What is psychology?
- diverse topics and subfields
What is behavior?
-actions and responses that we can directly observe
What is the mind?
-internal states and processes, such as thoughts and feelings that cannot be seen directly, are inferred by measurable responses
What is clinical psychology?
-the study of mental processes, it is a model that views the mind as an information processor
What is cognitive psychology?
-the study of mental processes, it is a model that views the mind as an information processor
What were the 6 subfields of psychology that were discussed?
How can our own experiences and observations lead to inaccurate beliefs?
What is critical thinking?
-taking an active role in understanding the world around you rather than merely receiving information
What is the cycle of the scientific method?
What is basic research?
-obtaining knowledge for its own sake
What is applied research?
-designed to solve specific practical problems
What are the 4 central goals of psychology?
What are Psychology’s levels of analysis?
What do the levels of psychology being bidirectional mean?
What are mind-body processes?
the relationship between the mental processes in the brain and the functioning of other bodily systems
eg: by focusing on positive thoughts when facing a challenge you can keep your body arousal in check, but if you dwell on negative thoughts, you will stimulate the release of stress hormones
What is nature-nurture interactions?
What is the mind-body problem?
Is the mind a spiritual entity separate from the body, or is it a part of the body’s activities?
What did Rene Descartes propose as an answer to the mind-body problem?
What did John Locke propose as an answer to the mind-body problem?
What did Charles Darwin propose as an answer to the mind-body problem?
What is structuralism and which researchers had this theory?
Structuralism=the analysis of the mind by breaking it down into basic components/ elements to better understand the psychology
-is the approach of William Wundt and Edward Titchener
How did structuralists study sensations?
What theory did structuralism give away too?
-functionalism
What is functionalism and which researchers had this theory?
-the idea that psychology should study the functions of consciousness rather than its structure
-why do we behave the way that we do and how does it help us?
-William James was a leader of functionalism and helped establish psychology in North America
James trained Mary Whiton Calkins, who studied memory and dreams and became the first female president of the American Psychological Association in 1905