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Welcome to General Psychology! Please use these slides as a supplementary guide to your course textbook. You must also read the text (do not simply rely on these slides). Psychology’s Roots, Big Ideas, and Critical Thinking Tools Chapter 1. Psychology’s Roots Psychological Science Is Born
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Welcome to General Psychology!Please use these slides as a supplementary guide to your course textbook. You must also read the text (do not simply rely on these slides).
Psychology’s Roots, Big Ideas, and Critical Thinking ToolsChapter 1
Psychology’s Roots • Psychological Science Is Born • Contemporary Psychology
Four Big Ideas in Psychology • Big Idea 1: Critical Thinking is Smart Thinking • Big Idea 2: Behavior is a Biopsychosocial Event • Big Idea 3: We Operate With a Two-Track Mind (Dual Processing) • Big Idea 4: Psychology Explores Human Strengths as Well as Challenges
Why Do Psychology? • The Limits of Intuition and Common Sense • The Scientific Attitude
How Do Psychologists Ask and Answer Questions? • The Scientific Method • Description • Correlation • Experimentation
Psychology’s Roots Aristotle (384-322 B.C.E.) One of the first thinkers to ask serious questions about learning and memory, motivation and emotion, perception and personality.
Psychological Science is Born The first psychology experiments • Leipzig, Germany1879 • Wilhelm Wundt and his students attempt to study the “atoms of the mind” • Experiment: How long for subjects to press a button after a ball drops.
Psychology’s early pioneers came from many disciplines • Wilhelm Wundt – German philosopher & physiologist • Charles Darwin – English naturalist • Ivan Pavlov – Russian physiologist • Sigmund Freud – Austrian physician • Jean Piaget – Swiss biologist • William James – American philosopher
William James • William James was an American philosopher, and wrote the highly influential Principles of Psychologyin 1890
A Man’s World? William James’ student, Mary Calkins, became the first female president of the APA Animal behaviorist Margaret Floyd Washburn was the first female psychology PhD (from Cornell) and the second female APA president
The Definition of “Psychology” • For early pioneers, psychology was defined as “the science of mental life” • This has evolved over the years as new perspectives were developed Behaviorism Cognitive Revolution! Cognitive Neuroscience “Science of mental life” Freudian Psychology Humanistic Psychology time
Behaviorism • Behaviorism: The view that psychology (1) should be an objective science that (2) studies behavior without references to mental processes. • You can observe behaviors, but not thoughts or feelings • Today, most research psychologists agree with (1) but not (2) John B. Watson B. F. Skinner
Behaviorist Experiment: Little Albert • John B. Watson and Rosalie Rayner showed fear could be learned, in experiments with the baby known as “Little Albert”
Freudian Psychology • Sigmund Freud was an Austrian physician • Emphasized the importance of unconscious sexual conflicts and the mind’s defenses against its own wishes and impulses
Humanistic Psychology • Humanistic Psychology emphasized the growth potential of healthy people and the individual’s potential for personal growth. • Humanistic psychologists (like Abraham Maslow and Carl Rogers) found Freudian and behaviorist psychology limiting. • Drew attention to the ways that a loving, accepting environment can enhance personal growth.
The Cognitive Revolution • In the 1960’s, a group of psychologists led the field back on the study of mental processes: how the mind perceives, processes, and remembers information • They sought to make this renewed study into a scientific discipline. • Cognitive Neuroscience: the interdisciplinary study of brain activity linked with mental activity (including perception, thinking, memory, and language).
Psychology Today • Today, we define psychology as the science of behavior and mental processes • Behavior: the study of an animal’s observable actions” • Mental processes: Internal states and events such as thoughts, feelings, and beliefs. • Note: Even mental processes are related to behavior: we infer feelings and thoughts from what someone says and does.
Contemporary Psychology What are psychology’s current perspectives? • Perspectives range from biological to socio-cultural • Settings range from laboratory to clinic • Common goal: to describe and explain behavior and the mind underlying it
Four Big Ideas in Psychology • Critical Thinking is Smart Thinking • Behavior is a Biopsychosocial Event 3. We Operate with a Two-Track Mind (Dual Processing) 4. Psychology Explores Human Strengths as Well as Challenges
Critical Thinking is Smart Thinking • Critical Thinking: Thinking that does not blindly accept arguments and conclusions. Rather, it examines assumptions, uncovers hidden values, weighs evidence, and assesses conclusions.
Behavior is a Biopsychosocial Event • Biopsychosocial approach: An integrated apprach that incorporates different but complementary views from biological, psychological, and social-cultural perspectives • Culture: The enduring behaviors, ideas, attitudes, and traditions shared by a group of people and transmitted from one generation to the next
Behavior is a Biopsychosocial Event: Nature v. Nurture • Nature-nurture issue: The longstanding controversy over the relative contributions that genes and experience make to the development of psychological traits and behaviors. • Today, we see traits and behaviors arising from the interaction of nature and nurture Question: How are differences in intelligence, personality and psychological disorders influenced by heredity and by environment?
We Operate with a Two-Track Mind (Dual Processing) • Dual Processing: the principle that information is often simultaneously processed on separate conscious and unconscious tracks. • Example: Visual Processing • Visual perception track enables us to recognize things and plan future actions • Visual action track guides our moment-to-moment actions
Psychology Explores Human Strengths as Well as Challenges • Positive Psychology: the scientific study of human functioning, with the goals of discovering and promoting strengths and virtues that help individuals and communities to thrive
Why Do Psychology? • The Limits of Intuition and Common Sense • The Scientific Attitude
The Limitations of Intuition and Common Sense • Intuitions and hunches are a good place to start, but must be followed up by critical thinking “The first principle is that you must not fool yourself – and you are the easiest person to fool.” – Richard Feynman
Hindsight Bias Hindsight Biasor the “I-knew-it-all-along” phenomenon. The tendency to believe, after learning an outcome, that we could have predicted it.
Overconfidence Sometimes we think we know more than we actually know. Anagram How long do you think it would take to unscramble these anagrams? WREAT WATER ETYRN ENTRY People said it would take about 10 seconds, yet on average solvers took about 3 minutes (Goranson, 1978). GRABE BARGE
The Scientific Attitude The scientific attitude is composed of curiosity (passion for exploration), skepticism (doubting and questioning) and humility (ability to accept responsibility when wrong).
The Scientific Attitude: Curiosity, Humility, and Skepticism Randi: Do you see an aura around my head? Aura-seer: Yes, indeed. Randi: Can you still see the aura if I put this magazine in front of my face? Aura-seer: Of course. Randi: Then if I were to step behind a wall barely taller than I am, you could determine my location from the aura visible above my head, right? The Amazing Randi
How Do Psychologists Ask and Answer Questions? • The Scientific Method • Description • Correlation • Experimentation
How Do Psychologists Ask and Answer Questions? Psychologists, like all scientists, use the scientific method to construct theories that organize, summarize and simplify observations.
Theory A theory isan explanation using an integrated set of principles that organizes and predicts behavior or events. For example, “low self-esteem contributes to depression.”
Hypothesis A hypothesis is a testable prediction, often prompted by a theory. It enables us to accept, reject or revise the theory. “People with low self-esteem will score higher on a depression test.”
Research and Observations We then test our hypothesis in a controlled setting. Have participants take two tests: one that tests self-esteem (e.g., “agree or disagree: ‘I am fun to be with.’”) and one that test for symptoms of depression. If the hypothesis is correct, people with low scores of self-esteem will have high levels of depression.
Reporting and Replicating Results • Psychologists often use an operational definition, a statement of the procedures used to define research variables. • E.g., depression may be operationally defined as scoring above a threshold on a depression test. • Exact descriptions allow others to replicatethe research, repeating the essence of the study to see whether the basic findings extends to other participants and cirumstances.
Description As we seek to understand people and refine our theories, we can gather descriptive information in one of three systematic ways: • The Case Study • Surveys • Naturalistic Observation
Case Study Case study: a descriptive technique in which one person is studied in depth in the hope of revealing universal principles. Caveat: Just because something is true of one of us, that does not mean it will be true in all of us. E.g., just because you have an uncle who smokes 3 packs a day and lived to be 100, doesn’t mean smoking doesn’t have adverse health effects.
Survey A survey is a descriptive technique for obtaining the self-reported attitudes or behaviors of people, usually by questioning a representative, random sample of them. Important to remember: • Wording effects • Random Sampling
Wording Effects Wording can change the results of a survey. Should cigarette ads and pornography be allowed on television? vs. Should cigarette ads and pornography be forbidden from being on television?
Random Sampling Random sample: a sample that fairly represents a population because each member has an equal chance of inclusion
Surveys • Think critically before accepting survey findings • Consider the wording and the sample • The best basis for generalizing is from a representative sample of cases
Naturalistic Observation A descriptive technique of observing and recording behavior in naturally occuring situations without trying to change or control the situation. Like case studies and surveys, it describes behavior, rather than explaining it. [Insert pic of Frans de Waal from p. 27]
Correlation • Correlation: a measure of the extent to which two events vary together, and thus how well either predicts the other. • The correlation coefficient expresses the relationship mathematically, ranging from -1 to +1 • Positive correlation, noted as a number from zero (no correlation) to 1, means that variables increase and decrease together, like shoe size and height. • Negative correlation, a number from 0 to -1, means that one variable going up predicts the other one going down, like self-esteem and depression scores