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