ideographic v nomothetic

    Cards (11)

    • ideographic - research that focuses on individual cases to understand behaviour rather than seeking to develop general laws of behaviour
    • the ideographic approach
      attempts to describe the nature of individuals rather than whole groups
      • often no attempt to compare individuals to a larger group or standard
      • associated with qualiatative research methods like case studies and unstructured interviews
    • examples of the ideographic approach
      the humanistic approach is a good example of ideographic study in psychology as rogers and maslow were both interested in individual experiences
      • the bottom-up approach to criminal profiling also has an ideographic focus as it creates individual case studies for each crime
    • nomothetic - research that attempts to establish universal rules and laws about groups of people
    • the nomothetic approach
      aims to produce general laws of human behaviour and provide a benchmark that people can be compared to
      • favours research methods that produce quantitative data like lab experiments using large sample sizes
    • examples of the nomothetic approach
      approaches criticised for reductionism and determinism like behaviourism and the biological approach often favour a nomothetic approach
      • localisation research also aims to determine universal laws surrounding the functioning of brains
    • arguement for ideographic approach
      the approach provides a complete and in-depth account of the individual, which can compliment the nomothetic approach by proving or challenging laws
      • also important in practice of psychology like the in-depth understanding of an individual to aid in the choice of treatment
    • arguement against the ideographic approach
      • the results gained are narrow and restricted, and often useless as they can't be used to aid the study of others
      • eg. oedipus complex based entirely on the case study of one individual
      • meaningful generalisations from findings can't be made without further examples
      • the methods favoured are the least scientific
    • arguement for the nomothetic approach
      the process of nomothetic research is more scientific so results are more reliable
      • allows norms to be established that give psychology greater credibility
    • arguement against the nomothetic approach
      • has been accused of 'losing the whole person' eg. knowing the risk of developing schizophrenia fails to tell us anything about living with the condition
      • in experiments participants are treated as their scores rather than individual people
      • the approach may overlook the human experience in the pursuit of generalities
    • a compromise?

      ideographic and nomothetic approaches may be useful when used in tandem, and the goal of modern psychology is now to provide both rich understanding of individuals and establish a framework of general laws