Unit 2 Psych Notes
Unit 2 Psych Notes
Unit 2 Psych Notes
As a result of this continuous reinforcement, the pigeons began to exhibit superstitious behavior,
such as turning in circles or pecking at the walls. Skinner interpreted this behavior as an
example of operant conditioning, where the behavior the pigeons exhibited was reinforced by
the delivery of food, even though it was not actually related to the food delivery. This is an
example of primary reinforcement, where the delivery of food is an inherently reinforcing
stimulus.
Overall, Skinner's study demonstrated the power of operant conditioning to shape behavior,
even in situations where the behavior does not actually lead to a desired outcome. It also
highlights the importance of schedules of reinforcement in determining the frequency and
persistence of behavior.
skinner Strength and weakness ^
There’s a lot of research in support of the Operant Conditioning, including the study by Skinner
(1948) into pigeons.
Moreover, a lot of this research is strictly scientific, being carried out on animals in lab
conditions,
This makes it objective and valid due to controlled variables
Weakness:
The theory is reductionist because it focuses entirely on behaviours and ignores cognitions.
(Ignores perception, attention, problem solving ,etc)
Skinner's use of pigeons is not generalisable to humans
Schedules of reinforcement
Skinner (1948) carried out a famous experiment called “Superstition in the Pigeon”. Eight
pigeons were starved to make them hungry then put in a cage. At regular intervals every 15
seconds, a food dispenser would swing into the cage for 5 seconds then swing out again. When
the food was due to appear, the pigeons started showing strange behaviours, such as turning
anticlockwise who making swaying motions.
Skinner concluded the pigeons were repeating whatever behaviour they had been in the middle
of doing when the reinforcement was first offered to them. Because the food kept reappearing,
this senseless behaviour was strengthened. This is like a “superstition” when humans imagine
that, by doing something senseless (knocking on wood, crossing their fingers) they can make
something pleasant happen.
Fixed interval: Reward is given at a regular time. Example: Getting paid every Friday. Learning
is medium and extinction is medium.
Variable interval: Reward is given at unpredictable times. Example: Audience cheering for a
performer. Learning is fast and extinction is slow.
Fixed ratio: Reward is given after a specific number of behaviors. Example: Getting paid per
every 100 products built. Learning is fast and extinction is moderate.
Variable ratio: Reward is given after a varying number of behaviors. Example: Slot machines.
Learning is fast and extinction is slow.
SLT can explain things that behaviourism cant, behaviourism struggled to explain complex
behaviour, SLT proposed that huge chunks of behaviour could be learnt in one go through
observation and imitation
Weakness:
Much of the research for SLT has been carried out on children or animals due to the difficulty of
placing adults in controlled situations with believable role models, so it is hard to generalise the
findings to adults and to humans in general.
Reductionist as it fixates on observational learning and doesn't account for the influence of
internal congitive processes.
Freud's psychosexual stages are proposed stages of human development. Freud suggested
that people people undergo these stages throughout their childhood.
Freud believed life was built round tension and pleasure, tension was due to the build-up of
libido and all pleasure came from its discharge.
The role of conflict was heavily emphasised in these psychosexual stages, for if the conflict
wasn't resolved, if a child struggles at a stage, they may become fixated on it and behaviours
and feelings that are typical of that stage, instead of fading, stay with them into adult life.
5 psychosexual stages:
Oral Stage
Age range: Birth to 1 Year
Erogenous Zone: Mouth
During the oral stage the infant's primary source of interaction occurs through the mouth, so the
rooting and sucking reflex is important.
The primary conflict at this stage is the weaning process, the child must become less dependent
upon caretakers.
If fixation occurs in the oral stage, individual would have issues with dependency or aggression,
oral fixation can result in problems with drinking eating or nail biting
Anal stage
Age range: 1 to 3 years
Erogenous Zone: Bowel and Bladder control
Strict approach can lead to an anal-retentive personality (stringent, orderly, rigid and obsessive)
Freud believed that positive experiences during this stage serve as the basis for people to
become competent, productive, and successful adults.
Phallic Stage
Age range: 3 to 6 years
Boys view fathers as a rival for the mother's affections and experience feelings of wanting to
possess the mother and replace the father
Children fear punishment from the father for these feelings, known as castration anxiety
Children identify with the same-sex parent to possess the other parent
Freud believed that penis envy is never fully resolved for girls and that women remain
somewhat fixated on this stage
—
Latent Stage:
Age Range: 6 to Puberty
Erogenous Zone: Sexual Feelings Are Inactive
Primary Focus:
Children develop social skills, values and relationships with peers and adults outside of the
family
This stage is a time of exploration in which the sexual energy is repressed or dormant
Sexual energy is sublimated into other areas such as intellectual pursuits and social interactions
This stage is important in the development of social and communication skills and
self-confidence
Possible Outcome:
Fixation can result in immaturity and an inability to form fulfilling relationships as an adult
---
Genital Stage:
Age Range: Puberty to Death
The onset of puberty causes the libido to become active once again, with a strong sexual
interest in the opposite sex.
The goal of this stage is to establish a balance between the various life areas, with a growing
interest in the welfare of others.
The ego and superego are fully formed and functioning at this point, allowing individuals to
balance their urges with the demands of reality and social norms.
Successful completion of earlier stages leads to a well-balanced, warm, and caring individual.
Fixation at this stage can result in an inability to form fulfilling relationships and an imbalanced
focus on individual needs.
Strength:
Freud's theory was one of the first to emphasise the importance of early childhood experiences
in shaping personality and behaviour, his theories have paved the way for psychoanalysis as a
form of therapy.
Weakness:
- Androcentric, focuses solely on male psychosexual development cannot be generalised to
females.
- Case study research on the recollections of his adult patients and study of children, cannot be
generalised to adults.
Systematic desensitization has a scientific basis and its effectiveness can be easily measured. It
is possible to observe the patient's progress in each session by comparing how far down the
hierarchy of feared stimuli they can proceed.
Weakness:
It can be unethical to expose a patient to something they find distressing. In fact, it could
backfire and make the patient even more frightened of that thing.
A problem might be that, in real life, sufferers do not get to choose when and how they
encounter the object of their fear (a spider might drop on you unexpectedly!) and they might
have no control over a real life situation. This means that the benefits of the therapy might not
generalise to real life situations.
Id: The most basic part of the psyche, consists of urges and desires, exists entirely in the
unconscious mind.
Based on the pleasure principle, it is purely desire, and not considerate of the environment or
sacrifices necessary to get what we want. The id is our innate, animalistic desire.
-
Ego: Second part of the psyche, exists within the conscious mind and based on the reality
principle, studies the world and makes decisions on behalf of the id.
It can defer gratification, meaning it puts off pleasure until later.
--
Super-ego: Third part of the psyche, based on the morality principle and acts as the sane guy in
the brain. It generates guilt and shame.
This is used in hopes that repressed memory fragments re-emerge throughout the course.
Dream Analysis:
A therapeutic technique known for its use in psychoanalysis.
Manifest content: information from the dream as the dreamer remembers it.
Latent content: Repressed, symbolic meaning embedded within the dream
After the symbols are pulled from the latent content, the therapist utilises free association,
naming each symbol and asking the client to spit out whatever comes to their mind upon
hearing it.
Real life application. Psychoanalysts employ Freudian dream analysis as a part of their
therapeutic repertoire.
Weaknesses:
Very subject interpretation because of the latent content. The dream is being interpreted by the
dreamer, which may not exactly be a source of reliable information. Misremembering a dream
can also happen.
Lack of scientific support: Dream analysis is based on a theoretical framework that has not been
studied extensively, empirically. Little Hans case study, cited as evidence for dream analysis, is
also not generalizable.
--
In therapy, transference helps the therapist understand the projected feelings of the patient, and
appropriately challenge those beliefs.
The therapist may also inform the patient of situations where transference takes place.
Counter-transference isn't always bad. If a client reminds a therapist of a younger sibling, the
therapist may feel protective and caring towards the client, which can lead to a more positive
interaction.
Object relations:
Humans are primarily motivated by the need for contact with others - the need to form
relationships
Aim of object relations therapist is to help an individual in therapy uncover early mental images
that may contribute to any present difficulties in one's relationships, and adjust them to improve
interpersonal functioning.
In layman's terms,
1) How you see the person you like
2) How you feel when you're with that person
3) How you both interact and feel about each other
In object relations therapy, the therapist generally attempts to understand through empathic
listening and acceptance, the inner workings, needs and fears of a person.
Once mutual trust is established, the therapist guides the person in therapy into areas that may
be more sensitive or guarded, with the purpose of promoting greater self awareness and
understanding.
This therapy will help the individual understand how they are perceived and how others perceive
them.
Building positive relationships will be encouraged by the therapist and motivate the individual to
transfer the positivity to relationships outside of the counseling environment.
--
AO3 for Object Relations Therapy:
Strengths:
Long-lasting benefits: The insights and skills gained from object relations therapy can have
long-lasting benefits, helping individuals to improve their relationships and overall quality of life.
Holistic approach: Object relations therapy takes a holistic approach to mental health treatment,
exploring a person's past and present experiences, emotions, relationships, and sense of self to
help them develop more fulfilling relationships and a stronger sense of self.
Application to clinics.
Weaknesses:
Time-consuming: Object relations therapy can be a lengthy process, requiring regular sessions
over a prolonged period of time.
Quicker solution inducing methods may be required for people who engage in addiction or self
harm, this also may be desired by the participant themselves.
Use of observations:
An observation is a research method that involves observing and recording groups without
directly manipulating variables.
Uses:
- To gather information on natural behaviour in a natural setting
- To provide rich, detailed descriptions of behaviour
- To collect data on individuals who may be difficult to reach through other research methods
Weakness:
Unreliable if certain measures arent in place, such as observers not detecting behaviours, or
subject interpretation of behaviour
Observer bias reduces validity as the observer becomes involved in the group being studied
Content analysis:
An observation that studies human behaviour indirectly. Usually through the medium of
magazines or TV shows.
It is a method used to numerically analyse qualitative data, converting it to quantitative data
It is an easy technique to use and not too time consuming, and allows statistical analysis due to
collecting quantitative data, this allows for a correlation to be shown
Ethical asf
High ecological validity because they are based on observations of real things people engage in
e.g magazines or tv shows
Weakness:
Observer bias is very prominent in any type of observation and can affect the validity of the
observation.
Causality cannot be established as it describes the data. An experiment must be performed to
investigate causality.
Freud used case studies to investigate Little Hans to provide support for his psychodynamic
theories (Oedipus Complex). He also used it for his Ratman and Wolfman studies.
It involved a series of dream analysis and free association. Freud encouraged them to say
whatever came to their mind without censoring them.
Facilitates research into the matter being studied, which stimulate research into that field of
psychology
Weakness:
Can lack reliability as individuals or small groups are being studied extensively. Cannot be
replicated
Generalisability is lacking because once again, it is not done on a large amount of people and
the condition may be specific to those types of people.
Potentially unethical due to the intimacy that can be created between researcher and research
participant
Rats are used in psychological research due to how quickly they can reproduce.
This makes them useful lab rats and also helps establish generational influence in a shorter
amount of time.
Experimentation with animals offers a higher degree of control therefore higher validity
Humans and animals share - to some extent - features such as the nervous system which can
help generalise findings from animals to humans
The scientific procedures act (1986) was a UK law that passes the following requirements:
Licensing to carry out animal research
Ethical review by a committee
Inspections by an authority
Public report on the use of the animals in the research
Procedure:
- Carried out on a healthy, emotionally stable child called Albert, who was 9 months old at the
beginning of the study
- 9 months of age, Albert was presented with a white rat, a rabbit, a dog, a monkey ( @Loves
Ali, @jamal, @Worthless Human Being ), masks with and without hair and burning news
papers. Albert wasn't scared of any of them.
- At 8 months, 26 days, Albert was exposed to a hammer hitting a suspended steel bar three
times, he cried on the third strike.
- At 11 months, 3 days: Albert was presented with a white rat and just as his hand touched the
rat, the metal bar was hit by the hammer two times, albert began to jump violently and whimper
- At 11 months, 10 days. Albert was presented a rat with no sound, as well as blocks after the
rat was taken away. He played with the blocks. The rat was presented again and this time the
sound was made, Albert was startled and fell over. This was done a further two times before the
rat was shown on its own again.
- At 11 months, 15 days, Albert was shown the rat on its own two times, he played with the
blocks between each presentation.
After this, albert was shown the rabbit, the dog, a seal fur coat, cotton wool and Watson's head
to see if Albert would play with his hair. He was also presented with a Santa Claus Mask.
Blocks were given to him to calm him down
- At 11 months 20 days: Albert was presented with the rat alone, the rat was placed on his hand
and the steel bar hit. He was presented with the rat alone two more times, followed by the
rabbit.
He was given blocks to play with, followed by the rabbit again, and as Albert reached for the
rabbit, a steel bar was hit by the hammer.
The same procedure was carried out for the dog.
On the same day, Albert was taken to a well lit room and presented with the rat alone, the rabbit
alone, the dog alone, then the rat a second time followed by the rat and the loud noise.
Albert was then shown the rat on its own twice followed by the dog.
1 Year, 21 days: Albert was presented iwth the Santa Claus mask followed by the fur coat, the
rat, the rabbit and the dog, and blocks in between each presentation
Results:
11 Months 10 Days
1st presentation - Withdrew hand the moment it touched rats nose
2nd presentation - whimpered and moved his body away from the rat
3rd presentation - Albert began to cry and crawled away from the rat
11 months 15 days:
1st presentation (Rat): Albert began to whimper when he saw the rat the first time
2nd presentation (Rat): The second time, he crawled away from it
1st Presentation (Rabbit): crawled away from the rabbit upon presentation
1st Presentation (Dog): Tried to move away from it, but began to cry after dog got too close
11 Months 20 Days:
1st Presentation (rat): withdrew his body
2nd Presentation(Rat): Tried to crawl away from the rat
Lecture Theatre:
Weak initial reaction to rat, hands out to avoid it
Slight fear to rabbit
Turned away from the dog and cried
Post-sound
Crawled away and whimpered upon exposure to the rat and rabbit
Cried when the dog barked and fell over
1 Year 21 Days:
Withdrew from the Santa Claus mask
Moved hands away from the fur coat. Cried when he accidentally touched it.
Moved arm away from the rat when rat was put on arm
Pushed rabbit away with his feet
Cried after the dog was presented
Capafons et al
Aim: TO investigate whether systematic desensitisation was an effective treatment for
aerophobia
Procedure:
41 people who had a fear of flying
20 were put in the treatment, 21 in the control.
Volunteer sampling via media campaign.
The patients gave an interview on their life history and their fear of flying using the IDG-FV.
Anxiety in relation to flight was measured a plethora of EMV and EPAV tests.
The EPAV scales measured catastrophic thoughts and physiological anxiety, and the EMV
scales measured fear during and before flying and fear without any involvement.
Heart rate, muscle tension and skin temperature were also measured.
A video tape of a person making their way to the plane from packing a case to reaching the
destination and touching down was used
Patients were interviewed on their own. They completed the IDG-V in the 1st interviews, and
other scales were completed in later interviews.
They were then invited to watch the video and have a psychophysiological assessment.
Before the video, patients spent 3 minutes without the phobic object and then watched the video
fully involved.
After the video, treatment was administered.
Patients had about 2 one hour sessions per week, all had 12 sessions, with the max being 15.
The treatment involved counter conditioning and graduated exposure with an emphasis on
hierarchy. They used the techniques of stop thinking and brief relaxation
----
Results:
There was no difference in any of the measurement scales before treatment and the control
group
However, there was a significant difference between those who had treatment on all measures
apart from fear and the control group
Conclusions:
Systematic desensitization is effective at reducing aerophobia
Bastian et al
Aim:
The investigation aims to explore the dehumanizing consequences of playing violent video
games towards oneself and others.
Study 1 focuses on the self-perception and perception of others in a violent video game context
where players were violent towards each other.
Study 2 focuses on the effect of playing violently against computer avatars compared to human
opponents on self-perceived humanity.
Procedure:
Study 1:
The game was Mortal Kombat.
106 participants aged from 17 to 34 were assigned one of two groups
Participants viewed the same screen but were separated by a wall
52 played Mortal Kombat, 54 played Spin Tennis, a non violent game.
Players were asked how much they enjoyed the game and how frustrating it was on a scale of 1
to 7
Participants rated themselves and their opponents on eight human nature items.
They had to consider their experiences while playing the game when answering the items.
Four of the items were positive, such as feeling emotional and responsive.
Four of the items were negative, such as feeling like an animal and lacking self-restraint.
---
Results:
Study 1:
Significant difference between two groups on rating of self-humanity and humanity of other
player.
Non-violent players perceived themselves and other player as possessing more humanity
Study 2:
Significant difference once again in self-rated humanity with non-violent players rating
themselves as more human.
No statistical difference in co-player humanity, showing us that playing violent video games with
another person affects how human we feel and not how human we perceive others.
--
AO3 For Bastian Et Al:
weakness: Players played for a short amount of time (around 15 minutes per session) whereas
actual video game players often spend hours on games. This study only measured the short
term effect of dehumanisation and there's no telling whether extended sessions might increase
humanity
Weakness:
Demand characteristics as the background of participants was never checked for - some of
them might have engaged in said games beforehand and may know about their dehumanising
effect in advance, which may affect how they answered the questionnaires. This reduces validity
--
Strength:
Large age range (17-34 iirc) which helps generalise the effects to a much wider demographic
and population
Strength:
Standardised procedure as they were playing for a set duration and were asked to answer the
same questions. This helps increase reliability
Role of Central Nervous System:
Consists of the brain and spinal cord, processes all human behaviour.
It is responsible for processing and transmitting information throughout the body
The cell body contains the nucleus which houses the genetic material. It also provides the
neuron with energy due to the presence of mitochondria
Dendrites receive messages from other neurons in order to trigger an action potential (electrical
impulse) within the cell
Axon passes electrical impulses towards the axon terminals
Towards the top of the axon is the axon hillock, where the nerve impulse is triggered from.
Myelin sheath provides an insulating layer to the axon and helps speed up the rate of message
transmission
Terminal buttons pass nerve impulses from the cell body to the parts of the body that they
control or activate
The terminal buttons contain vesicles that store neurotransmitters
Neurons are specialised cells that generate an electrical impulse that travels down the axon to
release neurotransmitters via stimulation of the terminal button, releases neurotransmitters to
the synaptic cleft
-
Neurotransmitters transmit signals between neurons in response to electrical signals called
action potentials. They bind to receptors on the post-synaptic neuron and induce an impulse
Synaptic transmission helps neurons communicate with each other and pass on electrical
impulses
-
Action potential is when the neuron's charge reaches -55mV, this causes an impulse along the
axon towards the axon terminals at the end of the neuron, signalling the release of
neurotransmitters
-
Neuron is stimulated by positive particles and is depolarised.
After a brief period, the positive particles are pushed outside the neuron, repolarising it.
Frontal lobe:
Deals with decision making and impulse control
Parietal Lobe:
Helps with perception and recognising faces and assigning faces to specific people so we can
recognise them
Temporal Lobe:
Assists with hearing sounds, understanding and creating speech and deals with memory
function
Occipital lobe:
Helps with our ability to see by processing visual information from our eyes and making sense
of this visual information
Corpus Calossum: The corpus callosum allows the left and right hemispheres to communicate
with each other.
Midbrain - Contains an area called the periaqueductal grey matter which links the amygdala and
hypothalmus with the prefrontal cortex. It is involved in coordinating and integrating information
from these three different regions to maintain optimal cognitive functioning
Limbic System
Limbic System: handles memory but also raw appetites and desires - sleep, hunger, aggression
and sex. It is thought to be the source of all our basic emotions.
Thalamus: handles all the messages coming in from the brain and routes them to where they
need to go.
Hypothalamus: regulates hunger, thirst, sexual arousal and sleep and it regulates hormone
production in the body.
Hippocampus:
It is important for forming new memories
Amygdala:
It is the brain's "emotion centre". It handles emotional responses to things, especially anger and
fear
Pre-frontal cortex: pre-frontal cortex (in the frontal lobe) is used for self-restraint, so if this is not
functioning well, there will be no "brake" on aggression.
Amygdala:
Centre for emotions, combines intrinsic and extrinsic stimuli and sensory input to give us an
instinctive reaction or feeling.
It's linked to the Pre-frontal cortex so that may lead to aggression
Pre-frontal cortex:
Self-restraint. Has connections to the amygdala and hypothalmus. Damage to this area leads to
problems with anger management, irritability and impulse control
--
AO3 points for brain aggression stuff:
Weaknesses:
Human brains are more complicated than animal brains so why tf are we generalising their shi
to us bro?
Brain functioning samples are not large e.g Phineas Gage was one case study and shi so like u
cant generalise it
Raine et al study revealed reliable predictors for aggression such as reduced function in the
smaller amygdala, this helps support the impact of aggression using brain structures.
What are hormones: A hormone is a chemical substance produced by a gland and carried by
the blood
Wagner et al (1979) found that castration reduces testosterone levels in male mice. It was
observed that castrated mice had lower aggression levels, however, when injected with
Testosterone, their aggression levels returned back to normal
Another hormone linked to aggression is cortisol. Cortisol is a hormone that manages stress
levels. It inhibits aggression.
Tennes & Kreye report low levels of cortisol in aggressive school children
Strengths:
studies conducted on mice by Wagner et al have shown that castration can decrease
aggression levels whereas injecting them with testosterone can increase it - testosterone linked
to aggression
Hawke et al found that castrated sex offenders had a decreased sex drive and less aggressive
Weakness:
Direction of causality is not confirmed. High testosterone levels may not be because the person
was predisposed to them initially, it might be due to them being aggressive that they raise. It's a
case of whether the chicken came first or the egg.
The gene MAOA-A codes for the production of an enzyme called MAOA which is responsible for
the regulation of serotonin in the brain.
Low levels of serotonin are thought to lead to aggressive behaviour
MAOA-L codes for lower levels of MAOA. This leads to excess neurotransmitters such as
serotonin overstimulating receptors which can cause abnormal activity in areas of the brain
responsible for regulating mood
MAOA-H can cause low serotonin, serotonin regulates mood and with low levels, there is more
irritability and aggresission.
---
AO3 points for role of genes on aggression:
Strength:
Evidence from twin and adoption studies suggest that genes play a significant role in
determining aggressive behaviour -
Stuart et al (2014) researched 97 men who committed domestic abuse and found that MAOA-L
was present in them
Studies on animals have shown that breeding for aggressive behaviour results in aggressive
traits being passed down.
Weakness:
Reductionist as only considers the role of genes on aggression
Deterministic as it assumes that if someone has the gene, they will be aggressive. Raises
ethical question as to whether people should be punished because of their genetic
predisposition
External zietgebers: Factors in the sleep-wake cycle which act as external cues to correct the
body clock
Example: Light, Temperature, Social cues
e.g
Light levels fall low (External zietgeber)
💤
SCN responds by signalling the pineal gland to release melatonin(Internal Pacemarker)
This causes the baby to sleep
Miles et al found that this one blind man had a bodily rhythm of nearer to 25 hours, suggesting
we have internal factors.
Weakness:
Animal study generalisation is stupid
Miles et al failed to consider different types of blindness as some blindnesses can perceive light
Campbell and Murphy shone light at knees it disrupted participant sleep wake cycles by up to
three hours.
Practical application - helps employees who work night shifts darken their room to sleep more
quickly.
Weakness:
Siffre's 1975 study did not consider artificial light so the validity is fucked
Studies like siffre's are sleep depravation studies which does not accurately represent the
average lad
Infradian rhythms are biolological rhythms that occur over a period longer than 24 hours.
Menstrual Phase: The menstrual phase marks the start of the menstrual cycle and lasts for
approximately 3-7 days. During this phase, the endometrial lining of the uterus sheds as a result
of low levels of progesterone and estrogen in the body.
Follicular Phase: The follicular phase starts after the menstrual phase and lasts for
approximately 7-14 days. During this phase, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) is released by
the pituitary gland, which stimulates the growth and development of follicles in the ovaries.
These follicles produce estrogen, which causes the endometrial lining to thicken in preparation
for a potential pregnancy.
Ovulatory Phase: The ovulatory phase is the midpoint of the menstrual cycle and lasts for
approximately 1-2 days. During this phase, luteinizing hormone (LH) is released by the pituitary
gland, which triggers the release of a mature egg from one of the follicles in the ovary. This
process is known as ovulation.
Luteal Phase: The luteal phase starts after ovulation and lasts for approximately 10-14 days.
After ovulation, the ruptured follicle in the ovary forms the corpus luteum, which produces
progesterone. Progesterone helps to maintain the thickened endometrial lining in the uterus,
preparing it for potential implantation of a fertilized egg. If pregnancy does not occur, the corpus
luteum breaks down, and progesterone levels decline, leading to the start of a new menstrual
cycle.
--
Strengths of internal pacemakers for menstrual cycle:
Aim: To test the influences of olfactory senses on menstrual cycle
Pheromones can also influence the menstrual cycle.
Russel (1980) found that using a cotton bud on a woman's armpit, placing it in alcohol to get rid
of bacteria, and rubbing it on the lip of other women synchronized their menstrual cycles within
24 hours of exposure.
4/5 women in the study had their menstrual cycles synchronized
results:
When donor was in the follicular phase, the other womens menstrual cycles shortened by
around 2 days.
When the donors were in ovulatory phase, the cycle shortened by around 1.5 days
Strengths:
Ecologically valid as women were in a dormitory (russel)
Large age range so more generalisable (McClintock)
Weakness:
However this was a short term study of only 5 months so like ig make what u will of it (Russel)
ONLY 5 women. Not generalisable (Russel)
Only 29 women not generlasible (McClintock)
Exogenous zietgebers effect on the menstrual cycle:
Pituitary gland is responsible for the release of FSH and LH
It is also sensitive to light so it may exert an influence on the cycles
If light is low and melatonin is released, it may affect the start and end of the menstruation cycle.
Strengths:
High experimental validity due to being in a controlled environment
Used objective measures to test for difference in menstral cycle e.g cervical mucus
Weakness:
One woman was used Not generalisable
She was caucasian not generalisable
No control group, decreased validity.
Lack of light. Melatonin is released more due to low lights in winter cuh like daylight is less.
Serotonin released less so feelings of lethargicness and sadness are more common
Studies done also showed that 68 SAD patients began releasing melatonin earlier and later
compared to control groups. Disrupts the sleep wake cycle and can fuck ur emotions up
Weakness:
Self-reported data from victims can make it difficult to ensure the findings are valid and accurate
Small sample sizes used so it may not be generalisable
Strength:
SSRIs are more convenient to use as they are administered as a pill instead of having to travel
to a light box.
SSRIs are more effective in treating depression which can combat low mood, fatigue, etc.
Weaknesses:
Serious side effects such as constipation, erectile dysfunction, etc.
Dependency/Addiction
Michel Siffre
Aim:
To investigate the effects of prolonged isolation on the human circadian rhythm and subjective
time perception.
Procedure:
Michel Siffre spent six months living alone in a subterranean cave in Texas. During this time, he
had no external cues to indicate the passage of time, such as natural light or communication
with the outside world. He kept a diary throughout his time in the cave, recording his activities
and subjective experiences.
Results:
Siffre's diary entries revealed that his subjective experience of time became increasingly
distorted as he spent more time in isolation. He reported feeling like days were longer or shorter
than they actually were, and sometimes lost track of how long he had been in the cave. His
sleep-wake cycle also became disrupted, with periods of extended wakefulness followed by
long periods of sleep.
Conclusion:
Siffre's study provides evidence that external cues such as natural light and social interaction
are important for regulating the human circadian rhythm and subjective time perception.
Prolonged isolation can lead to distortions in time perception and disruption of sleep-wake
cycles. These findings have implications for astronauts and others who may experience
prolonged isolation in space or other extreme environments
Strengths:
Longitudinal study - done over 6 months. Shows long term effects of being isolated.
Rich in qualitative data and quantitative - wrote in a diary, shaved his beard, measured
everything
Weaknesses:
Artifical light acts as externel zietgeber, reduces validity
One person not generalisable
Weakness:
Does not consider factors of 3rd variable
Does not establish causality
A CAT scan is non-invasive and painless. However, if a dye like iodine is used it is invasive to
an extent.
Weaknesses:
Radiation exposure can cause damage to unborn foetus and to humans in general
Very costly to perform
Weakness:
Radiation exposure cancer
Invasive procedure due to the taking of Fluroodexyglucose
Expensive asf
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fMRI (Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging)
Weakness:
Extremely expensive
the results of an fMRI scan can be difficult to interpret
Weakness:
EXPENSIVE!
Is not entirely representative of the entire population
Twin Studies:
MZ twins - 100% identical
DZ twins - 50% identical
They have the same genotype. Which means that the effect of genes on behaviour can be
observed for aggression.
Strengths:
Can show a genuine effect of genes on behaviour and understand the links between em since
the monozygotes are like 100% identical
Weakness:
Lacks generalisability as not everyone in the world is 100% or 50% identical.
Cannot establish causality
Raine et al
Aim:
To see whether there was a difference in brain functioning in a group of murderers compared to
a control group
Procedure:
Examined 41 people, 39 males 2 females who were charged with murder but pleaded NGRI and
compared them with 41 controls.
Control group was the same sex as the murderers and did not take medication. COmpletely
healthy.
All of the patients took Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) and were required to work at a continuous
performance task that was based around target recognition for 32 minutes
Level of activity in right and left hemispheres of the brain was measured using techniques called
cortical peel and box.
Cortical peel compares the absolute glucose values for each region of the brain being scanned
relative to other areas of the brain within that area.
Box techniques involve placing an interest box on places and measuring the volume within that
box.
Results:
NGRIs had less activity in their prefrontal cortex, parietal brain regions,
Lower activity in amygdala
the differences in brain activity did not appear to be due to any differences in age, gender,
schizophrenia,
handedness, ethnicity, or history of head injury
Conclusions:
Raine et al concluded that multiple brain regions are involved in violent behavior, but it's not the
sole cause.
Differences in brain regions predispose them
Weakness:
Not generalisable as only 41 participants from experimtnal group used.
Subjective PET scan readings as it is simply colours
Brendgen et al
Aim:
To determine the extent to which social aggression can be explained by genetic factors, shared
environmental factors or non-shared environmental factors in comparison to physical
aggression
Procedure:
Participants were a part of a longitudinal study and were all pairs of twins from Montreal,
Canada.
Same sex twins were assessed for physical resemblance at 18 months old to determine mono
or di zygotic
When children were 6, data was collected to assess their social adaptation in kindergarten,
written consent by parents was taken and peer reports and teacher ratings were also collected
The peer reports assessed aggression and prosocial behaviour in children.
The children were given photographs of three children and were given a description followed by
circling the child who fit that description.
Teachers had to rate the social and physical aggression of the twins in their class using the
preschool social behaviour scale and the Direct and Indirect aggression scales.
The social aggression scale measured the extent that the teachers rated a child as trying to
make others dislike a child.
Physical aggression was measured by the extent teachers thought the children got into fights
Result:
Brendgen et al found that when it came to physically aggression, monozygotic twins scored
twice as high in correlation compared to dizygotic twins.
For physical aggression, 63% of the variance is due to genetic factors and 37% is due to
non-shared environmental factors as rated by teachers.
For social aggression, non-shared environmental factors account for 60% of the variance, while
genetic factors and shared environmental factors each account for 20% of the variance as rated
by teachers.
--
For peer ratings, physical aggression was influenced by 54% genetics and 46% non-shared
environmental factors, while social aggression was influenced by 54% non-shared
environmental factors and genetic factors and shared environmental factors each accounted for
23% of the variance.
Conclusion:
Environmental factors have a greater influence on social aggression
Strengths :
Naturalistic study = High ecological validity
Holistic as he looked at both environmental and genetic factors
Ethical - parental consent
Weakness:
Self-reported data can reduce the validity and reliability
Sample size was focused on pre-school kids may not reflect to adults or older ppl
McDermott et al
Aim:
Investigating the effect of MAOA gene on environmental provocation
Aim:
Genetic samples of 78 male participants were taken and divided into MAOA-H and MAOA-L
(Low and high)
Aggression was measured by the amount of unpleasant hot sauce participants would give to an
opponent in a 'power-to-take' game when they knew the opponent did not like the taste of the
hot sauce. More hot sauce even if clear dislike? = more aggression.
-
Participants played a power-to-take game where they made earnings from a vocabulary task.
Anonymous person could take a portion of their earnings, participant could punish this person
by giving them hot sauce.
(Anon wasnt real)
Amount of money taken by participants was either 80% or 20% (high or low take)
Results:
MAOA-L administered hot sauce 13% more than MAOA-H in the high take and 6% more in low
take conditions
MAOA-L administed 25% more maximum hot sauce in the High take conndition than MAOA-H
and also administered 6% maximum hot sauce in the low take condition
Conclusion:
The greater the provocation through monetary loss, the more aggressive people are towards the
person they see as responsible for their loss.
MAOA-L were more aggressive in every condition
Strengths:
+ Standardised procedure as participants played the same game and experienced the same
percentages taken (80 and 20)
+ High experimental validity due to controlled variables such as gender and how many rounds
they played
Weakness:
- Low ecological validity as task lacks mundane realism
- Lacks generalisability 78 male ppts
Procedure:
Event sampling was chosen for this observation.
Prior to the observation, coding categories were made.
These coding categories were Interaction between members of the same gender (verbal) and
whether they conversed with each other or if they were playing together.
We then made our way to the playground for recess at exactly 10:25 AM and stayed there for 10
minutes and recorded each behaviour as it happened.
Results:
33% boy-to-boy interactions
27% girl-to-girl interactions
40% same gender interaction
Conclusion:
Based on the event sampling observation, it was found that same-gender interactions were
more common than interactions between individuals of different genders in elementary school
during recess.
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S:
Coding categories were developed prior to the observation which increases strength
Collecting during recess where elementary school children are most likely to be present
W:
Observation was conducted once meaning it is not representative of the whole elementary
school population
Event Sampling limited as observer may be available for limited amount of time. They cannot
record another behaviour whilst they are in the middle of recording
Observation Bias.
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Practical study Bio psych:
Title: Relationship between Brain Sex and Aggression Scores in Adolescent Males
Introduction: This study aimed to investigate the potential relationship between brain sex and
aggression scores in adolescent males. Brain sex refers to the degree to which an individual
exhibits characteristics typically associated with male or female brains.
Methods: A sample of 20 males aged 16-18 completed a brain sex quiz and an aggression
score quiz. The brain sex quiz ranged from masculine(100) to feminine(0) while the aggression
score quiz (0-100) measured the level of aggression exhibited by each participant. A scatter
graph was plotted to visualize the relationship between brain sex and aggression scores. A
Spearman's rho value was calculated to determine the strength and direction of the relationship.
Results: The Spearman's rho value for the relationship between brain sex and aggression
scores was 0.318, indicating a positive but weak correlation between the two variables.
Conclusion: The results suggest that there may be a weak positive relationship between brain
sex and aggression scores in adolescent males. Further research with larger sample sizes and
more diverse populations is needed to confirm these findings and explore potential underlying
mechanisms.
S:
Use of quantitative data allows for statistical analysis which increases validity
Standardised procedure - all were asked to perform the same quiz
Weakness:
Self-reported data is subjective which can decrease validity
20 participants is not generalisable