Approaches

Cards (51)

  • Origins of Psychology
    • Early influences - Rene Descartes
    • Concept of cartesian dualism - mind and brain are independent from each other
    • Argued the mind could be an object of study in its own right
    • Also reinforced science as a "study of measurable quantities"
    • Not based on beliefs, based on clear measurements
    • John Locke
    • Empiricism - all experience and knowledge can be obtained through the senses
  • The learning approach
  • The behaviourist approach
    Main assumptions
    • Only behaviour that can be observed and measured objectively should be studied
    • Basic processes of learning occur in all species
    • All behaviour is learnt through the environment
  • Operant conditioning

    • B.F. Skinner
    • Learning through the consequences of our behaviour
    • Positive reinforcement - presenting individual with a reward for displaying a behaviour (strengthening behaviour)
    • Negative reinforcement - avoiding something unpleasant (strengthens behaviour as you avoid consequences)
    • Punishment - unpleasant consequence of a behaviour (decreasing likelihood of a certain behaviour)
  • Operant conditioning
    Supporting research
    • Skinner
    • Experiment on rats
    • Rat presses lever, receives food pellet - increases behaviour
    • Rat pressed lever, receives electric shock - decreases behaviour
    • Rat pressed lever, avoids electric shock - increases behaviour
    Evaluation
    • Real-life application - parents and children, schools, workplaces
    • Unethical
    • Generalisation to humans is poor
    • Control over extraneous variables
  • Classical conditioning
    • Pavlov
    • One of the simplest forms of learning
    • Repeatedly pair 2 stimuli together to produce a new learned response (learning through association)
    • Neutral stimulus - stimulus that produces no response pre-conditioning (bell)
    • Unconditioned stimulus - stimulus that naturally elicits a response (food)
    • Unconditioned response - response will occur naturally with the unconditioned stimulus (salivation)
    • Conditioned stimulus - previously neutral stimulus, after conditioning, produced conditioned response (salivation)
    • Pavlov had conditioned the bell to elicit salivation
  • Classical conditioning
    Real-life application
    • Fire alarms - associated with leaving a building
    • Christmas adverts - associated with happiness
  • Behaviourist approach
    Evaluation
    • Much of the research was carried out on animals
    • Pavlov used evidence from dogs to demonstrate classical conditioning
    • Animals and humans have different biological makeup and humans arguably have a much more complicated thought process
    • Unable to apply the approaches' conclusions about learning behaviour
    • Shows poor generalisability
  • Social learning theory
    • Learn through observing and imitating role models (modelling)
    • Vicarious reinforcement (opposite to direct reinforcement)
  • Vicarious reinforcement
    • A learner sees a model rewarded for their actions
    • They copy their actions to get the same reward
    • Vicarious punishment is the opposite
  • Direct reinforcement
    If the individual is rewarded for a certain behaviour, they are more likely to repeat it
  • Identification
    Observer wishes to be like a role model, or sees themselves as similar
  • Factors increasing modelling
    • Same gender
    • Similar age
    • Powerful or high status
    • Friendly or likeable
  • Factors increasing modelling
    Cognitive elements
    • Bandura
    • 4 mediational processes
    • Attention - noticing a certain behaviour
    • Retention - how well it's remembered
    • Reproduction - ability to perform it
    • Motivation - whether it was rewarded or punished
    • ARRM
  • The cognitive approach
    • Humans do not passively respond to their environment
    • Our minds actively organise and manipulate information we receive in important ways
    • Our behaviour is determined by the way we process information taken in from our environment
  • Assumption 1
    • Mental processes lie between stimulus and response - studied scientifically
    • Study of mental processes - information received from senses and how we process it affects behaviour
    • Should be studied using lab experiments: perception, attention, memory, language, thinking
    • Psychologists study them indirectly, making inferences about what is going on in someone's mind based on their behaviour
  • Inference
    • Drawing conclusions from evidence and using reasoning to assume how something works
    • e.g. in memory experiments, people can recall about 7 words from a list, so we infer that our STM is about 7 items
  • 5 mental processes
    • Perception - taking in and making sense of information from our surroundings
    • Attention - focusing on particular sources of information rather than others, maintaining the focus over time
    • Memory - retaining and recalling information
    • Language - mental symbols to represent information in the mind, helping communication
    • Thinking - manipulating information to reason, solve problems, make decisions and judgements
  • Assumption 2
    Humans use schemas to process information from the environment
  • Schemas
    • Mental structures that represent an aspect of the world, such as an object or event
    • Babies are born with simple schemas but as we grow they become more sophisticated
    • Unique to an individual, develop from experience
    • Tells us how to behave in certain situations
    • Mental processes work together to process the world around us
    • We pay attention and search our memory to see if it matches an existing schema, then name it using our language
    • Schemas can influence key mental processes
    • More likely to remember information that fits with schemas
    • May cause us to develop stereotypes
  • Assumption 3
    • Theoretical models can be used to explain unobservable cognitive processes and behaviours
    • Models adopt a series of stages and explain a mental process
    • Usually a flow diagram
    • Theoretical models are good because certain stages can be tested individually through making inferences
    • Inferences are not always correct but models can be altered if evidence doesn't fit
  • Information processing model
    • Input - Rob sees an old lady struggling to reach biscuits on the top shelf (input from the senses)
    • Processing - he interprets that information as her needing help (making sense of information)
    • Output - he asks the lady if she wants to get him the biscuits (behaviour is shown)
  • Assumption 4
    • Humans process information in a similar way to computers
    • Compares how we take information in from our senses, store it or change it, then behave a certain way
    • Studied by using a computer to construct programs that mimic how the processes are working
  • The computer analogy
    • Hardware would be the brain
    • Software would be the internal mental processes
  • Cognitive neuroscience
    • Involves non-invasive brain scans - fMRI, EEG, PET
    • Comparing "normal" brains to those who have brain damage
    • Do a task during the scan to see which part of the brain is active
    • Enables inferences to be made
  • Practical uses of cognitive neuroscience
    • Locate different types of memory (treatment for memory problems)
    • Study mental processing of patients with depression or OCD
    • Study the effects of normal aging on the brain
    • Use computer simulations to test hypotheses about mental processes
    • Eye-tracking/motion-tracking to study visual word processing
  • The biological approach
    Main assumptions
    • Mind lives in the brain, so all thoughts and feelings have a physical basis (different to cognitive approach which sees them as separate)
    • Everything psychological is firstly biological, so we need to look at genes, biological structures and neurochemistry
  • Twin studies
  • Assumption 1
    • Genetic basis of behaviour
    • To investigate whether genes affect behaviour, psychologists often study twins
    • Identical twins share 100% of genes, non-identical share 50%
    • If we compare them, it gives an indication of how much behaviour may be genetic
    • Concordance rates - the extent to which both twins share the same characteristic
    • A limitation is the environment they are brought up in - different/same household
  • Assumption 2
    • The influence of genes on behaviour
    • Genotype - genetic makeup of an individual. Unique to you apart from identical twins
    • Phenotype - genotype is mixed with environmental influences. How behaviours and traits become expressed
  • PKU
    • Genotype -> PKU gene
    • Phenotype -> genotype + environment
    • PKU + diet -> brain damage / no brain damage
  • Assumption 3
    • Behaviour is influenced by neurochemistry
    • Varying levels of chemicals are thought to contribute to behaviour
  • Hormones
    • Testosterone - too much leads to risk-taking or aggression
    • Adrenaline - prepares us for stress by triggering fight-or-flight
    • High dopamine - schizophrenia
    • Low serotonin - OCD
  • Assumption 4
    • Evolution and behaviour
    • Charles Darwin theory of natural selection (19th Century)
    • Any genetically determined behaviour that enhances survival is carried to next generations
  • The biological approach
    Evaluation
    • Limitation - relies on twin studies
    • A shared environment means they're also brought up the exact same way so behaviour may not differentiate
    • Strength - precise scientific methods
    • Control of variables - high internal validity, increasing reliability
    • Strength - practical applications
    • Led to drug treatments allowing QOL for many people to improve, showing external validity
  • The psychodynamic approach
    • Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) - one of the most controversial psychological theorists, first to study workings of the unconscious mind
    • "Unconscious" mind influences a large part of behaviour
    • Events in childhood have a great influence on adult life
    • Events in childhood can remain in the unconscious and cause problems as adults
    • Stresses importance of relationships, especially in family
  • Assumption 1
    • Role of the unconscious mind
    • Conscious mind - aware of this part (tip of the iceberg)
    • Most of our mind is unconscious - instincts that affect behaviour and personality. Also contains disturbing memories that have been repressed
    • Under the surface of the conscious is the preconscious, ideas we become aware of during dreams, Freudian slips
  • Assumption 2
    • Structure of personality
    • ID - operates on the pleasure principle, behaves based on getting what it wants (e.g. babies crying for food)
    • Ego - mediator of ID and superego, middle ground used to reduce conflict by using defence mechanisms
    • Superego - operates on the morality principle, what is right and wrong (e.g. shouldn't have that slice of cake)
  • Assumption 3
    • Psychosexual stages
    • Children go through 5 stages of development
    • Each stage is a different conflict the child must solve to move onto the next successfully
    • If they receive too much/too little pleasure at a stage, they become fixated - fail to pass successfully
    • Experience is repressed into the unconscious and affects adult personality
    • Severe fixation can lead to a psychological disorder
  • Psychosexual stages
    Oral
    • Birth - 1 year
    • Mouth
    • Aggressive - chewing
    • Passive - smoking and eating
    Anal
    • 1-3 years
    • Bowel and bladder elimination
    • Retentive - organisation
    • Expulsive - disorganisation
    Phallic
    • 3-6 years
    • Genitals
    • Male - pride in sexual prowess and contempt for women
    • Female - overly flirtatious
    Latency
    • 6 - puberty
    • Dormant sexual feelings
    • Don't tend to fixate, but if they do, sexually unfulfilled
    Genital
    • Puberty onwards
    • Maturation of sexual instincts
    • Frigidity, impotence, unsatisfactory relationships