100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Other

Applied Psychology Unit 3 Content Area B Notes

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
37
Uploaded on
12-01-2026
Written in
2025/2026

This is notes for unit 3 Pearson BTECH National Applied Psychology Content Area B. You will get notes on: B1: Stress - Causes of stress - Life events and daily hassles - Role of the workplace - Role of Personality - Physiological responses to stress - Stress and physical ill health B2: Physiological addiction: - Smoking Biological + Learning Approach - Alcohol Cognitive + Learning Approach B3: Non-substance-related addiction - Gambling Cognitive + Learning Approach - Shopping Learning + Cognitive Approach. There is evaluations, notes and definitions, everything you would need to know for the exam, these notes got me a Distinction, check my page for content area A

Show more Read less
Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Study Level
Examinator
Subject
Unit

Document information

Uploaded on
January 12, 2026
Number of pages
37
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Other
Person
Unknown

Subjects

Content preview

LAB1: Daily Hassles & Life events
B1 Stress

Stress:

Causes of stress include Daily Hassles, Life events, Workplace Stress, Personality

Two main causes of stress:

Daily Hassles Life Events
Small + Common Big + Uncommon
Minor but frequent frustrations + Significant + infrequent
annoyance of everyday life that combines experiences/occasions in people’s lives
to cause stress that cause stress.
e.g forgetting where you have placed Stressful because people expend
something, missing the bus psychological energy to cope with the
Tend to be more negative changed circumstances.
e.g moving house, divorce
Can be positive/negative.


Life Events:

- Experience this as stressful cause we must make a significant psychological
adjustment to cope with a changed situation.
- Bigger the event = more we need to adjust = the more stressful it is.
- Applies to positive (marriage) and negative events (death)

Measuring Life Events:

- The social readjustment rating scale (SRRs), measure life events created by
Thomas Holmes + Richard Rahe (1967)
- SRRs scale is a list of 45 events, each event given several life change units
(LCUs)
- Number reflects the amount of adjustment needed to adapt to the life event
e.g death of a close friend is 37, but divorce is 73 LCUs
- A person indicates all the life events they have experienced over a set period,
and the level of stress is calculated by adding up the LCUs for these events

,Research into Life Events: Rahe Et Al (1970) - do not need to know this in detail.

Aim: Investigate whether scores on the life event questionnaire predicted the onset of
illness

Procedure:

- Approximately 3000 Navy workers studied (3 aircraft carriers) - this can be
applied to the public - generalisation
- Completed SRE (questionnaire used before the SRRS) - outdated as it is using
an old test not the new one
- Every life event in the 6 months before their duty over seas
- On the ship every illness was recorded
- Medical Records were reviewed after the tour, and an independent researcher
calculated an illness score for each participant.
- Staff or PPs were aware of the study but not why – can't be subject to bias, they
can't show demand characteristics, ethics violated because we deceived
them, they can't give formal consent

Results:

- Small but significant correlation (+0.118) between LCU score and illness score
- PPs who had the most stressful events in the 6 months before deployment had
the most illnesses for the 6 months on board, as stress lowered their immune
systems.

Conclusions:

- Rahe et al concluded that life events are reasonably robust predictor of later
stress-related illness.
- Most illnesses were minor as PPs were generally healthy, people in the real
world will be different.

,Daily Hassles – Kanner et al – do not need to know this in detail

Developed as an alternative explanation to the life events explained by Kanner et al
(1981) created the daily hassles questionnaire.

- Suggested that the more day to day events were closely related to stress than
life events.
- Developed a scale that looked at how irritating/annoying these hassles were.
- Uplifts are how often it happens
- 117 hassles (things that have happened to you) – severity
- 135 – frequency (how often it happened)

Aim: Investigate whether daily hassles or life events were a better predictor of
psychological health

Procedure:

- Devised the hassles and uplifts scale – the questionnaire
- 100 PPs aged 45-64 years, cannot generalise to anyone to who is under that
age range.
- Completed the daily hassle questionnaire every month for 9 months, reliable as
it is consistent
- Completed the Hopkins checklist (to measure symptoms of ill health and stress)
- Also completed a measure of live events one month before the study, and after
the end, looking back over 6 months.

Findings:

- Significant correlation between daily hassle frequency and psychological
symptoms
- Daily hassles were significantly stronger predictor of symptoms that life events

Conclusion:

- Daily hassles are more important in predicting illness than life events.

, What are the strengths and weaknesses of using these questionnaires to measure
stress?

Strength Weakness
Point – Both questionnaires use Point – Both of the questionnaire does
numerical data making it easier total up not take individual differences into
and analyse the score. consideration, as each person will take a
situation of stress differently
Evidence – The SRRS scale uses a scale Evidence - The SSRS labels a divorce 73
from 1-120 to depict different levels of on the scale out of 120 meaning that is a
stress for example divorce 73. high stress situation.
Explain - This is useful to the person who Explain - However for example a person
is totalling the score up as it helps them who managed to get out of an abusive
understand the individuals stress levels marriage through divorce is more like to
be relieved than stressed.


strengths and weaknesses of life events as a cause of stress – research into

Strength Weakness
Point - The study can be applied to the Point - Violated ethics procedure as the
public meaning it has generalisability participants did not give formal consent.
Evidence - Approximately 3000 Navy Evidence- Staff and participants were
workers studied (3 aircraft carriers) aware of the study but not why the study
was being done.

Explain - As there were 3000 Explain – This was done to reduce
participants, this large amount suggests demand characteristics however it is a
that the findings can be applied to the violation as no formal consent was given.
public rather than a study that consists of
100 people


Strength + Weakness of daily hassles

Strength Weakness
Point - Point – It has a lack of generalisability.
Evidence - Evidence - 100 PPs aged 45-64 years,
cannot generalise to anyone to who is
under that age range.

Explain - Explain - as the age group was 45-64 the
findings may not be the same as
someone who might be 18.
$13.81
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
nickolaziarmal

Also available in package deal

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
nickolaziarmal Sandwell College
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
1
Member since
1 month
Number of followers
0
Documents
4
Last sold
1 month ago

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions