Reductionism Flashcards
what is reductionism?
Reductionism is when complex behaviours are broken down into simple variables/ simplistic behaviours
What is machine reductionism?
This is when the human brain is reduced to processors of information using the computer analogy.
What is animal reductionism?
Animal reductionism is the assumption that we can understand human behaviour by studying the behaviour of other species.
What is biological reductionism?
- To reduce behaviour to a physical level
- There are no social factors involved
What is experimental reductionism?
This is where a complex behaviour is reduced to a single (isolated) variable for the purpose of testing.
What is environmental reductionism?
Reducing complex behaviour down to a simple stimulus and response
What is holism?
- Holism is when something is studied as a whole - for example in considering treatment for someone, there might be a holistic approach, which means considering everything about that individual.
- Holism is therefore the opposite of reductionism
SOCIAL
What is an example of reductionism in social?
- In Milgram’s baseline study, he reduces the behaviour of obedience down to one word pairing task between the learner and the teacher and one measurable variable.
- This was the voltage of the highest switch that they pressed.
- This shows the EXPERIMENTAL REDUCTIONISM in standardised procedures and artificial results.
- On the other hand, it means that the results were objective.
What is another example of reductionism in social?
- When the agentic shift occurs, humans go from the autonomous state to the agentic state.
- This is seen in Milgram’s study as the participants are in the agentic state when they are doing the experiment. - - - This is an example of MACHINE REDUCTIONISM because it is explained that it happens automatically and ignores the idea of free will or individual differences in personality.
- however it makes it more simple to measure
What are the benefits of using these types of reductionism in social?
- A benefit of using machine reductionism is that it makes it EASIER TO MEASURE the behaviour of obedience as it simplifies this.
- This means that we can look at obedience as a whole as it makes It LESS COMPLEX
A benefit of experimental reductionism is that it makes the results MORE OBJECTIVE and easier to measure.
What is an example of holism in social psychology?
- A more holistic approach in social psychology is SOCIAL IMPACT THEORY
- it looks at multiple different factors that can influence obedience and how much impact each of these factors has.
COGNITIVE
What is an example of reductionism in cognitive?
- In cognitive psychology MACHINE REDUCTIONISM is used and can be seen in the MSM which has three different stores as well as the duration, capacity and encoding of the stores, which can relate to a computer and its hard drive.
- This reduces processes in the human brain to computer processes and doesn’t take into account other factors that influence memory.
What is another example of reductionism in cognitive?
- In studies in cognitive psychology EXPERIMENTAL REDUCTIONISM is used. - For example, in the Sebastian and Hernandez Gill’s study the short term memory and digit span is reduced down to a test of lists of digits. - However, an issue with this is that it LACKED MUNDANE REALISM as the task is not one you would use digit span for.
Memory as a whole is hard to study and it not very reliable so it is studied in parts.
What are the benefits of using these types of reductionism in cognitive?
- A benefit of using machine reductionism is that it makes it EASIER TO MEASURE memory and understand as it simplifies this.
- This means that we can look at obedience as a whole as it makes It less complex.
- A benefit of experimental reductionism is that it makes the results MORE OBJECTIVE and easier to measure.
What is an example of holism in cognitive psychology?
- NEUROPHYSIOLOGY looks at how
different parts of the brain relate
to memory in real life, which
overlooks the brain as holistic
processor. - Also, the WMM looks at multiple parts of the STM
BIOLOGICAL
What is an example of reductionism in biological?
- MACHINE REDUCTIONISM
- It breaks behaviour (emotion and anger) into parts.
- This is reductionist because it is not looking at the brain as a whole but instead different parts.
- This is also seen in the limbic system and the prefrontal cortex which are studied for aggression, not the whole brain.