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Title: Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY 7th Ed


1
Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (7th Ed)
  • Chapter 1
  • Thinking Critically with Psychological Science

2
Psychologys Roots
  • Prescientific Psychology Questions
  • Is the mind connected to the body or distinct?
  • Are ideas inborn or is the mind a blank slate
    filled by experience?

3
Psychologys Roots
  • Prescientific Psychology moves toward Empiricism
  • Empiricism believes that
  • knowledge comes from experience via the senses
  • science flourishes through observation and
    experiment

4
Psychologys Roots
  • Wilhelm Wundt opened the first psychology
    laboratory at the University of Leipzig (c. 1879)
    and is frequently considered the father of
    empirical psychology

5
Psychologys Roots
  • Structuralism used introspection (looking in) to
    explore the elemental structure or building
    blocks of the human mind

6
Psychologys Roots
  • Functionalism, founded by William James, focused
    on how behavioral processes function - how they
    enable organism to adapt, survive, and flourish

7
Other Early Pioneers
  • Freud focused on
  • Psychodynamic, unconscious conflicts, complexes,
    dream analysis
  • Piaget focused on
  • Cognitive development
  • Watson focused on
  • Behaviorism

8
Psychologys Roots
  • Definition of Psychology
  • The science (uses the scientific method of study)
    of behavior (what we do and/or what is
    observable) and mental processes (sensations,
    perceptions, dreams, thoughts, beliefs,
    information processing, decision making, and
    feelings)

9
PSYCHOLOGY ROOTS
  • Goals of Psychology
  • 1. Describe behavior and mental processes
  • 2. Explain or understand behavior and mental
    processes
  • 3. Predict behavior and mental processes
  • 4. Change or influence behavior and mental
    processes

10
Contemporary Psychology
  • Nature-Nurture Controversy in Psychology
  • the longstanding controversy over the relative
    contributions that genes and experience make to
    development of psychological traits and behaviors
  • Nurture works on what nature provides
  • Every psychological event is simultaneously a
    biological event

11
Contemporary Psychology
  • Each perspective contributes to the overall
    understanding of behavior and mental processes.
  • Remember, no one perspective can explain all
    behavior or mental processes.
  • It is only through on-going research that the
    contributions of each perspective can be
    evaluated.

12
Psychologys Three Main Levels of Analysis
13
Psychologys Current Perspectives
14
Psychologys Current Perspectives
15
Contemporary Psychology Subfields
  • Psychologys Subfields focus on one or both
  • Basic Research
  • pure science that aims to increase the knowledge
    base
  • Applied Research
  • scientific study that aims to solve practical
    problems

16
Psychologys Subfields Research
17
Psychologys Subfields Research
18
Psychologys Subfields Applied
19
Psychologys Subfields Applied
20
Contemporary Psychology
  • Two frequently confused fields
  • Clinical Psychology
  • branch of psychology that studies, assesses, and
    treats people with psychological disorders
  • Psychiatry (not a branch of psychology)
  • a branch of medicine dealing with psychological
    disorders
  • practiced by physicians who sometimes use medical
    (for example, drug) treatments as well as
    psychotherapy

21
Why Study Psychology?
  • Psychologists, like all scientists, use the
    scientific method to construct theories that
    organize observations and imply testable
    hypotheses
  • Psychologists use the science of behavior and
    mental processes to better understand why people
    think, feel and act as they do.

22
Common Sense Test
  • 1. To change the way people act, you must first
    change their attitudes. TF
  • 2. The greater the reward promised for a boring
    activity, the more one will come to enjoy the
    activity. TF
  • 3. Most people rate themselves as below average
    when comparing themselves to others on socially
    desirable characteristics (such as
    attractiveness). TF

23
Common Sense Test
  • 4. Most people disobey a person in authority who
    orders them to hurt a stranger. TF
  • 5. In a debate, it is always to your advantage
    to be the last speaker instead of going first
    (you want to have the last word). TF

24
Common Sense Test
  • 6. People pull harder in a tug-of war when they
    are part of a team than when they are pulling by
    themselves. TF
  • 7. Groups will generally make more moderate
    decisions than a single individual. TF
  • 8. Opposites attract. TF

25
Common Sense Test
  • 9. Absence makes the heart grow fonder. TF
  • 10. People are LESS likely to help another person
    when they are alone than when there is a group
    around. TF
  • 11. Children who grow up in a family with gay
    parents are more likely to become gay. TF

26
Why Study Psychology?
  • Hindsight Bias
  • we tend to believe, after learning an outcome,
    that we would have foreseen it
  • the I-knew-it-all-along phenomenon
  • Overconfidence
  • we tend to think we know more than we do

27
The Scientific Attitude
  • Critical Thinking
  • thinking that does not blindly accept arguments
    and conclusions
  • examines assumptions
  • discerns hidden values
  • evaluates evidence
  • assesses conclusions

The Amazing Randi--Skeptic
28
The Scientific Attitude
  • The scientific attitude is composed of curiosity
    (passion for exploration), skepticism (doubting
    and questioning) and humility (ability to accept
    responsibility when wrong).

29
The Scientific Method
  • Theory
  • an explanation using an integrated set of
    principles that organizes and predicts
    observations
  • Hypothesis
  • a testable prediction
  • often implied by a theory

30
The Scientific Method
31
The Scientific Method
  • Operational Definition
  • a statement of procedures (operations) used to
    define research variables
  • example-
  • intelligence may be operationally defined as what
    an intelligence test measures

32
The Scientific Method
  • Replication
  • repeating the essence of a research study to see
    whether the basic finding extends to other
    participants and circumstances
  • usually with different participants in different
    situations

33
Description
  • Psychologists describe behavior using case
    studies, surveys, and naturalistic observation

34
Description
  • Case Study
  • observation technique in which one person is
    studied in depth in the hope of revealing
    universal principals

Is language uniquely human?
35
Case Study
  • Problems
  • Individual may be atypical
  • Extraordinary anecdotal cases have a way of
    overwhelming general truths
  • To discern general truths other methods must be
    used

36
Description
  • Survey
  • technique for ascertaining the self-reported
    attitudes or behaviors of people
  • usually by questioning a representative, random
    sample of people
  • Problems wording and sampling
  • can also be used for correlations

37
Description
  • Population
  • all the cases in a group, from which samples may
    be drawn for a study
  • Random Sample
  • a sample that fairly represents a population
    because each member has an equal chance of
    inclusion

38
Description
  • Naturalistic Observation
  • observing and recording behavior in naturally
    occurring situations without trying to manipulate
    and control the situation

39
Correlation
  • Correlation Coefficient
  • a statistical measure of the extent to which two
    factors vary together, and thus how well either
    factor predicts the other

Indicates direction of relationship (positive or
negative)
Correlation coefficient
r .37
Indicates strength of relationship (0.00 to 1.00)
40
Correlation
  • Correlation Coefficient
  • a statistical measure that indicates the extent
    to which two factors vary together and thus how
    well either factor predicts the other

41
Correlation
  • Value indicates strength
  • .00 indicates no relationship
  • 1.00 indicates strongest relationship
  • Sign indicates direction or relationship
  • is positive and indicates variables vary in
    same direction ?? ??
  • - is negative and indicates variables vary in
    opposite direction?? ??

42
Correlation
  • Three Possible Cause-Effect Relationships

could cause
(1) Low self-esteem
Depression
or
(2) Depression
Low self-esteem
could cause
or
Low self-esteem
(3) Distressing events or biological predispositio
n
could cause
and
Depression
43
Illusory Correlation
  • Illusory Correlation
  • the perception of a relationship where none exists

44
Two Random Sequences
  • Your chances of being dealt either of these hands
    is precisely the same 1 in 2,598,960.

45
Experimentation
  • Experiment
  • an investigator manipulates one or more factors
    (independent variables) to observe their effect
    on some behavior or mental process (the dependent
    variable)
  • by random assignment of participants the
    experiment controls other relevant factors

46
Exploring Cause Effect
  • Many factors influence our behavior. Experiments
    (1) manipulate factors that interest us, while
    other factors are kept under (2) control.
  • Effects generated by manipulated factors isolate
    cause and effect relationships.

47
Experimentation
  • Double-Blind Procedure
  • both the research participants and the research
    staff are ignorant (blind) about whether the
    research participants have received the treatment
    or a placebo
  • commonly used in drug-evaluation studies
  • Placebo
  • an inert substance or condition that may be
    administered instead of a presumed active agent,
    to see if it triggers the effects believed to
    characterize the active agent

48
Experimentation
  • Experimental Condition
  • the condition of an experiment that exposes
    participants to the treatment, that is, to one
    version of the independent variable
  • Control Condition
  • the condition of an experiment that contrasts
    with the experimental treatment
  • serves as a comparison for evaluating the effect
    of the treatment

49
Experimentation
  • Random Assignment
  • assigning participants to experimental and
    control conditions by chance
  • minimizes pre-existing differences between those
    assigned to the different groups

50
Experimentation
  • Independent Variable
  • the experimental factor that is manipulated
  • the variable whose effect is being studied
  • Dependent Variable
  • the experimental factor that may change in
    response to manipulations of the independent
    variable
  • in psychology it is usually a behavior or mental
    process

51
Experimentation
52
Research Strategies
  • Design of the subliminal tapes experiment

53
Frequently Asked Questions About Psychology
  • Can laboratory experiments illuminate everyday
    life?

54
Frequently Asked Questions About Psychology
Does behavior depend on ones culture and gender?
  • Culture - the shared ideas and behaviors that one
    generation passes on to the next

55
Frequently Asked Questions About Psychology
  • Why do psychologists study animals?
  • Is it ethical to experiment on animals?
  • Is it ethical to experiment on people?

56
Milgram Study
  • The following slides describe and demonstrate an
    actual experiment on obedience that was conducted
    by Stanley Milgram.

57
Milgram Study
  • Stanley Milgrams Experiment
  • . ."Obedience and Individual Responsibility"
    .
  • Stanley Milgram, a psychologist at Yale
    University, conducted a study focusing on the
    conflict between obedience to authority and
    personal conscience. He examined justifications
    for acts of genocide offered by those accused at
    the World War II, Nuremberg War Criminal trials.
    Their defense often was based on "obedience" - -
    that they were just following orders of their
    superiors.

58
Milgram Experiment
  • In the experiment, so-called "teachers" (who were
    actually the unknowing subjects of the
    experiment) were recruited by Milgram. They were
    asked administer an electric shock of increasing
    intensity to a "learner" for each mistake he made
    during the experiment. The fictitious story given
    to these "teachers" was that the experiment was
    exploring effects of punishment (for incorrect
    responses) on learning behavior. The "teacher"
    was not aware that the "learner" in the study was
    actually an actor - - merely indicating
    discomfort as the "teacher" increased the
    electric shocks.

59
Milgram Experiment
  • Was this an ethical experiment?
  • How many subjects or teachers do you think
    actually administered dangerous shock to the
    learners?
  • The following slides gives you the results

60
Milgram Experiment
  • What right does a researcher have to expose
    subjects to such stress?
  • What activities should be and not be allowed in
    marketing research?
  • Does the search for knowledge always justify
    such "costs" to subjects?
  • Who should decide such issues?

61
Ethics for Research
  • Obtain informed consent
  • Protect from harm and discomfort
  • Treat all information confidentially
  • If you must deceive subjects, must debrief
    afterwards
  • Participants have right to stop participating at
    any time for any reason
  • Fully explain results to subjects

62
Ethics
  • APA Ethics can be found at
  • http//www.apa.org/ethics/code2002.html

63
Frequently Asked Questions About Psychology
  • Is psychology free of value judgments?

64
Tips for Studying Psychology
  • Distribute your time
  • Learn to think critically
  • In class, listen actively
  • Over learn
  • Be a smart test-taker
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