Chapter 1- Psychology
Skinner Box (Daughter)
Skinner raised his daughter in a baby tender, in which she grew very close to her father. She has no mental illness and is still alive and healthy
Psychology is about understanding all the things we do.
True
Rafael, a tennis coach, insists he can make any reasonably healthy individual into an internationally competitive tennis player. Rafael is echoing the thoughts of _____
John B. Watson
Comparisons to computers and cognition created interest in the study of memory, decision making, and problem solving
True
According to Freud, people ______ in control of their own minds.
Are not
Contemporary psychologists recognize that theoretical diversity is a strength
True
Natural selection favors behaviors that enhance organism's' reproductive success
True
The cognitive and biological perspectives have become more important theoretical orientations in modern psychology
True
Empiricism
the premise that knowledge should be directly acquired through observation rather than speculation, beliefs, or common sense
Psychology is Empirical
-it is based on objective observations made through research
Methods cannot be devised to study cognition scientifically
False
Humanist's Greatest Contribution
One of humanist greatest contribution to psychology has been innovative treatments for psychological disorders such as; client centered, Gestalt, and existential therapies
Cogition
Refers to the mental processes involved in acquiring knowledge
Psychology
-Psychology is the science that studies behavior and the physiological and cognitive processes that underlie behavior, and it is the profession that applies the accumulated knowledge of the science to practical problems
Behavior is shaped by cultural heritage
-cultural factors exert influence over most aspects of behavior
Free Will- Skinner
According to Skinner, free will is an illusion, because we are all controlled by our environment.
Biological
Subject matter- physiological, genetic, and neural bases of behavior in humans and animals Basic Premise- an organism's functioning can be explained in terms of the brain structures and biochemical processes that underlie behavior
Gazzaniga, Bogen, and Sperry
-Cognitive psychologist. They determined that the right and left halves of the brain are specialized to handle different types of mental tasks. They were researchers and they won the Nobel Prize in psychology
Difference and similarities do not occur across cultures
False
Positive Psychology focuses on pathology and ways to heal suffering
False
Character Strengths and Virtues
- by Christopher Peterson and Martin Seligman -Attempts to present a measure of humanist ideals of virtue in an empirical, religiously scientific manner - CVS is intended to provide a theoretical framework to assist in developing practical applications for positive psychology -Wisdom and Knowledge- creativity, curiosity, open-mindedness, love of learning, perspective, inovation -Courage- bravery, persistence, intergrity, vitality, zest -Humanity- love, kindness, social intelligence -Justice- citizenship, fairness, leadership -Temperance- forgiveness and mercy, humility, prudence, self control -Transcendence- appreciation of beauty and excellence, gratitude, hope, humor, spitituality
Heredity and Environment Jointly Influence Behavior
-nature and nurture interactively shape most behavioral traits
Psychologists no longer to seek to understand the complex ways in which genetic inheritance and experience interact to shape behavior
False
From its earliest days, psychology has been involved in the treatment of mental illness
False
Psychologists rely upon guesswork, speculation, traditional beliefs, and common sense
False
Psychology Evolves in a Sociohistorical Context
- dense connections exist between what happens in psychology and what happens in society... in other words, a reciprocal relationship exists between society and psychology... trends, issues, and values in society affect psychology's evolution and progress in psychology affects trends, issues, and values in society.
People's Experience of the World is Subjective
-people tend to see what they expect to see and what they want to see
Hastorf and Cantril
Princeton - Dartmouth football game -1940s -Foul on a Princeton player... Princeton "didn't see the foul" but Dartmouth did -example of selected perception (choose what you want to see) -Demonstrated the study of perception -Studied human subjectivity
Why is psychology practical?
Gives us personal applications, such as coping with personal problems, coping with stress, improving self-control, and dealing with sleep difficulties. Psychology can help us find answers to pressing questions.
Animal Test Subjects
Animals were used preferably because they could have a considerable amount of control exerted on them (any behavior that is rewarded is likely to be repeated)
Humanistic
Subject Matter- unique aspects of human experience Basic Premise- Humans are free, rational beings with the potential for growth, and they are fundamentally different from animals
Behavior is Determined by Multiple Causes
complex causation is the rule, and single-cause explanations are usually incomplete -Behavior is governed by a complex network of interacting factors
Culture refers to...
widely shared customs, beliefs, values, norms, institutions, products of a community, transmitted over generations
Two trends that increase attention to culture as a behaviorism determinant
-Advances in communication, travel, and international trade have shrunk the world and increased Global interdependence - the ethnic makeup of the western world has become an increasingly diverse Multicultural mosaic
Cognitive
Subject Matter- thoughts and mental processes Basic Premise- human behavior cannot be fully understood without examining how people acquire, store, and process information
Gender Differences in Spatial Skills
The male's advantage in spatial navigation is seen in many animal species that do not exhibit the sex-based division of labor for hunting and gathering they see in animals
Evolutionary
Subject Matter- evolutionary bases of behavior in humans and animals Basic Premise- behavior patterns have evolved to solve adaptive problems; natural selection favors behaviors that enhance reproductive success
Psychoanalytic
Subject Matter- unconscious determinants of behavior Basic Premise- Unconscious motives and experiences in early childhood govern personality and mental disorders
John B. Watson
-Founder of behaviorism (theoretical orientation based on the premise that scientific psychology should study only observable behavior) -Proposed that psychologists abandon the study of consciousness altogether and focus exclusively on behaviors they could observe directly. -In essence, he was redefining what scientific psychology should be about. -To him, the power of the scientific method rested on the idea of verifiability. This power depends on studying things that can be observed objectively. -Mental experiences could not be studied scientifically
Humanism
-a theoretical orientation that emphasizes the unique qualities of humans, especially their freedom and their potential for personal growth -potential, uniqueness, freedom, rational, growth
Behavioral principles have little practical application in the real world
False
Psychometrics
-Is concerned with the measurement of behavior in the capacities, usually through the development of psychological tests - involved with the design of tests to assess personality, intelligence, and a wide range of abilities. It is also concerned with the development of new techniques for statistical analysis
A _______ is a system of interrelated ideas used to explain a set of ________
Theory, observations
Psychoanalytic Theory and Behaviorism
-considered to be dehumanizing -psychoanalytic theory was attacked for its belief that behavior is dominated by primitive, sexual urges -behaviorism was condemned for its preoccupation with the study of simple animal behavior -both failed to recognize the unique qualities of human behavior -not masters of their own destiny
Critical Thinking
-consists of knowledge of the skills or critical thinking -the cognitive component, as well as the attitude or disposition of critical thinking -the emotional or affective component
Seven Unifying Themes of Psychology
1. Psychology is empirical 2. Psychology is theoretically diverse 3. Psychology evolves in a sociohistorical context 4. Behavior is determined by multiple causes 5. Behavior is shaped by cultural heritage 6. Heredity and environment jointly influence behavior (nature AND nurture) 7. People's experience of the world is highly subjective
Cognitive perspective
Since 1976 the cognitive perspective has generated more published articles than any other perspective- makes this the most influential approach in psychology
World War 2
Because of the war, many academic psychologists were pressed into Service as clinicians. They were needed to screen military recruits and to treat soldiers suffering from trauma. Many of the psychologist found the clinical work to be challenging and rewarding and a substantial portion cuz you do the clinical work after the war. also some 40,000 American veterans, many with severe psychological scars, Return to speak post-war treatment at Veterans Administration hospitals. with the demand for clinicians far greater than Supply the VA stepped into Finance many new training programs in Clinical Psychology. Within a few years, about half of the new Phds in psych were specializing in clinical psych.
Psychology is Theoretically Diverse
- a variety of perspectives are needed to fully understand behavior
Skinner Box
-A small chamber in which a rat was placed, where Skinner could control the response -A moderate electric shock was delivered to the animal through the floor, and when a lever is pused (by the rat) the shock was turned out for a period of time
B.F. Skinner
-Harvard psychologist who questioned free will - Asserted that organisms tend to repeat actions that lead to positive outcomes, and tended not to repeat actions that led to neutral or negative outcomes -Like Watson, he emphasized how environmental factors mold behavior -Wrote Beyond Freedom and Dignity (1971)
Transcontextual Skills
-critical thinking skills -used in a variety of contexts
Split- Brain Research
-study of patients with severed corpus callosum -involves sending messages to only one side of the brain -demonstrates right and left brain specialization -Left hemisphere- verbal processing, face recognition -Right hemisphere- Drawing/ Visual
Behavorism
-was the dominant school of thought in psychology during the 1950s and 1960s
_______ refers to any overt-(______) _________ or activity by an organism
Behavior, observable, response
______ psych examines _______ processes in terms of their ________ value for members of a _______ over the course of many generations
Evolutionary, behavioral, adaptive, species, generation
Psychology is all about proliferating truisms and unreliable findings.
False
Positive Psychology
Positive psychology uses Theory research to better understand the positive, adaptive, creative, and fulfilling aspects of human existence. - Martin Seligman was scolded by his five-year-old daughter Nikki for being grumpy all of the time - he realized that his approach to life was overly and unnecessarily negative - more importantly, he recognized the same assessment could be made in the field of psychology
Behavioral
Subject matter- effects of environment on the overt behavior of humans and animals Basic premise- only observable events (stimulus-response relations) can be studied scientifically