Psychodynamic approach

Cards (7)

  • What is the role of personality and defence mechanisms? (2 AO1)

    Personality broken down into: ID, superego, ego


    Defence mechanisms consist of: denial, displacement. This reduces anxiety from conflict between id & superego
  • What are the 5 psychosexual stages? (2 AO1)

    Oral, anal, phallic, latency, genital
    Unconscious conflict at each stage, must be resolved to reach next stage, if not it leads to fixations in adult personality

    E.g. phallic stage, libido energy at genitals, boys go through Oedipus complex, girls Electra
  • What is the Oedipus complex? (2 AO1)

    Boy desires his mother but hostile towards father viewing him as a rival, leading to castration anxiety

    must be resolved for superego to develop which arises from identification with same sex parent and internalises their morals
  • What is one strength of the psychodynamic approach?

    evidence to support

    Freud studies boy called little Hans who feared horses.

    Similarities were found between father and horses, e.g. muzzle= moustache, blinkers= eyes

    Suggests fear of his castration anxiety and of his father was displaced onto the horse
  • What is one limitation of the psychodynamic approach?

    Difficult to oppose

    Freud's theory is based on the unconscious in behaviour

    e.g. one study involved adults being asked to recall childhood to see conflicts at different psychosexual stages, if they couldn't remember events, it was seen as repression

    Lacks falsifiability, reduction in credibility as a science
  • What is a second strength of the psychodynamic approach?

    Real-world applications, led to development of psychoanalysis

    e.g. ink blot test, people are shown images and what they see in it represents their unconscious

    e.g. dream analysis, where people identify what their dreams represent in their unconscious

    Effectiveness reinforces claim that unconscious mind drives behaviour as it makes the unconscious conscious
  • What is a second limitation of the psychodynamic approach?

    Doesn't acknowledge the influence of conscious mental processes

    CBT is effective in treating behaviour like depression, by challenging negative thoughts & replacing them

    Suggests behaviour has a cognitive bias

    To provide more comprehensive explanation of behaviour, must consider role of conscious and unconscious as both have real-world applications