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What is Psychology?

What is Psychology?

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What is Psychology?. What movies have you seen with professional psychologists as characters?. kind of work done? area of specialty? how realistic was characterization?. Exercise: Psychologist as Scientist. List three adjectives that describe a typical scientist. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: What is Psychology?

What is Psychology?

Page 2: What is Psychology?

What movies have you seen with professional psychologists as characters?

• kind of work done?• area of specialty?• how realistic was characterization?

Page 3: What is Psychology?

Exercise: Psychologist as Scientist

List three adjectives that describe a typical psychologist.

List three adjectives that describe a typical scientist.

Page 4: What is Psychology?

art chemistry___1_________2_________3_________4_________5_________6_________7___

philosophy physics

Science: Where is Psychology?

Page 5: What is Psychology?
Page 6: What is Psychology?

Roots of Psychology – Pre-scientificDualism – Mind/Body are separate and interact

Monism – Mind/Body are parts of the same thing.

Hippocrates- mind/soul reside in the brain but not a physical substance.

Plato – used self examination(introspection) and concluded knowledge is Innate

Descartes – “I think, therefore I am”

Aristotle – mind/soul are a result of our anatomy and physiology. Knowledge is acquired by experience.

Locke – we are born a “blank slate” (tabula rasa) and experience fills the slate.

Page 7: What is Psychology?

Psychology’s RootsPsychological Science is Born

Wilhelm Wundt (1879)• Founder of scientific

psychology• Set up first lab in 1879 in

Leipzig, Germany • Focused on structure of the

mind and indentifying basic elements of consciousness using introspection.

Page 8: What is Psychology?

Psychology developed into three different branches, or schools of thought

• structuralism (structural elements)• functionalism (functions)• behaviorism (observable behavior)

Page 9: What is Psychology?

Structuralism Thinking About the Mind’s STRUCTURE Emphasizes consciousness and identification of

elements of thought using introspection.Wilhelm Wundt - studied consciousness using

introspection. G. Stanley Hall – brought introspection to U.S.

at John Hopkins University, First President of American Psychological Association (A.P.A).

Edward Titchener – studied elements of consiousness at Cornell University.

Margaret Washburn – First woman to complete her Ph.D. in psychology

Page 10: What is Psychology?

Functionalism – Thinking about the mind’s FunctionEmphasizes how organisms uses its

perceptual abilities to adapt to its environment. Want to EXPLAIN behavior by OBSERVING behavior.

William James – wrote Principles of Psychology.

Mary Whiton Calkins – first woman president of the A.P.A.

Functionalism paved the way for behaviorism and applied subfields of psychology.

Page 11: What is Psychology?

Unit 1 Pop Quiz(get a piece of paper)

A test of how you react to unexpected situations

Q#1: What did you experience when you learned of the “pop” quiz? (introspection)

Q#2: Which thoughts and emotions were Expressed by the class? (observable)

Q#3: What steps might you take to overcome anxiety when faced with unexpected situations?(applied)

Page 12: What is Psychology?

Psychological Science Develops (1920s)Sigmund Freud (childhood

experiences and unconscious thought processes affect behavior)

LO #3

SexViolence

Unconscious Mind

Page 13: What is Psychology?

Psychological Science Develops (1960s)Behaviorism

John B. Watson B.F. Skinner

(reinforcement theory)

“study of observable behavior”

FidgetingCrying

trembling

Page 14: What is Psychology?

+GET

something

-REMOVEsomething

Page 15: What is Psychology?

“you be the parent”(1. You caught your son/daughter sneaking out the window on Sat night…..)(2. You want your son/daughter to study at least 1 hour every night….)

Behavior Encouraged Behavior SuppressedStimulus presented

+(get)

Stimulus removed

or withheld

–(remove)

Page 16: What is Psychology?

Psychological Science Develops 1960sHumanistic psychology

Carl Rogers (environmental influences, need for love and acceptance)

Abraham Maslow

(hierarchy of needs)

Page 17: What is Psychology?
Page 18: What is Psychology?

Psychological Science Develops 1960s Cognitive Neuroscience

(study of brain functioning)

examples . . . What part of brain is working when we do arithmetic? What chemical allows us to react to physical excitement or danger?

And Cognitive-Behavioral theory. How do my thoughts affect my behaviors?

Page 19: What is Psychology?

Think / Feel / DoStressful Peaceful

Example: Cut off by speeding, reckless motorist!

Wronged

Anger

Horn & Finger!

Accepting

Peaceful

Smile or a Shrug

Thought

Feeling

Action

Sinful(Old Adam)

Godly( New Man )

1 2

3

4

5 6

7

Page 20: What is Psychology?

Assignment:

Recall two occurrences when you recognize and then intentionally restructure your emotional response to a cognitive event.

Prepare to share one in class.

Page 21: What is Psychology?

Psychological Science Develops

Psychology-Defined as: The Scientific

study of Behavior and Mental processes.

3 partsScientific study – collection and

examination of data to prove or support hypotheses.

Behavior – anything observable.Mental Processes – thoughts,

feelings, sensations, perceptions. (unobservable)

Page 22: What is Psychology?

Psychology’s Three Main Levels of Analysis

Page 23: What is Psychology?

Psychology’s Three Main Levels of Analysis

Page 24: What is Psychology?

Psychology’s Three Main Levels of Analysis

Page 25: What is Psychology?

Psychology’s Three Main Levels of Analysis

Page 26: What is Psychology?

Psychological Approaches/Perspectives

biologicalevolutionarypsychodynamicbehavioralcognitivehumanisticsocial-cultural

• physiological and bio-chemical factors that determine behavior and mental processes.

• how the natural selection of traits promoted the survival of the human species

• how behavior is influenced by unconscious drives and conflicts

• how organisms react to stimuli, learning as a result of experience.

• how we encode, process, store and retrieve information

• how we meet our needs for love and acceptance, and achieve self-fulfillment

• how behavior and thinking vary across situations and cultures

Page 27: What is Psychology?

Psychology’s Subfields

psychometricsdifference between basic and applied research?

LO #6

Page 28: What is Psychology?

FIELDS:

Biological psychology

Developmental psychology

Educational psychology

Personality psychology

Social psychology

basic research • investigates persistent traits

• studies changing abilities throughout the life span

• explores how we view and affect one another

• studies influences on teaching and learning

• explores link between brain and behavior

Page 29: What is Psychology?

FIELDS:

Industrial/organizational psychologyCounseling psychologyClinical psychologypsychiatry

applied research• helps people cope with

adjustments, challenges, and crises

• used in the workplace to help companies select and train employees

• medical doctors who may prescribe drugs in treatment

• assesses and treats mental, emotional, and behavior disorders

• focuses on interaction of people, machines, and physical environments

Page 30: What is Psychology?

Psychology’s Biggest QuestionNature-Nurture Is

suebiology vs. experience

Are we a product of how we are born, biologically predisposed, DNA, etc..

OR are we a result of our experiences?

Page 31: What is Psychology?

• What is Structuralisms goal and method?• What is Functionalisms goal and method?• What is the difference between Introspection and

Observation?• Which modern approaches fit with Structuralism?• Which modern approaches fit with Functionalism?

Unit 1 Review

Page 32: What is Psychology?

• Who said:• “the mind is a tabula rasa”• “I think, therefore I am”• “We learn from experience”• “Knowledge is Innate”

Unit 1 Review

Page 33: What is Psychology?

• What is Structuralisms goal and method?• Emphasizes consciousness and identification of elements of thought using

introspection.

• What is Functionalisms goal and method?• Emphasizes how organisms uses its perceptual abilities to adapt to its environment.

Want to EXPLAIN behavior by OBSERVING behavior.

• What is the difference between Introspection and Observation?

• Introspection is looking within and self reporting, while observation is reporting what behaviors you and others can see and measure.

• Which modern approaches fit with Structuralism?• Psychoanalytic/Psychodynamic, Humanistic, Evolutionary, Social Cultural

• Which modern approaches fit with Functionalism?• Behavioral, Biological, cognitive

Unit 1 Review

Page 34: What is Psychology?

• Who said:• “the mind is a tabula rasa” - Locke - Monism• “I think, therefore I am” – Descartes - Dualism• “We learn from experience” – Aristotle - Monism• “Knowledge is Innate” - Plato - Dualism

Unit 1 Review

Page 35: What is Psychology?

Video: Vol. 1, DVD2, Psychological Disorders #2

Postpartum Psychosis: The Case of Andrea Yates

(7:00)

Page 36: What is Psychology?

Set 5

Biological / Neuroscience – Behaviorism – Humanistic psychology – Evolutionary psychology – Psychoanalysis / psychodynamic – Developmental psychology – Cognitive psychology –

Behavior of Andrea Yates (p. 9)

Page 37: What is Psychology?

Set 6

Biological / Neuroscience – Behaviorism – Humanistic psychology – Evolutionary psychology – Psychodynamic psychology – Developmental psychology – Cognitive psychology –

Behavior of Andrea Yates (p. 9)