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Summary about Introduction Psychology Chapter 104
Typology: Summaries
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Psychology: scientific study of mind, brain and behaviors Spans multiple levels of analysis Goals- understanding that causes of behavior
What makes Psychology Challenging? Actions are multiply determined (caused by many factors) Interrelated traits, influences are not independent o Makes it difficult to pinpoint cause-effect relationships Individual differences in thinking, emotion, personality etc. Mutually influence each others behavior o Reciprocal determinism: hard to know what’s causing what Culture shapes behavior o Emic: research from perspective of subject o Etic: from perspective of researcher
Naïve Realism: belief that we see the world precisely as it is, our beliefs shape our perspectives of the world
Psychology as a Science
Confirmation Bias: tendency to seek out evidence that supports out beliefs and ignore evidence that contradicts our beliefs “tunnel vision”
Belief Perseverance: tendency to stick to original beliefs even when evidence contradicts them “don’t confuse me with the facts”
Metaphysical Claims: boundaries of science Assertions about the world we cannot test Ex. God, soul, afterlife Good scientists avoid committing to definitive conclusions
Pseudoscience: science imposters
Apophenia: perceiving meaningful connections among unrelated and even random phenomena
Pareidolia: seeing meaningful images in meaningless stimuli (looking at the clouds)
Hot Hand Case Study
When player makes 2-3 shots in a row they are “on a roll” Thomas Gilovich studied the probability Discovered hot hand is an illusion
Terror Management Theory: awareness of own inevitable death leaves us with underlying sense of terror, we cope by adopting reassuring cultural world views Reassure us that our lives possess meaning Mortality salience (extent to which thoughts of death are foremost in our minds) is manipulated to study theory
Logical Fallacies: traps in thinking that can lead to mistaken conclusions, seem to make intuitive sense, types are:
Pseudoscience is obstructive to scientific progress
Natural selection: allows for better survival and reproduction rates
Behaviorism: John B Watson (1878-1958) Studying laws of learning using observable behavior and objective Stimulus-response, what goes in and what goes out, not worried about the in- between (black box psychology)- ignored the cognitive mind
Cognitivism: Piaget and Neisser (1950’s-60’s) Thinking is central to understanding behavior Interpretations and insights were crucial Cognitive neuroscience: relationship between brain function and thinking Still a thriving approach used today
Psychoanalysis: Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) Focuses on internal psychological processes; unconscious impulses, thoughts and memories Freud emphasized role of infant and childhood experiences and believed in symbolism (can be decoded to understand the mind) Contrasts behaviorism Controversial and difficult to test
Types of Psychologist: o Clinical- perform assessment, diagnosis, treat mental disorders, conduct research, work in colleges, mental health centers or private practice o Counselling- work on isolated problems (divorce, career help) o School- work with teachers, parents, children o Developmental- study how and why people change over time, research children, infants to view changes o Experimental- use research methods to study memory, language, thinking and social behaviors o Biological- examine physiological bases of behavior in animals and human o Forensic- work in prisons, jails, research eyewitness testimony or juries o Industrial/Organizational- companies and business, evaluate
Nature vs. Nurture
Evolutionary Psychology
Free-Will Determinism: to what extent are our behaviors freely selected rather than caused by factors outside of our control o Insanity defense: mental illness
Basic Research: studies how the mind works Applied Research: uses basic research to solve real world problems
Provide existence proofs: demonstrations that specific phenomenon can occur Offer insights to conduct further systematic investigations
Self Report Measures and Surveys
Pros and Cons of Self-Report Measures: Work well for observable personality traits Assume participants have enough insight, report their traits honestly Response sets: tendency to distort responses to questionnaire items o Positive impression management- make ourselves seem better o Malingering- make ourselves seem psychologically disturbed
Rating Data Halo Effect: rating of one positive characteristic ‘spill over’ to influence ratings of other positive characteristics
Correlation Design
Illusionary Correlation: perception of statistical association between two variables when none exists, we ten to pay too much attention to events and ignore non-events Lunar lunacy effect- full moon and crime
Experimental Designs
Demand Characteristics: cues that participants pick up during study that allow them to guess the researcher’s hypothesis
Ethical Issues in Psychology
Tuskegee Study USA public health services, learn the natural cause of syphilis if left untreated Subjects: 399 poor African-American men diagnosed, never informed they had syphilis and were tracked by researchers 128 died, 40 wives infected, 19 infected babies born