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PSY2008 - full notes

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Full notes from the lectures presented by Dr Rosenkranz in 2021. Includes the topics: Paradigms and Perspectives The Scientific Method The Replication Crisis Two Cultures: Alternatives and Challenges to the Scientific Method Quality or Quantity Feminist Psychology What is Normal Behaviour? ...

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  • December 18, 2022
  • 37
  • 2021/2022
  • Class notes
  • Dr patrick rosenkranz
  • All classes
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PSY2008 – Psychological Enquiry
Lecture 1 – Paradigms and Perspectives
 What is psychology?
o Scientific study
o Study of individual
o Study of populations
o "The Science of Mental Life, both of its phenomena and of their conditions" -
William James
o Study of behaviour
o Study of the brain and neural systems
 Diversity in psychology
o Range of phenomena and conditions
o Range of perspectives and paradigms
o APA has 54 divisions, each representing an area of research or practice
o Implications - Psychology is not a unified science and encompasses a range of
perspectives and paradigms
o Scientific paradigms
 Greek root = pattern and example
 Collective shared beliefs, values and techniques of a scientific community
 NOT AN EXPERIMENTAL PARADIGM
 Determine what the subject matter of a field is
 Determine what a satisfactory line of enquiry is/research question
 Determine what a satisfactory explanation looks like
 Most famous paradigms in psychology are:
 Functionalism
 Structuralism
 Behaviourism
 Cognitive revolution -> cognitive neuroscience
o Psych is a collection of different perspectives
 Each has a particular way of viewing human beings
 Each has arisen for particular historical reasons
 Each is satisfied with a different kind of explanation
 Each has a different combination of methods
o Major perspectives
 Biological/neuroscience
 People are viewed as biochemical systems
 Arose with development of psychoactive drugs, and later with brain
imaging
 Explanation is in terms of actual brain/chemical circuits and
processes
 Also includes modern day bio-behaviourism
 Methods = EEG, FMRI, TMS, heritability studies, epidemiological
studies, single cell recordings, drug studies
 Explanation is often said to be reductionist - not necessarily a bad
thing
 Cognitive
 People are viewed as information processing systems
 Arose with the advent of computers and programming
 Explanation in terms of information processing - think flow charts

,  Methods are experimental
 Cognitive is software, biological is hardware - different levels of
analysis
 Developmental
 People are viewed as developing individuals, such that later stages
are affected by earlier
 Arose with an interest in optimal human functioning, and the
interaction of nature and nurture
 Explanation is either in terms of an unfolding genetic programme, or
in terms of the effects of early events on later ones
 Methods are observational and experimental
 Social
 People are viewed as operating within their social context
 Arose out of sociological traditions and concern with reducing
conflict, prejudice, ect
 Came from historical perspective of WW2 and the Holocaust
 Explanation is not so much in terms of what is going on inside the
head, but processes between people (or people and groups)
 Methods observational and experimental
 How do these fit?
 Often different perspectives with the same subject matter
 Their explanations are of different kinds
 We can think of these as complementing, coexisting or
contradicting.
 E.g. origin of depression
 Biological - biochemical, neural correlates
 Depression responds to serotonergic drugs (d-
fenfluramine, fluoxetine/Prozac) (Meyer et al, 2003)
 Post-mortem irregularities in serotonin metabolism
of depressed patients
 Imaging of radioactive serotonin receptor suggests
serotonin abnormalities
 Therefore depression is caused by abnormalities of
serotonin metabolism, and other related biological
changes
 Cognitive - faulty information processing, cognitive bias
 Beck (1967) - depressed patients have automatic
negative thoughts
 When faced with ambiguous stimuli, patients make
a negative interpretation
 Think cognitive triad
 Patients attributions for events are catastrophic,
global and stable
 Learnt helplessness and hopelessness
 Non-depressed people do not have these biases,
and they go away as depression lifts
 Therefore, depression is caused by negative
cognitive biases

, 




 Social - societal influence, the bad barrel metaphor, effect of
social media
 Brown and Moran (1997) - risk of depression is
increased if you lack social support, are poor, are a
single mother
 Therefore these social factors cause psychosocial
stress which makes depression more likely
 Developmental - early childhood experiences, attachment
 Bifulco, Harris and Brown (1992) - females
separated from mother before age 17 leads to
childhood helplessness
 This in turn relates to greater risk of depression in
adult life
 Therefore depression is caused by hopeless loss of
caregiver in childhood

, 




o Diversity is not a problem, as psychology is a hub science that has unusually wide
implications for other fields (Cacioppo, 2007a)
o But: different paradigms or perspectives can be problematic or incommensurable -
this is the focus of this course
 Role of science
o The scientific method underlies the dominant paradigm within psychology
o Psychology is treated as a science
o The role of science within psychology is the main focus of this module

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