approaches - origins of psychology

Description

A level Psychology (Approaches to Psychology - yr 13) Flashcards on approaches - origins of psychology, created by Sophie Greenslade on 04/12/2018.
Sophie Greenslade
Flashcards by Sophie Greenslade, updated more than 1 year ago
Sophie Greenslade
Created by Sophie Greenslade over 5 years ago
9
0

Resource summary

Question Answer
What did Wundt do? established the first psychology lab in 1879. the aim was to describe the nature of the human consciousness in a scientific environment.
what was introspection? the first systematic experimental attempt to study the mind by breaking up conscious awareness into basic structures of thoughts, images and sensations. (isolating the structure of consciousness in this way is called structuralism)
What were standardised structures/ standardised instructions given to all ppts, and procedures could be replicated. Eg. ticking metronome - report their thoughts etc.
Why did early behaviourists reject introspection? (1900s) It was subjective, and it varied from person to person, according to behaviourist approach, 'scientific' psychology should only study things that can be observed and measured.
What approach dominated the 1930s? Skinner and bahaviourist scientific approach. focus on learning and controlled lab studies.
In the 1950s how did the cognitive approach use scientific measures to study mental processes? mental processes were seen as 'private' but psychologists could make inferences about how these work based on tests done in labs.
In the 1990s how did the biological approach introduce technological advances? They began to record brain activity using scanning techniques such as fMRI and EEG and advanced genetic research.
Strengths of Wundt's methods scientific. standardised procedures. Means that modern psychology can claim to be scientific as it has the same aims as natural sciences.
Limitations of Wundt's methods Relied on self-reporting and subjective data, efforts were naive. Not all approaches use scientific methods, eg. humanistic approach (interested in subjective experience)
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

History of Psychology
mia.rigby
Biological Psychology - Stress
Gurdev Manchanda
Bowlby's Theory of Attachment
Jessica Phillips
Psychology subject map
Jake Pickup
Psychology A1
Ellie Hughes
Memory Key words
Sammy :P
Psychology | Unit 4 | Addiction - Explanations
showmestarlight
The Biological Approach to Psychology
Gabby Wood
Chapter 5: Short-term and Working Memory
krupa8711
Cognitive Psychology - Capacity and encoding
T W
The working memory model
Lada Zhdanova