comparison

Cards (5)

  • Real world application
    • Behaviourism - Token economy
    • Social learning theory - how children learn
    • Cognitive approach - Treatment of depression, AI, robots, improving eyewitness testimony
    • Biological approach - Treating OCD with drugs
    • Psychodynamic approach- Psyhcotherapy
    • Humanistic approach - Rogerian therapy and Malsow's hierarchy of needs to explain motivation
  • Well controlled research
    • Behaviourism - lab studies
    • Social learning theory - lab studies
    • Cognitive approach - lab studies
    • Biological approach - precise and objective methods like scanning techniques
  • Nature v nurture
    • Behaviourism - Nurture as babies are 'blank slates' and learn through reinforcements
    • Social learning theory - Nurture as slt believes we learn through observation and imitation
    • Cognitive - Both as schema is innate but develops through experience
    • Biological - Both due to genotype and phenotype
    • Psychodynamic - Both as behaviour is driven by instincts but also parents relationship is key
    • Humanistic - Nurture as society has impact on a person's self-concept
  • Reductionism
    • Behaviourist - behaviour is broken into stimulus and response
    • Social learning theory - recognises cognitive factors interact with envronment
    • Cognitive approach - computer analogy ignores important roles like emotion
    • Biological - explains behaviour at level of the gene or neuron
    • Psychodynamic - reduces behaviour to biological drives
  • Determinism
    • Behaviourism - environmentally determined by external forces
    • Social learning theory - Influenced by environment
    • Cognitive - choosers of our behaviour but only within the limits of what we know (soft determinism)
    • Biological - behaviour is directed by innate influences (genetic determinism)
    • Psychodynamic - unconscious forces drive our behaviour (psychic determinism) which are rationalised by our conscious minds.
    • Humanistic - human beings have free will and are active agents who determine their own development.