Intro to Psych (Test 1 - Chapter 1)
The 3 New Branches of Psychology
Behavioral genetics Evolutionary psychology Clinical neuropsychology
Evolutionary psychology
Considers how behavior is influenced by our genetic inheritance from our ancestors
Clinical Psychology
Deals with the study, diagnosis, and treatment of psychological disorders (ex. ADHD treatment)
Health Psychology
Explores the relationship between psychological factors and physical ailments or disease (ex. Stress & heart)
Personality Psychology
Focuses on the consistency in people's behavior over time and the traits that differentiate one person from another
Counseling psychology
Focuses primarily on educational, social, and career-adjustment problems (ex. study skills) Focus is more specific than clinical psychology
Criticisms of structuralism
Introspection not a scientific technique, and people had difficulty describing some kinds of inner experiences.
Cross-cultural Psychology
Investigates the similarities and differences in psychological functioning in and across various cultures and ethnic groups
The 5 Major Perspectives of Psychology
Neuroscience Cognitive Behavioral Humanistic Psychodynamic
Introspection
Procedure used to study the structure of the mind in which subjects are asked to describe in detail what they are experiencing when they are exposed to a stimulus
Developmental Psychology
Studies how people grow and change from the moment of conception through death
behavioral neuroscience
Studies how the brain and nervous system determine behavior ex: how the degeneration of certain components of nerve cells in the brain might contribute to the development of multiple sclerosis
Experimental psychology
Studies the processes of sensing, perceiving, learning, and thinking about the world
Social Psychology
Study of how people's thoughts, feelings, and actions are affected by others
Cognitive psychology
The subfield of psychology that focuses on the study of higher mental processes, including thinking, language, memory, problem solving, knowing, reasoning, judging, and decision making.
Clinical neuropsychology
Unites the areas of neuroscience and clinical psychology. Focuses on the origin of psychological disorders in biological factors
Father of Psychology
Wilhelm Wundt
William James
person that concentrated on how behavior functions and the role of behavior in allowing people to adapt to their environments
Hermann Ebbinghaus and Max Wertheimer
person who focused on the organization of perception and thinking in a "whole" sense rather than on the individual elements of perception
Wilhelm Wundt (father of psychology)
person who focuses on uncovering the fundamental mental components of consciousness, thinking, and other kinds of mental states and activities
Cognitive Perspective
perspective that focuses on how people think, understand, and know about the world
Behavioral Perspective
perspective that suggests that observable, measurable behavior should be the focus of study John B. Watson B. F. Skinner
Neuroscience Perspective
perspective that views behavior from the perspective of the brain, the nervous system, and other biological functions
Psychodynamic Perspective
perspective that views that behavior is motivated by unconscious inner forces over which the individual has little control Sigmund Freud
Psychology
scientific study of behavior and mental processes
Humanistic Perspective
the perspective that suggests that all individuals naturally strive to grow, develop, and be in control of their lives and behavior. Therefore, not tied down by biological inheritance, free will to make decisions about life Carl Rogers Abraham Maslow