Professor Dunne BU PS101 Exam 3
outcomes of indulgent parenting
- Less likely to follow social rules - Children are immature -self centered -narcissistic
What is the Phallic stage?
- Pleasure is derived from sexual organs - Children suffer from oedipus or electra complex
Discriminate attachment behavior
- around 3 months -Preferences are developed for who they like to be cared for by
Separation anxiety
-12-16 months to 2-3 years -Distress over being separated from primary caregiver
Stranger anxiety
-7-18 months -Distress over contact with unfamiliar people
Rationalization
-A false excuse to explain an anxiety arousing behavior that has already occurred -E.G: Someone justifies cheating on an exam by saying their roommate kept them awake all night
Concrete Operational Stage
-Ages 7-12 -Easily able to perform basic mental operations involving tangible problems and situations -Difficulty with abstract reasoning
Specific attachment behavior
-Around 7-8 months -Definitive likes and dislikes of who they want to be cared for by
Formal Operational Stage
-Begins around age 11 or 12 -Able to think logically about concrete and abstract problems -Able to form and test hypothesis
Anal Expulsive
-Caused by kids fighting hard against losing autonomy during anal stage -Kids may be toilet trained, but choose not to act like they are - Results in messy, negative and dominant adults
Dismissive
-Doesn't desire close attachment -Typically comes from neglectful parenting -Low value for caregivers and others
Genital Stage
-Erotic impulses are expressed in sexual relationships
sensorimotor stage
-From birth to age 2 -We explore the world around us through sensory experiences -Object Permanence
Id
-Innermost source of all psychic energy that exists within the subconscious -Seeks release for the sexual and aggressive urges in our unconscious
Fearful
-Low view of one's self -Low view of others -Wants emotional connections, but feels uncomfortable/untrusting with bonding -A result of inconsistent care as a child
preoccupied
-Low view of ones self -High opinion of others -Longs for bonds but feels they aren't valued as highly as those they are bonding with -Typically received inconsistent care
Brain development in infancy and childhood
-Neural Networks develop rapidly -Areas that regulate basic survival functions mature first -Association areas mature -Cerebral hemispheres become more highly specialized
adolescent egocentrism
-Occurs during adolescence -Overestimation of uniqueness of feelings -Oversensitivity to social evaluation
What are the major character traits tested on personality tests?
-Openness -Consciousntesness -Extroversion -Agreableness -Neuroticism
Oral Stage (0-18 months)
-Pleasure centers around the mouth -Satisfaction from eating and sucking -Fixation leads to self-indulgence or dependency
Anal Stage (18-36 months, 2-3)
-Pleasure focused on elimination of body waste -Fixation leads to messy, negative, dominant adult
Centration
-Preoperational The tendency to focus on just one feature of a problem, neglecting other important aspects.
Types of attachment (Mary Ainsworth)
-Secure attachment -Insecure types of attachment 1) Dismissive 2) Preoccupied 3) Fearful
Ego
-The executive part of personality that has direct contact with reality -Our sense of self -Decision maker of the personality -Seeks healthy ways of satisfying urges
Superego
-The moral component of personality - What you "should" do
Medial prefrontal cortex
-The part of the brain that becomes active when you think about yourself -Much more active in the developing adolescent brain
Reaction Formation
-Unconsciously switch impulses into their opposites -You take how you really feel and flip it into the opposite, then take this opposite to the extreme
object permanence
-Understanding that objects continue to exist even when they can no longer see it -Develops in the sensorimotor stage
outcome of neglectful parenting
-Worst possible outcomes typically -Dismissive attachment -Majority of individuals in jail are a product of neglectful parenting
Preoperational stage
-ages 2-7 -World represented symbolically through words and mental images -Pretend Play -Centration, animism, egocentrism
Indiscriminate attachment behavior
-newborns -Only care about being cared for, not picky about who is doing it
Parenting styles
1) Authoritative 2) Authoritarian 3)Indulgent 4) Neglectful
What are the two general dimensions of parenting styles
1) Warmth vs. Hostility 2) Restrictiveness vs. Permissiveness
psychosexual development stages
1)Oral 2)Anal 3)Phallic 4)Latency 5)Genital
Piaget's four stages of cognitive development
1. sensorimotor 2. preoperational 3. concrete operational 4. formal operational
What is the age of reason?
7
What is attachment
A strong emotional bond that develops between children and caregivers
Trephination
A whole was cut in the skull of mentally I'll people in order to let the devil out
Difference between fixation and regression
Fixation is doing something day in and day out, regression is reverting to a stage only when experiencing stress
What is binge eating an example of?
Fixation on oral stage
oral stage
Freud's first stage of psychosexual development during which pleasure is centered in the mouth
What was Freud's psychodynamic perspective on personality?
He said there were three parts to personality: -Id -Ego -Superego
Who was the philosopher who acknowledged a connection between psychological changes and biology?
Hypocrites
At each stage of psychosexual development ->
Id focused on one erogenous body zone
Ages 12 - 20 years (erikson)
Identity or role confusion
Displacement
Impulses are repressed and then shifted onto an easier target
Castration Anxiety
In psychoanalysis, the fear in young boys that they will be mutilated genitally because of their lust for their mothers.
Assimilation ( In Terms of Schemas)
Incorporating new experiences into already existing schemas
Identity diffusion
Individuals are too young to have their own identity, so their identity is what they're told it should be
Age 6-12 (erikson)
Industry or inferiority
Age 3-5 (erikson)
Initiative or guilt
How does a more active nervous system affect mental health?
It is believed that a more active nervous system means an individual is more sensitive and prone to mental disorders
How is brain growth affected by adolescense?
It slows down
Erik Erikson
Known for his 8-stage theory of Psychosocial Development
Are people with depression more or less likely to experience anxiety than non-depressed people?
More likely
Accommodation (In terms of schemas)
New experiences cause schemas to change
What is personality?
Our distinctive and relatively enduring ways of: -Thinking -Feeling -Acting
Personal Fable
Overestimation of uniqueness of feelings and experiences
Identity achievement
Part of the 50% who leave the identity searching phase content with who they are
Projection
People disguise their own threatening impulses by attributing them to others.
Denial
Refusal to acknowledge an event or the emotions connected to it
defense mechanisms
Repression Denial Displacement Intellectualization Projection Rationalization Reaction Formation
Latency Stage
Sexuality dormant
Harry Harlow
Studied attachment in monkeys
What is the difference between sublimation and displacement?
Sublimation is redirection of impulses into something acceptable, while displacement is unhealthily redirecting impulses to an easier target
Imprinting
Sudden, inflexible, biologically primed form of attachment found in nonhuman species
Sublimation
Taboo impulses channeled into socially desirable and admirable behaviors
Capgras syndrome
The Belief that those around you have been replaced by impostors
Critical Period
The age range during which certain experiences must occur for development to proceed normally
Genie the Wild Child
The first true proof that there are experiences with critical periods, such as being able to speak.
Sensitive Periods
The optimal age range for certain experiences to spur normal development -Flexible, unlike critical periods
Which parent is most influential in a child's id development?
The same sex parent
What is the relationship between superego and id?
The superego strives to control the id
Objective anxiety
There is a concrete threat bringing about anxety
What is a common trend in dating for people with unresolved conflict?
They often date someone with the negative qualities of their opposite parents to try and resolve the conflict
Age 1 (erikson)
Trust or mistrust
Does one's attachment style change throughout their life?
Typically no
Arborisation
We are born with an overgrowth of neurons, then they start wiring and firing together and forming neurotransmitters and networks. Unused neurons are "pruned," leaving us with the normal amount of neurons
vulnerability-stress model
When a persons vulnerabilities are met with stressors, they are more likely to present psychological disorders
Anal retentive
Willingly gave away control as a child, but try to take control back in insignificant ways as an adult
What happens if something goes wrong during one of the first stages of psychosexual development?
You may become fixated due to deprivation or overindulgence during that stage
Intellectualization
a coping mechanism in which the person analyzes a situation from an emotionally detached viewpoint
Identity moratorium
a period of time in the development of identity in which a person delays making a decision about important issues but actively explores various alternatives
neurotic anxiety
occurs when there is direct conflict between id and ego
Identity foreclosure
premature commitment to an identity without adequate consideration of other options
When does adolescence begin?
puberty
Pleasure principle
tendency of the id to strive for immediate gratification
When does the Phallic stage occur?
Ages 4-5
Repression
Anxiety-arousing memories, feelings and impulses are prevented from entering consciousness -Motivated forgetting
What parenting styles lead to narcissism?
Authoritarian and indulgent
Age 1-2 (erikson)
Autonomy or doubt
Penis Envy
According to Freud, the female desire to have a penis - a condition that usually results in their attraction to males.
When are people down to the normal amount of neurons by?
Adolescence
When is personality formed by?
Age 6
What age range is most responsible for the person you become?
Ages 1-3, relies upon how you are treated by caregivers
When does superego develop?
Ages 4-5
Early maturation is more positive for which gender?
Boys
What is the biggest influencing factor in attachment?
Comfort
What is the #1 stressor?
Death
Historical Explanations of Abnormal Behaviors
Demonic possession Physical diseases Products of psychological conflicts Learned maladaptive behaviors Distorted perceptions of the world
