MODULE 1 - PSYCHOLOGY S HISTORY

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Name Period AP Psychology Units 1 & 2 History, Approaches MODULE 1 - PSYCHOLOGY S HISTORY 1. Prescientific Psychology - Our understanding of psychology has evolved over centuries, beginning with the Greeks - - 2. Psychology Science is Born - Wilhelm Wundt becomes the father of psychology - Structuralism - Functionalism 3. Psychological Science Develops - In 1920s psychology was redefined as - Psychology is now known as 1

MODULE 2 - PSYCHOLOGY S BIG ISSUES AND APPROACHES 1. Psychology s Biggest Question - Psychology s biggest and most persistent issue has been - Locke and Descartes - Darwin - Nurture allows what nature endows 2. Psychology s Three Main Levels of Analysis - Together the levels of analysis form an integrated Biological Influences Psychological Influences Behavioral or mental processes Socio-Cultural Influences 2

3. Psychology s Subfields 3

MODULE 4 - THE NEED FOR PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE 1. Why Science Based Answers Give Psychology More Validity - Hindsight Bias - Overconfidence - Perceiving Order in Random Events 2. Scientific Attitude and Critical Thinking - Scientific attitude consists to three components: - Critical Thinking 4

MODULE 5 - THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD AND DESCRIPTION 1. The Scientific Method - Theory A good theory has - Hypothesis - Operational Definitions - Hypothesis can be tested and theories refined in several ways: 2. How Psychologists Describe Behavior - Case Study - Naturalistic Observation - Survey Wording effects Sampling Bias Population - Random Sample 5

MODULE 6 - CORRELATION AND EXPERIMENTATION 1. Correlation - Correlation - Correlation Coefficient Correlation = Scatterplots - Correlation and Causation Three possible cause effect relationships: 1) 2) 3) 2. Illusionary Correlations 6

3. Experimentation - Experiment - Experimental Group - Control Group - Random Assignment - Double Blind Procedure - Placebo Effect - Independent Variable - Confounding Variable - Dependent Variable - Validity Fill in the chart below using page 53 Research Method Basic Purpose How Conducted? 7

MODULE 7 - Statistical Reasoning in Everyday Life 1. Descriptive Statistics - Descriptive Statistics - Histogram - Measures of Central Tendency Mean Median Mode How can these numbers be misrepresentative? - Measure of Variation Range Standard Deviation Normal Curve 8

Complete questions 1 and 2 below. 1. List the steps for calculating the standard deviation of a data set. 2. Find the mean, median, mode, range and standard deviation of the the following data set (round to the nearest ten) Data: 1. 3. 4. 15. 2. 11. 12. 9 MEAN: MEDIAN: MODE: Data Item Difference Difference 2 Mean of Squared Differences - Standard Deviation - 2. Inferential Statistics - Inferential Statistics - Three principles to keep in mind when generalizing from a sample to the larger population - Statistical Significance 9

MODULE 8 - Frequently Asked Questions About Psychology 3. Ethics in Psychology Four guidelines are used to adhere to proper ethics when conducting research Read about the Landis experiment and explain why this experiment is unethical. Landis Facial Expressions Experiment - 1924 In 1924, Carney Landis, a psychology graduate at the University of Minnesota developed an experiment to determine whether different emotions create facial expressions specific to that emotion. The aim of this experiment was to see if all people have a common expression when feeling disgust, shock, joy, and so on. Most of the participants in the experiment were students. They were taken to a lab and their faces were painted with black lines, in order to study the movements of their facial muscles. They were then exposed to a variety of stimuli designed to create a strong reaction. As each person reacted, they were photographed by Landis. The subjects were made to smell ammonia, to look at pornography, and to put their hands into a bucket of frogs. But the controversy around this study was the final part of the test. Participants were shown a live rat and given instructions to behead it. While all the participants were repelled by the idea, fully one third did it. The situation was made worse by the fact that most of the students had no idea how to perform this operation in a humane manner and the animals were forced to experience great suffering. For the one third who refused to perform the decapitation, Landis would pick up the knife and cut the animals head off for them. The consequences of the study were actually more important for their evidence that people are willing to do almost anything when asked in a situation like this. The study did not prove that humans have a common set of unique facial expressions. 10