Approach's Flashcards

1
Q

behaviorist approach and assumptions

A

believes behaviors result of prior experiences
only study what is physically observable- thought processes subjective
born as blank slates with no innate ability
valid to study animals - share same prinipals as humans

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2
Q

classical conditioning

A

learning through association - pavlovs dog study - an unconditioned stimulus is conditioned to produce the same same response as a neutral stimulus without its presence
stimulus genralizeation - a similar stimulus also produces a conditioned response without direct conditioning
stimulus discrimination - a similar stimulus that does not produce a conditioned response as it is too different to the original stimuli
time continuity - NS and UCS must be present in a certain time period of one and other to create an association

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3
Q

operant conditioning

A

learning by consequences
positive reinforcement - rewards for a desired behavior, increases the likely hood of it being recreated
negative reinforcement - removes a negative stimulus when a desired behavior is done, increases the likely hood of it being recreated
punishment - negative stimulation for an undesired behavior, decreases the likely hood of recreation
thorndike law of effect - if cat escaped box once they could escape a second time quicker

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4
Q

skinners box

A

two trials
- positive reinforcement - rat given treat when lever pressed
- negative reinforcement - lever pull stops box from being electrified
found 5 patterns of reinforcement
- continuous - behavior is reinforced after every performance - low adoption high extinction
- fixed interval - behavior reinforced after a set amount of performances - high response high extinction
- variable interval - behavior reinforced after a varied amount of performances - very fast response very low extinction
- fixed ratio - behavior reinforced after a set amount of time providing it is performed at least once in the time span - cyclical response fast extinction
- variable ratio - behavior reinforced after a varied time frame providing it is performed at least once in the time span - longer cyclical response low extinction

AO3:
- barnet 2000 - animal study not genralisable to humans - more simplistic
+ high external validity - easy to recreate
+ effective treatment based on it - CBT
- deterministic
- reductionist

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5
Q

Social learning Theory and mediating factors

A

bandura 1962 - proposed SLT, main principle being children learning vicariously - assumes behaviors are learned from environment, or from observing others, children are born a blank slate
mediating factors for imitation - attention, retention, reproduction and motivation
imitation - imitating the behaviors of a role model
identification - identifying the behavior to recreate
modeling - a role model who displays the observed behavior
vicarious reinforcement - learning through other’s action and the consequences

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6
Q

role model selection

A
same sex
similar age
people of power and influence
real world rather than animated
socially positive behaviors
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7
Q

bandoras bobo doll study

A

identifies how children learn anti-scoial behaviours - watched adult act aggressive to a bobo doll - those that watched this were more likely to imitate behaviors when in same situation
AO3
+ kun sung tribe - no aggression or violence in culture - not exhibited in children
- only studied children
- short term
- reductionist
+ philips 1986 - homicide rate increased after major boxing matches
+ pillag 2000 - found that testosterone levels correlated with aggression

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8
Q

parts of the mind - psychodynamic

A

conscious - what the person is currently thinking and aware of - smallest part - contains ego:
- developed in growth - reality principle - balances and rationalizes Id and super ego - protects Id against displeasure
preconscious - between conscious and unconscious - dream state - second smallest part - contains superego:
- develops in phallic stage - morality principle - judges right and wrong - representation of same sex parent - violating it causes anxiety
unconscious - rest of mind - instincts, traumas, fears, memories, personality - pleasure principle - present from birth - needs and wants

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9
Q

psychosexual stages of development

A

oral - 0-18mth - pleasure from biting, chewing and sucking - totally dependent on mother
anal - 18mth -3yrs - pleasure from toileting - control of environment - independence from mother
phallic - 3-6yrs - pleasure from genitalia - odepus and electra complex
latent - 6yrs-puberty - sexual desires stop
genital - puberty + - sexual desires mature and become romantic

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10
Q

psychosexual fixations

A

frustrations - not enough pleasure at a given stage causing a fixation
over indulgent - too much pleasure at a given stage causing a fixation

oral dependent - friendliness, optimism, generosity, and tolerance of dependency on others
oral aggressive - hostile, violence, jealousy, and exploitation
anal expulsive - cruelty, emotional outbursts, disorganization, self-confidence, artistic ability, generosity, rebelliousness and general carelessness
anal retentive - extreme need to control their environment
phallic personality - a pattern of narcissistic behavior exemplified by boastfulness, excessive self-assurance, vanity, compulsive sexual behavior, and in some cases competitive, aggressive, or exhibitionistic behavior

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11
Q

little hans 1909

A

case study of phobic child
feud thought fear of horses projection of fear of mother abandoning him - frightened of castration generalized to sister
ao3:
+ introduced therapies to access unconscious mind - psychoanalysis, dream analysis and free association - used to treat unconscious conflicts
- inference without empirical evidence to support
- reductionist
- inferences illogical

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12
Q

defense mechanisms

A

mechanisms to protect the ego from displeasure
identification with the aggressor - internalizing the behaviors of the aggressor to build a connection and avoid hostility
repression - suppressing memories in unconscious to protect superego - not very successful - can resurface in subconscious as Freudian slip
projection - unwanted thoughts, behaviors and feelings are attributed to another person
displacement - redirection of impulses (often aggressive) onto a powerless substitute (ie dog) - often occurs as a result of Id wanting something superego does not want
sublimation - displacement but into positive outlet not destructive outlet
denial - refusing to accept reality - blocks external thoughts from awareness
regression - ego reverts to earlier stage of development - retreats to a stage where they felt safer - becoming childish when scared
rationalization - distortion of facts or accepting a less threatening impulse
reaction formation - beyond denial, acting in the opposite to how they feel - adopt showy and compulsive conscious behaviors to compensate

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13
Q

humanist assumptions

A

everyone has free will - choose how they act in a given situation
everyone and their view of the world is unique - only p can interpret their world

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14
Q

maslows hierarchy of needs 1968

A

physiological -> safety -> belonging ->esteem fulfillment -> self actualization
AO3
+ hegarty 1999 - compared 88 countries economic development - LIC’s focused on lower levels, HIC’s focused on top levels -> could be negative - ethnocentric
- no empirical evidence
+ widely used - especially in education
- nevis 1983 - western cultures valued working on personal identity where as eastern cultured valued social belonging more (about the same as food)

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15
Q

rogers self-concept

A

self concept - how we view our self
developed through childhood through interactions with role models
to have a healthy self concept we must feel good about how others feel about us
the closer our ideal self is to our self concept the more healthy it is

congruence - close ideal self and self concept
in-congruence - distant self concept and ideal self
harper et al 1996 - teenagers forced to peruse a career to satisfy parent more likely to be incongruent

condition of worth - where people only see you as positive if a set of predetermined conditions are met, can stunt heiracrcy of needs progress if not met
unconditional positive regard - viewed in positive light regardless of actions
AO3
- not empirically measurable
- self report unreliable
- fails to recognize self destructive behaviours
+ hueistic
+ values individual
+ behavior focused

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16
Q

oedipus complex

A

conflict arises in boys during phallic stage - develop sexual desire for mother - becomes jelous of father - leads to fantasies of getting rid of him - causes fear of castration as punishment - son adopts / internalizes the attitudes, characteristics and values of father

17
Q

electra complex

A

believes they have been castrated by mother - leads to penis envy - becomes attracted to father - identifies with mother resulting in the internalization of her superego - weaker in women