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Perspectives on behavior and mental processes
VII. Read the text and explain why is it necessary to take into consideration all the five perspectives studying different psychological states. VI. Odd one out. V. These words can be used both as verbs and nouns. Make up your own sentences to show the differences in their usage. IV. Give Russian equivalents to the following words and phrases. to create sensory experiences, evolutionary influenced, unconscious drives, unfulfilled wishes, aggressive drives, observable responses, alter smb’s behavior, internal forces, external environment, life patterns, to regain the prominence, to reason problems, to retrieve information, a frustrating situation, intensity of anger, a useful way of looking at smth, brain circuits, in terms of, to be linked with mood and motives.
Reason, store, process, wish, drive, shape, reward
1. to consider, to think, to assume, to create. 2. to store, to transmit, to retrieve, to solve. 3. drive, wish, desire, motivation. 4. capacity, ability, competence, prominence. 5. to alter, to change, to modify, to emphasize. 6. perspective, view, aspect, response.
Whether psychologist emphasize internal or external influences depends on their theoretical perspective. Each perspective influences the question psychologists ask, the kinds of information they consider important and sometimes the method of study utilized. Consider five such perspectives in their historical order. I.The biological perspective helps us understand how the body and brain work to create emotions, memories and sensory experiences. Biologically oriented psychologists may study evolutionary and hereditary influences on behavior, how messages are transmitted within the body, or how blood chemistry is linked with moods and motives. II. The psychoanalytic perspective assumes that behavior springs from unconscious drives and conflicts. Building on the ideas of Sigmund Freud, it analyzes psychological traits and disorders in terms of sexual and aggressive drives or as the disguised effects of unfulfilled wishes and childhood traumas. III. The behavioral perspective studies the mechanisms by which observable responses are acquired and modified in particular environments. A behavioral psychologist might study how we learn to fear particular objects or situations, how external rewards shape our actions, or how we can most effectively alter our behavior, say to lose weight or stop smoking. IV. The humanistic perspective appeared as a reaction against the psychoanalytic view which sees people as driven by unconscious internal forces, and the behavioristic view, which sees people as shaped by the external environment. Humanistic psychologists emphasize our capacities to choose our life patterns. They also try to understand behavior more subjectively, in terms of its meaning to the individual. V. The cognitive perspective has regained the prominence it had in psychology’s early history. (Cognition refers to our remembering, thinking and knowing). Hundreds of researchers are exploring how we process, store and retrieve information and how we use it to reason and solve problems. Consider how from each perspective we might view an emotion such as anger. a) Someone working from a biological perspective might study the brain circuit that trigger the physical state of being “red in the face” and “hot under the collar”. b) Someone working from a psychoanalytic perspective might view an angry outburst as an outlet for unconscious hostility. c) Someone working from a behavioral perspective might study the facial expressions and body gestures that accompany anger or attempt to determine which external stimuli result in angry responses or aggressive acts. d) Someone working from a humanistic perspective might want to understand what it means to experience and express anger – from the individual’s own point of view. e) Someone working from a cognitive perspective might study how the different ways we perceive a frustrating situation affect the intensity of our anger, and how angry mood affects our thinking. The biological, psychoanalytic, behavioral, humanistic, cognitive perspectives describe and explain anger very differently. This doesn’t mean that they contradict one another. Rather, they are five useful ways of looking at the same psychological state. By using all five, we gain a richer, fuller understanding of anger than that provided by any single perspective.
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