Oxford Brookes University • Psychology
Latest uploads for Psychology at Oxford Brookes University. Looking for Psychology notes at Oxford Brookes University? We have lots of notes, study guides and revision notes available for Psychology at Oxford Brookes University.
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Modules Psychology at Oxford Brookes University
Notes available for the following courses of Psychology at Oxford Brookes University
Latest notes & summaries Oxford Brookes University • Psychology
Details of the main theory, including why it surfaced, core beliefs, global applications and conclusions.
Full lecture notes covering the main aspects of behaviourism, including why it surfaced, main theories and criticisms.
Questions covering the key points of section 2 psychoanalytic theory.
Full lecture notes covering the history of trait theory, including early categorisation of different traits into groups and number of traits needed to define personality, for example.
Multiple choice questions covering section 4 of biological psychology, answers can be purchased for free.
Multiple choice questions covering section 3, answers can be purchased for free as they're on a separate document.
Questions covering section 2 of biological psychology (answers are on a separate document which can be purchased for free).
Questions covering section 1 of biological psychology (answers are on a separate document which can be purchased for free).
Detailed and visual lecture notes covering: the retina and photoreceptors, visual pathways, depth perception, retinal disparity, colour vision and the trichromacy colour matching experiment (Young, 1802), principle univariance, colour opponency, the Perky effect (Perky, 1910), and mental rotation.
Lecture notes on biological rhythms covering: lesion studies, brain stem control of sleep and wakefulness (Bremner, 1937), reticular formation, brain mechanisms of sleep and waking, neurotransmitters and sleep, sleep-wake switch, flip-flop switch, the sleep switch, biological clocks and brain areas, genes and rhythms, chronotype variations, why light is important, two process theory (Borbely, 1974), effects of sleep disruption, and classification of sleep disorders.