they work on mental disorders
they are a temporary solution to a situation, can be found in schools, or family therapists
psychological bases of behaviour
Prison inmates, or research on eyewitnesses or juries
How people change over time
social culture influence
social or behavioural level
relating to others and personal relationships
psychological
mental or neurological level
involves thoughts, feelings, and emotions
biological
molecular or neurochemical
involves molecules and brain structure
human behavior is difficult to predict
actions are multiply determined
psychological influences are rarely independent
individual differences among people
people influence one another
reciprocal determinism
behavior is shaped by culture
emic vs. etic approaches
When you record the behaviors of your research subjects in real-world settings.
can draw cause- and- effect inference
The use of a descriptive research approach to obtain an in-depth analysis of a person, group, or phenomenon
good for existence proofs
Any test, measure, or survey that relies on an individual's own report of their symptoms, behaviors, beliefs, or attitudes
easy to administer
studies the relationship between variables without the researcher controlling or manipulating any of them
Describes the way participants are allocated to experimental groups of an investigation.
findings that are generalizable to the real world
ability to draw cause-and-effect inference
correlational design
experimental design
phonology: ability to recognize and manipulate the spoken parts of words, including syllables, onset-rime, and phonemes
phonemes: sound of language
morphology: study of words and their parts
morphemes: prefixes, suffixes, base words important for reading spelling, and comprehension
the set of rules to make sentences and the formation of phrases
word order, morphological markers, and sentence structure
elements of communication
facial expressions, tone of voice, previous statements by others
helps interpret ambiguous information
around 6 months they can recognize their own name
around 10 to 12 months they can comprehend other words
joint attention
sharing interests
9-12 months
babies practice sounds before they understand they represent
anything
begins in womb
newborns recognize Mom’s voice
easier to acquire with early deprivation
we talked about "Genie" and how the trauma she endured, caused her to go non-verbal.
so she learned how to do sign language
the overall argument was that the younger you are, the easier it is to learn a new language. "less is more theory"
short simple
4 month olds prefer it
may help simplify sounds into units
words paired with objects
expands children's speech
they theorized that "intelligence" is a mix of two capacities:
1. capacity to learn new ways of solving problems or fluid intelligence
2. accumulates knowledge or crystallized intelligence
different ways of thinking about the world
argued that autistic savants provided support for different types of IQ
however there is no good evidence that these intelligences are truly independent
analytical (book smarts)
practical (street smarts)
creative (creativity)
Stemberg is the originator
believes that having one does not ensure that you have others
they say that bigger brains predict higher intelligence
but there is a moderate correlation (0.3 and 0.4) between brain volume and intelligence
a third variable might be nutrition
they do also say that the cerebral cortex development is slower in gifted children
increased test sophistication
increased complexity of the modern world
better nutrition
changes at home and school
females tend to do better on verbal tasks and recognizing emotions in others
males tend to do better on spatial ability tests, like mental rotation and geography
pro: good if you want quick cheap easy data collection
con: can't have a cause and effect relationship, or analyze behaviour over time
pros: can say something about this development and watch the vision change over time
cons: time consuming, expensive
stage-like vs gradual changes in understanding
domain-general vs domain-specific
principle source of learning
children use this to acquire knowledge within a stage
how kids perceive and adapt to new information
when a kid can no longer take in information, they are forced to look at it differently
stressor as stimuli
stress as a transaction
stress as a response
focuses on identifying types of stressful events
studies situations that cause more stress and the people that react strongly to that.
examines how people interpret and cope with stressful events
primary and secondary estimation determines if a situation is harmful, and then if we can cope with it.
assesses psychological and physical reactions to stress
can be lab-induced or real-world stressors
alarm reaction
resistance
exhaustion
automatic nervous system is activated, stress hormones released, physical symptoms of anxiety
HPA axis and fight or flight response
you adapt and find ways to cope with the stressor
in prolonged stressors, our resistance can break down
can cause physical or psychological damage
behavioral: how you act on your emotions
cognitive: informational control and proactive coping
emotional: being able to suppress and express emotions properly
control
commitment
challenge
alternative: instead of conventional medicine
complementary: when products and practices are used with conventional medicine
CAM does not hold up
pain is highly responsive to placebo treatments, which may be the reason why CAM is so popular
NTBT: biological need to be with and around people, and it hurts to be isolated or rejected
poor cognition and depression and anxiety
mass hysteria: contagious outbreak of irrational behavior that spreads
windshield pitting: started to notice chips in their windows
attributions are assigning causes to behavior
internal and external influences this
Japanese and Chinese
a 2-week study of prison life where you were either a prisoner or guard. on the second day, the guards started punishing them.
had to stop on day 6 because the guards were becoming sadists and the prisoners became rebellious.
they engaged in atypical behavior because they were stripped of their identity
have a persuasive leader
disconnect from the outside world (isolated)
discourage questioning of assumptions
gradually indoctrinate members (brainwashing)
introducing reasons on why they might be right
debunking them
educate yourself
know what is right
it has both positive and negative outcomes depending on the situation or context
Designed experiment to test the influence of obedience and authority on normal people
more morally advanced
level of authoritarianism
when people see someone in need but fail to help them
pluralistic ignorance
diffusion of responsibility
sometimes we help people because we care for them
when you can't escape the situation
characteristics of the victim
personality
media, interpersonal provocation, frustration
personality traits, males, cultural
an attitude is a belief that includes emotions
they are highly accessible
firmly held and stable over time
an unpleasant state of tension between two opposing thoughts
change attitude a, b, or add a third variable
they studied being stubborn in behavioral change
people who were paid 1 dollar to lie were more stubborn than the ones who got 20 dollars
central uses facts and information
peripheral uses beauty, fame, and positive emotions
starts with a small request and moves to a larger one
starts big then "backs off"
starts with a low price, then once they accept it, up the price
a quick way to judge someone (good or bad)
prejudice: drawing negative conclusions before seeing the evidence whereas stereotypes are good or bad
prejudice is cultivated by stereotypes
both can lead to negative situations
girls like pink and dolls
boys like blue and trucks
prejudice can lead to treating someone poorly
comes from a need to blame other groups for our misfortunes
says that we have a need to see the world as fair, even if its not
its when you go along with others' opinions
implicit= unaware
explicit= aware
work together as one big group rather than split up
contact should be enjoyable
equality
potential to become friends
groups should defeat negative stereotypes first
intellectually curious, unconventional, open-minded
careful and responsible
social and lively, makes friends easily, confident
easy to get along with, not fussy, a lot of friends
tense and moody
predicts many real-world behaviors like:
job performance and grades in school
physical health and lifespan
Mischel's argument "Psychology of the Stranger" says that:
traits are a cluster, not isolated behaviors
they mainly describe individual differences rather than what causes them
the way we can find any underlying variables that play a role
the idea that the most important differences between people will be encoded in the language that we use to describe people
distinguishes diagnosis from others
predicts performance
predicts family history
predicts natural history
a diagnosis across cultures
koro: your genitals are shrinking and receding into your abdomen
amok: episodes of intense sadness and brooding, followed by uncontrolled behaviour and violence
all people with that diagnosis are alike in at least one aspect
People differ dramatically in other psychological difficulties, race, cultural background, personality, interests, and cognitive skills.
Major mental disorders typically have high interrater reliability, similar to medical disorders. Although, some personality disorders have lower reliabilities
probably true in some 'disorders' in the popular media
there is a criteria
Rosenhan's Asylum Study: An experiment conducted to determine the validity of psychiatric diagnosis.
Participants submitted themselves for evaluation at various psychiatric institutions and made up hallucinations to be accepted, but acted normally from then onward
clinical description, laboratory study, exclusion of other disorders, follow-up study, and family study.
DSM
not all decisions and rules are scientific
high level of comorbidity
Medicalizing normality
Vulnerable to political and social influences
symptoms: excessive worry, physical tension, irritability across many areas of functioning
causes: complex interaction of biological, psychological, and social factors
symptoms: fear focused on a particular object/situation, avoidance of a feared object/situation
causes: complex interaction of biological, psychological, and social factors
symptoms: Repeated and unexpected panic attacks, persistent concerns about future attacks, changes in personal
behavior in an attempt to avoid them
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Obsession: intrusive thought
Compulsion: Ritualized behavior to control anxiety
from thought
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Avoiding thoughts/images of past traumatic
experience; physiological response to stress is
dysregulated
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Fear of being in a place or situation in which
escape is difficult, can be an outgrowth of panic disorder,
fear of panic attack
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Intense fear of negative evaluation in social situations, anxiety that goes well beyond stage fright most of us feel,; avoidance of a social situation
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Sadness, empty feeling, physical slowing
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Episode of mania: increase in goal-oriented behavior, euphoria followed by an episode of depression
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Sudden loss of memory for important personal info, cannot be explained by normal forgetting
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Co-existence of 2 or more complete personalities in one person markedly disrupts the person’s usual sense
of identity, may be observed by others, there is typically a host personality (main) that is distinguished from alters (very different from a host)
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Feeling detached from oneself; may feel like
observing the body from another perspective
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Extreme instability of mood, instability of identity,
impulse control problems, difficulty in interpersonal
relations
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Guiltless, dishonest, manipulative, callous, self-centered, shallow affect
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Attention deficit; impulsivity; hyperactivity
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Violation of rules; disregard for the rights of others
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
symptoms: Deficits in 1. Social reciprocity and communication
(non-verbal & verbal) 2. Repetitive and restrictive behavior
causes: Complex interaction of biological, psychological, social
factors
History of depression and other mental illnesses.
Job/financial problems or loss.
Impulsive or aggressive tendencies.
Substance use.
Current or prior history of adverse childhood experiences. (PTSD)
depressed people tend to interact with others in a way that evokes future rejection, which increases their risk for future depression.
depression results from a low rate of positive reinforcement in the environment
tendency to feel helpless in the face of events we can not control
the belief or study of the evil entities such as the devil that can take control of a person.
Clinical psychologists, psychiatrists, counselors, and social workers
they work in Social services agencies, crisis intervention centers
1. Causes stem from traumatic or adverse childhood experiences
2. Analyze avoided thoughts and feelings, wishes and fantasies, and significant past events
3. When clients achieve insight into unconscious material, the causes and significance of symptoms become evident
pointing out, explaining and even teaching the client the meanings of behavior that is manifested
Anything that works against the progress of therapy and prevents the client from producing previously unconscious material, therapists point out and interpret the most obvious resistances so they can deal with them
Procedure for uncovering unconscious material and giving the client insight into some areas of unresolved problems, in dreams ones wishes, needs and fears are expressed
Be authentic and genuine
Express unconditional positive regard
Show empathetic understanding
Strategic family interventions= remove barriers to effective communication
Structural family therapy= immerse themselves in the family to make changes
Our vulnerability to psychological disturbance product of the frequency and strength of irrational beliefs
Identify and modify distorted thoughts and long-held negative core beliefs
Warm and direct
Establish a positive working relationship
Tend not to contradict clients
Select important topics to focus on in session
Match treatments to the needs of clients