Psychology Is The
Psychology Is The
Psychology Is The
While psychological knowledge is often applied to the assessment and treatment of mental health
problems, it is also directed towards understanding and solving problems in several spheres of human
activity. By many accounts, psychology ultimately aims to benefit society. [5][6] The majority of
psychologists are involved in some kind of therapeutic role, practicing in clinical, counseling, or
school settings. Many do scientific research on a wide range of topics related to mental processes and
behavior, and typically work in university psychology departments or teach in other academic settings
(e.g., medical schools, hospitals). Some are employed in industrial and organizational settings, or in
other areas[7] such as human development and aging, sports, health, and the media, as well as in
forensic investigation and other aspects of law.X
In 1890, William James defined psychology as "the science of mental life, both of its phenomena and
their conditions". This definition enjoyed widespread currency for decades. However, this meaning
was contested, notably by radical behaviorists such as John B. Watson, who in his 1913 manifesto
defined the discipline of psychology as the acquisition of information useful to the control of
behavior. Also since James defined it, the term more strongly connotes techniques of scientific
experimentation.[11][12] Folk psychology refers to the understanding of ordinary people, as contrasted
with that of psychology professionals.[13]X
History
Main article: History of psychology
The ancient civilizations of Egypt, Greece, China, India, and Persia all engaged in the philosophical
study of psychology. In Ancient Egypt the Ebers Papyrus mentioned depression and thought
disorders.[14] Historians note that Greek philosophers, including Thales, Plato,
and Aristotle (especially in his De Anima treatise),[15] addressed the workings of the mind.[16] As
early as the 4th century BC, Greek physician Hippocrates theorized that mental disorders had physical
rather than supernatural causes.[17]X
Distinctions in types of awareness appear in the ancient thought of India, influenced by Hinduism. A
central idea of the Upanishads is the distinction between a person's transient mundane self and
their eternal unchanging soul. Divergent Hindu doctrines, and Buddhism, have challenged this
hierarchy of selves, but have all emphasized the importance of reaching higher awareness. Yoga is a
range of techniques used in pursuit of this goal. Much of the Sanskrit corpus was suppressed under
the British East India Company followed by the British Raj in the 1800s. However, Indian doctrines
influenced Western thinking via the Theosophical Society, a New Age group which became popular
among Euro-American intellectuals.[19]X
Wilhelm Wundt (seated) with colleagues in his psychological laboratory, the first of its kind.
Psychologists in Germany, Denmark, Austria, England, and the United States soon followed Wundt in
setting up laboratories.[26] G. Stanley Hall, who studied with Wundt, formed a psychology lab
at Johns Hopkins University in Maryland, which became internationally influential. Hall, in turn,
trained Yujiro Motora, who brought experimental psychology, emphasizing psychophysics, to
the Imperial University of Tokyo.[27] Wundt's assistant, Hugo Münsterberg, taught psychology at
Harvard to students such as Narendra Nath Sen Gupta—who, in 1905, founded a psychology
department and laboratory at the University of Calcutta.[19] Wundt students Walter Dill
Scott, Lightner Witmer, and James McKeen Cattell worked on developing tests for mental ability.
Catell, who also studied with eugenicist Francis Galton, went on to found the Psychological
Corporation. Wittmer focused on mental testing of children; Scott, on selection of employees. [28]X
American psychology gained status during World War I, during which a standing committee headed
by Robert Yerkes administered mental tests ("Army Alpha" and "Army Beta") to almost 1.8 million
soldiers.[37] Subsequent funding for behavioral research came in large part from the Rockefeller
family, via the Social Science Research Council.[38][39] Rockefeller charities funded the National
Committee on Mental Hygiene, which promoted the concept of mental illness and lobbied for
psychological supervision of child development.[37][40] Through the Bureau of Social Hygiene and
later funding of Alfred Kinsey, Rockefeller foundations established sex research as a viable discipline
in the U.S.[41] Under the influence of the Carnegie-funded Eugenics Record Office, the Draper-
funded Pioneer Fund, and other institutions, the eugenics movement also had a significant impact on
American psychology; in the 1910s and 1920s, eugenics became a standard topic in psychology
classes.[42]X
In contrast to the US, in the UK psychology was met with antagonism by the scientific and medical
establishments, and up until 1939 there were only six psychology charis in Universities in England.
[43]X
During World War II and the Cold War, the U.S. military and intelligence agencies established
themselves as leading funders of psychology—through the armed forces and in the new Office of
Strategic Services intelligence agency. University of Michigan psychologist Dorwin Cartwright
reported that university researchers began large-scale propaganda research in 1939–1941, and "the
last few months of the war saw a social psychologist become chiefly responsible for determining the
week-by-week-propaganda policy for the United States Government." Cartwright also wrote that
psychologists had significant roles in managing the domestic economy. [44] The Army rolled out its
new General Classification Test and engaged in massive studies of troop morale. In the 1950s,
the Rockefeller Foundation and Ford Foundation collaborated with the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) to fund research on psychological warfare.[45] In 1965, public controversy called
attention to the Army's Project Camelot—the "Manhattan Project" of social science—an effort which
enlisted psychologists and anthropologists to analyze foreign countries for strategic purposes. [46][47]X
In Germany after World War I, psychology held institutional power through the military, and
subsequently expanded along with the rest of the military under the Third Reich.[21] Under the
direction of Hermann Göring's cousin Matthias Göring, the Berlin Psychoanalytic Institute was
renamed the Göring Institute. Freudian psychoanalysts were expelled and persecuted under the anti-
Jewish policies of the Nazi Party, and all psychologists had to distance themselves from Freud and
Adler.[48] The Göring Institute was well-financed throughout the war with a mandate to create a "New
German Psychotherapy". This psychotherapy aimed to align suitable Germans with the overall goals
of the Reich; as described by one physician: "Despite the importance of analysis, spiritual guidance
and the active cooperation of the patient represent the best way to overcome individual mental
problems and to subordinate them to the requirements of the Volk and the Gemeinschaft."
Psychologists were to provide Seelenführung, leadership of the mind, to integrate people into the new
vision of a German community.[49] Harald Schultz-Hencke melded psychology with the Nazi theory
of biology and racial origins, criticizing psychoanalysis as a study of the weak and deformed.
[50] Johannes Heinrich Schultz, a German psychologist recognized for developing the technique
of autogenic training, prominently advocated sterilization and euthanasia of men considered
genetically undesirable, and devised techniques for facilitating this process. [51] After the war, some
new institutions were created and some psychologists were discredited due to Nazi
affiliation. Alexander Mitscherlich founded a prominent applied psychoanalysis journal
called Psyche and with funding from the Rockefeller Foundation established the first clinical
psychosomatic medicine division at Heidelberg University. In 1970, psychology was integrated into
the required studies of medical students. [52]X
Twentieth-century Chinese psychology originally modeled the U.S., with translations from American
authors like William James, the establishment of university psychology departments and journals, and
the establishment of groups including the Chinese Association of Psychological Testing (1930) and
the Chinese Psychological Society (1937). Chinese psychologists were encouraged to focus on
education and language learning, with the aspiration that education would enable modernization
and nationalization. John Dewey, who lectured to Chinese audiences in 1918–1920, had a significant
influence on this doctrine. Chancellor T'sai Yuan-p'ei introduced him at Peking University as a greater
thinker than Confucius. Kuo Zing-yang who received a PhD at the University of California, Berkeley,
became President of Zhejiang University and popularized behaviorism.[57] After the Chinese
Communist Party gained control of the country, the Stalinist Soviet Union became the leading
influence, with Marxism–Leninism the leading social doctrine and Pavlovian conditioning the
approved concept of behavior change. Chinese psychologists elaborated on Lenin's model of a
"reflective" consciousness, envisioning an "active consciousness" (pinyin: tzu-chueh neng-tung-li)
able to transcend material conditions through hard work and ideological struggle. They developed a
concept of "recognition" (pinyin: jen-shih) which referred the interface between individual
perceptions and the socially accepted worldview (failure to correspond with party doctrine was
"incorrect recognition").[58] Psychology education was centralized under the Chinese Academy of
Sciences, supervised by the State Council. In 1951, the Academy created a Psychology Research
Office, which in 1956 became the Institute of Psychology. Most leading psychologists were educated
in the United States, and the first concern of the Academy was re-education of these psychologists in
the Soviet doctrines. Child psychology and pedagogy for nationally cohesive education remained a
central goal of the discipline.[59]X
Disciplinary organization
Institutions
See also: List of psychology organizations
The world federation of national psychological societies is the International Union of Psychological
Science (IUPsyS), founded in 1951 under the auspices of UNESCO, the United Nations cultural and
scientific authority.[26][61] Psychology departments have since proliferated around the world, based
primarily on the Euro-American model.[19][61] Since 1966, the Union has published the International
Journal of Psychology.[26] IAAP and IUPsyS agreed in 1976 each to hold a congress every four years,
on a staggered basis.[60]X
The International Union recognizes 66 national psychology associations and at least 15 others exist.
[60] The American Psychological Association is the oldest and largest. [60] Its membership has
increased from 5,000 in 1945 to 100,000 in the present day. [29] The APA includes 54 divisions, which
since 1960 have steadily proliferated to include more specialties. Some of these divisions, such as
the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues and the American Psychology–Law Society,
began as autonomous groups.[60]X
The Interamerican Society of Psychology, founded in 1951, aspires to promote psychology and
coordinate psychologists across the Western Hemisphere. It holds the Interamerican Congress of
Psychology and had 1,000 members in year 2000. The European Federation of Professional
Psychology Associations, founded in 1981, represents 30 national associations with a total of 100,000
individual members. At least 30 other international groups organize psychologists in different regions.
[60]X
In some places, governments legally regulate who can provide psychological services or represent
themselves as a "psychologist".[62] The APA defines a psychologist as someone with a doctoral
degree in psychology.[63]X
Boundaries
Early practitioners of experimental psychology distinguished themselves from parapsychology, which
in the late nineteenth century enjoyed great popularity (including the interest of scholars such as
William James), and indeed constituted the bulk of what people called "psychology". Parapsychology,
hypnotism, and psychism were major topics of the early International Congresses. But students of
these fields were eventually ostractized, and more or less banished from the Congress in 1900–1905.
[26] Parapsychology persisted for a time at Imperial University, with publications such
as Clairvoyance and Thoughtography by Tomokichi Fukurai, but here too it was mostly shunned by
1913.[27]X
As a discipline, psychology has long sought to fend off accusations that it is a "soft" science.
Philosopher of science Thomas Kuhn's 1962 critique implied psychology overall was in a pre-
paradigm state, lacking the agreement on overarching theory found in mature sciences such as
chemistry and physics.[64] Because some areas of psychology rely on research methods such as
surveys and questionnaires, critics asserted that psychology is not an objective science. Skeptics have
suggested that personality, thinking, and emotion, cannot be directly measured and are often inferred
from subjective self-reports, which may be problematic. Experimental psychologists have devised a
variety of ways to indirectly measure these elusive phenomenological entities. [65][66][67]X
Divisions still exist within the field, with some psychologists more oriented towards the unique
experiences of individual humans, which cannot be understood only as data points within a larger
population. Critics inside and outside the field have argued that mainstream psychology has become
increasingly dominated by a "cult of empiricism" which limits the scope of its study by using only
methods derived from the physical sciences. [68] Feminist critiques along these lines have argued that
claims to scientific objectivity obscure the values and agenda of (historically mostly male)
[37] researchers. Jean Grimshaw, for example, argues that mainstream psychological research has
advanced a patriarchal agenda through its efforts to control behavior. [69]X
Major schools of thought
Biological
Psychologists generally consider the organism the basis of the mind, and therefore a vitally related
area of study. Psychiatrists and neuropsychologists work at the interface of mind and body.
[70] Biological psychology, also known as physiological psychology, [71] or neuropsychology is the
study of the biological substrates of behavior and mental processes. Key research topics in this field
include comparative psychology, which studies humans in relation to other animals, and perception
which involves the physical mechanics of sensation as well as neural and mental processing. [72] For
centuries, a leading question in biological psychology has been whether and how mental functions
might be localized in the brain. From Phineas Gage to H.M. and Clive Wearing, individual people
with mental issues traceable to physical damage have inspired new discoveries in this area.
[71] Modern neuropsychology could be said to originate in the 1870s, when in France Paul
Broca traced production of speech to the left frontal gyrus, thereby also demonstrating hemispheric
lateralization of brain function. Soon after, Carl Wernicke identified a related area necessary for the
understanding of speech.[73]X
The search for biological origins of psychological phenomena has long involved debates about the
importance of race, and especially the relationship between race and intelligence. The idea of white
supremacy and indeed the modern concept of race itself arose during the process of world conquest by
Europeans.[77] Carl von Linnaeus's four-fold classification of humans classifies Europeans as
intelligent and severe, Americans as contented and free, Asians as ritualistic, and Africans as lazy and
capricious. Race was also used to justify the construction of socially specific mental disorders such
as drapetomania and dysaesthesia aethiopica—the behavior of uncooperative African slaves.
[78] After the creation of experimental psychology, "ethnical psychology" emerged as a subdiscipline,
based on the assumption that studying primitive races would provide an important link between
animal behavior and the psychology of more evolved humans. [79]X
Behavioral
Main articles: Behaviorism, Psychological behaviorism, and Radical behaviorism
Skinner's teaching machine, a mechanical invention to automate the task of programmed instruction
Psychologists take human behavior as a main area of study. Much of the research in this area began
with tests on mammals, based on the idea that humans exhibit similar fundamental tendencies.
Behavioral research ever aspires to improve the effectiveness of techniques for behavior modification.
Play media
The film of the Little Albert experiment
Embraced and extended by Clark L. Hull, Edwin Guthrie, and others, behaviorism became a widely
used research paradigm.[29] A new method of "instrumental" or "operant" conditioning added the
concepts of reinforcement and punishment to the model of behavior change. Radical
behaviorists avoided discussing the inner workings of the mind, especially the unconscious mind,
which they considered impossible to assess scientifically. [83] Operant conditioning was first described
by Miller and Kanorski and popularized in the U.S. by B.F. Skinner, who emerged as a leading
intellectual of the behaviorist movement.[84][85]X
Noam Chomsky delivered an influential critique of radical behaviorism on the grounds that it could
not adequately explain the complex mental process of language acquisition.[86][87][88] Martin
Seligman and colleagues discovered that the conditioning of dogs led to outcomes ("learned
helplessness") that opposed the predictions of behaviorism.[89][90] Skinner's behaviorism did not die,
perhaps in part because it generated successful practical applications. [86] Edward C. Tolman advanced
a hybrid "cognitive behavioral" model, most notably with his 1948 publication discussing
the cognitive maps used by rats to guess at the location of food at the end of a modified maze. [91]X
The Association for Behavior Analysis International was founded in 1974 and by 2003 had members
from 42 countries. The field has been especially influential in Latin America, where it has a regional
organization known as ALAMOC: La Asociación Latinoamericana de Análisis y Modificación del
Comportamiento. Behaviorism also gained a strong foothold in Japan, where it gave rise to the
Japanese Society of Animal Psychology (1933), the Japanese Association of Special Education
(1963), the Japanese Society of Biofeedback Research (1973), the Japanese Association for Behavior
Therapy (1976), the Japanese Association for Behavior Analysis (1979), and the Japanese Association
for Behavioral Science Research (1994).[92] Today the field of behaviorism is also commonly referred
to as behavior modification or behavior analysis.[92]X
Cognitive
Main article: Cognitive psychology
Green Red Blue
Purple Blue Purple
Blue Purple Red
Green Purple Green
The Stroop effect refers to the fact that naming the color of the first set of words is easier and quicker
than the second.
Cognitive psychology studies cognition, the mental processes underlying mental activity. Perception,
attention, reasoning, thinking, problem solving, memory, learning, language, and emotion are areas of
research. Classical cognitive psychology is associated with a school of thought known as cognitivism,
whose adherents argue for an information processing model of mental function, informed
by functionalism and experimental psychology.X
Baddeley's model of working memory
Starting in the 1950s, the experimental techniques developed by Wundt, James, Ebbinghaus, and
others re-emerged as experimental psychology became increasingly cognitivist—concerned with
information and its processing—and, eventually, constituted a part of the wider cognitive science.
[93] Some called this development the cognitive revolution because it rejected the anti-mentalist
dogma of behaviorism as well as the strictures of psychoanalysis. [93]X
Social learning theorists, such as Albert Bandura, argued that the child's environment could make
contributions of its own to the behaviors of an observant subject. [94]X
The Müller–Lyer illusion. Psychologists make inferences about mental processes from shared phenomena such as
optical illusions.
Technological advances also renewed interest in mental states and representations. English
neuroscientist Charles Sherrington and Canadian psychologist Donald O. Hebb used experimental
methods to link psychological phenomena with the structure and function of the brain. The rise of
computer science, cybernetics and artificial intelligence suggested the value of comparatively
studying information processing in humans and machines. Research in cognition had proven practical
since World War II, when it aided in the understanding of weapons operation. [95]X
A popular and representative topic in this area is cognitive bias, or irrational thought. Psychologists
(and economists) have classified and described a sizeable catalogue of biases which recur frequently
in human thought. The availability heuristic, for example, is the tendency to overestimate the
importance of something which happens to come readily to mind. [96]X
Social
Main article: Social psychology
Social psychology studies the nature and causes of social behavior.
Social psychology is the study of how humans think about each other and how they relate to each
other. Social psychologists study such topics as the influence of others on an individual's behavior
(e.g. conformity, persuasion), and the formation of beliefs, attitudes, and stereotypes about other
people. Social cognition fuses elements of social and cognitive psychology in order to understand
how people process, remember, or distort social information. The study of group dynamics reveals
information about the nature and potential optimization of leadership, communication, and other
phenomena that emerge at least at the microsocial level. In recent years, many social psychologists
have become increasingly interested in implicit measures, mediational models, and the interaction of
both person and social variables in accounting for behavior. The study of human society is therefore a
potentially valuable source of information about the causes of psychiatric disorder. Some sociological
concepts applied to psychiatric disorders are the social role, sick role, social class, life event, culture,
migration, social, and total institution.[98]X
Psychoanalytic
Main articles: Psychodynamics and psychoanalysis
Group photo 1909 in front of Clark University. Front row: Sigmund Freud, G. Stanley Hall, Carl Jung; back
row: Abraham A. Brill, Ernest Jones, Sándor Ferenczi.
Existential-humanistic theories
Main articles: Existential psychology and Humanistic psychology
Psychologist Abraham Maslow in 1943 posited that humans have a hierarchy of needs, and it makes sense to fulfill
the basic needs first (food, water etc.) before higher-order needs can be met. [105]