Paper 2 Evaluation Flashcards
1
Q
Circadian rhythms
A
Supporting evidence -Siffre study
Weakness of supporting- artificial light
Real world application- Pharmacokinetics- best time to administer drugs
Real world application- Shift work
2
Q
Biological approach
A
- Determinist- implications for legal system
- Reductionist- may not be complete explanation
- Problems with twin studies- MZ more likely to share environment
- Scientific methods - approach based on reliable & objects data
3
Q
Fight or flight response
A
- Not appropriate for modern day stressors
- ‘Freeze’ response may come before
- Difference in male and female roles- females may use ‘tend and befriend’
- Speisman et al (1964)- recordings of primitive and gruesome medical procedures
4
Q
Localisation of function
A
- Phineas Gage- change in personality
- Lashley study on rats- found learning was not localised to a particular area
- A French neurologist- connects between areas
- Studies on people with Broca’s aphasia and Wernicke’s aphasia
5
Q
Plasticity
A
- Macguire et al (2000)- taxi driver study
- Mechelli et al (2004)- bilingual brains vs monolingual brains
- Bezzola et al- golf training on motor cortex
6
Q
Functional recovery
A
- Schneider et al (2014)- collage education
- Real world application- neurorehabilitation- maintain improvements of functioning
7
Q
Infradian rhythms
A
- Stern and McClintock’s study- Pheromones
- Stern and McClintock’s study evolutionary value
8
Q
Ultradian rhythms
A
Derment and Kleitman- EEG- brain activity varied to how vivid dreams were
Replications of the study found similar findings- original study critised for sample size
9
Q
Humanistic approach
A
- Strength- holistic
- Strength- promotes positive image
- Weakness- vague ideas that are hard to test
- Weakness- does not apply to other cultures
10
Q
Cognitive approach
A
- Real-world applications- CBT and artificial intelligence
- Scientific approach- controlled and rigorous methods
- Suffers machine reductionism- ignores influence of emotions (e.g. anxiety)
- Relies on inferences & artificial stimuli- Results may not generalise, and cannot be directly measured