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 mindscientifically
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 formingheterosexual 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/negativereinforcement 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