perspectives Flashcards
1
Q
assumptions of psychodynamic perspective
A
- Many important influences on behaviour come from a part of the mind individuals have no direct awareness of, the unconscious.
- Personality is shaped by relationships, experience and conflict over time, particularly during childhood.
- Different parts of the mind are in constant dynamic struggle with each other (often unconsciously) and the consequences of this struggle are often shown through behaviour.
- The mind is like an iceberg. We have conscious, subconscious and unconscious thought, all of which can influence our behaviour
- Id, Ego and superego are the three parts of the human psyche
2
Q
strengths of psychodynamic perspective
A
- Allows psychologists to suggest causes of mental disorders (Freud)
- Allows psychologists to suggest why individuals behave in ways they cannot easily explain or understand. (Hancock)
- Allows psychologists to see how behaviour can develop over time as a result of subconscious forces. (Kohlberg)
- Uses methodologies such as case studies providing rich, detailed data (Freud / Kohlberg)
3
Q
weaknesses of psychodynamic perspective
A
- Studies which take this approach often use unrepresentative samples. (Freud)
- Methodology may not be objective and therefore open to bias. (Kohlberg)
- The perspective is based on concepts that are difficult to test and verify scientifically. (Hancock)
- Ethical concerns may be raised. (Hancock / Freud)
4
Q
methods of investigation for psychodynamic perspective
A
- Use of case studies open to subjectivity affecting validity
- Case studies difficult to replicate so issues with reliability of findings
5
Q
issues related to psychodynamic perspective
A
- Allows both qualitative and quantitative data to be gathered which provides rich, in-depth data about the behaviour under consideration.
- Methods can be longitudinal showing development of behaviour
- Longitudinal research can suffer from attrition of participants
6
Q
the psychodynamics perspectives contribution to psychology
A
- Understanding personality development eg: Freud
- Understanding aggression eg: Freud
7
Q
the psychodynamics perspectives contribution to society
A
- Real life application through psychoanalysis as a therapy for mental disorders
8
Q
assumptions of behaviourist perspective
A
- That the majority of behaviour is learned from the environment after birth (born as blank state)
- Only observable behaviour should be studied no need to look at what goes on inside the “black box” of the mind
- Humans and non-humans are only quantitatively deferent- they have the same mechanisms for learning
- All behaviour can be explained in terms of conditioning ( operant / classical) or SLT
9
Q
strengths of behaviourist perspective
A
- Allows psychologists to study the effect of the environment on behaviour (Bandura/ Chaney/ Skinner / Pavlov )
- Very scientific usually under controlled experimental methods (Bandura)
- Provides a strong counter argument to the nature side of the nature-nurture debate (Bandura / Chaney )
- Has many practical applications eg: ‘watershed’ for TV programmes, learning of language (Bandura / Chaney )
10
Q
weaknesses of behaviourist perspective
A
- It is reductionist as it ignores biological and cognitive explanations of behaviour (Bandura / Chaney )
- Tends to rely on laboratory experiments that lack ecological validity (Bandura / Chaney )
- Often uses non-human animals as participants that raises issues of ethics and generalizability to humans ( Skinner / Pavlov)
11
Q
methods of investigation for behaviourist perspective
A
- Very scientific using strict laboratory experimentation
- Often uses non-human animals as participants
12
Q
issues related to behaviourist perspective
A
- Tends to lack ecological validity as settings/tasks can be artificial in a laboratory
- Use of laboratory settings does provide good reliability as experiments can be replicated under controlled conditions
- Ethical concerns can be raised about learning some behaviours eg: aggression in Bandura. Use of non-human animals eg: bonobos
- Studies are usually ‘snapshot’ of behaviour over short period of time
13
Q
behaviourists perspectives contribution to psychology
A
- Language acquisition eg: Skinner
- Abnormality eg: classical conditioning of phobias
- Violent behaviour: Bandura
14
Q
behaviourists perspectives contribution to society
A
- Many practical applications to education
- Treatments such as systematic desensitisation for phobias
- Operant conditioning for training guide dogs
- Token economies used in institutions to promote positive behaviour