratified sample
Selected so that identified subgroups in the population are represented proportionately in the sample.
Elizabeth Loftus
Shown that memories are not snapshots of the past but often consist of something old, something new, something borrowed, and something blue.
Experimental psychologists
Specialize in basic processes such as the nervous system, sensation and perception, learning and memory, thought, motivation, and emotion.
Behaviorism
The school of psychology that focuses on learning observable behavior.
Psychology
The scientific study of behavior and mental processes.
Reinforced
Their behavior has a positive outcome.
Pure research
Undertaken because the researches is interested in the research topic.
Counseling psychologists
Use interviews and tests to define their clients' problems which are usually adjustment problems but not serious psychological disorders.
Cognitive perspective
Venture into the realm of mental processes to understand human nature. Investigate the ways we perceive and mentally represent the world, how we learn, remember the past, plan for the future, solve problems, form judgments, make decisions, and use language. In short, study the mind.
Existentialism
Views people as free to choose and as being responsible for choosing ethical conduct.