Psychology Chapter 1, 2, and 3
Humans
Are built for personal growth, to seek their fullest potential, to become all they are capable of being.
Medulla & Pons
Associated with the control of heart rate, breathing, blood pressure, and reflexes such as vomiting, sneezing, and coughing.
Left Hemisphere Contributions
Does more verbal tasks such as reading and writing.
Industrial/Organizational Psychologist
Employed in industry to help improve morale, train recruits, or help managers establish effective lines of communication with their employees.
Wilhelm Hunt
Established the first psychological laboratory in 1879 and is the founder and father of modern psychology.
Random Sampling
Everyone in the target population has an equal likelihood of being selected for the survey.
Where does the word Psychology comes from?
Greek psyche (translate to "soul" or "breath") and logos are the study or investigation of something.
Neurons
Individual cells that receive, transmit, and integrate information.
Axon
Long tail-like part of a neuron that serves as the cell's transmitter.
Nature vs Nuture
One can not happen with the other.
Cognitive
Refers to the process of knowing or perceiving.
Humanistic Psychology
1950's negative reaction lead to this. Movement in psychology that focuses on people's unique capacities for choice, responsibility, and growth.
Naturalistic Observation
A descriptive research technique that records naturally occurring behavior as opposed to behavior produced in the laboratory.
Humanistic Psychologists
All individuals have a considerable amount of untapped potential that should be nurtured by an empathetic therapist.
Debriefing
At the conclusion of an experimental session, informing the participants about the general purpose of the experiment, including any deception that was involved.
Motor Neurons
Carry the messages and commands away from the CNS to the muscle and glands that produce responses.
Interneurons
Cells that transfer information form one neuron to another; interneurons make no direct contact with the outside world and convey information from one internal processing site to another.
Neurotransmitters
Chemical messengers that relay information from one neuron to the next.
Personality Psychologists
Concerned with the internal factos that lead people to act consistently across situations and also with how people differ.
Parietal Lobe
Contains the somatosensory cortex, through which we experience the sensations of touch, temperature, and pain.
Mind
Contents and process of subjective experience through sensation, thoughts, and emotions.
Left hemispheres
Controls the sensory and motor functions for the right side of the body.
Right hemispheres
Controls these functions for the left side of the body.
Survey
Descriptive research technique designed to gather limited amounts of information from many people, usually by administering some kind of question.
Case Study
Descriptive research technique in which the effect is focused on a single case, usually an individual.
Clinical Psychologists
Diagnose and treats psychological problems such as: depression, anxiety, phobias, or schizophrenia- or give advice like how to raise your children or get along with your boss. Also treat with psychological disorders.
Right Hemisphere Contributions
Examples such as fitting together pieces of the puzzle to emotional expressions.
Applied Psychologists
Extend the principles of scientific psychology to practical, everyday problem in the real world.
Occipital Lobe
Far back of the brain where most visual processing occurs.
Dendrites
Fibers that extend outward from a neuron and receive information from other neurons.
Cognitive Psychologists
Focus on higher mental processes such as memory, learning, and reasoning.
Psychoanalysis
Freud believe that the mind and its contents must be analyzed extensively before effective treatments can begin.
John Watson
He rejected the study of the mind in favor of the study of observable behavior.
Much of our behavior is determined by....
How we think.
Eclectic Approach
Idea that it's useful to select information from several sources rather than to rely entirely on a single perspective or school of thought.
Empiricism
Idea that knowledge comes directly from experience.
Nativism
Idea that some knowledge is innate, or present at birth.
Hippocampus
Important for the formation of memories, particularly our memory for specific personal events.
Reactivity
Individuals behavior is changed by the process being observed.
Sensory Neurons
Initial contact with the environment and are responsible for carrying the message inward toward the spinal cord and brain.
Social Psychologists
Interested in how people think about, influence, and relate to each other.
Experimental Research
Investigator actively manipulates the environment to observe its effect on behavior. By "environment," psychologists can mean just about anything.
Cerebellum
Involved in the preparation, selection, and coordination of complex motor movements such as hitting a golfball, playing the piano, or learning how to use and manipulate tools.
When was Psychology established in?
It was not established until the mid 1800's and it was conducted mainly by philosophers and physiologist. Even though Sigmund Freud and Ivan Pavlov was trained in it, the field was not known until now.
Frontal Lobes
Largest lobes in the cortex and play a role in many functions, including planning and decision making, certain kinds of memory, and personality.
Two hemispheres
Left and right hemispheres
Temporal Lobe
Lie on either side of the cortex, are involved in processing auditory information received from the left and right ears.
Amygdala
Linked to a number of motivational and emotional behaviors, including fear, agression, and defensive actions.
Thalamus
Main processing center for sensory input prior to its being sent to the upper regions for the cortex.
Psychiatrists
Medical doctors that treat mental disorders but are licensed to prescribe medication.
Descriptive Research
Methods that underlie the direct observation and description of behavior. Watch and record the behavior of themselves and others.
Substantia Nigra
Midbrain contains a group of neurons release the neurotransmitter dopamine from their terminal buttons.
Counseling Psychologists
More likely to deal with adjustment (marriage and family problems). Requires a Ph.D. from a graduate problem specializing in this or and Ed.D.
Hypothalamus
Motivation particularly the regulation of eating, drinking, body temperature, and sexual behavior.
Reticular Formation
Network of neurons and nerves linked to the control of general arousal, sleep, and consciousness.
Serotonin
Neurotransmitter that has been linked to sleep, dreaming, and general arousal and may also be involved in some psychological disorders such as depression and schizophrenia.
Gamma-amino-butyric acid (GABA)
Neurotransmitter that may play a role in the regulation of anxiety; it generally produces inhibitory effects.
Dopamine
Neurotransmitter that often leads to inhibitory effects; decreased levels have been linked to Parkinson disease, and increased levels have been linked to schizophrenia.
Acetylcholine
Neurotransmitter that plays multiple roles in the central and peripheral nervous systems, including the excitation of muscle contractions.
Behavior
Observable actions such as moving about, talking, gesturing, and so on; behavior can also refer to the activities of cells and to thoughts and feelings.
"Insight Therapy"
Patient or client must understand exactly how memories and other mental processes lead to problem behaviors. Freud use this for the analysis of dreams.
Human Factor Psychologist
Play a key role in the design and engineering of new products.
Cultural Factors....
Play a role in how we think and interact with each other and even in how we see the world.
Informed Consent
Principle that before consenting to participate in research, people should be fully informed about any significant factors that could affect their willingness to participate.
Confidentiality
Principle that personal information obtained from a participant in research or therapy should not be revealed without the individual permission.
Evolutionary Psychology
Recent movement that seeks to identify exactly how our behaviors and thought processes have been molded by evolutionary pressures. They believe that we're born with mental software that guides our thinking and behavior.
Depression and Schizophrenia
Related to imbalances among the chemical messengers in the brain.
Behaviorism
School of psychology proposing that the only proper subject matter of psychology is observable behavior rather than immediate conscious experience.
Psychology
Scientific study of behavior and mind.
Corpus Callosum
Serve as communication bridge between the two hemispheres and the collection of nerve fibers that connects the two cerebral hemispheres and allows information to pass from one side to another.
Superior Colliculus & Inferior Colliculus
Serve as important relay stations for visual and auditory information and help coordinate reactions to sensory events in te environment.
Culture
Share values, customs, and beliefs of a group or community. Also based ethnicity race, or socioeconomic class but also on political religious, or other factors. Found in all aspects of behavior and mind.
Cognitive Revolution
Shift away form strict behaviorism, begun in the 1950s characterized by renewed intrest in fundamental problems of consciousness and internal mental problems.
Developmental Psychologists
Study how behavior and internal mental processes change over the course of the life span.
Soma
The cell body of a neuron.
Lateralized
The hemispheres on each side is responsible for performing unique and independent functions.
Synapse
The small gap between the terminal buttons of a neuron and the dendrite or cell body of another neuron.
Psychology is NOT:
The study of the mind.
Terminal Buttons
Tiny swellings at the end of the axon that contain chemicals important to neural transmission.
Research Psychologists
Try to discover the basic principles of behavior and mind.
Sigmund Fraud
Was a neurologist who thinks that his patients that had physical problems where psychological in origin.
School Psychologists
Work with students in primary and secondary schools to help them perform well academically and socially.