Issues and debates descriptions Flashcards

1
Q

Gender bias definition

A

occurs when research treats genders differently or the same, when this may not be correct

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2
Q

Universality

A

theories apply to all people and thus both genders/ cultures

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3
Q

Bias

A

prejudice for or against a person or group, especially in a way that would be considered unfair

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4
Q

Androcentrism

A

when behaviour is judged according to male standards
eg. asch, sherif, zimbardo all used male pps

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5
Q

Alpha bias
Beta bias

A

-when we assume there are differences between genders when there may not be. This is a problem as researchers may exaggerate the difference in gender eg. fight or flight as women said to tend and befriend
-when we assume there are no differences between genders. This is a problem as researchers may minimise the difference between genders eg. statistical infrequency treats everyone as equals

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6
Q

Cultural bias

A

when researchers have a distorted view of other cultures due to their own cultural understandings and this effects research. This means cultural differences are ignored

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7
Q

Ethnocentrism

A

use of own cultural group as basis for judgements about other cultural groups. See your own culture as superior/ normal and other cultures as strange

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8
Q

Cultural relativism

A

Suggestion that all cultures are worthy of respect and researchers should try and understand the way the culture perceives the world before doing research.
Emic approach- identify and measure behaviour in a way that is specific to that culture
Etic approach- behaviours are viewed as universal, cultures are studied from the outside

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9
Q

5 ways to minimise cultural bias

A

-not extrapolating findings to cultures not represented in the sample
-use researchers who are native or immersed in the culture being investigated
-carry out cross-cultural research rather than just sole culture
-be sensitive to cultural norms when designing research
-take a reflexive approach eg. reflect on how own bias may effect results

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10
Q

Free will

A

-suggests we are free to choose our thoughts and behaviours
-acknowledges we are influenced by other factors but we can reject the influences and create our own pathway
-eg. humanistic approach

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11
Q

Determinism

A

-suggests we have no free will over our thoughts and actions and they are pre-determine by internal and external factors
-means our behaviour is predictable allowing psychologists to develop theories
-eg. psychodynamic approach

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12
Q

Hard v soft determinism

A

Hard- extreme determinism, people not responsible for their actions. Behaviour has a specific external or internal cause
eg. Skinner, Pavlov, Freud
Soft- some room for free will, humans have some conscious control over actions, we have a number of influencing factors but have freedom to detract from these
eg. Asch, Milgram, Beck (schemas)

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13
Q

3 types of determinism

A

-Biological- behaviour determined by biological factors such as genetics, hormones and neurotransmitters eg. SERT gene less active so less serotonin causing OCD or abnormal amygdala causing aggression
-Environmental- behaviour determined by past experiences and external influences, we are socialised into our behaviour by society eg. Skinner, Pavlov, SLT
-Psychic- behaviour determined by unconscious forces, childhood experiences influence our unconscious mind eg. psychodynamic approach (Freud)

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14
Q

Scientific emphasis on causal explanations

A

-every event has specific cause that can be explained using general laws/ theories.
-to test for cause, use a lab experiment with high control to be able to state cause and effect
eg. Asch, Brown Peterson and Peterson, Milgram etc

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15
Q

Nature nurture debate

A

-extent to which our behaviour is influenced by biological and environmental factors
nature- influence of genes on our behaviour and characteristics. Supporters of nature view are called nativists eg. SERT gene in OCD, testosterone in aggression, basal ganglia
nurture- influence of interactions with both social and physical environment eg. learning theory of attachment
-interactionist approach

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16
Q

Interactionist approach

A

-concept that its not nature or nurture but an interaction of the two eg. Maguire taxi study, schemas
-diathesis stress= suggests mental illnesses/abnormality occur due to interaction between biological (diathesis) and environmental (stress) influences eg. epigenetics in OCD
3 ways nature/nurture can interact:
1. Passive relationship- where parental genes affect the way the parents treat their children eg. parent who plays instrument encourages children to play instrument
2. Active relationships- Child’s genetic make-up actively affects the environment eg. quiet child prefers to be alone so takes part in quiet activities with quieter friends
3. Reactive relationships- child’s genetic make-up such as appearance or temperaments leads to responses eg. parent notices childs talent in music so encourages musical development for them

17
Q

Holism and reductionism debate

A

-refers to level we try to explain behaviour
Holism= focuses on the system as a whole not constituent parts, can’t predict how system works by just looking at individual components eg. Rosenhan + Seligman- features of failure to function adequately as looked at all factors
Reductionism= breaks down complex phenomena into simple components, no such thing as individualism

18
Q

Reductionistic approach
(levels of explanation)

A

-suggests explanations begin at highest level and progressively look at component parts

Highest level- social and cultural explanations of behaviour eg. repetitive hand washing in OCD that most would regard odd
Middle level- psychological explanations of behaviour eg. obsessive thoughts
Lowest level- biological explanations of behaviour eg. underproduction of serotonin, hypersensitive basal ganglia

19
Q

Types of reductionism

A

-Biological- reduces behaviour down to actions of neurotransmitters, genetics, hormones eg. SERT, COMT gene
-Environmental- suggests all behaviour can be reduced to simple relationship between behaviour and events in the environment eg. phobias learnt, conditioning (pavlov, skinner)

20
Q

Idiographic and nomothetic approach

A

Idiographic focuses on individual case, nomothetic tries to create general/ universal laws of behaviour

21
Q

Idiographic

A

-focuses on unique individuals
-qualitative data
-gains insight into individuals unique insights
-methods- case study, unstructured interview, thematic analysis
eg. Clive Wearing, Henry Molaison

22
Q

Nomothetic

A

-study of large number of people
-seeks to make generalisations or develop theories/laws
-scientific as gathers quantitative data
-uses experiments with large sample size
eg. Bowlby, strange situation, Loftus and Palmer

23
Q

Ethical implications

A

-impact of findings on society
eg. way its communicated, may influence perception of particular group, how findings are used

24
Q

Socially sensitive research

A

-research with potential social implications either directly for pps or for individuals in the target population
-some research more sensitive than others eg. genetic factors in aggression
-attract attention from media, amplifying socially sensitive nature of research and conclusions
eg. child rearing practices, causes abnormality, EWT, causes of aggression

25
Q

3 issues create concern about sensitivity

A

Lee
-issues considered private, stressful, sacred
-issues that may cause stigmatisation/ fear
-issues related to social conflict

26
Q

Ethical issues in socially sensitive research

A

Sieber and Stanley- suggested issues that can arise during research process
Interpretation and application of findings- findings used for purposes not intended eg. IQ tests used to demonstrate inferiority of certain groups
1. Validity- poor methodology affects validity of findings and public/media not aware, so invalid findings may disadvantage groups
2. Public policy- consider what the research could be used for and what would happen if used for wrong purpose
The research question- potentially damaging to groups eg. Are there racial differences in IQ?
1.Implications - wider effects need to be considered, some studies given scientific credibility to discrimination, consider risk:benefit ratio
2.Scientific freedom- researchers have duty to engage in research but also can’t harm pps or groups in society

27
Q

Ways to overcome ethical issues

A

-sensitive brief and debrief
-care in relation to publication
-care in disclosure of results and anonymity of pps
-pps treated in equitable manner and vital resources not withheld from one group
-consider who is funding research and their motives