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PSYC 102 textbook notes UBC -- from someone who got a 90% with minimal effort

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PSYC 102 textbook notes. Got me a 90% with minimal effort. All chapters. Exams are heavily textbook based. Notes will save you hours of writing your own notes for each chapter. The notes are concise + well organized. I suggest still practicing inquisitives + just listening to lectures since they can help with application questions. I also recommend reading over the textbook chapters too and adding on any info on top my notes :)

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Geüpload op
21 december 2025
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36
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2025/2026
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Andrew rivers
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Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Textbook Chap 1

Brain func ons

Primary somatosensory cortex: sense of touch (damage = loss of touch)

Primary motor cortex: control voluntary movements—walking, speaking (damage=immobility)

Corpus callosum: exchange info between 2 halves of brain

Basal ganglia: allow brain to communicate with spinal cord to control muscles

Cerebellum: coordina on, balance, percise movements



E ects

Overcon dence e ect: overly sure of what we know—easy to bias

Con rma on bias: tendency to seek out/pay a en on to/ believe only evidence that supports

what we already are con dent we know



Di erent perspec ves

h ps://nerd.wwnorton.com/nerd/326721/r/goto/c /38!/4 (learn how to apply them)

Cultural: how culture a ects ppl’s thoughts/preferences (nurture)

Evolu onary: behaviour that result from evolu onary adapta ons (nature)

Cogni ve: memory related, learning, language, thoughts, crea vity

Biological-neuroscience: brain-imaging techniques, from biological standpoints

Developmental: How ppl change as they age

Personaility/social psychological: how ppl change & stays same across situa ons

- Personaility: how di erent personaili es react, stable behavior over me/situa ons
- Social psych: situa on in uence behavior, immediate thoughts/behaviors
Clinical: causes & treatments of disorders




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, Textbook Chap 2: Research Methods

Form conclusions based on experience or intui on: UNRELIABLE

- Personal experiences don’t show us all events (can’t rewind me to see alterna ve)
- Lots cofactors, dk what actually a ects (ex. Car crash: bc of phone? Or smt else?)
- Intu on: tend to be overcon dent, although might not be right
- bias blind spot: discount things that goes against our ideas, believe it’s correct
- Best way— scien c methods: base beliefs on systema c, objec ve observa ons
-Ex. Assess driving performance: While phoning,
follow cars closer, break slower

-Conlusion: unsafe! —> use SM rather than relying on
intui on or experience.

-theory-data cycle: develope theory abt what ppl do
& collect data to compare

Theory: Explaina on on how/why ppl act/think/feel certain way

Hypothesis: a predic on

Replica on: Study repeated on di erent batches of par cipates—achieve same results

Opera onal de ni ons: Specify ways to measure/manipulate variables

Popula on of interest: large group— smaller group of people is called a sample

- random sampling—small group can generalize big


Random sampling: who gets in; Randomly choosen

Random assignment: what group they go into once they’re in; Manipulated variable




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, 3 type of research methods

Descrip ve research: how people typically think/feel/behave w/o manipulate variables

“What do people do on average?”— usually 1 variable

- Self report: use survey — snapshot of a tudes or behaviours
- Observa onal data:
- Observa onal research — Any research where researcher observes w/o
manipula ng variables. (Could be in normal or lab environment)

- Naturalis c observa on — observe behaviour in normal environment
- Case study: one person’s experience
Correla onal research: measure 2+ variables to understand rela onship between them

- Sca erplot: (+) increase le to right, (-) decrease le to right, no rela onship
- weak, moderate, strong—but tho strong, can’t assume one cause the other
To see if one variable cause the other, meet 3 criteria:

1. Two variables must be correlated

2. Temporal Precedence: must know for certain which variable came rst in me.

3. No reasonable alterna ve explana ons for the pa ern

- third-variable problem: ex. Social life corrolate to wellbeing,but personaility a ects
- Confound: “Dk if the e ect is from X or from Z, since they went together.”
Experimental research: Support causal statements, such as “leads…increases…reduce”

- Variable: A trait of interest that varies for every person/situa on
- Measured variables: measured (independent [y-axis]—the cause)
- Manipulated!!: (dependent [x-axis],e ect) controlled what par cipant expose to




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, Experimental group: proposed cause is present

Control group: proposed cause is absent

But both groups should think they are under same condi on — the placebo e ect

Groups be randomized & variable carefully manipulated—full ll third criteria



Construct validity: Are you measuring the right thing? opera onaliza ons accurate?

- Reliability = consistency
External validity

- Careful not to overly generalize! Can the e ect apply outside the study?
- Replicate experiment to new pop. if unsure
Internal validity

- Can we rule out alterna ve explana ons?
Cri cal thinking

1. What am I being asked to believe?

2. What kind of evidence is there?

3. How strong is the result? (Graph manipulated to make data look a certain way?)

4. Mistaking correla on for causa on?

- Causal claim → needs an experiment.

5. Has the study been replicated?


Mean: Average of group

Median: middle of group

Mode: most Common of group




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