6. Psychology is a science
Uses scientific methodology to study behavior
and mental processes
A wide ranging discipline that can encompass any
aspect of human and nonhuman behavior
Developed from the more established fields of
philosophy and biology
7. Socrates (469-399 BC)
Plato (428-348 BC)
Aristotle (384-322 BC)
Rene Descartes (1595-1650)
Promoted Dualism- mind and body are seperate
FrancisBacon (1561-1626)
John Locke (1632-1704)
Tabula Rasa (this aided in forming Empiricism)
8. William Wundt
The birth of modern psychology occurred in
December 1879 in Leipzig, Germany
Wundt, Max Friedrich, and G. Stanley Hall
collected data for Friedrich’s dissertation on “the
duration of apperception” (the time lag between
the subject's recognition that he has heard the
ball hit the platform and his pressing of the
telegraph key)
Edward Bradford Titchener
9. WilliamJames
Mary Whiton Calkins
First female to earn a Ph.D. in Psychology at
Harvard, but was denied her degree
Margaret Floy Washburn
First female to receive a psychology Ph.D.
Dorothea Dix
Charles Darwin
Natural selection shapes behaviors as well as
bodies
10. John B. Watson
B. F. Skinner
Sigmund Freud
Carl Rogers
Abraham Maslow
Charles DarwinIvan Pavlov
Jean Piaget
12. Uses introspection to explore the structural
elements of the human mind
Has its basis in Wundt’s European
perspective. Titchener established this
school based on his work as Wudt’s student in
Germany
Sought to identify what the mind and
consciousness were
13. Focused on how our mental and behavioral
process function- how they enable us to
adapt, survive, and flourish
Based on William James’ ideas about
psychology having practical applications to
life
Assumed thinking was adaptive
Soughtto identify how the mind and
consciousness worked
14. Founded by John B. Watson
He believed environment is the main component
of psychology (like Locke)
The view that psychology
Should be an objective science
Studies behavior without reference to mental
processes
B.F. Skinner rejected introspection and
studied how consequences shape behavior
15. Sigmund Freud
Id, Ego, Superego
Focused
on meaning of early childhood
memories
16. The Third Force
In the 1950s and 1960s, psychologist followed
either the behaviorist or the psychoanalytic
perspective. Humanistic psychology offered
a third way of thinking about behavior
Believes people are essentially good, unlike
psychoanalytic psychologist
Believes human were unique and distinct from
animals, unlike behaviorist
17. Emphasized the importance of current
environmental influences on our growth
potential, and the importance of having our
needs for love and acceptance satisfied
18. Germany
Studied how people organized perceptual
experiences in understandable ways.
Developed rules for how we organize what
we sense and perceive
“The whole is greater than the sum of its
parts”
19. Supported ideas developed by earlier
psychologist, such as the importance of how
our mid processes and retains information
20. Do our human traits develop through
experience or are we born with them?
Evolution does not imply genetic
determinism
Behavior can be changed
Organisms do not have a conscious or
unconscious goal of maximizing gene
reproduction.
Rather they most adaptive traits will survive due
to natural selection
21. Integrated viewpoint incorporates various
levels of analysis and offers a more complete
picture of any given behavior or mental
process
Everything is related to everything else
22. Psychological
Influence
Social-
Biological
Cultural
Influence
Influence
Behavior
or
mental
process
24. How the body and brain enable
emotions, memories, and sensory
experiences; how genes combine with
environment to influence individual
differences
Sample question:
How are messages transmitted within the body?
How is blood chemistry linked with moods and
motives?
25. How the natural selection of traits promoted
the survival of genes
Sample questions
How does evolution influence behavior
tendencies?
26. How behavior springs from unconscious
drives and conflicts
Sample question
How can someone’s personality traits and
disorders be explained in terms of sexual and
aggressive drives or as the disguised effects of
unfulfilled wishes and childhood traumas?
27. How we learn observable responses
Sample question
How do we learn to fear particular objects or
situations? What is the best way to alter our
behavior, say, to lose weight or stop smoking?
28. How we encode, process, store, and retrieve
information
Sample question
How do we use information in remembering?
Reasoning? Solving problems?
29. How we meet our needs for love and
acceptance and achieve self-fulfillment
Sample question
How can we work toward fulfilling our potential?
How can we overcome barriers to our personal
growth?
30. How behavior and thinking vary across
situations and cultures
Sample question
How are we humans alike as member of one
human family? As products of different
environmental contexts, how do we differ?
31. Basicresearch is more concerned with
discovering concepts or processes. It is less
practical in nature
Much like Structuralism- want to discover what
the mind and consciousness were
Appliedresearch is more concerned with
providing solutions to problems. It is more
practical in nature
Like Functionalism- how the mind and
consciousness worked and how they helped
people adapt to circumstances
33. Psychiatrist go to medical school and receive
training in the treatment of psychological
disorders during a special residency and they
can prescribe drugs
Clinical psychologists earns a Ph.D. and
practice different psychologically based
treatments, or psychotherapies.