Kategoriak: All - trauma - emotions - freud - behaviour

arabera Jeville Harry 3 years ago

196

Psychological Paradigms

The text outlines various psychological paradigms, each offering unique perspectives on human behavior and mental processes. The biological paradigm emphasizes the role of genetics, brain structures, and neurotransmitters in influencing emotions and behavior.

Psychological Paradigms

Psychological Paradigms

Sociocultural Paradigm

Ecological
Environment
Relationships
Culture
Race
Sex
Gender
Ethnicity
Abnormal
Dysfunctional
Holistic
Illness
Trauma
Maltreatment

Two Eyed Seeing

Medicine Wheel
Participating
Purpose
Connecting
Knowledge

Biological Paradigm

Neurotransmitters
Communication
Chemicals

GABA

Regulation

Dopamine

Sensations

Serotonin

Sleep

Norepinephrine

Arousal

Brain Structures
Frontal

Functioning

Parietal

Touch

Occipital

Visual

Temporal

Memory

Hypothalamus
Thalamus
Amygdala
Regulating Emotion
Heredity and Genetics
Genes

Emotions

DNA

Biological

Cognitive Paradigm

Albert Ellis
Schema

Consistent

Distortions

Interpretation
Feelings/Emotions
Events
Experiences

Behavioural Paradigm

Social learning
Albert Bandura

We observe then imitate

Experiments

Monkey

Operant conditioning
B.F. Skinner

Consequences

Reinforcement or punishment

Behaviors

Classic conditioning
Ivan Pavlov and John B. Watson

Response/Reaction

Psychodynamic Paradigm

Freud
Components

Superego

Values

Ego

Satisfaction

Balance

Mechanisms

Id

Needs

Attachment Theory
John Bowlby

Ambivalent

Insecure

Secure

Awareness
Conscious

Aware

Preconscious

Brought

Unconscious

Can't