explanation: physical maturation‚ age related change Cognitive/Social Psychology Pysch as a Profession: • Basic vs. Applied Research • Basic: pure science • Applied: aims at solving practical/social problems • increase scientific knowledge base • Psychiatry: medical treatment and therapy • Clinical Psychology: study/assess treat psychological disorders • Counseling psychology: assisting people (community situation) • Academic Psychology: not at all clinical Psych as a science: • What do you mean
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Psychology What is psychology? The scientific study of mental processes and behaviour To understand a person a psychologist must investigate an individual’s...? Biology‚ psychological experiences‚ and cultural context. What are two aspects which create possibilities and limitations to an individual’s psychology? Biology and cultural experience. Biologically the structure of the brain sets the parameters or limits of human potential. Cultural experience shapes the groundwork for different kinds
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Bibliography: A2zpsychology‚ 2006‚ Freud ’s Psychosexual Theory. Viewed March 16‚ 2011‚ http://www.a2zpsychology.com/great_psychologists/freud_psychosexual_thoery.htm About‚ 2011‚ Personality Psychology. Viewed March 21‚ 2011‚ http://psychology.about.com/od/personalitydevelopment/Personality_Psychology.htm Answers‚ 2011‚ Nature or Nurture Boeree‚ George. 1998‚ B. F. Skinner. Viewed March 12‚ 2011‚ http://webspace.ship.edu/cgboer/skinner.html Changingminds
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Lorenzo de Calice AP Psychology Mrs. Freedman 11/6/2013 Development Essay Egocentrism: Egocentrism refers to the child’s inability to see a situation from another person’s point of view. According to Piaget‚ the egocentric child assumes that other people see‚ hear and feel exactly the same as the child does. For this specific example‚ the little girl who told her story would have probably said how everyone in her class thought of how awesome the fire station was. Most importantly‚ she would
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Chapter 1 What is social psychology? The scientific study of social influence: how people influence each other’s’ thoughts‚ feelings and actions. What makes it a scientific approach? Why do we want a scientific approach? How is social psychology different than common sense‚ philosophy‚ poetry‚ sociology‚ economics‚ history‚ and personality psychology? One big difference is in the level or unit of analysis. Social psychology focuses on the individual in interaction with others and in the social
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Chapter 2 Conceptualizing Abnormal Psychology One-Dimensional versus Multidimensional Models One-Dimensional Models Multidimensional Models The Role of Genes Neuroscience Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences Emotions Cultural‚ Social‚ and Interpersonal Factors Life-Span Development How do we put it all together? One-Dimensional versus Multidimensional Models One-Dimensional Models Single cause‚ operating in isolation Linear causal model Ignores critical
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Pennebaker: “confession is good for the soul” Self-disclosure enormous psychological and physical benefits The feelings of shame and guilt decreased Criminals confessed became more relaxed even though they knew they would have to face the consequences A stronger immune system response the production of white blood cells and antibodies increases Nondisclosure: “let sleeping dogs lie” (sometimes better) Children and sexual abuse Difficult because adults either took no action or didn’t believe
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Bibliography: https://www.boundless.com/psychology/learning/operant-conditioning/applying-operant-conditioning/ http://psychology.about.com/od/behavioralpsychology/a/classical-vs-operant-conditioning.htm
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Module 1: doing Social Psychology Wednesday‚ August 29‚ 2012 3:54 PM Social Psychology: The art of people-watching in a scientific manner. Theory: a broad explanation for a wide set of phenomena‚ strongly supported Concise: coherent‚ systematic‚ predictive‚ widely accepted. Strongly supported by many lines of evidence. Must be testable and falsifiable Generated more exploration Applicable to life Hypotheses: the edited Theory. What constitutes a good theory? Have your theory; generated
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depending on the modality in which you attend class. If you have recently changed modalities‚ read the policies governing your current class modality. Course Materials McAdams‚ D. P. (2006). The person: A new introduction to personality psychology. (4th ed.). Hoboken‚ NJ: Wiley. Axia College’s Writing Style Handbook‚ available online at https://axiaecampus.phoenix.edu/Writing_Style_Handbook_AxiaUOP.pdf All electronic materials are available on the student website.
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