AP Psychology

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

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Functionalism
American psychologist William James thought the structuralists were asking the wrong
questions. James was interested in the function or purpose of behavioral acts. He viewed
humans as more actively involved in processing their sensations and actions. James and
other psychologists, such as James Cattell and John Dewey, who studied mental testing,
child development, and educational practices, exemplified the School of Functionalism.
Functionalists focused on the application of psychological findings to practical situations
and the function of mental operations in adapting to the environment (stream of con-
sciousness) using a variety of techniques. Their goal was to explain behavior. Functionalism
paved the way for behaviorism and applied subfields of psychology.

Principal Approaches to Psychology


Major modern perspectives or conceptual approaches to psychology are behavioral, psycho-
dynamic, humanistic, biological, evolutionary, cognitive, and sociocultural.

Behavioral Approach
Thebehavioral approachfocuses on measuring and recording observable behavior in
relation to the environment. Behaviorists think behavior results from learning. Russian
physiologist Ivan Pavlov trained dogs to salivate in response to the sound of a tone, demon-
strating stimulus-response learning. Pavlov’s experiments at the beginning of the 20th cen-
tury paved the way for behaviorism, which dominated psychology in America from the
1920s to the 1960s. Behaviorists examine the ABCs of behavior. They analyze antecedent
environmental conditions that precede a behavior, look at the behavior (the action to
understand, predict, and/or control), and examine the consequences that follow the behav-
ior (its effect on the environment). Behaviorists have rejected the study of consciousness/
mental processes because such private events cannot be verified or disproved. American
behaviorist John B. Watson said that psychology should be the science of behavior.
B. F. Skinner worked mainly with laboratory rats and pigeons, demonstrating that organ-
isms tend to repeat responses that lead to positive consequences and not to repeat responses
that lead to neutral or negative consequences. He thought that free will is an illusion.
Like Aristotle and Locke before them, behaviorists such as Watson, E. L. Thorndike, and
B. F. Skinner took the position that behavior is determined mainly by environment and
experience rather than by genetic inheritance. In Germany, Gestalt psychologists studying
perception disagreed with structuralists and behaviorists, maintaining that psychologists
should study the whole conscious experience.

Psychoanalytic/Psychodynamic Approach
In Austria, Sigmund Freud also disagreed with behaviorists. He treated patients with mental
disorders by talking with them over long periods of time to reveal unconscious conflicts,
motives, and defenses in order to enhance each patient’s self-knowledge. His psychoanalytic
theory focused on unconscious internal conflicts to explain mental disorders, personality,
and motivation. Freud thought the unconscious is the source of desires, thoughts, and
memories below the surface of conscious awareness, and that early life experiences are
important to personality development. Variations of psychoanalysis by Carl Jung, Alfred
Adler, Karen Horney, Heinz Kohut, and others are collectively known as the psychody-
namic approach.

History and Approaches ❮ 45

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