UNIT 1 - Nature of Psychology
UNIT 1 - Nature of Psychology
UNIT 1 - Nature of Psychology
- Scientific study – uses scientific methods to describe, observe, predict and explain
behaviour.
o Studies behaviour through careful controlled observation/experimentation.
- Aim of Psychology Describe: what is happening?
Explain: why is it happening?
Predict: how can it be changed?
Control: how can it be changed? – change behaviour to help individuals cope with
different individuals.
Scientific Way of thinking (not always about what is found but how it is found)
4 important features of scientific approach/attitudes:
1. Curiosity: Quest for knowledge – waiting to know/ask questions
2. Skepticism: Question evidence for any idea/Question what others take for
granted/Question whether evidence is strong enough to be accepted as accurate and
factual/Questioning attitude often leads to clarity.
3. Objectivity: use of methods that are free from personal bias and judgement, free from
unreliable personal beliefs, opinions, emotions. (Seeing things as they are and not as
what we’d like to see them as.)
4. Critical thinking: test facts – examine research to check how an idea is supported –
willingness to think critically.
*These attitudes aren’t always possessed by everyone at every stage. – are ideal to have
– as they reduce information/errors based on personal opinions, emotions and beliefs.
Scientific Method:
1. Conceptualize a problem: Through theory and hypothesis
2. Collect research information
3. Analyze Data
4. Draw Conclusions
Standardized tests:
Set of oral/written questions
Answers tallied yield score indicates something about individual
Score of subjects usually compared to data of larger group of people
Advantages: provides information about individual differences among people
Disadvantages: may not always predict behaviour in non-test situations
Tests can predict behaviour more or less, but there is a possibility for variation
Psych tests developed in Western Culture may not be appropriate in other culture (different
perspective, outlook, upbringing)
Case Study – Individual cases are studied in greater depth and detail, used to suggest what
maybe true to the rest of the people.
3 major uses:
1. Understand and help people with psych disorders
Know what sort of person a patient is
What sort of difficulties he or she is experiencing
How the patients’ difficulties developed
2. A means of illustrating ideas and relationship in teaching
3. Important research tool
Used to suggest theories/hypotheses about human behaviour
Advantages: - tremendous amount of detail obtained
sometimes it may also be only way to get certain/specific kinds of information
Disadvantages: Researchers can’t really apply the results to other similar people
Case studies involve judgements of unknown reliability
Experiments in the laboratory and controlled situations enable a researcher to focus on the
possible effects of variable by holding constant those factors not being tested as there is more
controlled in such set-ups.
If behaviour changes when we vary an experimental factor, then we know that there is a cause-
and-effect relationship between 2 variables.
Definitions:
Independent variable: Experimental factor that is manipulated (changed), variable whose effect
is studied.
Dependent variable: What is being measured during experiment, variable may change in
response to the I.V.
To determine whether the change in dependent variable is cause by independent variable 2 groups
segregated:
Experimental Group – group of subjects who are exposed to the independent variable
*This is for comparison purposed. The two groups are assumed identical in all respects except
receival of the treatment of the IV must be ensured.
*In reality, no two groups are identical so all participants are randomly assigned to either the control
or experimental group(s). Random Sampling rules out difference between subjects or other
factors that may affect the experiment assign to groups randomly
Involved procedures like flipping a coin, computer generated list of random number to
assigned individuals to groups by chance so each have equal chances of being in any group of the
experiment.
*One can have more than one experiment group to vary intensity and will give more accurate and
detailed results if corresponding effect.
Control group – no exposed to IV // exposed to the control condition // provides a base line to be
compared to the results of the experiment group.
For studies involving a treatment, researchers often use a PLACEBO to make sure control and
experimental group are similar which allows subjects in both groups to go through the same
experience during the experiment. Example: ‘fake’ alcohol and real alcohol in test for how alcohol
affects the memory.
2 types of bias
Eliminate bias: SINGLE BLIND PROCEDURE – participant is unaware of the condition the subject is
being subjected to.
DOUBLE BLIND PROCEDURE – neither experimenter nor the subject knows which condition the
subject is being subjected to.
Advantages: most systematic and conditions can be completely controlled // data can be analyzed in
objective manner and therefore is reliable // Cause-and-effect relationship of individuals behaviour
can be established. // findings open to critical examination and verification // discards subjective
experiments.
Disadvantages: human behaviour is changeable and therefore identical behaviour of same individual
cannot occur even under identical conclusions at different times // costly and time consuming //
must have specialized skills to conduct experiments // tools used in experiments may not be
satisfactory therefore obtained data may not be reliable // extremely difficult to control all other
causative factors except the one under study // the experimental method can produce results of
probability and not certainty (cannot guarantee 100% accuracy).
Ethics in Research
Guidelines for researchers so that interests and welfare of participants are protected
1. Informed consent
2. Right to withdraw
3. Deception
4. Confidentiality
5. Debriefing
1. Informed consent designed to explain the research procedures and inform the participants of
his/her rights during the investigation
Possible discussion: purpose of research / procedures / foreseeable risks and discomfort (physical
and psychological injury) / benefits if research to society and possible to the individual human
subject / length of time participation / persons to contact – in case of emergency
*Informed consent may not be requested if participants are taking part in everyday activity.
2. Participants have the right to withdraw themselves or their data from a psychological study at any
time and without being questioned or coerced.
3. Deception is when research participants are not completely and fully informed about the nature
of the research project before participating in it.
Participants are misled and wrongly informed about aims of the research.
Types: 1. Deliberate method: e.g., using manipulations in field settings, deceptive instructions.
2. Deception by omission, e.g., failure to disclose full information about study or creating ambiguity.
4. Confidentiality - Relates to the way data is stored and how it is used (need to know basis only)
Anonymity helps participants answer confidently and honestly
- Participants and data gained is kept anonymous unless given full consent
5. Debriefing - Procedure designed to fully explain the purposed and procedures of the research and
remove any harmful after effects of participation.
- Under Code of Ethics, once study Is complete researchers are required to provide accurate and
appropriate information about the nature of the experiment or study.
- Researchers also share with subjects any and all information related to what purpose of all the
research was.
|involves certain assumptions of human behaviour// most common way to view behaviour//
emphasize different influences that shape behaviour
Earlier schools
- Structuralism
- Functionalism
- Gestaltism
Psycho-dynamic
The underlying assumption is that unconscious forces are important influences on humans.
Sigmund Freud’s assumptions were that human beings are born with unconscious drives that
seek some kind of outlet or expression from the very start.
Structure of Personality (continued) - id, ego, super ego interacts and balances each other
resulting in shaping of personality
- present at birth, based on the pleasure principle, unconscious process to avoid pain, seek
pleasure --> cannot delay gratification of wants and needs
Ego - develops after birth through way of nurture, based on reality principle - sense of reasoning
Super Ego - develops maximum by the age of 12 years internalised moral values, mostly
unconscious, partly conscious morality principle
Healthy personality - strong ego developed to balance the needs between id and super ego.
Types of defense mechanisms --> defend ego from anxiety ridden situations
Id continues to conflict with social rules or moral values --> builds tension --> ego - uses
unconscious strategies called defense mechanisms that deny/distant reality but protects us from
conflicts and anxiety.
Projection - ones own feeling repressed and instead attributed to someone else (doubting)
Displacement - redirection of feelings - source of stress and anxiety is something you can't
handle e.g., if friend argues with boss, can't so outlet on others.
Behavioral
- said to be optimistic - because if behaviour can be learnt, it can be unlearnt --> eg: aversion therapy
- study of observable behaviour and what determines it --> not much emphasis on introspection aka
psychoanalytical approach
- study behavioural responses and the way these responses are influenced by stimuli in the
environment.
- B.F Skinner (operant conditioning): founder of modern behaviourism (role reward and punishment
in determining behaviour)/ classical conditioning (Little Albert study)/observational modelling
(imitation/vicarious learning)
Albert Bandura - social cognitive theory - behaviour is influenced by how thoughts modify the effects
of environment on behaviour - imitation.
Cognitive
- the study of cognition, the way we process or transform information about the world around us
(perception, language)
- Either best or worst, nothing in between --> puts a lot of pressure on individual because of line of
thinking.
Socio-cultural
focus on relationship between social behaviour and culture, social and culture influence on
behaviour.
- cultural norm/practices affect thought processes that may be universal. e.g, marriage.
- combination of social psychology (study of groups, social roles, relationships) and cultural
psychology (study of cultural norms/standards of behaviour, values and expectations)
Behavioral Neuro-science
- study of biological bases of behaviour and mental processes
- how the body and brain create emotions, memories and sensory experiences
- the underlying assumption of neuroscience is that for every behaviour, feeling, thoughts and
corresponding physical event takes place in the brain.
Evolutionary
- natural selection
- similar for behaviour. talks about behaviour which has passed on through generations to enable
individuals to survive.
- just as evolution shapes our physical features (natural selection) similarly, psychological dimensions
are affected (emotions, mental processes, behaviour)
Humanistic
Carl Rogers, Abraham Maslow (Maslow Hierarchy of human needs (pyramid)) gave importance to
human beings as individuals.
There is potential for self-understanding and freedom/ability to choose therefore humans aren’t
easily manipulated (according to Humanists)
Positive
(21 century)
- studies problems but also enhance quality of life/increases happiness/enhance life (gratitude,
optimism, self-esteem, responsibility, hope, nurturance) - life above zero (the positive)