Issues and Debates Y13 Flashcards
Culture bias
Trigger words.
- To judge all
- Your own
- What does this do?
The tendency to judge all people in terms of your own cultural assumptions. This distorts or biases your judgement.
Ethnocentrism
- Ones own..
- Believe that this is..
Seeing the world only from one’s own cultural prespective, and believing that this one prespective is normal and correct.
Cultural Relativism
Trigger words:
- behaviour
- Understood
- Only if CC
Insists that behaviour can be properly understood only if the cultural context is taken into consideration
Alpha bias
Trigger words:
- Theory
- Different
Occurs when a theory assumes that cultural groups profoundly different
Beta bias
Trigger words:
- ignored
- the same
- Univeral
Occurs when real cultural differences are ignored or minimised, and all people are assumed to be the same, resulting in universal research designs and conclusions
Culture-bound syndrome
Trigger words:
- Signs and symptoms
- Restricted
- limited
- Psychosocial social
a collection of signs and symptoms that is restricted to a limited number of cultures due to certain psychosocial features
Determinism
- no place
-Explanaing - Predictable
I & Ex
Free will has no place in explaning behaviour, thereforce behaviour is predictable due to internal + external forces.
Hard determinism
Trigger words:
- free will
- Always
- out of our control
Free will is not possible as our behaviour is always caused by internal + external factors that are out of our control.
For example, someone with depresssion may have serious social problems and believe that their current behaviour in terms of coping with it cannot change they had fixed belief of deciding to do thise behaviour.
Soft determinism
- All
- conscious
All behaviour can also be determined by conscious and choices and our free will to a certain degree.
For example, a regular smoker who is a aware of their addiction also knows they have the choice to quit even though they may be surrouned by influnces that could affect their decision.
Biological determinism
- Human
- innate
refers to the idea that all human behaviour is innate and determined by genes.
Environmental determinism
- Behaviour
- forces
is the view that behaviour is determined or caused by forces outside the individual.
Psychic determinism
- Childhood experiences
- Innate drives
Claims that human behaviour is the result of childhood experiences and innate drives (ID, Ego and Superego), as in Freud’s model of psychological development.
Ethical implication of socially sensitive research
Socially sensitive research
- Social conseqeunce 4 who?
- Represent
Any research that might have a direct social consequence for the participants in the research or group that they may represent.
Sieber and Stanley (1988)
- Term
- ## Potential SC
Used the term social sensitivity to describe studies where there are potential social consequence for the participants or the group of people represented by the research
Migram’s (1963) research
- Consider whether…?
- What happened to the p’s and why?
- What did the experiment cause?
- What happened to the p’s after the experiment.
- What did they do a year later.
- Need to consider whether the ‘ends justify the means’.
- P’s were decevied and were unable to give fully informed consent.
- Experiment also caused distress and the particpants were told to continue.
- P’s were debried after the experiment and a follow-up interview took place a year later.
Migram’s (1963) research outcome.
-Follow up
Follow up interviews suggested that the participants had suffered no long-term effects.
Migram’s (1963) research Link sentence
Trigger Word:
- Justify the way?
- Why is it useful?
- Affects
It could be argued that the importance of the findings did justify the way the research was conducted, as. the research is useful to society in determining the factors that affect obidence.
Bowlby’s theory of attachment
- Form what?
- What does this type of attachment affect their future
- Through what?
Suggest that children form special attachment bond, usually with their mother. (Must critical period.)
- He also suggested that this attachment bond affects their future relationships through an IWM
What has Bowlby’s theory of attachment encourged?
- Women
- How could this make mothers feel?
The view that woman’s place is at home with her children.
- Could make some mother feel guility for wanting to return to work.
Explain what psychologists mean by socially sensitive research. [2/3 mark]
Define Socially sensitve research,
Given an example.
Milgram.
Model Answer.
Any research that might have a direct social consequence for the participants in the research or group that they may represent.
For example Milgram’s (1963) research where participants were deceived and unable to give fully informed consent.
Ethical guidelines
Trigger words
- A set of..
- How are they made by?
- Why does it help psychologists do?
A set of principles set out by BPS (British psychological society) to help psychologists behave honestly and integrity.
Ethical issues
- When does these issues come?
- When there is..
- rights of p’s .. of..
Issues that arise when there is conflict between the rights of the participant and the aims of the research.
Ethical implications
- Condering the impact of??
- Not just what?
Consider the impact or the consequences the research has on other people in a wider context, not just the participants taking part in the research.