Origins of Psychology
Origins of Psychology
Origins of Psychology
Descartes’ dualism placed more emphasis on the role of the body than had previous versions of dualism.
Hobbes’s materialism held that behavior is completely a product of the body and thus physically caused.
To the degree that behavior and the mind have a physical basis, they are open to study just like the rest of
the natural world.
Nineteenth-century physiological studies of reflexes and localization of function in the brain demonstrated
the applicability of science to mental processes and behavior.
The British empiricists claimed that all thought and knowledge are rooted in sensory experience.
Empiricists used the law of association by contiguity to explain how sensory experiences can combine to
form complex thoughts.
In contrast to empiricism, nativism asserts that some knowledge is innate and that such knowledge provides
the foundation for human nature, including the human abilities to learn.
Darwin proposed that natural selection underlies the evolution of behavioral tendencies (along with
anatomical characteristics) that promote survival and reproduction.
Darwin’s thinking led to a focus on the functions of behavior.
Natural selection also offered a scientific foundation for nativist views of the mind.
James founded functionalism, the school of psychology that focused on how behavior helps individuals adapt to
demands placed upon them in the environment.
o Whereas structuralists were concerned with understanding the structure of the human mind, functionalists
were concerned with the functions of mental processes
o Examined the roles or functions of mental processes—why we do what we do. For example, James
believed we develop habits, such as the characteristic ways in which we use a fork or a spoon, because they
enable us to perform more effectively in meeting the many demands we face in daily life.
Gestalt psychology - the school of psychology that studies ways in which the brain organizes and
structures our perceptions of the world.
He led to major discoveries about the nature of perception, the processes by which we organize sense
impressions and form meaningful representations of the world around us.
They rejected the structuralist belief that mental experience could be understood by breaking it down into
its component parts.
“whole is greater than the sum of the parts” - brain organizes our perceptions of the world by grouping
elements together into unified or organized wholes, rather than as individual bits and pieces of sense
experience.
Freud conceived of the unconscious as the repository of primitive sexual and aggressive drives or
instincts and of the wishes, impulses, and urges that arise from those drives or instincts.
He believed that the motives underlying our behavior involve sexual and aggressive impulses that
lie in the unconscious, hidden away from our ordinary awareness of ourselves. Thus, we may do
or say things without understanding the true motives that prompted these behaviors.
The way that people behave is largely influenced by their unconscious drives.
The development of personality is mostly influenced by the events of early childhood. Freud
suggested that personality was largely set in stone by the age of five.
Bringing information from the unconscious in the consciousness can lead to catharsis and allow
people to deal with the issue.
People utilize a number of defense mechanisms to protect themselves from information contained
in the unconscious.
Emotional and psychological problems such as depression and anxiety are often rooted in
conflicts between the conscious and unconscious mind.
A skilled analyst can help bring certain aspects of the unconscious into awareness by using a
variety of psychoanalytic strategies such as dream analysis and free association
SCOPE OF PSYCHOLOGY
SPECIALTY AREAS
Experimental psychologists - apply experimental methods to the study of behavior and mental processes.
They study such processes as learning, sensation and perception, and cognition.
Clinical psychologists - evaluate and treat people with psychological disorders, such as depression and
anxiety disorders. They may use psychotherapy to help people overcome psychological problems or
cope better with the stresses they face in their lives.
Counseling psychologists - help people who have adjustment problems that are usually not as severe as the
kinds of problems that clinical psychologists treat.
School psychologists - work in school systems, where they help children with academic, emotional, and
behavioral problems and evaluate students for placement in special education programs.
Educational psychologists - develop tests that measure intellectual ability or academic potential, help gear
training approaches to students’ learning styles, and create ways of helping students reach their maximum
academic potential.
Developmental psychologists - study people’s physical, cognitive, social, and personality development
throughout the life span.
Personality psychologists - seek to understand the nature of personality—the cluster of psychological
characteristics and behaviors that distinguishes us as unique individuals and leads us to act consistently
over time.
Social psychologists - study how group or social influences affect behavior and attitudes.
Industrial/organizational (I/O) psychologists - study people at work. They are concerned with such
issues as job satisfaction, personnel selection and training, leadership qualities, effects of organizational
structure on productivity and work performance, and challenges posed by changes in the workplace.
Health psychologists - study how such psychological factors as stress, lifestyle, and attitude affect
physical health.
Consumer psychologists - are interested in understanding consumer behavior—why people
purchase particular products and particular brands
Neuropsychologists - study relationships between the brain and behavior. Although some
neuropsychologists limit their activities to research, clinical neuropsychologists use specialized tests to
evaluate the cognitive effects of brain injuries and strokes.
Geropsychologists - focus on psychological processes associated with aging.
Forensic psychologists - work within the legal system. They may perform psycho- logical evaluations in
child custody cases, testify about the competence of defendants to stand trial, develop psychological
profiles of criminal types, give expert testimony in court on psychological issues, or assist attorneys in
selecting potential jury members.
Sport psychologists - apply psychological principles and techniques to sports and
athletic competition
SCIENTIFIC METHOD
The scientific method is a framework for acquiring knowledge based on careful observation and the use of
experimental methods. It can be conceptualized in terms of four general steps that scientists use to test their
ideas and to expand and refine their knowledge: (1) developing a research question, (2) framing the research
question in the form of a hypothesis, (3) gathering evidence to test the hypothesis, and (4) drawing
conclusions about the hypothesis.
Informed consent- means that participants must be given enough information about the study’s methods
and purposes to make an “informed” decision about whether they wish to participate. Participants must also be
free to withdraw from the study at any time.
Confidentiality - Psychologists must also protect the confidentiality of the records of research participants
and of the clients they treat. That is, they must respect people’s right to privacy. There are situations, however,
when laws require psychologists to disclose confidential information acquired in research or clinical practice, as
when a participant or a therapy client threatens to do physical harm to someone else.
PAP Code of Ethics
Neurons - the basic building blocks of the nervous system, are cells in the body that are specialized for
transmitting information or messages in the form of electrical impulses.
Sensory neurons - transmit information about the outside world to the spinal cord and brain. This
information first registers on your sensory organs.
Motor neurons - convey messages from the brain and spinal cord to the muscles that control the
movements of your body. They also convey messages to your glands, causing them to release hormones—
chemical substances that help regulate bodily processes.
Interneurons - are the most common type of neuron in the nervous system. They connect neurons to
neurons. In the spinal cord, they connect sensory neurons to motor neurons. In the brain, they form
complex assemblages of interconnected nerve cells that process information from sensory organs and
control higher mental functions, such as planning and thinking.
Ion - electrically charged atoms and molecules both inside and outside the neuron
Have either a positive (+) or negative (-) charge
The movements of ions across the cell wall cause electrochemical changes in the cell that generate an
electrical signal to travel down the cell’s axon in the form of a neural impulse
The most important ions in this process are two types of positively charged ions, sodium ions and
potassium ions .
1. Resting Potential
When a neuron is at rest (not being stimulated), the gates that control the passage of sodium ions
are closed.
A greater concentration of positively charged sodium ions remains outside the cell, causing the cell to have
a slightly negative charge, relative to the surrounding fluid.
The resting potential of a neuron is about -70 millivolts (mV) (a millivolt is one thousandth of a volt).
2. Depolarization
When the cell is stimulated, usually by neurotransmitters released from adjoining neurons, sodium gates at
the base of the axon open.
Positively charged sodium ions from the surrounding fluid then rush in, which causes the area inside the
cell membrane at the point of excitation to become less negatively charged.
3. Action Potential
When stimulation is sufficiently strong, depolarization quickly spreads along the cell membrane.
As this wave of depolarization reaches a critical threshold, the neuron abruptly shifts from a negative
charge to a positive charge of about 140 mV.
The sudden reversal of electrical charge is called an action potential, or neural impulse.
Firing of the neuron or Spike - the action potential typically begins at the juncture between the soma and
the axon, which is called the axon hillock. It then shoots down the entire length of the axon as a wave of
changing electrical charges
Once an action potential reaches the end of an axon, it causes the release of neurotransmitters from the
terminal buttons that carry the neural message to the next neuron.
According to the all-or-none principle - A neuron will fire completely (generate an action potential) if
sufficient stimulation is available, or it will not fire.Different axons generate action potentials of different
speeds depending on such characteristics as their:
Thickness (generally the thicker the axon, the faster the speed),
Whether or not they are covered with a myelin sheath (which speeds transmission).
4. Repolarization
After firing, a neuron busies itself preparing to fire again.
Sodium gates along the cell membrane close, preventing further inflows of positively
charged sodium ions into the cell.
The potassium ion channels open and the cell pumps out positively charged ions, mostly potassium ions,
and as it rids itself of these positive ions.
5. Hyperpolarization
Ion channels do not immediately respond and positively-charged ions continue to exit the cell.
The inner side of the cell membrane develops a higher negative charge than at the threshold
potential value.
The voltage will be between -71 mV and -75 mV during hyperpolarization
(undershoot).
6. Resting potential
During hyperpolarization, all voltage-gated channels close and sodium and potassium ions pass
through the cell membrane via concentration gradients (leakage channels) and pumps to maintain
the -70 mV inner voltage.
In a slower process, the cell restores the electrochemical balance by pumping out sodium ions and
drawing in some potassium ions, making it possible for another action potential to occur.
During the time these changes are occurring, called a refractory period, the neuron, like a gun
being reloaded, is temporarily incapable of firing. But temporarily truly means temporarily, for a
neuron can “reload” hundreds of times per second.
ANTAGONIST
Drugs or chemicals that block the actions of neurotransmitters by occupying their receptor sites. Prevent
transmission of the messages the neurotransmitter carries.
Schizophrenia
• Irregularities in how the brain uses dopamine may help explain the development of it. People with
schizophrenia may experience hallucinations (“hearing voices” or seeing things that are not there) and
delusions (fixed, false ideas, such as believing that aliens have taken over their bodies).
• Antipsychotic drugs - are antagonists that block receptor sites for dopamine, help control hallucinations and
delusional thinking
Parkinson’s disease
• A degenerative brain disease that leads to a progressive loss of motor functioning or physical movements.
Parkinson’s patients experience tremors (shakiness), muscle rigidity and stiffness, and difficulty walking
and controlling the movements of their fingers and hands.
• These symptoms result from the death, for unknown reasons, of dopamine-producing cells in an area
of the brain involved in regulating body movement
AGONIST