ISSUES AND DEBATES

    Cards (111)

    • Gender bias
      The differential treatment or representation of men and women based on stereotypes rather than real difference
    • Alpha bias
      A tendency to exaggerate differences between men and women, suggesting that there are real and enduring differences between the two sexes
    • Examples of Alpha Bias
      • Psychodynamic explanations for offending behaviour
      • Wilson's sociobiological theory of relationship formation
      • Historically, since the 1980s, schizophrenia has been diagnosed more frequently in men compared to women
    • Androcentrism
      The consequence of beta bias and occurs when all behaviour is compared according to a 'male' standard, often to the neglect or exclusion of women
    • Example of Androcentrism
      • PMS has been criticised by some as being a social construction, which trivialises female emotion, particularly anger. On the other hand, male anger is seen as a logical response to external pressures
    • Beta bias
      A tendency to ignore or minimise differences between men and women. Such theories tend to ignore questions about the lives of women, or insights derived from studies of men will apply equally well to women
    • Examples of Beta Bias
      • Early research conducted into the fight or flight response exclusively used male lab mice
      • Kohlberg's levels of moral reasoning theory was developed on the basis of studying groups of American males
    • Universality
      The aim to develop theories that apply to all people, which may include real differences. This describes any underlying characteristic of human behaviour which can be applied to all individuals, regardless of their differences
    • Bias, lack of validity and issues with reliability reduce the universality of psychological findings
    • Evaluation
      • Feminist psychology argues that difference psychology arises from biological explanations of behaviour
      • Bias in research methods
      • The laboratory experiment may also be an example of institutionalised sexism within psychology
      • Reverse alpha bias describes the development of theories that show a greater emphasis on women
      • Avoiding a beta bias
      • Assumptions need to be challenged
    • Culture
      The rules, customs, morals and ways of interacting that bind together members of a society or some other collection of people
    • Cultural bias
      The tendency to judge all cultures and individuals in terms of your own cultural assumptions. This distorts or biases your judgements
    • Cultural relativism
      The view that behaviour, morals, standards and values cannot be judged properly unless they are viewed in the context of the culture in which they originate
    • Example of Cultural Relativism
      • Milgram's study into obedience was originally conducted using 40 male American participants, but then also replicated using Spanish students and Australian students
    • Alpha bias (in cultural context)

      Cultural relativism can lead to an alpha bias, where the assumption of real differences lead psychologists to overlook universals
    • Beta bias (in cultural context)

      Cultural relativism is often discussed in the context of defining mental disorder. Behaviours that are statistically infrequent in one culture may be more frequent in another
    • Alpha and Beta Bias in Cross-Cultural Research
      • Alpha bias - the assumption that there are real and enduring differences between cultural groups
      • Beta bias - theories that minimise or ignore cultural differences, assuming that all people are the same
    • Ethnocentrism
      Seeing things from the point of view of ourselves and our social group. Evaluating other groups of people using the standards and customs of one's own culture
    • Example of Ethnocentrism
      • Ainsworth's Strange Situation is an example of cultural relativism due to suggesting that a secure attachment was only characterised by moderate separation and stranger anxiety
    • The emic-etic distinction
      Emic approach emphasises the distinction of uniqueness in every culture, etic approach seeks universal aspects of behaviour
    • Evaluation
      • Bias in research methods
      • Consequences of cultural bias
      • Not all behaviours are affected by cultural bias
      • Worldwide psychology
    • Determinism
      The belief that behaviour is controlled by external or internal factors acting upon the individual and beyond their control
    • Types of determinism
      • Biological determinism
      • Environmental determinism
      • Psychic determination
    • Biological determinism
      The view that behaviour is always caused by internal biological forces beyond our control, such as the influence of genes
    • Environmental determinism
      The belief that behaviour is caused by previous experience through classical and operant conditioning
    • Psychic determination
      Freud's theory of personality suggests that adult behaviour is determined by a mix of innate drives and early experience
    • Free will
      Each individual has the power to make choices about their behaviour, without being determined by internal or external forces beyond their control
    • Hard determinism
      The view that all behaviour can be predicted, according to the action of internal and external forces beyond our control, and so there can be no free will
    • Conscious conflicts
      Conflicts over which we have no control
    • Freud's psychosexual stages of development
      Each stage is characterised by a conflict which, if unresolved, leads to fixation in adulthood
    • Anal expulsive personalities
      Result of fixation at the anal stage
    • Humanistic approach

      Common feature is the belief in free will
    • Behaviourism
      Suggests that all behaviour is the product of classical and operant conditioning
    • Biological approach
      Sees behaviour as the product of genes and neurochemistry
    • Social learning theory
      Suggests that behaviour is the product of vicarious reinforcement and mediational processes
    • Soft determinism
      A version of determinism that allows for some element of free will and suggests that all events, including human behaviour, has a cause
    • Cognitive approach

      Suggests that individuals can reason and make decisions within the limits of their cognitive system
    • Scientific research
      Based on the belief that all events have a cause, where an independent variable is manipulated to have an effect on the dependent variable
    • 100% genetic determinism is unlikely to be found for any behaviour
    • Studies that compare monozygotic twins have found 80% similarity for intelligence and 40% for depression