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PSYC-110N Week 8 Final Project: Psychology Yearbook (GRADED A)

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PSYCHOLOGY YEARBOOK Introduc tion • I've mastered the fundamentals of psychology during the last eight weeks. I know a lot more about behavior and mental illnesses now than I did before this class. This presentation is an overview of everything I've learned during the last few weeks. I used what I considered to be the most important for each issue. My presentation demonstrates what I learned and retained from each course outcome. 1900s: Human Behavior • Outcome 1: Assessment of theoretical perspectives on human behavior, including physiological causes for behavioral changes. • In the 1920s, John B. Watson was the first major psychologist to use the behavioral approach. (Feldman, 2019) • Humans might be comprehended by monitoring their conduct, they believed. • Watson thought that a person's surroundings might bring out any type of conduct. 1900s: Consciousness • Outcome 2: Examine the sensation and perception processes, as well as the factors that influence consciousness. • Dreams were used by Sigmund Fraud to gain insight into the unconscious mind. (Feldman, 2019) • Fraud wrote a book about dream interpretation. • In his book, Fraud discusses how dreams can be interpreted to understand how the unconscious mind perceives the world and what is being replayed. (Fraud, 1900) 2000s: Human Behavior • Many things, such as terror attacks or mass shootings, are investigated based on one's behavior. • Why people do what they do is typically considered as a case of nature vs. nurture. • People's behavior is also influenced by where they are from in the globe and what they are taught from an early age. 2000s: Consciousness • Dreams are used to gain insight into a person's subconscious mind and what is going on inwardly. • Our subconscious mind can reveal a lot about how we feel and recall things. • The book by Sigmund Freud aids in deciphering what we don't grasp about the meaning of our dreams. 1900s: Stress • Examine the physiological and psychological effects of stress, as well as various stress management approaches. • Soldiers began to develop an illness known as shell shock during the world wars. • Because of the stress produced by the conflict, the soldiers returned home unable to operate. (Jones, et al., 2012) • Shell shock not only caused bodily problems as a result of the stress, but it also had a psychological influence on them once they returned home. 2000s: Stress • Shell shock is now termed as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) • Between 10% and 18% of soldiers suffer from PTSD, and the US spends $3 million to assist treat them. 2019 (Feldman) • PTSD is becoming more common among first responders and others who have witnessed terror incidents. • Because the person is unable to cope with the stress created by the occurrence, PTSD might lead to suicide. • Not only does it influence the mind, but it also affects the body, causing loss of appetite and insomnia. 1900s: Learning & Memory • Outcome 4: Demonstrate learning and memory models. • A Russian physiologist, Ivan Pavlov, did a study employing dogs to investigate stomach acid secretion and salvation (Feldman, 2019) • He discovered that dogs do not respond to hunger, but rather to learned behaviors about when they will be fed. • This experiment demonstrated how humans and animals are conditioned into habits by continuously repeating them. 2000s: Learning & Memory • What Pavlov discovered has been used to learn about human memory and behaviors. • Everyone nowadays lives in a revolving door of habits that they engage in every day from the moment they get up until they retire to bed. • When it comes to memories, psychologists use them to help people with mental illnesses comprehend when everything started for them. 1900s: Motivation & Personality • Outcome 5: Examine important motivational and personality theories. • Maslow's hierarchy of needs describes how some wants must be addressed before others can be met. 2019 (Feldman) • The hierarchy starts with the most basic need of food and water and progresses to self- actualization. • Personality, according to Freud, is founded on the unconscious part of our mind that we are unaware of (Feldman, 2019) • Freud thought that personality and behavior stemmed from the unconscious mind. • Today's motivation has to do with money and the economy rather than the wants and requirements of the individual. • Today's personality includes who a person associates with during their adolescence years and beyond. • Maslow's hierarchy explains not only why people do what they do to meet their needs, but also why we as humans prioritize certain needs over others. • Describe the major physical, cognitive, and social developmental changes that occur from childhood to maturity • To better understand when certain features of a person grow, psychologists began to research what changes occur at each stage of life. • Humans learn basic skills such as talking and walking during their early years, as well as grow swiftly and develop motor skills. • Humans begin going to school in their childhood to develop social skills and to be placed in an educational context. • Puberty happens during adolescence, and a person's identity is revealed. • Adulthood is the time when people start a family, and their bodies start to slow down as they become older. • Understanding how people why something goes wrong along the process. • Doctors currently look at what was examined and noted to see how we should develop during specific time periods in our lives. • It also aids in recognizing when mental problems manifest themselves at different phases of life. 1900s: Mental Disorders • Outcome 7: Describe the various forms of psychological problems, schools of thought on possible causes, and how society reacts to people who suffer from mental illnesses. • Mental illness affects a person's thinking, feelings, and moods, making it difficult for them to operate daily. (Mental Health) • According to psychologists, humans are possessed by the devil, which is the cause of their disorders. • During this time, people were admitted to mental hospitals and treated with electrotherapy while being confined in deplorable conditions. 2000s: Mental Disorders • Mental diseases are better understood and researched today. • Medical, psychoanalytic, behavioral, cognitive, humanistic, and sociocultural perspectives are used to explain the problems that patients are diagnosed with. • There are many effective treatment choices available, ranging from medication to therapy. • People with mental illnesses are stigmatized, because they are viewed as insane and should be institutionalized rather than treated as individuals. Reference • Allen, S., Siegel, D., Begley, S., Kuyken, W., Hunter, J., Sofer, O. J., … Newman, K. M. (2019, October 21). What Awe Looks Like in the Brain. Retrieved from

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PSYCHOLOGY
YEARBOOK

, • I've mastered the fundamentals of psychology
during the last eight weeks. I know a lot more

Introduc
about behavior and mental illnesses now than
before this class. This presentation is an overvi
of everything I've learned during the last few
tion weeks. I used what I considered to be the mos
important for each issue. My presentation
demonstrates what I learned and retained from
each course outcome.

, 1900s: Human Behavior

• Outcome 1: Assessment of
theoretical perspectives on human
behavior, including physiological
causes for behavioral changes.
• In the 1920s, John B. Watson was
the first major psychologist to use
the behavioral approach.
(Feldman, 2019)
• Humans might be comprehended
by monitoring their conduct, they
believed.
• Watson thought that a person's
surroundings might bring out any
type of conduct.
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