Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Evolution of Psychology
- A New Science is Born
- Wilhelm Wundt
- Father of
Psychology
Anmerkungen:
- Made Psychology an independent discipline
- Established 1st formal
laboratory for research of
psychology (University of
Leipzig 1879)
- 1st journal
responsible for
publishing
research of
psychology
(1881)
- Focused on
consciousness -
awareness of
immediate
experience
Anmerkungen:
- mind & mental processes
- G. Stanley Hall
Anmerkungen:
- Responsible for
Psychology's popularity in
North America
- Established 1st research
laboratory for research in
Psychology in America (Johns
Hopkins University 1883)
- Launched 1st
Psychology
journal in the
US (1887)
- Driving force behind
starting the
American
Psychological
Association (APA) in
1892
Anmerkungen:
- Structuralism Vs. Functionalism
- Structuralism
Anmerkungen:
- Structure
"Static points"
Laboratory
Analyze
- Edward Titchener
Anmerkungen:
- Credited for Structuralism
- Definition: The belief that the
purpose of Psychology is to
analyze consciousness into its
basic elements & investigate
how they are related
- Examine
fundamental
components of
conscious experience
(Sensations,
Feelings, Images)
- Introspection: The careful,
systematic self-observation of
one's own conscious experience
Anmerkungen:
- Limitations of introspection led to demise of structuralism
- Functionalism
Anmerkungen:
- Function
"Flow"
Real world
Investigate
- William James
Anmerkungen:
- Chief impetus of functionalism
"Principles of Psychology" (1890)
- Consciousness consists of a
continuous flow of thought -
"The stream of consciousness"
- James wanted to understand
that flow
- Definition: the notion that psychology
should investigate the function or
purpose of consciousness
- Behaviourism Makes its Debut
- John B. Watson
Anmerkungen:
- founded behaviourism (early 1900's)
Favoured nurture (environment & experience)
- Watson believed mental processes
were not a proper subject for
scientific study
- Definition: A theoretical orientation based on the
premise that scientific psychology should study
only observable behaviour
- Stimulated
radical change
- Verifiability - Requires
observation
- Behaviourists
pushed for
Psychology to
become the science
of behaviour
- The mission was to relate
overt behaviours (responses)
to observable events in the
environment (stimulus)
- Behaviour: Any overt
(observable) response
or activity by an
organism
- Stimulus: Any detectable
input from the
environment
- Animal
research
Anmerkungen:
- Subjects easier to control
- Unconscious Enters the Picture
- Sigmund Freud
- Approach to psychology was
to treat mental disorders &
psychological problems such
as irrational fears,
obsessions & anxieties with
an innovative procedure he
called psychoanalysis
- Concluded
psychological
disturbances are
largely caused by
personal conflicts @
unconscious level
- Suggested people are
masters of their own
minds
- Proposed behaviour is greatly influenced by
how people cope with their sexual urges
- Unconscious: Contains
thoughts, memories &
desires that are well
below the surface of
conscious awareness
but nonetheless
influence behaviour
- Psychoanalytic Theory: Attempts
to explain personality,
motivation & mental disorders
by focusing on unconscious
determinants of behaviour
- 1920
Psychoanalytic
Theory was
widely known
- Today many psychoanalytic concepts have filtered into the
mainstream of psychology
- Behaviourism Flourishes
- B. F. Skinner
Anmerkungen:
- Central figure in behaviourism
Harvard
"Beyond Freedom and Dignity" (1971)
- Developed
Radical
Behaviourism
- Argued that psychology could
understand & predict behaviour
adequately without resorting to
physiological explanations
- Concluded free will is an illusion
- Fundamental Principle of Behaviour: Organisms tend
to repeat responses that lead to positive outcomes &
they tend not to repeat responses that lead to neutral
or negative outcomes
- 1950's-1960's
Behaviourism
dominated as
the dominant
school of
thought
- The Humanist Revolt
- Carl Rogers & Abraham Maslow
- Must take into
account the
fundamental
human drive
towards personal
growth
Anmerkungen:
- Person-centered-therapy
Anmerkungen:
- 1950's
- Humanism: A theoretical
orientation that emphasizes
the unique qualities of humans
(freedom & potential for
personal growth)
- Optimistic view of human nature
- Believed research
on animals was
irrelevant to the
understanding of
human behaviour
- Animals and humans separated
by sense of self
- Fragmentation & dissent have
reduced the influence of humanism
in recent decades
- Greatest contribution
to psychology:
Innovative treatments
for psychological
problems & disorders
- Psychology as a Profession
- Became a profession in the 1950's
- Applied Psychology: Concerned
with everyday, practical
problems
- School Psychology,
Industrial &
Organizational
Psychology and
Counselling
Psychology
- Clinical Psychology: concerned with the
diagnosis & treatment of psychological
problems & disorders
- Came into high demand after WWII
- Cognition & Neuroscience
- Renewed
interest in
consciousness
today
- Cognition: The mental processes
involved in acquiring knowledge
- Jean Piaget
Anmerkungen:
- Studied cognitive development in children
- Focusing only on overt
behaviour yields an
incomplete picture of why
individuals behave the way
they do
- James Olds
Anmerkungen:
- Demonstrated that electrical
stimulation of the brain could
evoke emotional responses such as
pleasure and rage in animals
- Roger Sperry
Anmerkungen:
- Showed that the left &
right hemispheres of the
brain are specialized to
handle different types
og mental tasks
- Hubel & Wiesel
Anmerkungen:
- Worked on how visual
signals are processed in
the brain
- Donald Hebb
Anmerkungen:
- "The Organization of Behaviour: A Neuropsychgological Theory" (1949)
- Stated origin of behaviour was the brain and introduced Cell
Assembly: repeated stimulation leads to the development od
cell assemblies. They resemble cognitive units that together or
in concert with other cell assemblies facilitate behaviour
- The Emergence of Evolutionary Psychology
- Evolutionary Psychology: Examines
behaviour processes in terms of their
adaptive value for members of a
species over the course of a generation
- Natural Selection
- Interest in animal behaviour
- Gender differences are
due in part to
evolution as a result of
the sex-based division
of labour in ancient
hunting & gathering
societies
- 1990's saw birth of 1st new
theoretical perspective since
the 50's-60's (cognitive
revolution)
- Positive Psychology Movement
- Martin Seligman
Anmerkungen:
- Realised Psychology was
unnecessarily negative in
its approach
- Positive Psychology: Uses theory
& research to better understand
the positive, adaptive, creative &
fulfilling aspects of human
existence
- 3 Areas of Interest
- Positive Subjective Experiences
Anmerkungen:
- Positive emotions & happiness
- Positive Individual Traits
Anmerkungen:
- Personal strengths & virtues
- Positive Institutions & Communities
Anmerkungen:
- How societies fostering civil discourse, strong families, healthy work environment etc.
- Focus of Research
- Developmental
Psychology
Anmerkungen:
- Looks at human development across the lifespan.
- Social
Psychology
Anmerkungen:
- Focuses on interpersonal behaviour & the role of social forces in governing behaviour. (attitude formation, attitude change, prejudice, conformity, attraction, aggression, intimate relationships & behaviour in groups)
- Experimental
Psychology
Anmerkungen:
- Encompasses the traditional core of topics that psychology focused on heavily in its first half-century as a science: sensation, perception, learning, conditioning, motivation & emotion
- Physiological
Psychology
Anmerkungen:
- Examines influence of genetic factors on behaviour and the role of the brain, nervous system, endocrine system and bodily chemicals in the regulation of behaviour
- Cognitive
Psychology
Anmerkungen:
- Focuses on "higher" mental processes (memory, reasoning, information processing, language, problem solving, decision making & creativity)
- Personality
Anmerkungen:
- Interested in describing and understanding individual's consistency in behaviour, which represents their personality.
- Psychometrics
Anmerkungen:
- Concerned with the measurement of behaviour and capacities, usually through the development of psychological tests. (asses personality, intelligence, and a wide range of abilities). Also concerned with development of new techniques for statistical analysis
- Educational Psychology
Anmerkungen:
- Studies how people learn & the best way to teach them. (curriculum design, teacher training, student motivation, classroom diversity, etc.)
- Health
Psychology
Anmerkungen:
- Focus on how psychological factors relate to the promotion and maintenance of physical health and the causation, prevention and treatment of illness
- Seven Key Themes
- Psychology is Empirical
Anmerkungen:
- Empiricism: the premise that knowledge should be acquired through observation
Conclusions based on observation
- Psychology is
Theoretically
Diverse
Anmerkungen:
- Theory: A system of interrelated ideas used to explain a set of observations
- Psychology Evolves in a
Sociohistorical Context
Anmerkungen:
- Develops in a social & historical context
- Behaviour is Determined by
Multiple Causes
Anmerkungen:
- Behaviour is complex and most aspects of it are determined by multiple causes
- Behaviour is
Shaped by
Cultural
Heritage
Anmerkungen:
- Culture: Refers to the widely shared customs, beliefs, values, norms, institutions, & other products of a community that are transmitted socially across generations
- Heredity and Environment
Jointly influence Behaviour
Anmerkungen:
- nature vs nurture
Individuals are born & made, according to todays psychologists
- Peoples Experience of the World is Highly
Subjective
Anmerkungen:
- People see what they want to see & what they expect to see
Perception is personalized & subjective