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