Origins of Psychology

    Cards (14)

    • Introspection
      A method of self-observation in which participants report their thoughts and feelings
    • Science
      An organized way of gathering and analysing evidence about the natural world.
    • Wundt's Lab
      The first ever lab created dedicated to psychology study was opened by Wundt in 1879.
    • Standardised procedures
      A set of procedures that are the same for all participants in order to be able to repeat the study.
    • Structuralism
      An early school of psychology that used introspection to explore the elemental structure of the human mind.
    • Wilhelm Wundt
      German physiologist who founded psychology as a formal science; opened first psychology research laboratory in 1879.
    • Psychoanalysis
      A method of studying how the mind works and treating mental disorders.
    • 1900s Behaviourists

      - Questioned value of introspection as it produced subjective data so it was difficult to establish general laws.
      - Proposed that a truly scientific psychology should only study phenomena which can be objectively observed and measured.
      - Focused on behaviours they could see and used carefully controlled experiments.
    • 1950s Cognitive Approach
      Made the study of mind legitimate and scientific, experiments tested the computer metaphor (e.g. multi-store model).
    • 1980s Biological approach
      - Observable behaviours studied, using controlled measures e.g. fMRI.
      - Also genetic testing studies relationship between genes and behaviour.
    • Strength of Wundt and Introspection
      Scientific
      - All introspections were recorded in the controlled environment of a lab, ensuring that possible extraneous variables were not a factor.
      - Procedures and instructions were carefully standardised so that all participants received the same information and were tested in the same way.
    • Limitation of Wundt and Introspection
      Subjective data
      - Relied on participants self-reporting their mental processes.
    • Strength of the emergence of psychology as a science
      Modern psychology
      - Psychology has the same aims as the natural sciences - to describe, understand, predict and control behaviour.
    • Limitation of the emergence of psychology as a science
      Subjective data
      - The subject of study (human beings) are active participants in research, responding for example to demand characteristics.