Категории: Все - mind - psychology - cognition - conditioning

по Jillian Pillon 6 лет назад

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Introduction to Anthropology, Psychology, and Sociology

The field of psychology seeks to understand the intricacies of the human mind and behavior. By exploring mental states, development, and their interrelationships, psychologists aim to describe, predict, and influence behavior.

Introduction to Anthropology, Psychology, and Sociology

Psychology


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Psychologists seek .....


Experiment

Line Experiment

Conformity


Psychologists Solomon Asch wanted to understand the nature of conformity on healthy, intelligent people and conducted a series of experiments in the 1950's on this topic



Coping Strategies

6 Ways To Cope With High Functioning Depression
Mindfulness

MENTAL HEALTH

What is Depression to Individuals?
A Student with Mental Illness
Sociopath vs Psychopath: What's the Difference?
Borderline Personality Disorder... What is it?
Mood

Depression:

2 types:

Major Depression:


Bipolar Affective Disorder (previously Manic Depression):

Schizophrenia:


Types:


Catatonic Schizophrenia:


Paranoid Schizophrenia:


Personality


Antisocial Personality:


Substance

Anxiety

Generalized:


Phobias:


OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Disorder):


Hysterical Reaction:


Disorders

-Irrationality

-Personal Suffering

-Interpersonal maladjustment (Difficulty with relationships)


-Persistent personal unhappiness

-Inability to function in society

-Antisocial behaviour that harms others

-If they pose a threat to themselves/others = kept in custody



Unethical Expiriments

Monkey Drug Trial
David Reimer


Landi' Facial Expression Experiment
The Monster Study

Little Albert


The Happiest Girl in the World

Approaches to Understanding Behaviour

Mary Ainsworth


Harry Harlow


Leta Stetter Hollingworth


Erik Erikson


Jean Piaget



Theories of Development

Elizabeth Loftus

Studied false memories and the flexibility/reliability of repressed memories. Devised the lost in the mall experiment to prove her hypothesis. 39 percent of people tested believed the false memory to be real.

Cognitive Psychology

Albert Bandura

Cognitive Psychology

Carl Rogers

Humanist Psychologist

Viktor Frankl

Humanist Psychologist

Abraham Maslow

Humanist Psychologist

B.F Skinner

Behavioural Psychologist

Ivan Pavlov


Carl Jung

Psychodynamic Theorist

Karen Horney

Psychodynamic Theorist

Sigmund Freud

Psychodynamic Theorist

Branches

Cognitive

Cognitive:


Psychoanalysis

Psychoanalysis:

Founders: Sigmund Freud, Karen Horney, Carl Jung, Erik Erikson

Humanism

Humanism:


Behaviorism

Behaviourism


Key Terms...


Analytical Psychology


Archetypes



Cerebrum


Classical Conditioning


Client-Centered Therapy


Cognition


Collective Unconscious


Conditioned Response


Conditioned Stimulus


Conscious


Correlation


Defense Mechanism


Denial


Displacement

Ego


Extinction


Fixation


Free Association


Id


Identity Crisis


Logotherapy


Neo-Freudians


Neuroscientists


Neurotic Disorder


Operant Conditioning


Personality


Projection


Psychoanalytic Theory


Psychodynamic Theory


Repression


Self-actualization


Superego


Unconditioned Response


Unconditioned Stimulus


Unconscious

Social Identity and The Life Style

*** Changes and grows along with the individual throughout his or her life and is influenced by life experiences***


***Stages of the life cycle refer to developing social skills and abilities that form your behavior in society***

Sociology

*The study of human behaviour, including, individuals, groups , and societies*



Conformity

NOTE
Status of Members

Source: Solomon Asch

Influence on Conformity: If a group member is knowledgeable, as a teacher or has a high status , such as a workplace superior , other participants are likely to conform to that person's views. There is also higher conformity to a group that has high status

Ambiguous Situation or Difficult Situation

Source: Muzafer Sherif, Solomon Asch

Influence on Conformity: When a task is difficult or ambiguous participants look to each others in the group for cues as to how to react, assuming the others will know what to do. More difficult the task, the greater the conformity

Self-Esteem

Source: Solomon Asch, Phillip Zimbardo

Influence on Conformity: Those with lower self-esteem are more likely to conform because they want to belong. Conversely, participants are less likely to conform when they are confident in themselves or their abilities

Public vs Private

Source: Muzafer Sherif, Solomon Asch

Influence on Conformity: When participants are able to give answers privately, conformity is decreased

Group Unanimity

Source: Muzafer Sherif, Solomon Asch, Philip Zimbardo

Influence on Conformity: When everyone in a group appears to agree, participate conformity is high, Even one person voicing disagreement decreases the conformity of participants



Group Size

Source : Solomon Asch

Influence on Conformity : Larger groups tend to have higher rates of conformity; however, that rate does not change much after groups reach four or five members


Culture

What Do Cultures Have In Common?

Individual cultures can vary greatly, but all cultures share some common characteristics

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Culture is learned


Culture is shared (have subcultures)


Culture defines nature


Culture shapes how e perceive and understand the world


Culture has patterns

Where does culture come from?

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What is culture?

Important Sociologists

Margaret Mead

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Charles Cooley
Looking-Glass Self Idea

The way in which the individual's sense of self is mirrored and reflected by others


Example ---> An Avatar



Max Weber
Weber's Theory Rationalization

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Weber's idea of a bureaucracy VS. sociological bureaucracy


Weber


Sociology

Example of Modern Bureaucracy

Canadian Civil Service


Mysore Narasimhachar Srinivas

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Caste System


Srinivas Work
William Foote

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The Street Corner Society Experiment

---> Inhabited by 1st and 2nd generation Italian immigrants

the neighborhood ---> High crime rates, considered dangerous refereed to as a slum


---> observed/ recorded tensions between different groups from withing the neighborhood


Two Groups Studied -->"Corner Boys" and "College Boys"


Corner boys


College Boys

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Herbert Spencer
Social Darwinism


---> Led to the creation of a eugenics board

---> Board had the power to order the sterilization of individuals

---> Between 1929 and 1972 ---> 2822 individuals were sterilized

Spencer's Theory

Example

Prejudices

The Competition Theory

(To justify this to exploit another group, the dominant group may choose to see the group they are exploiting as inferior)



Social Conditions
The Frustration-Aggression Theory
Ignorance
The Learned Prejudice Theory

Agents of Socialization



Agents of Socialization



Effects of the Agents Over Time

Life Cycle Effect

Example: Political revolution (military coup, etc.)


Period Effect


Cohort Effect

Social Classes
Secondary Agents of Socialization

Examples: school, work,religion


Primary Agents of Socialization
Meet the Agents of Socialization

Family

School

Peers

Media

Culture




What is Socialization?

The way people think and act

**Allows new members to learn accepted ways of behaving within a certain culture


Socialization

** Various types of social contact are called the agents of socialization


Socialization

Subtopic
7 Ways Alcoholic Parents Affect their Children
The Process of Socialization

In our everyday relationships with people we learn different knowledge and skills, When we start to use these skills and knowledge ourselves this is called internalization .

Symbolic Interactionism

(Microsociology)




"I am not what I think I am; I am not what you think I am; I am what I think you think I am"

Explanation

Cooley is talking about the process of developing The Self

This is done in three stages:

  1. The imagination of our appearance to the other person
  2. How we imagine the person judges our appearance
  3. How we feel about the other person's judgment (as we have imagined it)
Structural Functionism

(Macrosociology)


Social Identity

Allows a person to interact with a number of people in a variety of different situations




Elements Include...

*Aide in formation of social identity*

When Studying The Emergence of Social Identity

Macro and Micro Sociology

***Stages of the life cycle refer to developing social skills and abilities that form your behaviour in society***

Microsociology

Concerned with the role and interactions an individual or small group of people may have in society


Example

A microsociologist would study a religious worship by looking at role and beiefs of a single worshipper or small group of worshippers in a religion

Macrosociology

Takes a wide perspective and is concerned with studying society as a whole


Example

A macrosociologist studying a religion would try to learn a great deal about religious worship as a large structure or institution in society.

Life Strategies and Developments Tasks

6. Family in Later Life
5. Family in Mid Life
4. Family With Adolecents
3. Family With Young Children


2. Newly Married Couple
1. Young Single Adult

Sociological School of Thought

Symbolic Interactionalism

Studies human interaction at the micro level


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To study the individual's social role and peace within a wider society and how people create their world through social interactions

To examine how a physical environment and social structures determine individual behavior


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Theory

Behaviour of others in a society is deeply rooted in our response and reactions to it

*influencing the way an individual may...

}-------------->This dependent relationship is what

allows a society to function smoothly

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Focus



Charles Cooley, George Herbert and Max Weber
Feminist Theory


To examine conflicts created by gender



Research based on two premises;

  1. Shouls focus on the condition of women in society
  2. Must be grounded on the assumption that women generally experience subordination


Dorothy Smith
Conflict Theory

To study how power forms the basis of the relationships between different groups and creates conflict


Karl Marx
Strucural Functionism

To study how social structure functions serve the needs of society






Emile Durkhiem

Forms of Child Abuse

Emotional Abuse
Neglect
Physical Abuse
Sexual Abuse

Gender Identity

One's personal experience of one's own gender. This is generally described as one's private sense of being a man or a woman, consisting primarily of the acceptance of membership into a category of male or female, and into the following identities:


How are genders constructed?

Gender Roles

A set of societal norms dictating what types of behaviours are generally considered acceptable, appropriate or desirable for a person based on their actual or precieved sex :



Gender

Culturally Constructed
Culturally Defined


Sex

Visibly Identifiable
Genetically defined
Introduction to Sociology

Agents of Socialization

Anticipatory Socialization

Bureaucracy

Empiracle

Feral

Functional Differentiation

Isolate

Macrosociology

Microsociology

Norms

Positivism

Primary Group

Primary Socialization

Rationalization

Resocialization

Role

Secondary Socialization

Social Influence

Socialization

Survey

Values

Sociology and Me

Acting Crowd

Altruism

Casual Crowd

Census

Chaperone

Classism

Compliance

Conformity

Conventional Crowd

Dehumanize

Demography

Differential Association

Discrimination

Dyad

Expressive Crowd

Groupthink

Homophily

Informal group

Islamaphobia

Mass Hysteria

Mob

Obedience

Panic

Prejudice

Prosocial Behavior

Racism

Review of Literature

Riot

Sanction

Scapegoat

Secondary Group

Sexism

Smart Mobs (flash mobs)

Social Identity

Social Role

Solidarity

Stereotype

Threshold

Upstander

Virtual Community



Prejudice's Discrimination's and Other "Ism's"

Ethnocentrism


Xenophobia


Intergration


Separatism


Pluralism


Racism


Prejudice


Unequal


Expulsion


Annhiliation


Genocide


Segregated

Cultural Influence

Art and Entertainment


Enviroment

Values/Religious/Beliefs

Education/Insitutions

Laws/Customs

Divisions of Labour/Power

Deviance and Social Control

Key terms......


Social Norms

Folkways

Mores

Degrees of conformity
Social Roles

Deviant Behaviors

Behavior that differs from social norms of the group and is judged as wrong by members of that group

Biological Theories

Psychological Theories

Sociological Theories

Motivational

Learning

People learn deviant behavior from people that they know really well

Control

Labeling

Anthropology

The study of humans, including their origins; behaviors; and physical, social and cultural development.


Otzi

Known as......


Image result for otzi




Found in 1991

Found.....



Gives an insight to diet, climate, clothes, tools, and weapons of our early ancestors that walked the earth.

Important Anthropologists

Dian Fossey

Studied....

Met Louis Leaky in 1966

First trip to Africa under Louis Leaky in 1967

Other information...
Research and findings


Birute Galdikas
Findings/Research

Studied.......

Jane Goodall

Studied Chimpanzees

Findings/ Research
  1. An alpha male wins supremacy over the other males : aggression and strength
  2. Alpha male : rite to mate with any/ every female
  3. Other males are not aloud to mate while alpha is in charge
  4. old/overthrown males: treated as a respected grandparent





Conclusion...

What did she do?
The Leaky'
Mary, Louis, and Richard
Conclusions...
Konrad Lorenz
Best known for


Also studying...


Founder of...

Fields of Anthropology

ETHNOLOGY

Study and compare of past and contemporary cultures

Interested in knowing about......

ARCHAEOLOGY

Studies/ analyze material and human remains left by ancient culture

ANTHROPOLOGICAL LINGUISTICS

Studies languages

PRIMATOLOGY

Study the anatomy and behaviours of primates

FORENSIC ANTHROPOLOGY

Studies/ examines human skeletal remains for law enforcement agencies.

PALEOANTHROPOLOGY

The study of human ancestors based on evidence from the distant evolutionary past

Evolutionary Theories/Theorists

Gregor Mendel
Jean Baptist Lemarck


Theory
Charles Darwin
Theory : Evolution


Key Terms

Key Terms.......


Bipedalism

Culturally defined


Culturally Constructed


Culture

Ethnically

Ethnocentric

Ethnography

Ethnology

Fossils

Hominin

Hominid

Hypothesis

Informant

Kinship

Objective

Participant observation

Radio metric dating

Reflextivity

Subculture

Subjective



Social Science Inquiry Model



STEP 1 : Question

STEP 2 : Focus

STEP 3 : Formulate a Hypothesis

STEP 4 : Collect Your Data

STEP 5 : Assemble and Analyze Data

STEP 6 : Stop and Check

STEP 7 : Present Results

STEP 8 : Reflection



Introduction to Anthropology, Psychology, and Sociology