Approaches Flashcards

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1
Q

Explain the emergence of psychology

A

-Wundt, father of Psychology
- Created first ever lab
- Tried to document and describe the nature of human consciousness
- Used standardised procedures for all participants

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2
Q

Evaluate the emergence of psychology

A
  • Subjective data
  • Methods used today, standardised procedures that allow for replication
  • Focused an scientific methods of experiments
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3
Q

Outline the behaviourist approach

A
  • Focuses on how behaviour is observed and then replicated
  • Learn through classical conditioning (association)
  • Also learn through operant conditioning (reinforcement)
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4
Q

Evaluate the behaviourist approach

A
  • Real world application - token systems (operant)
  • Reductionist
  • Deterministic
  • Used in therapies - phobias, systematic desensitisation
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5
Q

Outline the SLT

A
  • Indirect learning
  • Seen as bridge between cognition and behaviourism
  • Vicarious reinforcement
  • Mediational processes
  • Must be form of role model to then imitate
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6
Q

Evaluate the SLT

A
  • Recognises cognitive element
  • Explains cultural differences in behaviour
  • Bobo Doll experiment
  • Reductionist - no biological factors
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7
Q

Outline the cognitive approach

A
  • All behaviour is due to internal mental processes
  • Uses computer models - input, storage, retrieval
  • Schema - packages of knowledge helping us experience new things
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8
Q

Evaluate the cognitive approach

A
  • Machine reductionism
  • Soft determinism
  • Scientific methods are used to study cognition
  • Cognitive Neuroscience was a result of this
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9
Q

Outline the biological approach

A
  • Assumes all behaviour is down to genes, neurochemistry and the NS
  • Imbalance of certain neurotransmitters causes a mental disorder
  • Uses twin and adoption studies - monozygotic etc
  • Genotype and phenotype
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10
Q

Evaluate the biological approach

A
  • Real world - drugs in treatments
  • Deterministic - biological predisposition = disorder
  • (should use diathesis stress model)
  • Reductionist
  • Scientific methods are used
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11
Q

Outline the psychodynamic approach

A
  • Freud
  • Suggested most of mind is unconscious
  • Behaviour is down to drives and instincts
  • Disturbing memories are repressed or denied (defence)
  • Id - pleasure, Superego - morality, Ego - reality, mediator
  • Stages:
    0-2 Oral
    2-4 Anal
    4-5 Phallic - Oedipus (boys), Electra (girls)
    (fixations at any of these means you’ll carry behaviour and conflict into adulthood)
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12
Q

Evaluate the psychodynamic approach

A
  • Unfalsifiable concepts - not testable
  • Led to new form of therapy - psychotherapy (therapist based) - others are better, client based
  • Draws significance of parent behaviour and our connections on later life
  • Determinism
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13
Q

Outline the humanistic approach

A
  • Free will - active agents, but still int/ext influences
  • Maslow - psychological needs, safety and security, main goal is self-actualisation
  • Rogers - congruent between ideal and actual self - if too big a gap, self-actualisation won’t be possible
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14
Q

Evaluate the humanistic approach

A
  • Helped develop client-based therapy
  • Cultural bias - collectivists won’t care about self-actualisation
  • Holistic approach - rejects breaking up behaviour and experience into smaller components
  • Positive approach - doesn’t mean its helpful tho
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