Paper 2: Approaches of Psychology Flashcards
Revise
What are the 5 main psychological approaches?
Learning approaches (behaviourism and social learning theory): Behaviour is learned from experience
The cognitive approach: Behaviour is a result of thoughts and cognitive processes
The biological approach: Behaviour is a result of biological processes
The psychodynamic approach: Behaviour is a result of unconscious processes and unconscious conflicts
Humanistic psychology: Behaviour is influenced by all these things, but each person ultimately has free will to decide their actions
Who was the first psychologist and how did he conduct his introspection?
Wundt. Introspection involves looking inwards and examining ones own emotions and state. can involve looking in a mirror with a metronome and prompts. Must meticulously write everything and make sure the process is exact.
AO3 evaluation of Wundt’s research.
Strengths: tried to apply scientific rigour to the proceedings. Strictly controlled the environment to prevent any extraneous variables. Had great influence on the study of cognitive psychology.
Weaknesses: Research is subjective and ultimately unscientific. Unable to replicate findings.
What are the two genres of the learning approach?
Behaviourism and Social Learning Theory.
What are the basic assumptions of the behaviourist approach?
Everyone is born as a blank slate and it is through experience that behaviour is learnt.
The study of the mind should be based on external behaviour.
Humans and animals have the same behaviourist structure.
Who was the first behaviourist and what was his experiment?
Pavlov 1927. Found dogs could be conditioned to salivate at the ringing of a bell, making the bell a conditioned stimulus associated with the food.
What did Skinner look at?
Operant conditioning, the idea there are positive, negative and punishments to reinforce behaviour.
How did Skinner test his theory?
Skinner tested both positive and negative reinforcement using rats and pigeons. He would either reward the animal with food once they had completed an action or remove a negative thing (stop the electrified floor).
Strengths of behaviourism?
Scientific, focuses on what’s credible and repeatable.
Has practical application in the treatment of phobias such as flooding and systematic desensitisation.
Weaknesses of behaviourism?
Ignores the internal mind: By focusing only on environmental inputs (stimulus) and behavioural outputs (responses), behaviourism neglects the mental events in the middle such as thoughts, reflections, and emotions. This makes it difficult for behaviourism to explain behaviours such as memory.
Animal studies aren’t as valid as human studies.
Ethical concerns for animals that may have been in distress in Skinner’s studies.
What is the Social Learning Approach?
We not only learnt through the reward and punishment of our own behaviour but the imitation of other peoples behaviour.
People imitate the role models they have.
Allows for some cognitive elements.
What research supported the SLT theory?
Bandura’s Bobo Doll Study. Subjects were 36 boys and 36 girls aged between 3 and 6 years old
They were each put into a room with an inflatable doll (Bobo) and observed an adult role model interact with the doll for 10 minutes
The subjects were separated into groups as follows:
Aggressive: Role model hits the doll with a hammer and shouts abuse at it
Non-aggressive: Role model does not hit the doll or shout at it
Control: No role model
Half of the subjects had a role model of the same gender, while the other half had a role model of the opposite gender
After observing the role model for 10 minutes, the participants were taken to a room with toys but told they couldn’t play with them (the aim of this was to increase aggression)
After 2 minutes, the participants were taken to a room with lots of different toys (including a Bobo doll) and left to play with them for 20 minutes
What were the results of this study?
Children who had observed an aggressive role model previously acted more aggressively than children who had observed a non-aggressive role model
Boys acted more aggressively than girls in general
The child was more likely to imitate the behaviour of the role model if the role model was the same gender as them
What’s vicarious reinforcement?
Person is more likely to imitate behaviour if they see it rewarded. More likely to not imitate if they see it punished.
What the cognitive side of Social Learning Theory?
The mediating process, as described by Bandura in 1977.
What are the 4 factors of SLT.
Attention, retention, reproduction and motivation.
Strengths of Social Learning Theory?
Offers a more complete account than behaviourism. Uses the ideas of the internal process.
Can be used to explain cultural differences.
Weaknesses of SLT?
The research accidentally demonstrated a biological factor. Showed boys were more aggressive than girls.
Had questions of ecological/external validity, conducted in an unfamiliar environment.