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WELCOME! GRAB A POST-IT-NOTE DUE SUNDAY NIGHT WHO AM I? MOODLE

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Presentation on theme: "WELCOME! GRAB A POST-IT-NOTE DUE SUNDAY NIGHT WHO AM I? MOODLE"— Presentation transcript:

1 WELCOME! GRAB A POST-IT-NOTE DUE SUNDAY NIGHT WHO AM I? MOODLE
READING MOD 1

2 PSYCHOLOGY What is Psychology?
Take 1 minutes and write down any words, terms, ideas, people, places, etc. that come to mind when you hear the word… PSYCHOLOGY

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5 Inner sensations- mental processes
Psychology What does it mean? Inner sensations- mental processes Observable behavior

6 Prologue: The Story of Psychology
Psychology’s Roots Prescientific Psychology Psychological Science is Born Psychological Science Develops OBJECTIVE 1| Define psychology. To questions like, Who are we? From where come our thoughts? Our feelings? Our actions? Discipline of psychology comes to our aid. This discipline of psychology is defined as the scientific study of behavior and mental processes.

7 Prescientific Psychology
Socrates ( B.C.) and Plato ( B.C.) Socrates Plato Socrates and his student Plato believed the mind was separate from the body (dualists), the mind continued to exist after death, and ideas were innate (inborn).

8 Prescientific Psychology
Rene Descartes ( ) Descartes like Plato believed the immaterial mind and physical body were separate but communicated in the brain at pineal gland. Animal spirits moved from the brain to act on the muscles and experiences lead the nerves to open up “pores” in the brain to form memories. Descartes was right about the nerves connecting the inside and the outside worlds but had no notion of how these nerves functioned. Descartes, like Plato, believed in soul (mind)-body separation, but wondered how the immaterial mind and physical body communicated.

9 Prescientific Psychology
Aristotle ( B.C.) “The soul is not separable from the body, and the same holds good of particular parts of the soul.” Aristotle, De Anima, 350 B.C. Aristotle suggested that the soul is not separable from the body (monist) and that knowledge (ideas) grow from experience.

10 Prescientific Psychology
John Locke ( ) Locke held that the mind was a tabula rasa, or blank sheet (slate), at birth, and experiences wrote on it.

11 Debates in Psychology Nature v. Nurture

12 Prescientific Psychology
Francis Bacon ( ) Bacon is one of the founders of modern science, particularly the scientific method.

13 Empiricism Knowledge comes from experience
The practice of relying on observation and experiment

14 Psychological Science is Born
Structuralism- smallest parts of conscious experience Hall Titchner ( ) Wundt ( ) OBJECTIVE 3| Explain how early psychologists sought to understand the mind’s structure and functions, and identify some of the leading psychologists who worked in these areas. Structuralism: Wundt and his student Titchner focused on the elements of mind, and studied it by using introspection (self-reflection). Wundt established the first laboratory of psychology in 1879 at Leipzig, Germany, and wrote the first textbook of psychology. Wundt, G. Stanley Hall and Titchener studied the elements (atoms) of the mind by conducting experiments at Leipzig, Germany, in 1879.

15 Introspection OBJECTIVE 3| Explain how early psychologists sought to understand the mind’s structure and functions, and identify some of the leading psychologists who worked in these areas. Structuralism: Wundt and his student Titchner focused on the elements of mind, and studied it by using introspection (self-reflection). Wundt established the first laboratory of psychology in 1879 at Leipzig, Germany, and wrote the first textbook of psychology. Titchener used the method of looking inward using self-reflective dialouge

16 Psychological Science is Born
Functionalism- looks at how conscious experience helps us function James ( ) Mary Calkins Functionalism: James suggested that it would be more fruitful to consider the evolved functions of our thoughts and feelings than simply studying the elements of mind. Based on the theory of evolution, he suggested that the function of these thoughts and feelings was adaptive. James admitted the first woman student Mary Calkins to Harvard and tutored her. Despite his efforts she was not able to attain her PhD from Harvard. Influenced by Darwin, William James established the school of functionalism, which opposed structuralism.

17 Gestalt Psychology Focused on how the mind organizes and interprets information The basis of cognitive psychology The whole is greater than the sum of its parts 1912

18 Psychological Science is Born
The Unconscious Mind Austrian physician. Treated mental illness and developed psychoanalysis and the psychodynamic perspective. Freud ( ) Sigmund Freud and his followers emphasized the importance of the unconscious mind, childhood relations and its effects on human behavior.

19 Psychological Science Develops
Behaviorism- the study of observable behavior. Argues that all behaviors are learned. Skinner ( ) Watson ( ) OBJECTIVE 4| Describe the evolution of psychology as defined from 1920s to through today. Ivan Pavlov a Russian Physiologist, James Watson and Skinner were all instrumental in developing the science of psychology and emphasized behavior instead of mind or mental thoughts. From 1920 to 1960, psychology in the US was heavily oriented towards behaviorism. Watson (1913) and later Skinner emphasized the study of overt behavior as the subject matter of scientific psychology.

20 Welcome Find your new seat. Grab a calendar.
Lecture on Contemporary Perspectives. Post-it practice.

21 Psychology: A Definition
The scientific study of behavior (what we do) and mental processes (what we think).

22 Psychology’s Perspectives
The Big Seven

23 Psychodynamic Perspective
Fathered by Sigmund Freud. Our behavior comes from unconscious drives. Usually stemming from our childhood relationships. What might a psychoanalyst say is the reason a teenage son is resentful towards his father?

24 Behavioral Perspective
Focuses on our OBSERVABLE behaviors. Only cares about the behaviors that impair our living, and attempts to change them. r If you bit your nails when you were nervous, a behaviorist would not deal with the anxiety, but would try to stop the biting.

25 Psychological Science Develops
Humanistic Psychology Maslow ( ) Rogers ( ) Maslow and Rogers emphasized current environmental influences on our growth potential and our need for love and acceptance.

26 Humanistic Perspective
Issues stem a lack of something. Focuses on positive growth Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Attempt to seek self-actualization Therapists use active listening and unconditional positive regard. Carl Rogers Mr. Rogers would have made a great Humanistic Therapist!!!

27 Maslow’s Hierarchy

28 Cognitive Perspective
Focuses on how we think (or encode information) How do we see the world? How did we learn to act to sad or happy events? Cognitive Therapist attempt to change the way you think. Meet girl Get Rejected by girl Or get back on the horse Did you learn to be depressed

29 Evolutionary Perspective
Focuses on Darwinism. We behave the way we do because we inherited those behaviors. Thus, those behaviors must have helped ensure our ancestors survival. How could this behavior ensured Homer’s ancestors survival?

30 Social-Cultural Perspective
Focus on how your culture/group effects your behavior. Looks at the norms of a group. Even in the same high school, behaviors can change in accordance to the various subcultures.

31 Neuroscience Perspective (Biological)
Focus on how the physical body and brain creates our emotions, memories and sensory experiences. If you could not remember the names of your parents and went to a psychologist who adheres to the neuroscience perspective, what might they say?

32 Psychology’s Subfields: Research
Data: APA 1997

33 Psychology’s Subfields: Research
Psychologist What she does Biological Explore the links between brain and mind. Developmental Study changing abilities from womb to tomb. Cognitive Study how we perceive, think, and solve problems. Personality Investigate our persistent traits. Social Explore how we view and affect one another. OBJECTIVE 7| Identify some of the psychology’s subfields, and explain the difference between clinical psychology and psychiatry.

34 Psychology’s Subfields: Applied
Data: APA 1997

35 Clinical Psychology vs. Psychiatry
A clinical psychologist (Ph.D.) studies, assesses, and treats troubled people with psychotherapy. Psychiatrists on the other hand are medical professionals (M.D.) who use treatments like drugs and psychotherapy to treat psychologically diseased patients.

36 Psychology’s Current Perspectives
Focus Sample Questions Neuroscience How the body and brain enables emotions? How are messages transmitted in the body? How is blood chemistry linked with moods and motives? Evolutionary How the natural selection of traits the promotes the perpetuation of one’s genes? How does evolution influence behavior tendencies? Behavior genetics How much our genes and our environments influence our individual differences? To what extent are psychological traits such as intelligence, personality, sexual orientation, and vulnerability to depression attributable to our genes? To our environment? Although debates arise among the psychologists working from differing perspectives, each point of view addresses important questions.

37 Psychology’s Current Perspectives
Focus Sample Questions Psychodynamic How behavior springs from unconscious drives and conflicts? How can someone’s personality traits and disorders be explained in terms of sexual and aggressive drives or as disguised effects of unfulfilled wishes and childhood traumas? Behavioral How we learn observable responses? How do we learn to fear particular objects or situations? What is the most effective way to alter our behavior, say to lose weight or quit smoking?

38 Psychology’s Current Perspectives
Focus Sample Questions Cognitive How we encode, process, store and retrieve information? How do we use information in remembering? Reasoning? Problem solving? Social-cultural How behavior and thinking vary across situations and cultures? How are we — as Africans, Asians, Australians or North Americans – alike as members of human family? As products of different environmental contexts, how do we differ?

39 Matching B.F. Skinner Conducted first Psychological experiments
Calkins Freud 4. Titchener Wundt Rogers James Conducted first Psychological experiments Used Introspection Functionalist wrote first psychology textbook First Female president of the APA Focused on the unconscious mind Behaviorist Humanist

40 Break it down… Science Behavior Mental Processes

41 Psychology Today We define psychology today as the scientific study of behavior (what we do) and mental processes (inner thoughts and feelings).

42 Psychology’s Big Issues
Nature v Nurture Stability v. Change Continuity v. Discontinuity

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44 Nature v. Nurture Biology versus Experience
Am I the way I am because I was born that way or because of my surroundings? Can I ever be like these people, or does nature give me limitations?

45 Stability v. Change As the years pass, do we change or remain the same? Do we become adults or are we always just big kids? Personality traits, physical appearance, sense of humor, tastes, etc…

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47 Continuity v. Discontinuity
Does growth occur gradually or in stages?

48 Three Main Levels of Analysis
Biological Psychological Social Cultural

49 Figure 1 Biopsychosocial approach Myers: Psychology, Eighth Edition Copyright © 2007 by Worth Publishers

50 Example – Obesity in America
What are some of the biological factors that cause obesity? What are some of the psychological factors that cause obesity? What are some of the social- cultural factors that cause obesity?

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52 Nature v. Nurture Biology versus Experience
Am I the way I am because I was born that way or because of my surroundings? Can I ever be like these people, or does nature give me limitations?

53 Stability v. Change As the years pass, do we change or remain the same? Do we become adults or are we always just big kids? Personality traits, physical appearance, sense of humor, tastes, etc…

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55 Continuity v. Discontinuity
Does growth occur gradually or in stages?

56 Psychological Associations & Societies
The American Psychological Association is the largest organization of psychology with 160,000 members world-wide, followed by the British Psychological Society with 34,000 members.


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