Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Psychodynamic Approach
- The assumptions
- Influence of
childhood
- the adult personality is developed in stages known as psychosexual stages, each stage
represents the libido fixating on a certain part of the body
- it can end up with the person being fixated too much on one stage. leading to long term
effects on the personality and it can occur in two ways:
- frustration: the childs needs
were not met at a stage
- over-indulgence: the child is over satisfied
so it is reluctant to move through the
stages
- the stages: oral 0-18m; anal 18m-3y; phallic 3-5y; latency 5y- puberty; genital puberty -
onwards
- oral
- mouth: sucking, chewing, swallowing and
biting
- anal
- phallic
- latency
- genital
puberty
- genitals: homosexual
intercourse
- well developed adult
personalities
- little/ no sexual
motivation
- aquiring knowlegde and understanding of the
world
- no fixations as no pleasure
focus
- genitals:
masturbation
- the odeipus complex leads to superego and gender
identity
- self assured, vain, sexuality issues,
relationship struggles
- anus: withholding, expelling, playing with faeces
- potty training
- fr: stubborn, possessive, overly tidy
- ov: messy, disorganised, reckless
- breast feeding. weaning onto solid food
sources
- fr: pessimism,
envy,
sarcasm
- ov: optimism,
gullibility,
neediness
- the unconscious mind
- 3 levels of the mind
- conscious: a logical part of the mind, and what we are aware of at
the time. the smallest of the 3 levels
- preconscious: just under the surface, can be accessed with prodding,
not as large as the unconscious but not as repressed
- unconscious: cannot be directly accessed and only expresses indirectly
e.g. dreams. governed by pleasure seeking and emotion. home of the
id, ego and superego and all their conflict. to protect from the conflict
the ego uses defence mechanisms
- each level becomes larger and larger and even harder to access. the
deeper levels can only be accessed through dreams and long-term
therapy
- defense mechanisms: there are three which when are overused can be
the cause of disturbed behavior
- displacement: transfer of impulses from one person or object to
another
- projection: undesirable thoughts are attributed to someone
else
- repression: pushing painful memories deep down into out
unconscious mind so they are entirely forgotten
- the tripartite
personality
- the id: the impulsive, unconscious, part of our personality that is present
at birth. it demands satisfaction, also refered to as the pleasure principle.
the main aim of the id is to gain pleasure and gratification at any cost.
driven by the eros - the life drive and the thanatos- the death drive
- the ego: this is the conscious, rational part of the
mind that develops around the age of 2. it exists to
work out realistic ways of balancing the demands of
id and cosial acceptance. it is governed by the reality
principle
- the superego: this is the last part of our personality to
develop, forming around the age of 4. it embodies the child's
sense of right and wrong as well as his or her ideal self. the
supergeo seeks to perfect and civilise our behaviour.
learnerd through identification with one's parents and
others.
- Relationship Formation
- childhood experiences
- Childhood experiences, psychodynamic development, influence future
relationships.
- Each stage and fixations involved will affect a person’s adult relationships in different ways:
- Overindulgence in the oral stage may lead to clingy/ needy
partners
- If the phallic stage is not passed it may lead to not being able to
love
- If the Oedipus complex is not resolved it will lead to
homosexuality.
- defence
mechanisms
- Forming relationships in adulthood can bring up unpleasant emotions from the past. May use ego defences to help them avoid
anxiety.
- Freud spoke about the mechanisms and how they affect a person’s behaviour including in relationships.
- For example, a person in denial about their sexuality might try to form relationships with
those not in line with their true feelings, resulting in dysfunctional relationships which break
down.
- Those who are dishonest in a relationship (i.e. having an affair) may deal with their
guilt through rationalisation such as ‘they deserve it as they don’t pay me
attention’.
- defence mechanisms affect our overall personality and inevitably the relationships
formed
- Bowlby formed the view that early unhealthy experiences shaped the behaviour of some
children
- some of the theives he studied had formed an affectionless character and that most of these children had experienced prolonged separation from their mothers at a young
age
- developed the maternal deprivation hypothesis, the view that the ability to form meaningful social relationships in adulthood was dependant on a close and continiour relationship with the mother or the
mother-figure.
- first 2 and 1/2 years are most important but up to the age of 5 there is a continuing sensitivity and need for the
relationship
- acts as a prototype for all future relationships and its disruption would impair the person's ability to relate to
others
- The Contemporary Debate
- Mother should be the primary care
giver
- feeding
- nhs recommends that infants should be breatsfed for
the first 6 months at least if possible.
- protects child from numerous
infections and diseases
- allows a physical and emotional bond to form; important for emotional
development
- mother is only person who can feed child; limits other caregivers abilitities maiing the mother the
primary
- recommended feed is every 2 hours - hard for woman to work due to
this
- Freud's
view
- mother-infant relationahip is most
improtant
- help to satisfy the initial oral stage of psychosexual
development
- satisfy
libido
- separation
anxiety
- mother's love acts as a prototype for every relationship the infant will
form
- deprivation
damage
- Bowlby demonstrated that early and prolonged seperation
between a child and its mother can have lasting emotional
effects
- most likely to lead to affectionless chilldren who lack a sense of shame or
responsibility
- called it a maternal
deprivation
hypothesis
- attchment to caregivers has a special importance for survival; called
monotropy
- bowlby identified a central role for the mother in the emotional
development
- based on training as a Freudian
psychiatrist
- mothers not
fathers
- biological
factors
- oestrogen underlies caring behaviour meaning women are more orientated to emotion than
men
- social
factors
- sex-stereotypes allow women to be more sensitive then
men
- infant
cues
- evidence that men are less sensitive to infant
cues
- Heermann et al
1994
- frodi et al 1978 found there was no difference in biological responses between male and female
when a infant cried - was on video, could be a flaw
- Mother does not need to be the primary care
giver
- feeding
- food does not equal love like it was presented in the
50s
- Harry Harlow 1959 placed infant monkeys in with 2 wire
'mothers'
- one only fed - had a feeding bottle
attached
- on provided comfort - covered in soft
cloth
- spent most time on cloth covered mother - especially when frightened
- Schaffer and Emerson 1964 studied human
behaviour
- primary attachments were not formed by feeding or spending
time with the infant
- formed by carers who responded quickly
ans sensitively to their 'signals' and
offered the most interaction
- Freud's
views
- consider context - when Freud was writing women didn't even have the right to
vote
- views could just reflect on the norms and values held by
society
- did recognise the importance of the
father
- Oedipus complex - fancy dad (F) / envy dad
(M)
- father's
protection
- deprivation
damage
- bowlby did not exclusivley mean the child's mother in his maternal deprivation
hypothesis
- he uses the word mothering - allowing for
substitutions
- Bowlby et al 1956 presented research that some children show no ill effects from early
seperation
- the children in the study were ill with TB and spent years in hospitals with little family
contact
- showed few
problems in
later life
- suggests that they coped better due to better attachments to their mothers/substitutes in the first place =
resilient
- mothers not
fathers
- men are capable of forming close attachments, as is the case with single parent
famillies
- view that men are not emotional is
outdated
- men become hormonally adapted to
parenthood
- gettler et al 2011 suggests that a father's testosterone levels drop in order to help with
reponses
- Dream Analysis
- link to the
assumptions
- childhood experiences: the therapy will link current issues to the childhood experiences causing the
issues
- unconscious mind: the therapy aims to make the unconscious,
conscious
- tripartite personality: the desire of the id, which are unacceptable in society, are released to prevent
insanity
- dreams act as wish fulfillment; the id's desires and
wishes
- the unconscious must do this in order to prevent insanity by letting the id rule when it matters
least
- our dreams are not blatantly obvious in what wishes they want filled and use symbolism to show dreams indirectly.
- freud considered the context of people's lives when analysisng
dremas
- dreams are put into two types of
content
- the manifest content: what you actually dream
about
- latent content: the real meaning of the
dream
- dreamwork is where the latent content of a dream is transformed into manifest
content
- it is the therapists role to reverse the dreamwork and provide interpretations that fits the
client
- methods:
- - Condensation: dream thoughts are rich in detail and content, but these are condensed to brief
images in a dream where one dream image stands out for several associations and ideas
- - Displacement: the emotional significance of a dream object is separated from its real object or
content and attached to an entirely different one, so the dream content is not censored – allows
disturbing thoughts (e.g. angry at someone – dream that you like them)
- - Representation: a thought is translated into a visual image (e.g. turn desire into images)
- - Symbolism: a symbol replaces an action, person or idea (e.g. directly symbolises desire)
- - Secondary elaboration: the unconscious mind collects all the different images and ties them
together to form a logical story, further disguising the latent content. The actual dream material may
be supplied from recent events in a person’s waking life. (e.g. use a story to represent a desire)
- research
evidence
- Hopfield et al 1983, found that computer simulations trying to mimic the mind had to condense information when it was overloaded, this is similar to Freuds idea of condensation. (not as good as technology was weak)
- Solms 2000 used PET scans and found that when in the REM stage of sleep the rational part of the brain (ego) is inactive where the memory and motivation parts (id) is active. (tripartite support and unconscious mind is supported as memory section is
awake)
- methodological
issues
- Many studies conducted have been done on humans and animals that are sleep deprived significantly including REM. This disruption will impair biological functions and the secretion of
hormones and neurotransmitter. These can act as confounding variables which need to be interpreted with caution
- When research about dreams are conducted they are done in laboratories, it can be questioned whether the dream state is authentic as not done under normal conditions due
to environment and wired that measure electrodes. Compromises the ecological validity.
- subjective
interpretations
- Finding the meaning of the latent content relies on the subjective interpretation of the therapist. Further the dream being interpreted is a subjective report of the dreamer and may not be reliable. Dream analysis
is a highly subjective process going against scientific aims of psychology.
- therapist client
relationship
- an imbalance between patient and client. Generally, the therapy takes the expert role, offering the
patient insight into their unconscious making them reliant on the therapist to make progress
- is typical of people suffering from depression and other mental illnesses where they rely on others
in their life.
- There can also be a power imbalance in other therapies, such as systematic desensitisation, with the therapist being the authority figure it cancels out the consented
hierachy
- false memory
tests
- These false memories can come to light during psychoanalysis when the therapist claims to have
uncovered past traumatic experiences
- it is likely to succumb to the belief of the therapist as they act as the authority figure and inks to
power imbalance as what the therapist believes about the past the client does too.
- Toon et al 1996 suggested that therapists may even induce false memories to extend the length of
the therapy and gain more financial
- patients may experience much anxiety because of the ‘memories’ of events that didn’t
happen
- emotional
harm
- therapist may guide a client towards an insight or interpretation that
proves to be emotionally distressing during their session
- it is important that psychotherapists warn their clients of this danger before they engage in the therapy.
- People with mental health disorders are more vulnrable, people with things such as schizophrenia
and psychosis are more likely to have false memories due to voices and hallucinations.
- Bowlby 1944
- background:During the 1930s/40s, many children had been left orphaned or separated from parents for a long period of time. Childhood depression rose dramatically as did infant
mortality
- The study was a series of case studies. There was a control group despite it not being an experiment. The final analysis looked at association and experiences in separation. he used oppotuniyt sampling, saved on time and
money
- The focus was on the ‘thieves’ group, 44 children who attended a child guidance clinic
(for emotionally challenge pupils) in London. They were described as thieves because
stealing was one of their ‘symptoms’ but only a few children had been charged in court
however this is mainly because the others were too young to charge.
- 33 buys and 13 girls between the age of 5 and 17 and graded in terms
of the seriousness of their stealing. Grade IV thieves (22) had been
stealing for a long time, some > 3years. Grade 1 thieves had only one
theft (4); The thieves were mainly of average intelligence
- The control group was used, made of 44 children who also
attended the clinic. They were of a similar age, sex and IQ
to the thieves. Like the thieves they were emotionally
disturbed but did not steal.
- The mothers of the participants were involved, they were interviewed to assess the participant’s histories.
- Procedures: The initial examination: the sample was obtained through opportunity sampling.
- 1. On arrival at the clinic each child was given mental tests by a psychologist to assess their intelligence (Binet Scale was used) and then the psychologist also noted the emotional attitude of the children.
- 2. Whilst this was happening a social worker would interview the child’s
mother and record the preliminary details of the child’s early psychiatric
history.
- 3. The psychologist and social worker would then report to the
psychiatrist, Bowlby, who would interview both child and mother.
- 4. After the 2-hour examination the team considered school
and other reports, discussing the conclusion.
- 5. Therapy: many of the children continued to meet the psychiatrist once a week over a 6 month+ period and the mothers would talk over their problems with the social
worker. This enabled a detailed case history to be built and enabled a diagnosis to be made.
- Diagnosis: he wanted to distinguish between the
thieves; difficult in children who had not yet formed
their whole personality.
- 6 main personality
types:
- - Normal (seemed
stable);
- - Circular (unstable children who show alternating depression and
hyperactivity);
- - Hyperthymic (constantly
over-active);
- - Affectionless (lack of normal
affection, shame or sense of
responsibility);
- - Depressed (children who have been unstable and
now they are in a more or less depressed state of
mind);
- - Schizoid (chow schizoid or
schizophrenic symptoms)
- the affectionless
character
- Having identified the affectionless group of children a clear pattern of delinquency
emerged. Bowlby found that 14/44 thieves were classed as affectionless, 12/14
affectionless had experienced frequent separations from their mothers.
- Betty.I= placed in a foster home at 7m/o when her parents spilt
up, moved from foster home to foster home and spent a year in
a convent school before she went home age 5.
- Derek.B= hospitalised at 18m/o as he
developed diphtheria. Stayed there for 9
months and was not visited by parents
- Kenneth.W= between age 3 and 9 he
was primarily cared for by his
grandfather who had no control over
him.
- Such separations were very rare amongst other types of thieves. There were
30 non-affectionless thieves and only 3 had experienced separations. In the
control group, only 2 experienced prolonged separations.
- other
factors
- 17 of the thieves experienced early separation. When considering the remaining 27 thieves, Bowlby reported that 17 had mothers who were
extremely anxious, irritable/fussy or else were rigid, domineering and oppressive; traits that marks unconscious hostility.
- 5 of the 27 thieves had fathers who hated them openly. These experiences were also reported by the non-delinquent group. Therefore, such
early experiences might explain emotional problems not delinquency.
- conclusion
- Children would not have become offenders if they had not
experienced things that were harmful to healthy development
- proposed that the damage to the relationship between mother and child would affect
the development of the superego, leading to a reduced sense in right or wrong
- Juvenile delinquency is undoubtably the consequence of many and complex
factors, such as poverty, bad housing and lack of recreational facilities.
However, this classic study has placed an emphasis on psychoanalytic
factors.
- If the finding were correct the implication is that treatment should be offered
to delinquents, through this process is extremely slow and difficult
- preferable approach is prevention rather than treatment however,
prolonged separation of a mother and child may on occasion be
unavoidable
- evaluation:
methodology
- The study is not fully scientific due to it being based from case
studies
- The study did not give clear results due to anomalies and other factors not explored
properly.
- correlation not
causation
- The study could be replicate again due to the lack of strict criteria there would be a large enough sample to repeat. However, wouldn’t be the same participants.
- The study produced qualitative data, data could be useful but not
accurate/ true for all people, consequently, it Is not representative. due to
all children used in the experiment being emotionally disturbed it cannot
be generalised to all children
- The findings could have been manipulated by Bowlby as he conducted the test himself and he may have (un)consciously influenced the results to support his hypothesis
- evaluation:
ethics
- The study did it protect the participants confidentiality, proving first name and last initial along with in depth reports on their life making them
identifiable.
- It is unclear if the families were told how much information would be shared which if they were not told properly would mean they did not give full consent; . Children could not consent, parents had to do it on behalf if given.
- . Children could not consent, parents had to do it on behalf if
given.
- evaluation: alternative
evidence
- Separation alone may not cause long-lasting damage especially if the child has a good substitute for emotional care
- a lack of emotional care before the age of 6 months appears to be
something appears to be something children can recover from.
(Rutter and Sonuga-Barke 2010, romanian orphans)
- Bowlby’s basic conclusion has been supported in subsequent research. Micheal Rutter et al 2010,
using romanian orphans The lack of emotional care during key periods of development appears
to have lasting and serious consequences
- consequences include physical underdevelopment,
intellectual retardation, and difficulty in later
relationships: friends, partners and children.
- Evaluation
- strengths
- nature and
nurture
- takes both sides into
account
- Freud claimed that the adult personality is the product of innate drives - nature- and childhood experiences -
nurture-
- for freud the id is instinctual and is the
biological aspect of our personaility
- driven by the eros - life drive - and the thanatos - the death
drive-
- influence of nuture comes in the form of psychosexual stages, frustration and overindulgence may lead to
frustration
- predict the adult
personality
- usefulness
- highlights the fact that the childhood is a critical development point that affects the whole
life.
- ideas put forward by Freud have
influenced therapies to treat mental
disorders
- first person to explain psychological factors could
be used to explain psychical symptoms - paralysis
- psychoanalysis widely used to overcome
problems
- useful approach for understanding mental health problems - ie childhood trauma or unconscious
conflicts
- complexity of human
behaviour
- approach can be seen as HOListic - includes wHOLe of the
complexitiies
- recognises that human behaviour is influenced by multiple, inseperable
factors
- improves on other approaches that reduce the complexities to one
factor
- behvaiourist approach proposes that recovery from mental disorder can be achieved through re-learning
and does not look at the cause and it can reappear - symptom substitution
- psychoanalysis seeks to undercover deep meanings and acknowledges that understanding behaviour is a lengthy
process
- weaknesses
- reductionist
- can be accused of 'mechanistic reductionism' because it oversimplifies complex human behaviourto the mechanics of the
mind
- ie childhood experiences = psychosexual
stages
- ignores other influences on
behavior such as genetics and
biochemistry
- during the 50s and 60s, one of the main explainations for autism was that
some mothers were very distant from their children and autism was a
withdrawal from the lack of involvement
- oversimplifies the process of autism. shows the approach can ignore important
factors
- determinist
approach
- saw infant behaviour as determined by the libido and adult behaviour determined by childhood
experiences
- therefore follows that we have no free will in who we become of
behave
- personality is predetermined and we cannot change
them
- flaw as we can change our behavior if we want
to
- may give some people a plausible excuse for behaving unreasonably or an excuse for criminal
behaviour
- implies that people cannot be held responsible for their
behaviour
- cannot be prove
wrong
- difficult to falsify, a good theory can be tested to see if it is
wrong
- karl popper 1934 argued that falsification is the only way to be certain. you cannot prove that a theory is right you can only falsify the
theory
- falsify: prove (a statement or theory) to be
false
- many of freuds theories are 'slippery' eg - all men have repressed homosexual tendencies cannot be proven as it can be argued that they
have them they are just so repressed they are not apparent
- whilst difficult to generate testable hypotheses from freuds theory of personality it is not
impossible
- research has looked at relationships between guilt and wrongdoing
- MacKinnon 1938 found that individuals who cheated at a task tended to express less guilt when questioned than those who did not
- supported freud who predicted an inverse
relationship