Wundt and origins of psychology (approaches)

    Cards (22)

    • Wundt
      the first person to call himself a psychologist believed that all aspects of the human mind could be studied scientifically
    • father of psychology
      he only studied aspects of behaviour that could be studied in strictly controlled experimental conditions
    • structuralism
      behaviour/consciousness could be broken down to its basic elements to see how they interact and examine them
    • first ever lab
      Wundt set up first ever lab in Leipzig Germany 1879, utilised scientific methods to study the human mind and behaviour.
    • its own science
      wanted to separate psychology from philosophy and biology make it unique and it's own scientific discipline
    • introspection
      • conscious examination of conscious experience
      • self-observation of your own thoughts and feelings
      • highly controlled, systematic and standardised
    • features of introspection
      • in the present moment not a reflection of the past
      • presented with stimulus
      • inspect own thoughts
      • conclusion
    • example of introspection
      • metronome/light ('looking into light')
      • report back emotions and sensations
      • compare all responses to see similarities and differences
      • to standardise e.g same colour, brightness of light
    • controlled and standardised procedures 

      • always able to repeat the experiment using the same conditions to check reliability, and compare results
      • able to present as legitimate science
    • advancements
      without his study of internal mental processes there would be no advancement in cognitive psychology
    • reductionism to structuralism 

      Wundt believed in reductionism
      • theoretical perspective involves describing the structures that compose the mind
    • limitation
      responses can be biased due to self-report, pps will sensor or change demand characteristics to come off better
    • influenced investigative methods
      • FALSIFIABILITY - possibility a statement can be proved wrong
      • OBJECTIVITY - measurement is not affected by researched bias
      • REPLICABILITY - ability to reproduce procedure
      • EMPIRICAL METHODS - using observation/testing to gain knowledge
    • experimental reductionism
      when a complex behaviour is reduced to a single (isolated) variable for the purpose of testing
    • Introspection
      Study of conscious experience through subjective reports
    • emergence behaviourists early 1900s
      early rejection of introspection
      • Watson said introspection is subjective ad influenced by personal perspective
      • according to them we should only study phenomena that can be observed
    • 1930s behaviourist dominated

      • skinner brought the language and the rigour of natural science into psychology
      • focus on learning and the use of carefully controlled labs
    • 1950s cognitive approach
      • studied mental processes scientifically
      • likened the mind to a computer
      • tested their predictions about memory and attention using experiments
    • 1980s biological approach
      • introduced technical advancements
      • took advantage of recent advances in technology
      • including recording brain activity using scanning techniques and advanced genetic research
    • evaluation: scientific methods
      • recorded introspections within a controlled lab environment
      • standardised his procedures so all pps received the same info and tested in the same way
      • therefore, Wundts research can be considered a forerunner to the later scientific approaches
    • evaluation: pioneering
      • Wundts work was pioneering in influencing the future course of psychology
      • he produced the first academic journal for research and wrote the first textbook. as well as changing the direction away from philosophy
      • therefore it can be claimed that Wundt has made a significant contribution to the subject of psychology and paved the way for future areas
    • evaluation: subjective
      • potential issue, some responses could be potentially bias due to a self report, pps may use demand characteristics
      • due to this, may be difficult to construct 'laws of behaviour' which can be widely applied due to bias data
      • therefore, his work falls short of modern scientific principles and cannot be the only theory to explain the approaches