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Terms in To
Psychology
Dr.K.R.MANSOOR ALI
Approved practitioner,Ministry Of Health,UAE
Email : info@similima.com
Psychology is the science of human and animal behavior, it attempt to
use rational means to understand the action of people and lower
animals.
History and
developments
As psychology developed from the philosophy, and became a separate
area of study in the late 1800s & early 1900s,many schools of
psychology arouse. Each school have different point of view about the
best way to study people.
The structuralist
searched for the elements of mind; the functionalist studied the way
in which mental process and behavior help the organism to adapt.
The behaviorist rejected the study of mind altogether and
concentrated on the objective study of what people and animals do. The
gestalt school studied mind and behaviour, emphasising the pattern of
relationship &"fields of force" in mental and behavioral process.
The older school of psychology are now largely gone today
2 major view point
dominate.
1.The humanistic view _ state that we can better understand human
experience and behavior by studying the feelings, motives and wishes,
as well as the behavior of a particular person.
2.The modern behaviorist view _ deals with the study of observable
behavior _ not the study of unobservable inner states such as feelings
_ is the proper subject of psychology.
SUBFIELDS
Clinical psychology
Counseling psychology
School & educational psychology
Industrial & personal psychology
Social psychology
Developmental psychology
Personality development
Psychometric psychology
Engineering psychology
Miscellaneous.
Primary activity of psychologist
Teaching
Clinical practice
Administration
Basic research
Psychological testing
Counseling practice
Applied research
Industrial counseling
Clinical research
Miscellaneous
METHODS OF
PSYCHOLOGY
Psychologist use 3 general methods
Natural observation _ Which is made as systemic as possible by the
development of psychological tests.
Experimental methods _ Which permits independent variable to be
manipulated & dependant variables to be measured.
Statistical methods _ To test he significance of differences obtained
and to compute correlations between variables.
PERSONALITY
Defined as all the areas of development like physical, motor,
language, mental, emotional, social, moral and other various
components.
Personality develops from the interaction of a large number of
factors, some inborn, some learned. Personality can be defined as the
way in which an individual typically react to his surroundings.
DETERMINANTS OF
PERSONALITY
Physique
Glandular factor
Emotions
Early childhood experience
Family influences
Socio Cultural influences
Play mates and friends
Hereditary
School influences
Occupational
Financial
A WELL DEVELOPED
PERSONALITY
· Enjoys life
· Is self confident
· Satisfying relationship with people
· Able to meet problems
· Having justifiable anger
· Is not afraid of people, things / situations
· Realize that any unhappiness he experience has understandable
cause.
· Able to look life from an objective point view
PERSONALITY TESTS
Projective techniques
Situational tests
Personality inventories
PERCEPTION
Perception is the process by which we obtain information about our
environment. We perceive only those aspects of the environment to
which we attend. Attending is generally considered to be a readiness
to perceive.
Selective absorption of appropriate stimuli from the environment
The act of attending involve adjustments of the sense organs,
posture, change in muscle tension & also activities in the CNS.
Object constancy & primitive organism tendencies are important for the
achievement of stable perception of ourselves and the world around us.
Object constancy is the tendency to perceive objects as constant even
though the stimuli from them act on us in a variety of ways.
Important aspects of object constancy are shape, size & color.
Primitive tendencies are important in perceptual stability, appear to
be determined by the nature of the human nervous system. They include
figure ground relationship and the principles of primitive grouping
such as similarity, proximity, closure and continuity.
Perception of space is achieved through visual cues which are
correlated with aspects of external world. Auditory perception of
distance is achieved monaurally on the basis of loudness, complexity
and special volume.
LEARNING
Learning is defined as a relatively permanent change in behavior which
is a result of experiance,excluding changes due to injury and
physiological adjustments. Learning makes possible adaptation to new
situations & solutions of simple & complex problems.
Conditioning is the simplest form of learning involving the
modification of reflexes, simple habits & emotional responses.
Operant conditioning occurs when reinforcement of an emitted response
increases the frequency of occurrence of the response. In this type of
conditioning the organism operates on its environment to gain some
reward.
Reinforcement involve the presence of a satisfying stimulus or
the absence of an aversive one _such as extremes of cold or
disapproval.
Chaining refers to the process of learning a series of related
responses, each of which serve as reinforcement for the previous
response & provide a stimulus for the next one. The series is known as
a behavior chain.
The concept of learning continuum emphasis that learned behavior
ranges from the simplest type of habits, apparently acquired through
condtionng,to highly complex verbal & motor skills.
Intentional learning is much more effective than incidental
learning and is obviously superior when complex skills are involved. A
widely used method of study is the “survey,question,read,recite &
review" (SQ3R) system, but no study regimen will be of value unless
the student is motivated to improve his performance.
MEMORY
Memory involves the making of an impression by an experience the
retention of some record of this impression and the reentry of this
record in to consciousness (behavior) as recall and recognition _ in
short memory is the "static residue” of the past activity in a normal
pathway.
A distinction has been made between short term and long term memory,
the trace involved in short term memory is a normal activity, not a
structural change as that presumed to underline long-term memory.
Memory appears in several different type of tasks, including recall,
recognition and relearning. Recall generally considered to be the most
difficult memory task because most of the related stimuli absent.
Recognition is a more sensitive test of memory than recall. In
recognition we differentiated the familiar from the unfamiliar.
Relearning is attempting to regain material/a skill which has been
partially or completely lost.
Forgetting is failing to retain what was once learned. Forgetting
sometimes occurs because stimulation adequate to activate the memory
trace is absent
Forgetting is least during inactivity or sleep because here is little
or no interference. Emotional and physical shock can cause forgetting
of recent events.
Memory training is successful to the degree that it increase the
efficacy of learning, but it does not develop a memory faculty.
THINKING
Thinking is essentially the manipulation of images and ideas which
represent aspects of the world that have falls within our previous
experiance. Thinking is manipulation of the world internally, using
symbols which represent previous experience.
The symbols most commonly used in thinking are numbers and language
symbols;therfor words play an important role in thinking.
Thinking occurs in various forms, in free association, there is no
conscious control over ones thoughts.
Creative thinking and reasoning are more controlled and more realistic
: they involve rational attempts to solve a problem or question in the
external world.
There are different theoretical approaches to the study of thinking.
Stimulus response theorists study thinking as an extension of the
principles of simple learning.
Cognitive theorist emphasize hypothesis testing and the acquaints of
meaning and understanding.
Thinking is being studied particularly from the view point of
information storage and especially information processing.
EMOTIONS
"A complex feeling / state accompanied by characteristic motor and
glandular activities"
Emotions typically involve reaction through out the organism. The
complexity of emotions is indicated in the many changes and
interrelationships which occurs in emotional arousal.
Environmental factors play an undesirable oleic emotional expression.
The activating or energizing dimensions of emotion suggests its
motivational significance.
Emotional reactions may be analyzed from the view point of
physiological process, subjective states and behavioral consequences,
but cognition also plays a role.
Chronic emotional stress sometimes result in psychosomatic reactions,
such as ulcers, which are physical disorder influenced by
psychological factors.
Most commonly studied feelings are anxiety ,anger and affection for
others. The pleasant _ unpleasant dimension is the most obvious
dimension of an affective state.
Fears, attitudes and other affective states appear to be acquired
through classical conditioning, they may be altered by the same
procedures. Imitation and thinking also plays important roles in
acquisition of affective states.
The behavioral accompaniments of emotions are continually evident in
human life, particularly in frustration and conflict.
EMOTIONAL
INTELLIGENCE
Being able to motivate oneself and persist to face in frustrations
Control impulse and add gratification
Empathy and hope
Control moods and keep distress from swaying away the ability to think
INTELLIGENCE
A complex term dealing with the ability of a person /animal to adapt
to a novel situations. In man it often involves an ability to utilize
abstract concepts and to learn and grasp novel relationship.
The view of intelligence is composed of a general factor and specific
factor, or many specific factors, has encountered considerable
research interest, but the nature of intelligence is very much
debated.
Post natal growth of intelligence undoubtedly related to physical
development of the brain after birth. Studies of unusual environments
indicate beyond doubt that early experience have a lasting influence
upon intellectual development.
The mentally gifted and MR are considered to comprise the upper and
lower 2% of the population. Studies of the development of adult
intelligence shows that the higher level of performance is reached at
different ages for different types of mental abilities, such as
numerical ability, reasoning and perceptual skills. The individual
mental activities in later life appear to be important factor in
continued growth.
Aptitudes are regarded as the potential for acquiring a specific
skill, physical or mental. A part from general intelligence, they can
play an important role in ones capacity to perform a certain type of
growth.
General intelligence, aptitudes, vocational interests and personality
all are considered in vocational guidance, in which the aim is to
enable an individual to help himself in carrier planning.
The consistency of individual mental growth seems to be
overestimated. In long term studies ,wide fluctuations have been
observed, associated with emotional factors, personality factors, and
the education level of the family.
TERMINOLOGIES
Repression : Unconsciously excluding unpleasant thoughts from
awareness. Preventing ego threatening ideas from returning to
consciousness. A primary defense mechanism.
Regression :
Going back to an earlier, sally less adequate, mode of response. In
hypnosis behaving as one did at an earlier stage of life.
Sublimation :
Satisfying a motive indirectly but in a socially acceptable
manner.Considerd as a defense mechanism.
Suppression :
Conscious inhibition of an activity, as when Some one suppresses a
desire to strike some one else. (repression is unconscious )
Vocational guidance
: Providing opportunities, through testing,counselling,and
interviews, for an individual to discover fields of work most suited
to his intelligence, aptitudes, interests and other personal traits.
Unconditioned
response : An original or inborn response, such as salivation
stimulated by food in the mouth, or withdrawal from an injurious
stimuli.
Transference :
In psycho analysis, situation in which the patient transfers to the
therapist feelings and behaviour is appropriate to significant other
persons in the patients life. Eg.The patient response to the
therapists as though the therapist were his father, fiancé or teacher.
Sociopath disorder
: A disorder in which the person fails to observe rules which govern
conduct in his society.
Aptitude : A
predisposition to react in a certain way; a readiness to react, a
determining tendency.
E S P :
Perception which allegedly occur with out sensory awarness, such as
communication between two individuals when there appear to be no
channels of information exchange.
I d : A Freudian
term representing the primitive, animalistic urges which underline
much behavior.
Gifted : Person
with special talents, with an IQ above 130.
Habit : A
recurring acquired mode of behaviour,such as a motor or verbal skill,
a way of doing things or a way of thinking.
Instinct : A
descriptive term for a complex un learned adaptive response, an un
learned pattern of reflexes appearing in all members of a species.
Oedipus complex : A Freudian term representing the sexual
attachment of a son for his mother, sally regarded as repressed &
disguised in various ways. Also it is assumed that the son will be
jealous of the father because the father can have intimacies with the
mother that the son is denied.
Electra complex :
A Freudian term representing the erotic attachment of a daughter to
his father, with accompanying jealousy of the mother. This attachment
may be repressed & disguised in various ways.
Psycho analysis
: A system of understanding human behavior based on Freud’s writings.
Emphasis is placed upon unconscious pious determinants of behavior.
R E M : Quick
movement of the eye during sleep, often occurring in series, as
measured by sensitive electrodes. Subjects awakened during REM periods
usually reports that they have dreaming.
Reasoning : Solving
some problem implicitly, sing symbols to represents objects or
solutions. Thinking one's way through a problem rather than engaging
in overt trial & error.
Subconscious :
Literally what is below the level of awarness.It refers to a
hypothetical region of the mind which serve as a repository of
repressed and other experiences which, while influencing behavior in
important ways, seldom come in to consciousness (awareness)
Experience which really come in to awareness are said to be in the pre
conscious. Unconscious _ referring that which we are not aware at the
moment.
Ego : The
individuals conceptions of himself. In psychoanalysis the part of
personality which as an outcome of experience, retain the expressions
of the Id and deals with the demands of the external environment.
Super ego :
Generally, internal controls or standards. Super ego is derived from
early influences. Super ego is one of the 3 chief intra psychic forces
in the Freudian view, the others are
Reinforcement :
Reduction or satisfaction of a drive ; reward. Anything which increase
the probability of a response.
Recognition :
Perceiving some thing as having been experienced before, as being
familiar.
Projection :
Attributing one' own motives or thoughts to others.
Motivation :
Inner influences or behavior as represented by physiological
conditions ,interestes, attitudes & aspirations.
Illusion : A
perception considered as mistaken because it does not agree with the
objective measurement of the physical form or pattern, which is
regarded as fundamental.
Hallucination :
A false perception generally regarded as abnormal.
Frustration :
A state of the organism which results when the satisfaction of the
motivated behavior is rendered difficult or impossible.
Feeling :
Affective experience represented by the individual as pleasantness,
excitements calmness, happiness etc.
Deja vu : The
feeling that a new situation is familiar _ that one has" been there"
before.
Compensation :
Counter balancing some change, such as lowering of temperature or some
defect, such as feeling of inferiority.
Cognition : A
general term indicating knowledge & awareness, it include perceiving,
remembering, reasoning and other means of knowing about oneself and
environment.
Aggression :
Hostility which may involves actual attack, physical or verbal upon
other people.
REFERENCES
Mangal : Educational psychology
Kaplan : A comprehensive text book of psychiatry
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