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PSYC100 Final Review

Psychology is the scientific study of behavior and mental processes. Psychologists use scientific methods to describe, predict, and explain human behavior and mental processes. There are many subfields of psychology that focus on different aspects such as cognitive psychology which studies thinking and memory. Some key issues in psychology are the influence of nature vs nurture and conscious vs unconscious processes. Personality reflects enduring characteristics that produce consistency in individuals and can be influenced by genetic and environmental factors. Psychological disorders involve abnormal behavior that causes distress and prevents normal functioning.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
76 views8 pages

PSYC100 Final Review

Psychology is the scientific study of behavior and mental processes. Psychologists use scientific methods to describe, predict, and explain human behavior and mental processes. There are many subfields of psychology that focus on different aspects such as cognitive psychology which studies thinking and memory. Some key issues in psychology are the influence of nature vs nurture and conscious vs unconscious processes. Personality reflects enduring characteristics that produce consistency in individuals and can be influenced by genetic and environmental factors. Psychological disorders involve abnormal behavior that causes distress and prevents normal functioning.

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Introduction to Psychology

• Psychology is scientific study of behaviors and mental processes

• Psychologist use scientific methods to describe, predict and explain human behavior and
mental processes

• In psychology, evidence and proof is necessary whereas it is not in philosophy


Subfields of Psychology

• Behavioral Neuroscience: How does the brain and the nervous system (+ other
biological elements) affect behavior

• Cognitive Psychology: Focuses on thinking, memory, problem solving, reasoning,


judging, problem solving etc

• Developmental Psychology: Studies how people grow and change

• Personality Psychology: Focuses on the consistency in people’s behavior and how traits

differentiate

• Health Psychology: Explains relationships between psychological ailments and

diseases

• Clinical Psychology: Study, diagnosis and treatments of disorders

• Counseling Psychology: Educational, career and social adjustment problems

• Social Psychology: How people’s thoughts actions and feelings affect others

• Cross-cultural Psychology: Similarities and differences between different ethnic groups’


psychologies

• Industrial and Organizational Psychology: Psychology applied in workplaces


Roots of Psychology

• Buddha: World is subjective, perspectives form ideas

• Confucius: Memories are not passive

• Socrates & Plato: Mind is separable from body, pre-existing knowledge exists

• John Locke: Tabula Rasa

• Wilhelm Wundt: Father of experimental psychology, structuralism and introspection

• Structuralism: Uncovers fundamental mental components of consciousness and thinking

• Introspection: Description of emotions when exposed to a stimulus (Description of emotions


can be hard and inaccurate sometimes) (Looking inward)

• William James: Investigates purpose of consciousness not its structure

• Functionalism: What mind does and how behavior functions


• Gestalt Psychology: Whole is different form parts, what you perceive depends on your focus,
may be shaped by social psychology

Today’s Perspectives in Psychology

• Neuroscience: Views behavior from the perspective of brain and nervous system

(Humans are basically animals)

• Cognitive: Focuses on how consciousness and unconsciousness deals with senses and

thinking processes, how people think and understand the world (McGurk Effect: Ba-Fa)

• Behavioral: Observable behavior is the focus od study (John Watson’s Little Albert

Experiment: Phobias and behaviors can be learned)

• Psychodynamic: Behavior is motivated by inner forces and conflicts (Little or no

awareness/control)

• Humanistic: All people are good and have free will, conflicts with determinism)

Key Issues

• Nature vs Nurture: How much of our behavior is based on heredity and environment

• Conscious vs Unconscious: How much of our behavior is produced by forces which


we’re fully aware of

• Observable Behavior vs Internal Mental Processing: Should psychology only focus on


behavior or should it focus on unseen thinking processes

• Freewill vs Determinism

• Individual Differences vs Universal Principles: How much of behavior reflects unique

quality and how much reflects culture and society

Personality

• Pattern of enduring characteristics that produce consistency and individuality in a person

• Reflection of who we are

Different Approaches to Personality

• Humanistic Approach: Emphasized people’s innate goodness

• Self Actualization: Self fulfillment where people realize their full potential

• Unconditional Positive Regard: Attitude of unconditional acceptance and respect

• Advantages: Development of a form of therapy, highlight uniqueness of humans

• Limitations: Difficult to verify basic assumptions of the approach

• Biological and Evolutionary Approach: Important components of personality are


inherited by genes
• Genes are not the sole cause of personality, their interaction with the environment
shapes who we are

• Learning Approaches: Skinner’s Behavioral Approach “Personality is a combination of


learned behavior”

• Humans are infinitely changeable (repeated observation the others’ behavior

• Social Cognitive Approaches: Emphasize the influence of a persons cognitions and

observation other’s behavior

• Self-esteem: Encompasses our positive and negative self-evaluations

• Advantages: Made personality into a scientific venture

• Limitations: Has a deterministic point of view

• Trait Theory: Seeks to identify basic traits to describe personality

• Trait: Consistent personality characteristics and behaviors

• All people possess certain traits but their degree changes

• Big Five Personality Factors: Openness to experience, conscientiousness,

extraversion, agreeableness, neuroticism

• Advantages: Straightforward explanation of behavioral consistency, allows for

comparison

• Limitations: Trait conception of personality is questionable, only describes behavior

doesn’t explain

• Psychodynamic Approaches: Personality is unconsciousness and motivated by inner

forces and conflicts which people have no awareness or control over

• Freud: “To understand personality, we must understand the unconscious”

• Unconscious: Dreams, drives, urges, slip of tongue

• Personality=Id+Ego+Superego

• Id: Raw, unorganized, animal part of personality, reduces the tension created by
primitive drives, “pleasure principle=reduce tension, maximize satisfaction”

• Ego: Balance between id & superego (outside world), “reality principle=reduces


instinctual energy to maintain safety

• Superego: Controls the impulses from id, represent rights and wrongs of society

• Freud: “Ego struggles to balance the demands of id and commands of superego”


How Personality Develops

• Psychosexual Stages: Conflicts between demand of society (superego) and their

sexual urges (id) in all developmental stages in life, this creates personality

• Fixations: Psychosexual conflicts which are not resolved in developmental

stages

• Oral: Sucking, eating, mouthing, biting (12-18 months)

• Anal: Holding feces, toilet training (1-3 years)

• Phallic: Interest in genitals, coming to terms with Oedipal conflict (3-6 years)

• Latency: Sexual concerns largely unimportant (6-adolescence)

• Genital: Reemergence of sexual interests (adolescence-adulthood)

Freud’s Psychoanalytic Theory

• Defence Mechanisms: Underlying dynamics of personality is related to anxiety

which arise from the conflict between id and superego, people use defence

mechanisms to reduce anxiety (distorting reality/concealing the source)

• Repression: Unpleasant impulses are pushed back to the unconscious

• Limitations: Unobservable, abstract concept, no evidence, is subjective and has

gender differences

Assessing Personality

• Self Report Measures: Asks people questions about a sample of their behavior to
determine personality (MMPI)

• Projective Personality Tests: Shown an ambiguous stimulus and asked to describe it


(Rorschach Test: Describe the symmetric ink pattern, Thematic Apperception Test/TAT:

Write a story about the image shown)

Psychological Disorders

• Abnormal Behavior: Causes people to experience distress and prevents them from
functioning in their daily lives, it’s a continuum(spectrum)

Perspectives on Abnormality

• Medical Perspective: Abnormal behavior of an individual has the source found in

physical examination (Brain injury, hormonal imbalance, chemical deficiency)

• Psychoanalytic Perspective: Sees abnormal behavior caused by childhood conflicts

over opposing wishes regarding sex and aggression

• Behavioral Perspective: Claims abnormal behavior to be a learned behavior


• Cognitive Perspective: Assumes people’s thoughts and beliefs to be the cause of
abnormal behavior

• Humanistic Perspective: People have responsibility of their behavior even it is abnormal

• Sociocultural Perspective: People’s behavior is shaped by the society and their culture

• DSM-5: Used to diagnose and classify (precise) abnormal behavior, communication between
mental health professors and theoretical approaches

• David Rosenhan: Sent people to mental hospital whether they heard voices or not, pseudo-
patients acted normal after that but they were still diagnosed with several abnormalities,

after initial diagnosis mental health professionals overlook other diagnostic possibilities

Disorders

• Anxiety Disorders: Occurrence of anxiety without any any obvious cause that affects
daily functioning

• Phobic Disorders:Intense and irrational fear of an object or situation

• Social: Public speaking, eating in front of others etc

• Agoraphobia: Being away from a safe place or a person that makes you feel safe

• Specific: Heights, snakes, flying etc

• Panic Disorder: Anxiety rises to a peak, person feels doom and leads to panic attacks

• Generalized Anxiety Disorder: Long term persistent anxiety and worry, accompanied

by physical symptoms such as headaches, dizziness, muscle tension, insomnia etc

• Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD): Persistent, unwanted thoughts followed by

repetitive behaviors formed to avoid the unwanted outcome

• Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD): Disturbance caused by major traumatic event

(Re-experiencing, elevated arousal and anxiety, avoidance and numbing)

• Anxiety disorders are caused by biological causes, environmental factors and cognitive

perspective

• Somatoform Disorders: Psychological difficulty to take on a physical form without any

medical cause

• Hypochondriasis: Constant fear of illness

• Conversion Disorder: Physical disturbance such as inability to use a sensory organ,


the cause is purely psychological

• Dissociative Disorders: Separation of different facets of one’s personality


• Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID): Person displays two or more distinct
personalities

• Dissociative Amnesia: Significant, selected memory loss (Forgotten memories are


repressed)

• Dissociative Fugue: Person leaves home and becomes someone else, after sometime
realizes the reality

• Mood Disorders: Disturbances in emotional experience intrudes on daily life

• Major Depression: Interferes with decision making, concentration and sociability

• Mania: Extended state of wild, intense elation

• Bipolar Disorder (Manic-Depressive Disorder): Periods of alternating mania and

depression, periods of depression are usually longer

• Schizophrenia: Distortion of reality occurs, disturbances of thought and language,

delusions and hallucinations,

• Causes: Biological, Environmental (Emotional and communication patterns of

families), Cognitive (Over-attention and under-attention to stimuli in the

environment), Multiple Causes (Predisposition Model: Inherit a predisposition or

inborn sensitivity to schizophrenia)

• Personality Disorders: Characterized by a maladaptive, inflexible behavior that makes

people not function accordingly in society

• Antisocial Personality Disorder: No regard of moral and ethical rules of society, very

manipulative, lack guilt or anxiety about wrongdoing

• Borderline Personality Disorder: Can’t develop a secure sense of who they are, tend

to depend on relationships to define themselves, impulsive and self-destructing

behavior, rejections are devastating, feel alone and empty

• Narcissistic Personality Disorder: Exaggerated sense of self-importance, expect


special treatment from others, inability to experience empathy

Treatments of Psychological Disorders

• Psychotherapy Approach: A therapist uses psychological techniques to help someone

overcome psychological difficulties and disorders, not enough if there is something wrong in

the body

• Biomedical Approach: Relies on drugs and medical procedures to improve psychological


functioning, work hand in hand with psychotherapy
• Eclectic Approach: Assumes psychological disorders to be product of both psychological and
biological processes, many perspectives should be considered

• Psychodynamic Approach: Seek to bring unresolved past conflicts from the unconscious to the
conscious

• Defence Mechanisms: Repression (Pushing unwanted memories to the unconscious)

• Psychoanalysis by Freud: Those memories can be reached by dream interpretation and free

association

• Manifest Content: Surface description

• Latent Content: Underlying meaning

• Resistance: Inability or unwillingness to reveal certain memories

• Transference: Transfer of feeling to the psychoanalyst that was originally directed to a


relative or close one

• Criticisms: Too expensive, takes lots of time, effectiveness of therapy cannot be


determined accurately because of subjectiveness, would be more effective on more

sociable patients

• Contemporary Psychodynamic Approaches: Less emphasis on childhood, shorter duration,

focuses on current relationships

• Behavioral Approach: Uses basic processes of learning like reinforcement

• Criticisms: Inside thoughts and expectations can’t be gained

• Benefits: Eliminates phobias, anxiety disorders and establishes control over impulses

Classical Conditioning Treatments

• Aversive Conditioning: Reduces frequency of undesired behavior

• Extinction of behavior will be seen eventually

• Systematic Desensitization: Gradual exposure to an anxiety producing stimulus paired

with relaxation (Muscle relaxation)

• Exposure Treatments: People confronted gradually/suddenly with a stimulus they fear

• Operant Conditioning Techniques to Treatment: Token system, contingency


contracting, observational learning

• Cognitive Approach: Teaches people to think in more adaptive ways by changing their
dysfunctional cognitions about the world and themselves

• Therapy is very structured and depends on concrete problems

• Cognitive Behavioral Approach: Uses basic learning behaviors to change how people think
• Rational-Emotive Behavior Therapy: Negative Activating Condition —> Irrational Belief
System —> Emotional Consequences

• Humanistic Therapy: People have control over their own problems and are responsible for
solving them, unconditional positive regard is visible

• Self-actualization: State of fulfillment where people realize their highest potential

• Criticism:Not specific, not precise, not scientifically proven or developed

• Group Therapy: Centers on a common difficulty like alcoholism

• Benefits: Timesaving and less costly

• Family Therapy: Focuses on the family and its dynamics


Effectiveness of Psychotherapy

• Works for most of the people but not all

• Client has a positive relationship with the therapist

• Receives explanation of their symptoms

• Able to confront negative emotions

Other Methods of Therapy

• Drug Therapy: Alters the operation between the brain and neurotransmitters.

• Antipsychotic Drugs: Temporarily reduce psychotic symptoms like hallucinations ,


may have long term side effects, symptoms may come again when drug is withdrawn

• Antidepressant Drugs: Improve the mood and feelings of a severely patient, works by
changing the specific concentrations of some neurotransmitters

• Mood Stabilizers: Treats mood disorders and prevents manic episodes of bipolar
disorders

• Antianxiety Drugs: Reduces anxiety by reducing the excitability and increasing the
feelings of well being, its combination with alcohol is very dangerous

• Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT): Used in the treatment on severe depression

• 70-150 Volts of electric applies to patient’s head

• Causes seizures and loss of consciousness

• Transcranial Magnetic Simulation (TMS): An alternative to ECT, directs magnetic pulse

to specific areas of the brain

• Psychosurgery: Used to reduce the symptoms of a mental disorder

• Prefrontal Lobotomy: Surgically destroying or removing frontal lobes which control emotions

• Cingulotomy: Used in severe cases of OCD

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