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AP Psychology. What is Psychology?. The study of behavior and the mental/physical processes that make it happen Focus of this class: Human behavior Different areas of psychology focus on different areas of behavior. Example: Earworms.
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What is Psychology? • The study of behavior and the mental/physical processes that make it happen • Focus of this class: Human behavior • Different areas of psychology focus on different areas of behavior
Example: Earworms • According to research, up to 90% of people studied report having a song that gets stuck in their head (Williamson, Goldsmith’s College, 2012). The term used to describe this phenomena is earworms. • Earworms are linked to recent exposure to the song, as well as stress, visual and/or audio cues, or by hearing a certain word. • People generally find the experience unpleasant (Williamson, ibid).
Application • Interrogators at the Guantanamo Bay, Cuba terrorist detention center specialize in playing music that is designed to break the will of the prisoners (“Welcome to ‘the disco,’” The Guardian, 6/18/08). • Selections include “We Are the Champions”, “Enter Sandman”, “Born in the USA”, and the Meow Mix commercial. • The selections collectively are known as “futility music.” • Most used song is…
Goals of Psychology • Observe and describe behavior • Explain the behavior through hypothesis (“educated guess”) • Predict future behavior based on past results • Use acquired knowledge to solve issues
Assignment (50 points) Due 03/15/2013 • Create a montage that in your mind shows the difference between normal/abnormal behavior. • One side normal, other side abnormal. • Be prepared to explain why you put the images where you did. • No fewer than fifteen images a side, very little background should show • Grading: 15 pts: following format 25 pts: creativity 5: use of time 5: oral presentation
Psychology and the Scientific Method • Psychology is a science. Therefore it employs the scientific method. • Observation: Watch the behavior occur Issue: Hawthorne Effect 2. Hypothesis a. null b. experimental
Scientific method, cont. 3. Results 4. Conclusions 5. Theory
Origins of Psychology • Ancient Greeks: humans are rational beings • Used observation as primary method to explain behavior • The formal study of psychology did not begin until 19th Century B. Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920): Father of modern psychology. - Wrote Principles of Physiological Psychology (1874), where he meant to “mark out a new domain of science.” Proponent of structuralism: breaking down what was to be studied into its most basic parts Wundt’s students help develop Psychology departments at Stanford, Harvard, and Yale. C. G. Stanley Hall (1846-1924): Establish first psychology lab in the U.S. (Johns Hopkins), and first psychology journal. Founded American Psychological Association
Origins, cont. D. William James: One of the first American psychologists. Believed that mental processes helped the human species survive. Founder of functionalist school D. Sir Francis Drake: Behavior is inherited. E. Gestalt: German school of thought that focused on how individual sensations form complete patterns F. Psychoanalytic (Sigmund Freud): Behavior dominated by unconscious urges that drive outward behavior • Believed that people are truly unpleasant • Dream interpretation • Free association
Structuralism v. Functionalism Issue: What is more important: investigating the basic elements of psychology (Structuralism), or its purpose (Functionalism)? For Structuralism: Edward Titchener For Functionalism: William James Although both schools have faded away, Functionalism influenced behaviorism and applied psychology
Behaviorism School of thought that psychology should only concern itself on what can be objectively observed. • John Watson: Is our behavior based on nature (genetics) or nurture (environment)? Watson: Nurture B. B.F. Skinner: Continued Watson’s ideas, openly questioned concept of free will. Believed that behavior is shaped by consequences.
Humanism • Emphasis on the uniqueness of humans, and their capabilities for positive growth. • Spearheaded by Carl Rogers and Abraham Maslow (Hierarchy of Needs).
Psychologist v. Psychiatrist • Psychologist: • Has a doctoral degree (Ph.D. or Psy.D) • Cannot prescribe medication (generally, Louisiana and New Mexico are exceptions) • Often looks to solve mental health issues through counseling/non-medical means • Currently, seven states (including Hawaii and Utah) are considering legislation allowing psychologists prescription rights (AMA News, 3/11) Psychiatrist: • Has a medical degree (M.D.) • Can prescribe medication • Often sees patients with severe mental-health issues • Often looks to solve mental health problems through medical means
Other Mental Health Careers • Psychiatric Nurse (RN) • Substance Abuse Counselor • Psychometrist • School Psychologist (M.S./M.A.)