Chapter 1 and Chapter 2 (Psyc 1011)

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Introduction to Psychology (Psyc 1011)

Course Objectives
After the completion of this course you will be able to:
Describe basic psychological concepts;
Compare and contrast the major theoretical perspectives in
psychology;
Discuss different and similarity between sensation and
perceptions;
Compare and contrast different learning theories
Summarize motivational and emotional processes
Demonstrate social and interpersonal skills in everyday life;
Set an adaptive goal and plan for future;
Apply knowledge of psychology in your life; and
Develop your life skills.
CHAPTER ONE
ESSENCE OF PSYCHOLOGY
Learning Outcomes/objectives
At the end of this chapter, you will be able to:
 Define psychology
 Show historical roots of psychology as a science
 Point out the goals of psychology
 Identify early schools and modern perspectives of psychology
 Discuss the basis of differences among perspectives of
psychology
 Identify subfields of psychology
 Differentiate the major research methods in psychology
 Explore the major steps of scientific research in psychology
1.1. Definition of Psychology and Related Concepts
Brainstorming Questions
• What comes to your mind when you hear about the
word psychology?
• Have you ever heard about, read or listened to
anything related to psychology?
• What was its content about?
• Did you appreciate it? Why?
• What do you expect from the course in psychology?
• “Psychology" derived from Greek words 'psyche' and
logos
• Psyche refers to mind, soul or sprit while logos means
study, knowledge or discourse.
• “Psychology" refers to the study of the mind, soul/sprit.
• Psychology is the scientific study of behavior and the
mental process of both humans and animals.
Aspects the definition are concerned with:
 Science: psychology uses scientific methods to study
behavior and mental processes in both humans and animals.
 Behavior: all of our outward or overt actions and reactions,
such as talking, facial expressions, movement, etc.
 Mental processes: refer to all the internal, covert activities
of our minds, such as thinking, feeling, remembering, etc.
1.2. Goals of Psychology

Brainstorming Questions
• Why do you think is psychology important?
• What do you think a psychologist is doing when
studying behavior and mental processes?
a. Description:-is the narration of the observable
characteristics of an event, person or object.
Description answers the question what happens. Or
involves observing the behavior and noticing everything about it.
b. Explanation:- is the discovery of the causes of
behavior, mental experiences and physiological
processes. It answers the question why it happens.
c. Prediction:- determining what will happen in the
future.
d. Control:-Control or modify or change the behavior
from undesirable one.
 Control is the process of regulating change in
behavior or mental experience.
1.3. Historical Background and Major Perspectives in
Psychology
• Psychology is a relatively new field
• Modern psychology is deeply rooted in the older
disciples of philosophy and physiology.
• The official birth of psychology is often traced to
1879, at the University of Leipzig, in Germany (Wundt)
• Wilhelm Wundt established the first psychological
laboratory dedicated to the scientific study of mind.
• After psychology became an independent field of
study, different views or perspectives were developed
1.3.1. Early schools of psychology
1. Structuralism (Edward Titchener )
• The conscious mind is considered as the subject
matter of psychology.
• The goal of structuralism is to find the units or
components/elements of the conscious mind.
• There by the conscious mind is made up of three
immediate mental experiences: sensation, image
and feeling.
• Introspection is employed to study such immediate
conscious experiences of the human mind.
2. Functionalism (William James,1848-1910)
• Functionalists criticized the Structuralisms for limiting
themselves to analyze the contents of the mind.
• Psychological processes are adaptive/allow human to
survive/what the mind does?
• Subject of the study the function of the mind.
• Goal of the study is to determine how the mind
affects what people do.
• Method of study is introspection and measure of
performance to understand mental process and
behavior respectively.
3. Gestalt psychology (Max Wertheimer )
• Gestalt psychologists argued that the mind is not made
up of combinations of elements rather holistic aspect
• The German word "gestalt" refers to form, whole,
configuration or pattern.
• The mind should be thought of as a result of the whole
pattern of sensory activity and the relationships and
organizations within their pattern.
• The gestalt psychologists acknowledge consciousness
mind.
• The whole is greater than the sum of its parts ,i.e. mind
is greater than its parts (images, sensations, and
feelings)
4. Behaviorism (John Watson )
• Behaviorists proposed observable and measurable
behaviour as a subject matter of psychology.
• Behaviorism had three other important characteristics;
1. conditioned response as the elements/building blocks
of behavior
2. learned rather than unlearned behaviors and
3. focus on animal behavior.
• All behaviors are learned but not inherited and learners
are passive and reactive
• The goal of behaviorism is to investigate the effect of
environment on behavior.
• Consider observation and experiment as methods of study.
5. Psychoanalysis (Sigmund Freud,1856-1939)
• Conscious awareness is the tip of the mental iceberg beneath the
visible tip lays the unconscious part of the mind that plays great
role on our behaviours.
• The unconscious which is the subject matter of psychoanalysis
contains hidden wishes, passions, guilty secrets, unspeakable
yearnings, and conflict between desire and duty
• Some of the physical illnesses of his patients didn‘t have medical or
bodily causes; but non-physical or emotional causes.
• He called these kinds of illnesses as hysteria‘ or conversion reaction
to indicate the conversion of emotional problems into bodily
problems.
• The conflicts and emotional traumas that had occurred in early
childhood can be too threatening.
• They become hidden or unconscious and then will remain to affect
later behavior.
These schools basically differ in terms of three issues:
object/what, goal/why and methods/how to study
• Object of study:- conscious or unconscious mind or
overt behavior
• Goal of the study : analyze the components of the
mind or observing the effect of the environment on
behavior.
• Method:- Introspection, observation, clinical case
studies, etc...
Reflection
• How the old schools of psychology differ in terms
of their object, goal and method of the study?

Brainstorming Questions
• What lessons do you think were generally learned
from the early schools of psychology in better
understanding human behavior
1.3.2. Modern schools of psychology
• Modern psychologists views reflect different
questions about human behavior, different
assumptions about how the mind works, and
different kinds of explanations why people do and
what they do.
1. Psychodynamic perspective (origins in Freud's theory)
Emphasizes on the unconscious dynamics within the
individual such as inner forces, conflicts or instinctual
energy
The psychodynamic approach emphasizes;
2. The influence of unconscious mental behavior on
everyday behavior
3. The role of childhood experiences in shaping adult
personality
4. The role of intrapersonal conflict in determining
human behavior
 Psychodynamic perspective tries to dig below the surface
of a person's behavior to get into unconscious motives .
 They consider themselves as archaeologists of the mind.
2. Behavioral Perspective
• It emphasizes the role of learning experiences play in
shaping the behavior of an organism.
• It is concerned with how the environmental
conditions affects the person‘s actions/Behaviour
(e.g. rewards & punishments)
• Sometimes called the "black box" approach because
it treats the mind as less useful in understanding
human behavior and focus on what goes into and out
of the box, but not on the processes that take place
inside the box.
• They are only interested in the effects of the
environment (input) and on behavior (output)
3. Humanistic Perspective
• Assume that human behavior is not determined either
by unconscious dynamics or the environment.
• It emphasizes the uniqueness of human beings and
focuses on human values and subjective experiences.
• It places greater importance on the individual‘s free
will.
• The goal of humanistic psychology was helping
people to express themselves creatively and achieve
their full potential or self-actualization (developing
the human potential to its fullest)
4. Cognitive Perspective
• It emphasizes what goes on in people's mind; how
people reason, remember, understand language,
solve problems, explain experiences and form
beliefs.
• Highly concerned about the mental processes.
• It show how people's thoughts and explanations
affect their actions, feelings and choices.
• Techniques include electrical recording of brain
activity, electrical stimulation and radioactive
tracing of metabolic activity in the nervous system
5. Biological Perspective
• It focuses on studying how bodily events or functioning of
the body affects behavior, feelings, and thoughts.
• It holds that the brain and the various brain chemicals
affect psychological processes such as learning,
performance, perception of reality, the experience of
emotions, etc.
• Biology and behavior interact in a complex way; biology
affecting behavior and behavior in turn affecting biology.
• We are physical beings who evolved over a long time and
that genetic heritage can predispose us to behaving in a
certain way.
• We may have evolved certain kinds of behavior patterns to
protect our bodies and ensure the survival of our species
6. Socio-cultural Perspective
• The social and cultural factors that affects human behavior.
• Human behavior cannot be understood without
sociocultural context that people "Swim" in every day.
• For e.g. social psychologists examine how group
membership affects attitudes and behaviors, why authority
and other people (like spouse, lovers, friends, bosses,
parents, and strangers) affect each of us.
• Cultural psychologists also examine how cultural rules and
values (both explicit and unspoken) affect people's
development, behavior, and feelings.
• This perspective holds that humans are both the products
and the producers of culture, and our behavior always
occurs in some cultural contexts
Reflection
1. Comparison among modern perspectives of
psychology?
2. Do you think the relationship among the modern
perspectives and the early schools of thought?
1.4. Branches/Sub Fields of Psychology

Brainstorming Questions
Where psychologists are employed to work after
graduation
Branches (or sub fields) of psychology
1. Developmental psychology –studies the physical,
cognitive and psychological changes across the life
span.
It attempts to examine the major developmental
milestones that occur at different stages of
development.
2. Personality Psychology – it focuses on the relatively
enduring traits and characteristics of individuals.
Personality psychologists study topics such as self-
concept, aggression, moral development, etc.
3. Social Psychology –deals with people‘s social-
interactions, relationships, social perception, and
attitudes.
4. Cross-cultural Psychology - examines the role of
culture in understanding behavior, thought, and
emotion.
• It compares the nature of psychological processes
in different cultures, with a special interest in
whether or not psychological phenomena are
universal or culture-specific
5. Industrial psychology – applies psychological
principles in industries and organizations to
increase the productivity of that organization.
6. Forensic psychology - applies psychological
principles to improve the legal system, judiciary
(police, testimony, etc..).
7. Educational Psychology - concerned with the application
of psychological principles and theories in improving the
educational process including curriculum, teaching, and
administration of academic programs.
8. Health Psychology - applies psychological principles to the
prevention and treatment of physical illness and diseases
9. Clinical Psychology:-is a field that applies psychological
principles to the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of
psychological disorders.
10. Counseling Psychology: - is a field having the same
concern as clinical psychology but helps individuals with
less severe problems than those treated by clinical
psychology
1.5. Research Methods in Psychology
A. Definition of terms
Brainstorming Questions
Describe what science, and the scientific method in
particular, is focused on?
A. Definition of terms
 Scientific method - a process of testing ideas
through systematic observations,
experimentations, and statistical analysis.
 Theory - is an integrated set of principles about
observed facts that is intended to describe and
explain some aspects of experience.
 Hypotheses - is a tentative proposition about the
relationship between two or more variables or
phenomena. E.g. Males have high self-confidence
in making decisions than females
B. Major types of research methods

Brainstorming question
What do you think that psychologists are doing
exactly the same thing to achieve the different goals?
There are three major types of research methods: descriptive, correlational
and experimental
1. Descriptive research - the researcher simply records what she/he has
systematically observed
i. Naturalistic observation: subjects are observed in their natural
environment to get a real picture of how behavior occurs.
Limitations are observer effect and observer bias
ii. Case study: an individual is studied in great detail.
 Advantage-it provides tremendous amount of data about a single case or
individual.
 The disadvantage - the researchers can‘t apply the results to other similar
people or lack of generalization to others.
ii. Survey: used to collect data from a very large group of people.
It is useful to get information on private (covert) behaviors
it addresses hundreds of people with the same questions at the same time.
 Disadvantage is that it needs a careful selection of a representative
sample of the actual population.
2. Correlational research
• Is a research method that measures the
relationship between two or more variables.
• A variable is anything that can change or vary.
• Correlation also inform in what direction the
relationship goes (+ve , –ve or no relation)
• It doesn‘t prove causation (cause & effect relation)
3. Experimental Research
• Show cause and effect relationship between variables.
• The independent variables/factors manipulated
carefully in a regulated procedure and all other factors
are held constant to see their effects on dependent
variable.
• The independent variable is the manipulated,
influential, experimental factor.
• The dependent variable is the factor that is measured
in an experiment.
• Dependent variable can change as the independent
variable is manipulated
In experimental research there are two groups
i. A control group is a comparison that is treated in
every way like the experimental group except for the
manipulated factor/independent variable
• The control group serves as a baseline against which
the effects of the manipulated condition can be
compared.
ii. Experimental is a group which take the treatment
• Experimental research is useful to discover causes
of behaviors,
• Disadvantages the expectations and biases on the
part of both the researcher and participants can
affect the results.
C. Steps of scientific research

Brainstorming Questions

What do you think of the


procedures to be followed to
conduct scientific research?
The major steps to be followed in scientific research
1. Defining the problem - noticing something attention catching in
the surrounding for which one would like to have an explanation.
2.Formulating the hypothesis - you might form an educated gues
about the explanation for your observations, putting it into the
form of a statement that can be tested in some way.
3.Testing the hypothesis - the researcher employs appropriate
research methods and collects data to accept or reject the
proposed statement.
4. Drawing conclusions - the researcher attempts to make
generalizations or draw implications from tested relationship
5. Reporting results - the researcher would want to write up
exactly what she/he did, why she/he did, and what she/he found
 This allows others to predict and modify behavior based on the
findings
Reflection
• Explain the three major types of research methods in psychology
and the ethical procedures to be followed.
Discussion Questions
1. Compare and contrast the five early schools of thought in psychology.
2. Compare and contrast the modern psychological perspectives.
3. Reflect on the relationship between the goals of psychology and the
three types of research methods using examples.
4. Mention the steps of conducting research in psychology.
5. A psychologist is interested in exploring the effect of tutorial support on
students‘ academic performance and assign students into two groups.
Students in group one get the tutorial support and those in group two do
not. In this example, what is the
a. Dependent variable
b. Independent variable
c. Control group
CHAPTER TWO
SENSATION AND PERCEPTION

Learning Outcomes
At the end of this chapter, you are expected to explain the;
 meaning of sensation and perception
 difference and similarities of sensation and perception
 factors affecting sensation and perception
 principles of sensation and perception, and
 reasons for sensory and perceptual differences amoun
individuals.
2.1.The meanings of sensation and perception

Brainstorming questions

1. You watch but you don’t see, you hear but you don't
listen, you touch but you don't grasp… What do
these statements suggest to you?
2. Which one do you think refers to sensation and
which one refers to perception?
1. Sensation
• The process whereby stimulation of receptor cells
in the eyes, ears, nose, mouth, and surface of the
skin sends nerve impulses to the brain.
• It is closely tied to what is happening in the
sensory systems themselves.
• Color, brightness, the pitch of tone or a bitter taste
are examples of sensations.
• The starting point of sensations is a stimulus.
• Sensation is therefore the process that detects the
stimulus from one‘s body or from the environment
2. Perception
• The process that organizes sensations into meaningful
patterns.
• It is the process where by the brain interprets
sensations, giving them order and meaning.
• Thus, hearing sounds and seeing colors is largely a
sensory process, but forming a melody and detecting
patterns and shapes is largely a perceptual process.
How different is sensation from perception?
• Sensation is detection of stimuli but perception is organizing
and interpreting what is detected
• Hearing sounds and seeing colors is largely a sensory process,
but forming a melody and detecting patterns and shapes is
largely a perceptual process.
• Sensation is not affected by personal judgment but perception
involves personal judgment

How similar is sensation with perception?


• It is almost impossible to separate sensation from perception
• As soon as the brain receives sensations, it automatically
interprets or perceives them.
• Without sensations of some kind perception could not be occur.
2.2.The sensory laws: Sensory thresholds and sensory adaptation

Brainstorming questions
1. How much intense must a sound be for you to detect it?
2. How much changes in light intensity must occur for you to
notice it?

i. Sensory thresholds
1. Absolute threshold
2. The difference threshold/Just noticeable difference
1. The absolute threshold
• The minimum amount of stimulation/energy we can
detect
• If you were presented with a low intensity sound 30
times and detected it 15 times /50% , that level of
intensity would be your absolute threshold for that
stimulus. E.g. the hearing threshold for human is 20 Hzt
Factors affecting absolute threshold
1. intensity of the stimulus;
2. physical; when the receptors are not functioning
properly, we have sensory disorders or defects
3. psychological state of the individual i.e. the response
bias-how ready the person is to report the presence of a
particular stimulus
2.The difference threshold/Just Noticeable Difference
• The minimum amount of change that can be detected.
• Just Noticeable Difference (jnd) is the measurement of a
just noticeable difference which is also called a
difference limen.
• In jnd tests a subject is asked to compare two sounds
and to indicate which is higher in level, or in frequency.
• The difference threshold for a particular sensory
experience varies from person to person and from
occasion to occasion.
• Therefore, psychologists formally define the difference
threshold as the minimum change in stimulation that
can be detected 50% of the time by a given person.
ii. Sensory Adaptation
• Sensory adaptation is the tendency of the
sensory receptors to respond less and less to a
constant stimulus.
• Sensory adaptation happens when the senses are
constantly bombarded by stimulation for
prolonged time.
2.3.Characteriscs/types of Perception
• Perception is a meaning making process.
• Here the major characteristics of the perceptual
process: selectivity of perception, from
perception, depth perception, perceptual
constancy, and perceptual illusion will be
discussed
2.3.1.Selectivity of perception: attention
• Attention is the term given to the perceptual process that
selects certain inputs for inclusion in your conscious
experience, or awareness, at any given time, ignoring others.
• The selectivity of perception implies that our field of
experience is divided into Focus and Margin.
• Events/stimuli that you perceive clearly are the focus of your
experience and other stimuli that you perceive dimly/vaguely
are in the margin of your attention.
• You may be aware of items in the marginal field but only
vaguely or partially
Remark:- Attention shifts constantly from what is in the focus of
your attention one moment may be in margin; and what is in the
margin may become in your focus
Brainstorming questions
• What factors do you think determine your
attention?
• Why do you pay attention sometime to one stimulus
and other time to other stimulus?
• What aspects of the environment get your attention
at a given time?
What affects attention? (environmental and psychological factors)
1. Environmental Factors /external to the perceiver
i. Size and intensity:-bigger and brighter stimuli are more likely to
capture your attention than smaller and dimmer objects
ii. Repetition:- stimuli repeatedly/frequently occur in your
perceptual field call your attention more
iii.Novelty :- novel stimuli create a sharp contrast with the
environment and hence tend to capture your attention more than
others
iv. Movement :- moving objects bring with changes in stimulation
or newness in their presentation.
2. Psychological factors/internal to the perceiver.
i. Set or expectancy :- readiness & expectancy certain kinds of
sensory input
ii. Motives or needs :- hungry, thirst, sexually aroused are likely to
pay attention stimuli which will satisfy these needs
2.3.2.From perception
1.Figure-Ground Perception
• It is the perception of objects and forms of everyday
experience as standing out from a background.
• Pictures hang on a wall, words are seen on a page, and
melody stands out from the repetitive chords in the
musical background, the pictures, words, and the melody
are perceived as the figure, while the wall, the page, and
the chords are the ground.
• There can be a shift in perception of figure and ground
• Factors that determine attention equally determine what
should become the figure and what should become the
ground.
2. Contours in Form Perception
• Contours are formed whenever a marked difference
occurs in the brightness or color of the background.
• In perceiving the division at the place where the
brightness gradient changes abruptly, you have
perceived a contour.
• Contours give shape to the objects in our visual
world b/s they mark one object off from another or
they mark an object off from the general ground.
• When contours are disrupted visually, as in
camouflage, objects are difficult to distinguish from
the background.
Reflection questions
1.Explain why chameleon changes its color
accordingly to the environment it is found using the
idea of contours in form perception.
2. Why are soldiers dressed in green uniforms in
almost all countries?
3. What will happen if you write with a charcoal on a
blackboard?
4. What will again happen if you write with a pen or
with white ink on a white piece of paper?
5. Do you advice a black man to dress a white cloth or
a black cloth? Why?
Organization in form Perception
• When several objects are present in the visual field, we tend
to perceive them as organized into patterns or groupings.
• Gestalt psychologist “whole is more than the sum of its parts”.
• This implies that what is perceived has its own new properties
emerges from the organization, which takes place.
• Organization in perception partially explains our perception of
complex patterns as unitary forms, or objects.
• We see objects as objects only because grouping processes
operate in perception.
• Without grouping processes operate the various objects and
patterns we perceive would not hang together as objects or
patterns.
• They would merely be so many disconnected sensations-dots,
lines or blotches.
Law of perceptual organization
1. Figure-ground:- relating to or denoting the perception of
images by the distinction of objects from a background from
which they appear to stand out, especially in contexts where
this distinction is ambiguous.
2. The law of Similarity:- grouping according to similarity
3. The law of proximity(nearness):- items which are close
together in space/time tend to be perceived as belonging
together or forming an organized group.
4. The law of Continuation:- the tendency to perceive a line that
starts in one way as continuing in the same way.
 For example, a line that starts out as a curve is seen as
continuing on smoothly curved course.
5. The law of closure:- to organize the perceived world by filling
in gaps in stimulation
Examples of perceptual organization
2.3.3.Depth perception
• Depth perception is the ability to judge the distance of objects.
• Depth perception depends on the use of binocular cues and
monocular cues.
1. Binocular cues: retinal disparity and convergence.
• The two kinds of binocular cues require the interaction of both eyes.
i. Binocular cues Retinal disparity :- is the degree of difference
between the image of an object that are focused on the two retinas.
• Point a forefinger vertically between your eyes, look at the finger
with one eye closed and VS , the background shifts as you view the
scene with different views of the same stimulus.
• Retinal disparity is greater when an object is near than farther
• Certain cells in visual cortex detect the degree of retinal disparity,
which the brain uses to estimate the distance of an object focused
on the retinas.
ii. Binocular cue to depth is convergence:- the degree to which
the eyes turn inward to focus on an object.
• Binocular cues require two eyes
• The closer the objects are the greater the convergence of the eyes
• Hold a forefinger vertically in front of your face and move it
toward your nose and notice an increase in ocular muscle
tension as your finger approaches your nose.
• Neurons in the cerebral cortex translate the amount of muscle
tension into an estimate of the distance of your finger.
• Note that convergence is associated with important everyday
activities.
• For example, drinking alcohol impairs depth perception by
disrupting the normal convergence of the eyes and using a
computer terminal for hours induce eye fatigue caused by
continues convergence.
2. Monocular cue:- require only one eyes.
accommodation:- the change in the shape of the lens
that lets you focus the image of an object on the retina.
• Neuron in the rectum assume that the greater the
accommodation of the lens, the closer the object. But
prolonged accommodation can alter your depth
perception.
• If you stare at a near object for a long time and then
look at a more distant object, the more distant object
will look farther away than it is.
• This is attributable to the brain‘s overcompensation
for the continuous accommodation of the lens while it
was focused on the near object.
Summary of monocular cues
a. Pictorial cues:- artists use them to create depth in their
drawings and paintings.
b. linear perspective:- parallel objects, such as railroad
tracks, seem to get closer as the further away.
c. An object‘s elevation:- objects that are higher in your
visual field seem to be farther away.
d. Aerial perspective :- closer objects seem clearer than
more distant ones
e. Texture gradient:- the nearer object the more details we
can make than farther object
f. Motion parallax:- the tendency to perceive ourselves as
passing objects faster when they are closer to us than
when they are farther away.
2.3.4.Perceptual Constancies
i. Size constancy :- as an object gets farther away from you, it
produces a smaller image on your retina.
 If you know the actual size of an object, size constancy
makes you interpret a change in its retinal size as a change in
its distance rather than a change in its size.
ii. Shape constancy:- it assures that an object of known shape
will appear to maintain its normal shape regardless of the
angle from which you view it.
• Shape constancy occurs because your brain compensates for
the slant of an object relative to your line of sight.
iii. Brightness constancy:- though the amount of light
reflected from a given object can vary, we perceive the
object as having a constant brightness.
• A white shirt appears equally bright in dim light or bright light
2.3.5.Perceptual Illusion/ Errors Due to Perceptual Constancy:
Tricks of the Brain
Provide clues to the processes involved in normal
visual perception.
 Example moon appears larger when it is at the
horizon than when it is overhead, but the moon is
the same distance from us at the horizon as when it
is overhead.
Muller-Lyer, developed the most widely studied
illusion.

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