What is psychology and what do psychologists study?

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Psychology

• the scientific study of the mind, behavior, and the relationship between them. Looks at how people think, learn, feel, act, and understand themselves

The Roots of Psychology

The dialectical evolution

of ideas: why do we look

at the past?

The Dialectic• often people propose and strongly believe

in one theory or point of view for a while until a contrasting view comes to light

• then the most attractive or reasonable elements in each are melded into a new view which gains acceptance.

• This new theory serves as a springboard for anew angle to the dialectic

•Based on the idea of a critical tradition: an established pattern of permitting current beliefs to be challenged by alternate, new, radical ideas which then lead to new ideas.

Ancient classical Greece

and Rome (600-300 BC)

•Hippocrates, Plato, Aristotle

•Born out of the roots of two approaches to human behavior

Philosophy

•exploring and understanding

the general nature of aspects

of the world through

introspection-the self-

examination of inner ideas

and experiences.

Physiology

• the scientific study of living

organisms and their functions

and processes

The early Christian era (200-450

AD) and the Middle Ages (400-1300

AD)

•Basis of philosophical

discourse became God and

Christian doctrine

•Empirical demonstrations and

rational arguments were not

considered permissible if they

contradicted Christian doctrine

•Main Christian philosophers of

the time believed

introspection and prayer were

more important than

observation

The Renaissance (1300-1600 AD)

•Critical thought and empiricism

were reborn in the renaissance

•Scientific study became the only

important foundation for study

of philosophy

•Sir Francis Bacon

The beginnings of the

modern period

(1600-1850 AD)

Psychological perspectives:

the 1850s and beyond

•The merging of philosophy and physiology into modern psychology (1850-1900): by the 1800s, psychology is moving away from both philosophy and physiology

•The diverging perspectives of modern psychology: most perspectives built on or reacted to the perspectives that came before

Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920))

•First modern psychological

experiment

Structuralism (Titchener)•1st major school of psych. •Wanted to understand the “Structure” of the mind. “What are the structures of the human mind?” Saw people as passive in analyzing incoming sensations

•Used introspection

Functionalism

(William James)

•First American school of psych

•Asked the question “what do

people do and why do they do

it?”

•Looked at adaptive thinking

and behavior

Sought to understand the

relationships between specific

earlier stimulus events

(things that prompt action)

and specific subsequent

response behaviors (actions

linked to the stimulus)

Twentieth Century

perspectives on

psychology

Each perspective assumes a different root cause of human behavior – see summary chart on page 9

Behaviorism

•only interested in observable human behavior, not human emotions

•Focuses entirely on the association between an observed stimulus and an observed response

Significant Behaviorists:

John Watson (1878-1958): US

• Used animal rather than human

experimentation subjects

•Believed a stimulus-response

relationship could be controlled

and established

Significant Behaviorists:

B.F. Skinner

•Operant conditioning/

reinforcement/

experimentation

The Cognitive Perspective• the study of how people learn,

structure, store, and use knowledge

• Believe that if we first understand how people think, we will then better understand why they behave the way they do

Biological Psychology /

Neuroscience•Assumes a mind-body link

•tries to understand biological impacts on human behavior

•Looks at specific brain regions and biochemicals as responsible for various behaviors

Social-Cultural

•How do thinking and behavior vary across cultures?

•How is our thinking and behavior affected by our culture?

Evolutionary psychology•Our behavior is adaptive – how does evolution influence our behavior?

•Behavioral genetics: how much are certain traits influence by our genes? How much are they influenced by our environment?

Psychodynamic Psychology

• AKA Psychoanalytic

• Founded by Freud

• How do subconscious desires, motivations and conflicts influence our behavior?

Behavioral Genetics Perspective

• How much are our traits and behavior influenced by our genetics?

• What traits and behaviors are more influenced by our environment?

Humanistic Psychology• Not in the text – but you need to

know it!

• Maslow, Rogers

• Human behaviors stems from our desire to fulfill out capabilities, reach our highest potential

Biopsychosocial Approach

Chapter 1 - What is psychology and

what do psychologists study?

Psychology

• the scientific study of the mind, behavior, and the relationship between them. Looks at how people think, learn, feel, act, and understand themselves

Subfields of Psychology

• Basic Research – add to knowledge base

• Applied Research – look at solving practical problems

• Counseling – help people cope with problems

• Clinical – assess and treat mental disorders

• Psychiatrists – may prescribe meds to treat disorders

What is applied psychology?

Kenneth Clark and the Brown vs. Board of Ed decision

Careers in Psychology

Be sure to review Appendix A that covers careers in Psychology and the required education.

Questions psychologists ask

•How do we see ourselves?

•What prompts us to do what we do?

•How do we think?

•Why do people act the way they do?

Psychology as a natural science

and a social science

•What makes psychology

different from other sciences

that study human behavior

and different from other

nonscientific studies of human

behavior?

Social sciences:

•study of the laws of the thoughts, feelings, behaviors of humans and animals.

Natural sciences:

•study the laws of nature. Psychology looks at the genetic, physical, biological, biochemical influences on behavior

•Uses the scientific method and controlled experiments

What do we mean when we say

that psychology is scientific?

Verifiable▫there must be some way of confirming the findings. The experiment or study must be able to be replicated

Reliability

•the same procedure produces

the same results time after

time

Validity

•the study examines and tests

what it claims to

Accurate reporting of findings

Cumulative science

•scientists build on the work of those who came before

Misconceptions about science

Science is always correct

•many scientists have been wrong, what is believed to be true at one point may later be disproved. Science is dynamic and evolving.

Science is always conducted via

an idealized method

•scientific method the way we learned it in school is very rarely used in the linear way it is described, often work in fits and starts

Science is always conducted

with perfect objectivity

•Confirmation bias: tendency

to seek to confirm rather than

refute existing beliefs

•Values affect the way

research is conducted

Science is merely a collection of

facts

•Theories-the analysis of

general principles explaining

particular events-make

science much more than just

a simple listing of facts and

figures

The goals of psychological

research and practice

1. Observe

2. Describe

3. Explain

4. Predict

5. Control

Research methods in psychology

• Descriptive Methods:▫ Naturalistic observation▫ Case studies▫ Tests, questionnaires and surveys

• Correlation Methods:▫ Use statistics to seek relationships

between data

• Causal Methods

▫ Experiments

What are the steps

scientists follow in

understanding and solving

problems?

The problem-solving cycle

• Identifying & define the problem

▫ Operational definition: describes as specifically as possible the precise elements and procedures involved in solving a specific research problem

▫ Hypothetical construct: an abstract concept that is not itself directly measurable or observable but gives rise to measurable phenomena.

Experiments

• Independent variable: aspect of the experiment that are manipulated by the experimenter while other aspects are held constant

• Dependent variable: aspect of the experiment that changes in response to changes in the independent variable

Confounding variables

• When something other than the independent variable is affecting the dependent variable

Example:

▫ When ice cream sales increase, murder and rape rates go up

▫ True, but ice cream does not cause violent crime

▫ Correlation does not equal causation

Populations, Things to Consider

• Size

• Randomness

• Volunteer Bias

•Experimental group:

▫people who are subjected to the variables

•Control group:

▫people who do not receive the treatment or are not subjected to the variable

Making Experiments Reliable and Valid

• Single & Double Blind procedures

• Placebo Effect

Figure 1.7 The Experimental Conditions in the Lang Study. The taste of vodka

cannot be discerned when vodka is mixed with tonic water. For this reason it was

possible for subjects in the Lang study on the effects of alcohol to be kept blind as to

whether or not they had actually drunk alcohol. Blind studies allow psychologists to

control for the effects of subjects’ expectations.

Identify the Components of this Study

Other things to keep in mind when

doing research…

• Hindsight Bias

• Overconfidence phenomenon

• False Consensus

Ethics in Research

• Informed Consent

• “Do no harm”

• Animals