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Welcome to Psychology 101 Introductory Psychology Instructor: Evette Samaan Book: Myers, David G. (2002). Exploring Psychology, 5th Edition. E-mail: Giseladora_at_AOL.com – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Welcome to


1
  • Welcome to
  • Psychology 101
  • Introductory Psychology
  • Instructor Evette Samaan
  • Book Myers, David G. (2002). Exploring
    Psychology, 5th Edition.
  • E-mail Giseladora_at_AOL.com

2
History of Psychology
  • Psychology is a fairly new science.
  • Until the 19th century it was not recognized as a
    separate field of study.
  • The birth of psychology as a formal science can
    be traced back to 1879.
  • It was founded by Wilhelm Wundt in Leipzig,
    Germany.
  • The use of introspection

3
Defining Psychology
  • Psychology is the scientific study of behavior
    and mental processes and how they are affected
    by an organisms physical state, mental state,
    and external environment.

4
Specialties in Psychology
  • Experimental Psychology
  • Clinical Psychology
  • Educational Psychology
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Industrial Psychology
  • Psychometric Psychology
  • Social Psychology

5
Defining Personality
  • Personality is a distinctive and stable pattern
    of behavior, thoughts, motives, and emotions that
    characterizes an individual over time.
  • This pattern reflects a particular constellation
    of traits and characteristics that describe the
    person across many situations shy, friendly,
    hostile, or brave.

6
Measuring Personality
  • Projective Tests
  • Objective Tests

7
Psychological Testing
  • Objective Tests
  • Also called Inventories
  • Measure beliefs, feelings, or behaviors of which
    the individual is aware
  • Have more reliability and validity
  • Projective Tests
  • Designed to tap unconscious feelings or motives

8
1- Objective TestsInventories
  • The Beck Depression Scale Inventory
  • The Taylor Manifest Anxiety Scale
  • The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory
    (MMPI)
  • The Myers-Briggs Personality Inventory

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10
2- Projective Tests
  • A psychodynamic measure of personality
  • They attempt to measure unconscious motives,
    feelings and conflicts.
  • Example Rorschach Inkblot Test the client
    reports what he sees in the inkblots and the
    clinician interprets the answers according to the
    symbolic meaning emphasized by the psychodynamic
    theories.

11
The Rorschach Projective Test
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14
Theories of Personality
  • 1- The Trait Perspective
  • 2- The Psychodynamic Perspective
  • 3- The Social-Cognitive Learning Theory
  • 4- The Biological Theory
  • 5- The Humanist and Existential Theories

15
1- Trait PerspectiveGordon Allport(1897-1977)
  • 1- Cardinal Traits
  • Are of overwhelming importance to the individual
    and influence almost everything the person does.
  • Example nonviolence
  • Gandhi and Martin Luther King

16
2- Central Traits Reflect a characteristic way of
behaving, dealing with others, and reacting to
new situations. Example the persons attitude
towards the world (negative or positive) 3-
Secondary Traits They include habits, opinions,
and preferences for colors or food, for example.
17
The Big Five
  • Introversion vs. Extroversion
  • Neuroticism or Emotional Instability
  • Agreeableness
  • Conscientiousness
  • Openness to Experience

18
  • Which of the five robust factors enhance the
    persons well-being?
  • Which of them inhibit the persons well-being?

19
2-The Psychodynamic Theories(You Are What You
Were)
  • Freud
  • Psychoanalysis
  • a- The Structure of Personality
  • b- Psychosexual Stages
  • c- Defense Mechanisms

20
Freud, Psychoanalysis
21
Structure of Personality
  • Id
  • Pleasure principle
  • Life death instincts
  • Immediate gratification
  • Ego
  • Reality Principle
  • Superego
  • Ego Ideal moral and social standards
  • Conscience the inner voice

22
Structure of Personality
23
Psychosexual Stages
  • 1- Oral Stage (0-2)
  • 2- Anal Stage (2-3)
  • 3- The Phallic Stage (3-6)
  • 4- The Latency Stage (6-12)
  • 5- The Genital Stage (12-18)

24
Examine the life of a rapist in light of Freuds
Psychosexual stages and structure of personality.
  • What happened during each stage?
  • Was he fixated at any stage?
  • What principle does he operate by?
  • What structure of personality is dominant?
  • What is his famous sentence?
  • Describe him in one word.
  • Is there a balance between the function of the id
    and the superego? Why?

25
Defense Mechanisms
  • 1- Repression
  • 2- Projection
  • 3- Displacement
  • 4- Regression
  • 5- Denial
  • 6- Sublimation
  • 7- Reaction Formation

26
  • Describe the condition this person is in, in
    terms of
  • Defense mechanisms
  • The condition he/she is in
  • Whether he/she is liberated
  • Whether he/she has a clear understanding of the
    concept of salvation and the new birth in Christ

27
I Like It Here
  • They told me on the other side
  • Of the raging River of Change,
  • There is nowhere to hide.
  • But it sounds a bit strange,
  • Here my feelings are inside,
  • My heart has a guarded gate, whats in cant go
    outside,
  • And no one can investigate.

28
  • They told me on the other side
  • Everything will seem clear, turning on the light
    inside
  • Will make the dark disappear.
  • But it is a long , long ride,
  • No, thank you my dear,
  • I need a place to hide.
  • So, since I like it here,
  • Its here where Ill reside.

29
  • Change, I truly dont know,
  • Why would I go to neverland
  • Just that I may grow?
  • Here I know where I stand,
  • I know how things will go.
  • Why must I leave my land
  • Drop my act for a new show?
  • Change is not drawing near,
  • Cause I certainly like it here.

30
Erik Erikson (1909-1994)Psychosocial Stages
  • 1- Trust vs. Mistrust (birth to 1 ½)
  • 2- Autonomy vs. Shame Doubt (1 ½ -3)
  • 3- Initiative vs. Guilt (3-6)
  • 4- Competence vs. Inferiority (6-12)
  • 5- Identity vs. role confusion (12-18)
  • 6- Intimacy vs. Isolation (young adulthood)
  • 7- Generativity vs. Stagnation (middle adulthood)
  • 8- Ego Integrity vs. Despair (older adulthood)

31
Freud Erikson
  • Psychosexual stages
  • 5 stages of development
  • Sexual motivation
  • If issues arent resolved, fixation occurs
  • End sexually mature adult (adolescence)
  • Psychosocial stages
  • 8 developmental stages
  • Psychological and social motivation
  • At each stage there is a crisis that must be
    resolved
  • Development is an ongoing process

32
  • What happened to these people? In which stage did
    the crisis occur?
  • Someone who is insecure
  • Someone with low self-esteem
  • Someone with an inferiority complex
  • Someone whos shy
  • Someone who is insecure about his sexual
    orientation
  • Someone who has difficulty establishing healthy
    relationships
  • Someone with a midlife crisis
  • Someone whos terrified of death

33
3- The Social-Cognitive School(You Are What You
Think Observe)
  • 1- Locus of Control
  • Julian Rotter
  • 2- Self-efficacy
  • Albert Bandura
  • 3- Latent Learning
  • Edward Tolman

34
The Social-Cognitive SchoolThree Principles
  • Learning
  • Cognition
  • Social Behavior

35
Reciprocal Determinism
  • Personal-cognitive factors interact with the
    environment to influence peoples behavior.

36
Julian RotterLocus of Control
  • Internal (Internals)
  • Tend to believe they are responsible for what
    happens to them
  • External (Externals)
  • Tend to believe that they are victims of luck,
    fate, or others

37
Choose Your Locus of Control
  • 1- a. Many of the unhappy situations are partly
    due to bad luck.
  • b. Peoples misfortunes result from
    mistakes they make.
  • 2- a. Becoming a success is a matter of hard
    work luck has little or nothing to do with it.
  • b. Getting a job depends mainly on being
    in the right place at the right time.

38
Reciprocal Determinism in Locus of Control
  • Expectations
  • Affect
  • What happens (environment behavior)
  • What happens
  • Affect
  • Expectations

39
Albert BanduraSelf-efficacy Is Derived from
  • Experiences in mastering new skills
  • Vicarious experiences provided by successful
    people
  • Encouragement and persuasion
  • Physiological and emotional state

40
Self-efficacy
41
Reciprocal Determinism in Self-efficacy
  • Belief in your abilities
  • Affects
  • What happens to you (Behavior environment)
  • What happens to you
  • Affects
  • Your belief in your abilities

42
Social-Cognitive School
Julian Rotter (1966, 82, 90) A. Bandura (1994, 1995) E. Tolman (1938)
External/Internal Locus of control Self-efficacy Latent Learning
Generalized Ex- pectancies Observation Imitation Cognitive Map
Reciprocal Determinism Reciprocal Determinism Insight
43
  • Which comes first, the biology or the belief?

44
Biology Belief
  • Genesists
  • You will be disposed to seek out situations that
    let you express your biologically influenced
    trait.
  • You are an active person then you play sports
  • Social Cognitive Theory
  • You will seek situations in which you believe you
    can behave a certain way.
  • You believe youre good in sports then you play
    sports

45
3- The Biological Perspective(You Are What
Youre Born)
  • 1- Ethology
  • 2- Developmental Neuroscience

46
Ethological TheoriesKonrad Lorenz
  • Behavior is influenced by biology.
  • Imprinting is the rapid, innate learning within
    a limited period of time that involves
    attachment to the first moving object.
  • Critical period is a very early period in
    development in which certain behaviors optimally
    occur.

47
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48
Developmental Neuroscience
  • The study of the development of brain structures
    and the relations between brain structures and
    functions and behavior

49
5- The Humanist Existentialist Theories
  • Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)
  • Carl Rogers (1902-1987)
  • Rollo May (1909-1994)

50
Abraham Maslow
  • Hierarchy of Needs
  • 1- Safety Physiological Needs
  • 2- Emotional Psychological Needs
  • 3- Self-acctualization

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52
Carl Rogers
  • Congruence
  • Relationship between self and organism
  • Unconditional Positive Regard
  • Self-fulfillment

53
CongruenceSelf Organism
  • Self
  • Your conscious view of yourself
  • The way you want to be based on peer, parental,
    and societal pressures
  • Organism
  • Sum of all of your experiences
  • Who we really are
  • Others and the environment give us feedback on
    who we really are

54
ExistentialismRollo May
  • Difficult and Tragic Aspects of the Human
    Condition
  • Freedom of Choice
  • Absence of any obvious meaning or sense to life

55
Which Approach is Right?
  • Consider the behavior of an alcoholic person.
  • What led to this lifestyle?
  • What are the factors to be considered?
  • Biological cultural
  • Social/family cognitive
  • Emotions personality

56
SongThe Greatest Love of All
  • I believe the children are our future
  • Teach them well and let them lead the way.
  • Show them all the beauty they possess inside.
  • Give them a sense of pride
  • to make it easier
  • Let the childrens laughter
  • remind us how we used to be.
  •  

57
Everybody is looking for a hero People need
someone to look up to. I never found anyone who
fulfilled my needs A lonely place to be And so I
learned to depend on me. I decided long ago Never
to walk in anyones shadow.
58
If I fail, if I succeed, At least I lived as I
believe. No matter what they take from me, They
cant take away my dignity Because the greatest
love of all is happening to me. I found the
greatest love of all inside of me. The
greatest love of all is easy to
achieve. Learning to love yourself Is the
greatest love of all.
59
What theory does the song represent?
  • Is she self-actualized?
  • Did she have unconditional positive regard?
  • Where her psychological needs met?
  • What did she do with her free will?
  • What is her locus of control?
  • Describe her self-efficacy now.
  • Is she on her way to self-actualization, or she
    is stuck somewhere in the hierarchy of needs?

60
Who or Which Theory would most likely State the
Following Statements
  • Choose from the following
  • Freud, Wilhelm Wundt, Psychodynamic
    psychologist, Jean Piaget, Carl Rogers, Abraham
    Maslow, Bandura, Rotter, Lorenz, existentialism,
    humanism, ecological, Erikson, Skinner, Pavlov,
    social-learning, Thorndike

61
  • 1- My theory emphasizes the unconscious dynamics
    within the individual.
  • 2- I reject that behavior is determined by
    unconscious dynamics or the environment.
  • 3- I say that people have freedom of choice, but
    this freedom entails anxiety.
  • 4- I believe that people can reach their full
    potential when treated with unconditional
    positive regard.
  • 5- I would like to call my psychology the third
    force.
  • 6- My psychology compares the human brain to a
    computer.
  • 7- I believe that fully functioning people show
    congruence or harmony between self and organism.
  • 8- According to me, sexuality is very important
    in development.
  • 9- I believe that people develop over the life
    span in 8 stages

62
  • 10-I talk about the hierarchy of needs.
  • 11-I talk about imprinting.
  • 12-People learn by observation and insight.
  • 13-I talk about the locus of control.
  • 14-I talk about the reciprocal determinism in
    self-efficacy.
  • 15-I believe that the structure of personality
    consists of the id, ego, and superego.
  • 16-There are 4 levels of the environment
    microsystem, mesosystem, exosystem, and
    macrosystem.
  • 17-The study of the relations between brain
    structures and functions and behavior.
  • 18-I established the first psychological lab.

63
  • 19-I talk about the law of effect.
  • 20-I coined the expression classical
    conditioning.
  • 21-I coined the expression operant
    conditioning.
  • 22-Learning occurs in the environment in which
    stimuli elicit responses.
  • 23-I experimented with dogs to measure the amount
    of saliva they produced when listening to the
    sound of a bell.
  • 24-I talk about 4 stages of cognitive
    development.
  • 25-Children acquire knowledge in a quantitative
    as well as qualitative manner.
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