Syllabus, UIC Psychology 100: Introduction to Psychology ...
Introduction to psychology
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Transcript of Introduction to psychology
Psychology
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
BedRest
Awake Tired
Dream Wake
Snooze
Blanket Doze
Slumber SnoreNap
PeaceYawn
Drowsy
Remember these words
Stroop Effect
• Work in pairs
• Using the flash cards take turns to ask your partner to tell you the COLOUR that the word is printed in.
• Are any of the flash cards harder?
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Stroop Effect Explained
• So why is it so hard to say the colour?
– There is interference between the information, what the words SAY and the COLOUR of the words.
– This causes a problem for your brain.
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Stroop Effect Explained• There are two theories which try to explain this
– Speed of Processing Theory: the interference occurs because you read the words automatically this occurs faster than naming the colour.
– Selective Attention Theory: the interference occurs because naming colours requires more attention than reading words.- you read more often than you name colours so it becomes automatic.
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Synaesthesia
• Continuing with a theme of colour, imagine what it would be like if your senses were confused….
• Has anybody ever had a smell or a song that reminded them of a particular thing?
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Synaesthesia• The most common form of Synaesthesia is Colour-
Grapheme, where syenesthetes see words or letters as particular colours.
• "I realized that to make an R all I had to do was first write a P and draw a line down from its loop. And I was so surprised that I could turn a yellow letter into an orange letter just by adding a line." Pat Duffy.
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Imagine if life was coloured like this.
Synaesthesia
• One of the more disruptive forms of synaesthesia is Lexical-Gustatory synesthesia.
• This is where the synesthete actually tastes the word.
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Synaesthesia
VIDEO HERE
Who are these people?
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Who are these people?
• Imagine if you couldn’t recognise these people?
• Imagine if you couldn’t recognise your friends, family, or even your own face.
• Patients with prosopagnosia have a brain disorder which means they are unable to recognise faces.
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Who are these people?
• Oliver Sacks-The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat
• Dr P-could not recognize his wife from her face but he was able to recognize her by her voice. His recognition of pictures of his family and friends appeared to be based on highly specific features, such as his brother's square jaw and big teeth.
• “He reached out his hand, and took hold of his wife’s head, tried to lift it off and out it on. He had apparently mistaken his wife for a hat! His wife looked as if she was used to such things.” pg 10
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Remember these words
On your paper try and remember as many words as possible from at the start of the session.
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Remember these wordsBed
Rest Awake Tired
Dream Wake
Snooze
Blanket Doze
Slumber SnoreNap
PeaceYawn
Drowsy
Did you have any extra words? Such as
SLEEP?
A simple memory task like this can show how the brain fills in with what you think you experienced.
Other experiments have investigated this in more depth-such as the hot air balloon experiment.
Spot the difference..
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Visual Illusions
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
The Maggie Thatcher Effect
• It is difficult to detect local feature changes in an upside down face.
• This suggests that we process faces by analysing the structure and the configuration of features.
• Interestingly reports suggest that prosopagnosic’s do not suffer from this effect. Suggesting that their brain disorder maybe due to damage to the area of the brain which analyses facial.
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Attention
• Embed video…http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vJG698U2Mvo
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Attention
• So how many did you see?
• Did you see the gorilla?
• When Chabris and Simons did this study half of the people who watched the video and counted the passes missed the gorilla.
• This suggest that we are missing a lot of what goes on around us, and that we have no idea that we are missing so much.
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Topics During a Psychology Degree
Psycho PharmacologyEye Witness Testimony
Development of drawing and language
Extreme Survival
Psychology of Magic
Crowd Behaviour Mental Disorders
Memory
Disorders of the Brain
Research in the Department
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Human Computer Interaction Pain Research
Self Harming
Second Life
Positive Psychology
Life Styles Epilepsy
Festivals, Drugs, Underground parties
Education Technology
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Why Do Psychology?
Transferable Skills Communication,
Numeracy, Independent Learning
Team WorkQuantitative and Qualitative Data.
Critical Thinking Essay Writing.
Variety of JobsAcademiaTeaching
ResearcherHuman Resources
ManagementMarket Research
AccountingPsychologist
Mental Health CareChild Care
Susanna Martin Bath Uni Taster Psychology
Any Questions?