Approaches

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  • Science
    The systematic study of the physical and natural world through observation and experiment
  • Psychology
    The scientific study of the human mind and its functions, especially those functions affecting behaviour in a given context
  • Early influences on Psychology

    • Rene Descartes and Cartesian dualism
    • John Locke and empiricism
    • Charles Darwin and the notion of behaviour evolving
  • Wilhelm Wundt
    • Published the first book on psychology 'Principles of Physiological Psychology'
    • Opened the first psychology laboratory in Leipzig, Germany
    • Considered the 'father of psychology'
    • Separated psychology from philosophy
    • Promoted the use of introspection to study the structure of the human mind (structuralism)
    • Studied reaction time, sensation and perception
  • Introspection
    Looking into and observing one's own conscious thoughts or emotions
  • Wundt's use of introspection

    1. Strictly controlled the environments
    2. Controlled the stimuli and tasks
    3. Limited the range of responses
    4. Trained participants to give detailed observations
  • Wundt established psychology as a science by using the scientific method
  • Wundt's ideas would lead to multiple different psychological perspectives
  • Introspection involves reporting present experience
  • Introspection aims to document and describe the nature of human consciousness
  • Wundt and his co-workers recorded their own conscious thoughts with the aim of breaking these down into their constituent parts (structuralism)
  • Wundt's role in the development of Psychology

    • What he is known as: 'the father of psychology'
    • Contribution: Separated psychology from philosophy, promoted the use of introspection to study the structure of the human mind
    • Feature demonstrating Psychology as a Science: Used the scientific method
  • Strengths of Wundt's approach and introspection

    • Methods were systematic and well-controlled
    • Standardised procedures
    • Forerunner to later scientific approaches
  • Limitations of Wundt's approach and introspection

    • Self-reporting mental processes - subjective data
    • Thoughts can be hidden
    • Difficult to establish general laws of behaviour
  • Emergence of different approaches in Psychology

    • Behaviourism (1900s)
    • Cognitive approach (1960s)
    • Biological approach (1980s)
  • Goals of Psychology

    • Description - tells us "what" occurred
    • Explanation - tells us "why" a behaviour or mental process occurred
    • Prediction - identifies conditions for future behaviour/mental process
    • Change - applies psychological knowledge to prevent unwanted behaviour and bring about desired change
  • Different approaches/perspectives in Psychology

    • Biological approach
    • Learning approach (Behaviourist and Social Learning Theory)
    • Cognitive approach
    • Psychodynamic approach
    • Humanistic approach
  • Assumptions
    Suppositions that something is a fact, which underpin each psychological approach
  • Evaluation of Psychology as a Science

    • Modern Psychology can claim to be scientific: same aim as natural sciences, Behaviourism/Cognitive/Biological rely on scientific methods, subject has established itself as a scientific discipline
    • Not all approaches use scientific methods: Humanistic rejects scientific methods, Psychodynamic uses unrepresentative case studies, human beings are active within the research and can be affected by the situation
  • Psychology has emerged as a science through the development of different approaches over time, from early philosophical roots to the biological approach
  • Behaviourist approach

    • Interested in studying behaviour which can be observed & measured, not concerned with investigated mental processes of the mind
    • Relies on lab experiments in order to maintain control and objectivity
    • Suggested basic processes which govern learning are the same in all species
  • Classical conditioning

    Learning occurs through association
  • Unconditioned stimulus (UCS)
    Stimulus which automatically triggers a response
  • Unconditioned response (UCR)

    Unlearned response that occurs naturally in reaction to the unconditioned stimulus
  • Neutral stimulus (NS)

    Something that does not produce a specific reaction
  • Conditioned stimulus (CS)

    Previously neutral stimulus that, after becoming associated with the unconditioned stimulus
  • Conditioned response (CR)

    Learned response to the conditioned stimulus
  • Classical conditioning

    1. Neutral stimulus paired with unconditioned stimulus
    2. Neutral stimulus becomes conditioned stimulus
    3. Conditioned stimulus triggers conditioned response
  • Classical conditioning

    • Spontaneous recovery
    • Extinction
    • Stimulus generalisation
  • Problems with the Little Albert study
  • Operant conditioning

    Learning in which behaviour is shaped and maintained by its consequences
  • Positive reinforcement
    Receiving a reward when a behaviour is performed
  • Negative reinforcement
    Avoiding something unpleasant which increases the desired behaviour
  • Positive punishment
    Adding an undesirable stimulus to decrease a behavior
  • Negative punishment
    Removal of a desired stimulus to decrease a behaviour
  • Positive reinforcement
    • Jerome cleans his room, he gets a toy
  • Negative reinforcement

    • Fastening seatbelt to avoid hearing beep sound
  • Positive punishment

    • Giving a student a detention for texting in class
  • Negative punishment

    • Jerome misbehaved, so his parents took away his favourite toy
  • Skinner's operant conditioning chamber

    • Designed to teach rats how to push a lever
    • Positive reinforcement - rat awarded food for pressing lever
    • Negative reinforcement - rat able to turn off electric shocks by pressing lever