Approaches in Psychology

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Origins of Pyschology

Descartes: mind and body= a dualism

Wundt and Introspection

  • Opened first experimental psychology lab in 1879, Leipzig, Germany
  • Distinguished scientific psychology from philosophy

Introspection:

  • Systematic experiments
  • He broke up conscious awareness into:
    • thoughts
    • images
    • sensations
  • He used stimuli to record conscious awareness
  • It was standardised as everything was in a lab, with same stimuli and it was repeatable
  • The isolation of consciousness is called structuralism- stimuli in the same order with same instructions
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Behaviourist Approach

Approaches (AO1)

  • Behaviour is learned 
  • Only interested in observable behaviour recorded in lab; objective and controlled
  • Everyone is born in blank slate- tabula rasa

Classical Conditioning (AO1)

  • Pavlov, 1927, proved that behaviour could be learned by using dogs
    • 1. UCS (food) elicits UCR (salivation)
    • 2. NS (bell) elicits no CR
    • 3. NS+UCS paired together to elicit UCR
    • 4. NS becomes CS (bell) eliciting a CR (salivation)

Operant Conditioning (AO1)

  • Skinner suggested behaviour was actively learned and shaped through consequences
  • Positive Reinforcement: positive stimulus increases behaviour 
  • Negative Reinforcement: negative stimulus occurs before, increasing behaviour
  • Punishment: negative stimulus occurs after, decreasing behaviour
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Psychodynamic Approach

Assumptions (AO1)

  • Sigmund Freud assumed behaviour was determined by the unconscious.

The Mind (AO1)

  • Conscious- The part of the mind we are aware of
  • Preconscious- Not actively aware of it, but can be accessed
  • Unconscious- Unaware of, repressed and forgotten deep instincts

Tripartite Personality (AO1)

  • Id- primitive and selfish, operates on pleasure principle and instinct.
  • Ego- balances id and super-ego, operates on reality principle
  • Super-Ego- punishes ego through guilt, works on morality principle.

Defence Mechanisms (AO1)

  • Repression- forcing idea into unconscious
  • Denial- refusing to acknowledge a fact
  • Displacement- putting unwanted feelings onto something else
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Humanistic Approach

Assumptions (AO1)

  • Focuses on conscious experiences and believe that humans strive towards personal growth
  • Person-Centred Approach- humans have free will and personal responsibility.

Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs (AO1)

  • Maslow believed each need must be fulfilled until you can progress up to the next:

Congruence- Carl Rogers (A01)

  • Incongruent- little overlap between self-image and ideal self; low-self-esteem lack of unconditional positive regard
  • Congruent- self-image and ideal self are very similar; high self-esteem due to much unconditional positive regard
  • Client-Centred Therapy- gives client unconditional positive regard they may have lacked in childhood
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