Issues And Debates Flashcards

1
Q

What is gender bias?

A

Gender bias is the differential treatment between two genders based on stereotypes

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2
Q

What is alpha bias?

A

Alpha bias is the exaggerated difference between men and women and therefore one gender is devalued (often women)

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3
Q

What is beta bias?

A

Beta bias is ignoring the differences between men and women, leading to researchers believing they can generalise results from male studies to the whole population

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4
Q

What is androcentrism?

A

Androcentrism is the consequences of beta bias, and occurs where everything is compared to ‘male standards’

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5
Q

What is universality?

A

Universality is developing theories that are applicable to everyone, including any differences

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6
Q

Gender bias in psychology evaluation

A

Gender bias in psychology evaluation:
- = gender bias reamains unchallenged in many theories
- = lab experiments + institutionalised sexism -> due to male authority creating male perspective of women
- = bias in research methods affects final results
+ = feminist psychology -> differences can arise due to biological differences

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7
Q

What is determinism?

A

Determinism is the view that free will is an illusion and our behaviour is controlled by uncontrollable internal or external forces

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8
Q

What is free will?

A

Free will is the idea that we play active role and have choice over our behaviour

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9
Q

What is hard determinism?

A

Hard determinism the idea that forces outside our control shape behaviour
-No free will
-Science has hard determinism - looks for causal relationships

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10
Q

What is soft determinism?

A

Soft determinism is the view that behaviour is constrained by the environment or biological makeup to an extent - an element of free will remains

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11
Q

What is biological determinism?

A

Biological determinism is innate and determined by genes
-Pre determined behaviour
-Hard determinism

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12
Q

What is environmental determinism?

A

Environmental determinism is the view that behaviour is controlled by external forces, caused by experiences through conditioning

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13
Q

Free will and determinism evaluation

A

Free will and determinism evaluation:
- = humanistic view opposes - people have free will - eg twin case studies - not exactly the same
- = potential negative effect when generalised ie criminal acts
+ = skinner arugues free will is an illusion - motor regions of brain activated before conscious mind registers it - biological determinism

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14
Q

What is psychic determinism?

A

Psychic determinism is when behaviour is. Result of childhood experiences and innate drives (freudian thinking)

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15
Q

What is culture?

A

Culture is the morals, values, beliefs and patterns of behaviour shared by a community of people

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16
Q

What is cultural relativity?

A

Cultural relativity is the idea that moral standard beliefs and values can only be understood when viewed through the culture in which they originate

17
Q

What is ethnocentrism?

A

Ethnocentrism is seeing the world through only one cultural perspective and thinking this is the normal and correct one

18
Q

Outline the nature debate.

A

Nature debate:
-Biological approach
-Genes, biochem, hormones
-Hard/Biological determinism
-Twin studies (Gottesman)
-OCD
-Mate selection theory
-Bowlby attachment theory
-Diatheses stress model
-Genotype
-Hereditary
-Natavist approach

19
Q

Outline the nurture debate.

A

Nurture debate:
-Influenced by the environment
-Conditioning
-SLT - vicarious reinforcement + mediational processes
-Psychodynamic approach
-Born a blank state (tabula rasa)
-Authoritarian personality in childhood
-Mowrer two process model

20
Q

Outline the interactionist approach

A

Interactionist approach:
-Both nature and nurture work together to shape human behaviour
-Diatheses-stress model (genetic predisposition and environmental trigger causes disorder iephobias)
-Maguire study (taxi drivers - larger hippocampus)
-PKU - inhertiance mental disorder caused by amino acids but controlled by low protein diet

21
Q

Outline reductionism

A

Reductionism:
-Breaking behaviour down into smaller components
-Based on parisomy (idea that complex things should be explained in simplest ideas)
-Different levels of explained (biological, physiological, social and cultural)
-Biological/Environmental/Experimental

22
Q

What is biological reductionism?

A

Biological reductionism - behaviour broken down into biological components - eg neurones, hormones

23
Q

What is environmental reductionism?

A

Environmental reductionism = also known as stimulus-response reductionism (conditioning) - that complex behaviour is a series of S-R chains

24
Q

What is experimental reductionism?

A

Experimental reductionism - applies to cognitive approach - complex behaviour reduced to single variable for purpose of scientific testing

25
Q

What is holism?

A

Holism = idea that behaviour should viewed as a whole integral experience than seperate parts - qualitative methods - humanistic and cognitive approach

26
Q

Evaluation of reductionism and holism

A

+ = scientistics use reductionism in their research - experimental reductionism - less complex findings and easier to infer causality
-> counterargument = highly controlled so questionable results (reliability?)
+ = scientific - replicable
+ = Biological reductionism has lead to biological theories ie SSRI’s and OCD
- = biological reductionism - ignores complexity - ie ADHD treatment
- = use of animals in experiments - ecological validity and ethics questioned

27
Q

What are the ethical implications of psychological research?

A

Ethical implications of psychological research - deceptions, informed consent, protection from heart, social sensetivity
Examples - milgrams distress on parts, bowlbys findings affecting mothers (guilt for returning to work?

28
Q

What is meant by social sensitivity in reference to studies?

A

Social sensitivity - wher e there are potential social consequences for the participants of the group of people represented by the research

29
Q

What are the aspects of scientific research from Sierber and Stanley that raises ethical implications in social sensitive research?

A

aspects in rsearch that raises ethical implications in socially senseitive resarch:
-The research question (ie race + IQ)
-Methodology used (confidentiality)
-Instiutional context (public/private) - subjectivity
-Interpretatino and application of findings
-Harder to asses risk/benefit ratio

30
Q

Exampl of socially sensitive reserarch?

A

An example of socially sensitive research is linking intelligence to genetic factors - ie via identical twins - influenced some school systems - controversial to wether Burt falsified research data

31
Q

Evaluation of socially sensitive research

A

Evaluation of socially sensitive research:
- = current ethical guidelines focuses on direct affect on parts rather than its harm to society as a whole - eg how findings are used by others
- = exclusion of marginalised groups ie disabilities - harm when findings generalised
- = discrimination -> researchers argue against this research - eg racial differences and IQ
-> but ignoring these reserach areas means we lack info - ie how to help those underrepresented in society

32
Q

Two approaches in research? (Emic/Etic)

A

Etic research is when research is based on one culture and is generalised and applied to all cultures

Emic research is based on studying a specific culture