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Psychology
Approaches YR12
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Created by
Jake Hughes
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Cards (68)
How did Wundt study the human mind?
through
Introspection
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What does Introspection mean?
Analysing
your own
thoughts
and feelings internally
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what is a strength of Introspection?
viewed as a
'forerunner'
for
cognitive
approach ( he was first to apply
empirical
methods to
internal
mental processes)
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What is a weakness to Wundts
introspection
?
It requires
interpretation
of
unobservable
matter (not
reliable
)
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What does the behaviourist approach believe?
1. All behaviour is
learned
2. Tabula-rasa (
blank slate
)
3. no
free will
4. should study behaviours
scientifically
5.
environment
shapes behaviour
6. only study
observable
behaviours
7. can study
animals
(similar to humans)
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what does classical conditioning mean?
learning through a
stimulus response to
associations
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What did pavlov study?
Dogs
salivation
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What are the key terms associated with CS?
1.
UCR
2.
UCS
3.
NS
4.
CS
5.
CR
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What happened to the dog before conditioning?
Food
—
salivation
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What happened to the dog during conditioning?
Food
+
bell
—
salivation
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what happened to the dog after conditioning?
Bell
—
salivation
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what does generalisation mean?
a
similar
stimuli to the original
conditioned
stimulus produces the
conditioned
response
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what does discrimination mean?
When
similar
stimuli to the
CS
does not produce
CR
because it is too
different
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What does operant
conditioning
focus on?
behaviours and the
consequences
that shape the behaviours
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what does reinforcement mean?
Behaviour is more likely to be
repeated
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What does positive reinforcement mean?
something
good
is given to make the behaviour more likely to be
repeated
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what negative reinforcement?
something
unwanted
taken away to make behaviour more likely to be
repeated
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what is meant by punishment ?
when a behaviour is
less
likely to be
repeated
as a result of an
action
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what is a Strength of behaviourist approach?
scientific methods -
classical
and operant conditioning focus on
observable
methods
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What is weakness of the behaviourist approach?
Ethical
issues -
controlling
and
manipulating
human behaviour (power could be
abused
over people)
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what does the social learning theory suggest?
There is a
stimulus
—
response
link (something happens between)
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what do theorists refer to the 'something ' as?
Mediational cognitive
process
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what does imitation mean?
'copying'
behaviours - rarely
exactly
the same
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what does
modelling
mean?
A demonstration of a behaviour that will later be
imitated
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what does identification mean?
characteristics that people feel are
similar
to
role
model ( more likely to
imitate
)
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what is vicarious reinforcement?
Imitating
a behaviour because the role model has received a
reward
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What does ARRM stand for ?
Attention
,
Retention
,
Reproduction
,
motivation
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what does attention mean?
when a person is paying
attention
to a
role
model to
imitate
it
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what does retention mean?
a person must
remember
what they've
seen
so they can
imitate
them in the
future
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what does reproduction mean?
A person attempts to
recreate
a behaviour
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What does motivation mean?
a person will be
motivated
to imitate a behaviour if the role model has been
rewarded
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Who studied social learning theory?
Bandies
-
Bobo
dolls
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what age did bandura study?
3-5
years old
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How did they do this?
adults with
bobo
doll ( children watch) - beat doll for
ten
mins to see what children do
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what are the 3 conditions of this experiment?
1. child see adult getting
praise
for behaviour
2. child sees adult being
punished
for behaviour
3.
control
group- don't see anything happen to adult
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what were the results of the experiment?
when given their own
bobo
doll , children in
C1
were most aggressive, followed by those in
C3
and
C2
were least aggressive.
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what is a strength of the social learning theory?
It uses
scientific
methods methods —
bandura
used
controlled
observation
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what are the 4 key assumptions of the biological approach?
1.
Evolution
plays a role in explaining behaviours
2.
genetic
basis when explaining behaviours
3.
Anatomy
of
brain
influences behaviour
4. behaviour can be impacted by chemical messengers (
neurotransmitters
)
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what is meant by environment of evolutionary
adaption
?
Period of
time
where changes occur, specific to
species
SURVIVAL OF THE
FITTEST
and SEXUAL
SELECTION
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what are genes?
genes carry
instructions
for a particular
characteristic
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