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Samenvatting Psychology, ISBN: 9781319150518 Introductory Psychology and Brain and Cognition

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Samenvatting van het vak Introduction to Psychology and brain and cognition wat wordt gegeven aan de UvA in het eerste jaar van de bachelor Psychology.

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Ch1: the basics

Psychology: science of human behaviour and its underlying mental processes.
- behaviour: observable actions of a person
- mind: unobservable subjective experiences like perceptions, thoughts, emotions.

Basic ideas in psychology
1: behaviour and mental processes have a material, physical origin
 Descartes’ dualism: body is complex machine, a reflex would happen just physically
 pineal gland is little house for the human soul, soul produces thought
 his theory sets strict limits on what can and cannot be studied scientifically; bad
 Hobbes’ materialism: everything is a product of the physical brain, so conscious
thought is produced by material structures
 no limits on what can be studied and what not; so good theory
 reflexology: by Russian guy, all human behaviour are stimulated by environment

2: people and their behaviour changes because of experiences
 Locke’s empiricism: brain is tabula rasa, all knowledge comes from experience
 association by contiguity: successful following building blocks (red+round=apple)
 Kant’s nativism: basic forms of human knowledge are inborn into the mind (opposite)
 a priori: built into brain at birth, a posteriori: learned throughout life

3: humans are shaped by natural selection and evolution
 Darwin’s theory offered scientific founding for explaining behaviour, because only
the behaviour that fitted best with environment would be inherited and learned

Levels of analysis
- neural what happens in brain
- physiological what happens in body, hormones
- genetic difference in genes, look at twins
- evolutionary why behaviour came though natural selection
- learning how behaviour is caused by previous experiences
- cognitive look at mental information, beliefs
- cultural look at culture
- social influenced by other people
- developmental how someone is raised


Ch2: research

observation: objective statement that observers agree is true
theory: idea designed to explain observations and make predictions
hypothesis: prediction about new observations

Hawthorne effect: changes in subjects’ behaviour because they know they are watched

, Good research
- value of scepticism: doubting claims and trying to disprove them
- testing hypotheses, you should control the conditions carefully, so you can rule out
alternative explanations, confounds
- watch out for observer-expectancy effect: subjects of study perceive (unconscious)
cues from observers  bad study
- the less random variation (always random factors influencing measurement, this is
measurement error) in the results, the more reliable they are
- lab study: good control over the conditions, but behaviour might be influenced
- field study: less control, but more natural behaviour
 scientific experiment: independent variable is manipulated, dependent variable is
measured (within-subject: one thing is studied repeatedly, between-groups: duh)
 does x cause y ?
 correlational study: observing 2 measures and looking for a relationship
 is there a correlation between x and y ?
 descriptive study: observe behaviour without assessing a relationship
 what is x ?

In order to draw a conclusion about a whole group, you need a representative sample of
people of that whole group. Not a biased sample! If you test something about people with
insomnia, you need a group with people who don’t all have the same amount of insomnia
but all different complaints and sorts of insomnia, because if you run a test only with people
with severe insomnia then you can only say something about people with a certain kind of
insomnia.

Subject-expectancy effect / placebo-effect: the participant’s expectations can affect the
outcomes. The patient getting a placebo treatment but thinks it’s the real treatment might
believe it works and mentally affect the results.

Observer-expectancy effect: the observer/experimenter treat the patients in different
groups differently so they influence the outcome as well.

Correlation is not the same as causality: if A gets bigger and B gets smaller, doesn’t mean
that A is causing B to get smaller, might be just coincidence or a third variable influencing the
both of them. So when correlational research, don’t say causes/has an effect/influences but
just say the facts and this might be caused by ….


Ch3: genes

Genes affect your behaviour by determining the bodily structures involved in behaviour
 coding genes: code for unique protein molecules
 regulatory genes: activate and suppress specific coding genes, environmental
effects also help to turn genes on and off (epigenetics)

Environment: every aspect of an individual + surroundings but the genes themselves
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