Approaches P2

    Cards (94)

    • What is introspection?
      The study of the mind by breaking up conscious awareness into a basic structure of thoughts,images and sensations
    • What did Wundt do?
      Established the first psychology laboratory and is considered the founder of modern psychology as he was the first to study the human mind scientifically
    • What's structuralism?
      Structure of the consciousness - experimental method to find the building blocks of thought
    • Advantages of Wundt's study
      All his methods were highly scientific and were done in a controlled lab with a standardised procedure
      His work was pioneering and set a foundation for other approaches
    • Disadvantages of Wundt's study
      Methods were subjective as he relied on pps to self report their mental processes and hard to establish meaningful 'laws of behavior' and general principles
    • Role of the unconscious mind
      Determines a person's behavior
    • Role of the conscious
      Involves our conscious awareness
    • Role of the pre-conscious
      Anything that can be brought to the conscious mind
    • Role of the sub-conscious
      Things outside our awareness that are considered unacceptable or unpleasant
    • Role of ID in the structure of personality
      Present at birth and is our pleasure principle seething mass of the unconscious drive and instincts
    • Role of the super ego in the structure of personality
      Develops after the phallic stage (age 5) and is our conscience and moral standards (right + wrong)
    • Role of the ego in the structure of personality
      Reality principle between the ID and super ego as it reduces conflict and does this by using defence mechanisms
    • What is repression?
      Used by the ego to force a distressing memory out of the conscious mind
    • What is denial?
      Refusing to acknowledge some aspect of reality or denying that an event occured
    • What is displacement?
      An unconscious process by transferring feelings from the true source of distressing emotion onto an easier or substitute target
    • Explain the psycho sexual stages
      Five stages of child development and each stage is a different conflict the child must resolve to move on
    • What is a fixation?
      If a conflict isn't resolved at a stage, it will led to certain behaviours and conflicts in adult life
    • Explain stage one of the psycho sexual stages
      Oral stage between 0-1 years - focus of pleasure is the mouth and sucking and the fixation could be smoking, biting nails, overreacting and sarcasm
    • Explain stage two of the psycho sexual stages
      Anal stage between 1-3 years - focus of pleasure involves membranes in the anal region and
      Fixation - if retentive, you'll be a perfectionist + obsessive and if expulsive you'll be thoughtless and messy
    • Explain stage three of the psycho sexual stages
      Phallic stage between 3-6 years - focus of pleasure involves the genital area and fixation involves masturbation, narcissistic and reckless.
    • Explain stage four of the psycho sexual stages
      Latency stage between 6-12 years - Any earlier conflicts from the previous stages will be repressed
    • Explain stage five of the psycho sexual stages
      Genital stage is 12 + onwards -sexual desires become conscious alongside the onset of puberty and fixation involves difficulty forming heterosexual relationships and sexual previsions may develop
    • Explain the Oedipus complex
      Freud claimed boys in the phallic stage develop feelings for their mum and hatred for their dads over a rival of love. These feelings will be repressed and instead identify with their dad taking on his gender role and moral rights
    • Explain the Electra complex
      Freud believed young girls experienced penis envy by hating their mum but desiring their dad as they wanted a penis. They would eventually give up on this desire and replace it with a desire to have a baby.
    • Explain the strengths of the psycho dynamic approach
      • His psychoanalysis was the first attempt to treat mental disorders psychologically rather then physically
      • Found ways to explain certain human behaviours
    • Explain the weaknesses of the psycho dynamic approach
      • He ignored female sexuality and how it may differ from men (gender bias)
      • His work isn't scientific or falsifiable as his opponents claimed you can't test the unconscious mind
    • What is behaviorism?
      Psychological approach that focuses on observable behavior and the role of conditioning in shaping behavior.
    • Name the two types of conditioning
      Classical and Operant
    • What is classical conditioning?
      Learning through association and occurs when two stimuli are repeatedly paired together. Only occurs with involuntary behavior + fears
    • How did Pavlov demonstrate classical conditioning?
      Through experiments with dogs, Pavlov demonstrated classical conditioning by pairing a neutral stimulus (a bell) with a unconditioned stimulus (food) which created a unconditioned response (salivation). Eventually this led to the neutral stimulus eliciting a conditioned response (such as salivation) on its own.
    • How does timing effect classical conditioning?
      If the neutral stimulus cannot be used to predict the unconditioned stimulus, conditioning doesn't take place
    • How does stimulus generalisation effect classical conditioning?
      Where the conditioned stimulus could be generalsied to other thing similar to the conditioned stimulus
    • How does extinction effect classical conditioning?
      A gradual weakening of a conditioned response
    • What does spontaneous recovery mean?
      Sudden display of behaviour that was thought to be extinct
    • What did Watson and Rayner's experiment (1920s) do?
      They applied classical conditioning to humans and made an 11 month old baby (Albert) develop a fear of white rats as well as other white, fluffy things.
    • Explain the stimulus and responses of little Albert.
      Ns - White rat UCS - Loud noise UCR - Crying
      CS - White rat CR - Crying
    • What's operant conditioning?
      Learning through consequences as behaviour is shaped + maintained by positive/negative reinforcement and punishment
    • Explain Skinner's box experiment
      If a rat pushes down a lever, a green light shows and it will get a treat and he also conditioned rats to press to the lever to avoid an electric shock.
    • Difference between reinforcement and punishment
      Reinforcement ensures a behaviour is more likely to happen again and punishment ensures a behaviour is less likely to happen again
    • What's positive reinforcement?
      Adding a reward to reinforce the behaviour to happen again
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