Lecture 2: What is psychology?

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  • Created by: Becca789
  • Created on: 23-11-20 13:21

Popular perceptions:

There is still perception that much of psychology is really just ‘common sense’ (Eysenck 2004)

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Common Sense:

  • There is some common sense involved in psychology 

  • Would common sense suggest:

  • You would give someone a shock you knew might kill them? (Milgram,1963)

  • That students taking part in an experiment would harass each other just because of the group they were assigned too? Or endure abuse for $15 a day (Zimbardo,1971)

  • By taking a photo of something would make your memory for it poorer? Even if you knew you must delete the photo shortly after (Soares & Storm,2018)

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Definition:

  • ‘Psychology is the scientific study of mind and behaviour’ (Schacter, Gilbert, Wegner & Hood,2012)

                        - Mind = is our internal experience

                        - Behaviour = our observable actions

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Fields of Psychological Enquiry:

  • Biological Psychology - Explores how our biology interacts with Psychological processes

  • Cognitive psychology - Is the study of mental processes, ‘thinking’ and problem solving 

  • Development psychology - Study of how psychological processes change over the lifespan 

  • Personality & Individual Differences - the study of personality and how psychological processes vary from one person to the next

  • Social psychology - explores the psychological processes that operate when we interact with others
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Different Approaches:

  • Wide range of approaches in psychology, doesn’t make any right or wrong

  • Lenses through which we make sense of phenomena 

  • Not exclusive, several lenses can be applied to the same topic

  • Memory:

                    - Biology
                    - Underlying processes
                    - Development in kids/deterioration in old age 
                    - Why performance differs between people 
                    - Social influences

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Questions:

  • A pivotal question relates to how we move our discipline forward

  • Psychologists ask questions and address them using scientific methods 

  • Develop theories:

                - Via observation
                - Using previous literature

  • Then develop questions to explore that theory

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Psychology and Questions:

Theory

     ↓

Question

     ↓

Hypothesis

     ↓

Test

↓                                        ↓

Hypothesis supported      Hypothesis rejected 

↓                                        ↓

Conclusions 

Theory

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Features of a question:

  • It must be theory driven

  • It needs to make a prediction 

  • We need to be able to refute it

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What Questions do you think we should ask ?

  • Psychology is an evolving discipline and the questions we ask reflect our changing understanding and world

  • Questions that were pivotal 50 years ago, are seen as less important now 

  • Three examples:

                       - Project Orcon
                       - Darley and Latané (1968)
                       - Loftus and Palmer (1974)

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Project Pelican AKA ‘Orcan’:

  • To discover if we can convert ‘a lower creature into an unwitting hero?’

  • Skinner trained pigeons to direct pelican missiles 

  • Pigeons could be trained to recognise enemy ships and steer a missile towards it 

  • At this time, this was an important question

                        - Win the war
                        - Save lives

  • Project was theoretical and never used in warfare

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Bystander effect:

  • Attack of Kitty Genovese 13th March 1964

                   - At least 38 witnesses

  • Darley and Latané (1968) 

                    - Question = why didn’t people come to Kitty’s aid?

                    - Experiment where a participant witnessed a seizure, with 1,2 or 5 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii  i                              additional bystanders

  • Findings:

                     - Less likely to help if as number of bystanders increased
                     - Those who did help, took longer to help with larger groups

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Loftus and Palmer:

  • Does the wording of questions affect how people remember information?

  • Asked participants to watch a video of a car crash

  • They were then asked to recall the speed the car was travelling when it:

                             - Hit = 34 mph
                             - Collided = 39.3 mph
                             - Contacted = 31.8 mph
                             - Smashed = 40.8 mph

  • Participants were more likely to wrongly remember broken glass with smashed as opposed to hit (32% vs 14%)

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Real World:

  • The examples discussed are areas where psychology has directly addressed real world problems 

  • Not all research directly focuses on real world problems

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Literature and Questions:

  • Whilst we are guided by the real world to develop our questions, we are also influenced by the academic literature

  • The first stage of any research project is to review the academic literature and begin to develop a theory to explain/explore a phenomena

  • Therefore we use the academic literature to begin to address our real world problems

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Conclusions:

  • Psychology is a scientific discipline

  • Our focus is to devise theories and ask questions to help us understand the mind and behavior 

  • The conclusions we draw and help guide future research, it can also be applied to real world problems

  • Theories are not facts, so they are open to being questioned

  • Through this process, psychology can massively impact our world and help better society 

  • You are not part of this process

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