Created by Rebecca Bishop
about 8 years ago
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Ego Psychology
Psychosocial Development
Object Relations Theories
Object Relations Theory: Mahler
Attachment Theory
Attachment Theory: Harlow
Attachment Theory: Bowlby
Attachment Theory: Ainsworth
Ainsworth
Secure attachment
Ainsworth
Anxious ambivalent attachment
Ainsworth
Avoidant attachment
Psychosocial Development
Psychosocial Development: Erikson’s Stages
Infancy (year 1) — Trust vs. Mistrust
Early Childhood (yrs. 2–3) — Autonomy vs. Shame and doubt
Preschool (yrs 3–5) — Initiative vs. Guilt
School age (yrs 5–11) — Industry vs. Inferiority
Identity vs. Role Confusion (yrs. 12–20)
Young Adulthood (20’s) — Intimacy vs. Isolation
Adulthood (to 60’s) — Generativity vs. Stagnation
Old Age —Integrity vs. Despair
Applying Erikson
Erikson In Conclusion
The Behavioral Viewpoint
Classical Conditioning:
Operant Conditioning:
Positive vs Negative
Schedules of Reinforcement
ratio schedule
interval schedule
Fixed Ratio Schedule
variable Ratio Schedule
Fixed Interval Schedule
Variable Interval Schedule
Schedules of Reinforcement: Impact on Future Responding
The Behavioral Viewpoint
Behaviorism: Assumption #1
behaviourism assumption #2
behavioursim evaluation
Downside of Behaviorism
Social-Cognitive Theory – Basics
Social Cognition: Theory of Person
Social-Cognitive Theory: Structures of Personality
processes of personality
processes of personality
depression
phobias
Aggressive Behavior (causes):
Aggressive Behavior (maintenance):
Social-Cognitive Theory: Treatment
humanistic psychology: main theories
maslow- self actualization
d needs (basic characteristics)
metamotivation
Being needs (B needs)
marlows hierarchy of needs
maslow: self actualization
peak experiences
Maslow: Self actualization
Maslow: Self actualization
Maslow: Self actualization
Maslow: Self actualization
men vs. women
Humanism : Carl Rogers
phenomenological field
psychological distress
Rogers, inner values and insitutions
Rogers: The "self"
self actualization
evidence that self-actualization predicts
seek self consistency and congruence self and experience
congruence
anxiety results from incongruence
subception
defences
distortion
donahue and colleagues (1993)
self is fragmented
why is consistency so important?
very powerful need
Roger, no need for ____ & _____
george kelly
Kelly; referral says "student is lazy"
Kelly; teacher is forming a construction of the students behaviour
Kelly; there is no absolute, objective truth
Kelly; personal constructs
Kelly similarties to Roger
Kelly; view of the person
implications
Behaviourists
Kelly
Kelly; theory of personality (structure)
negative emotions; anxiety
threat; negative emoition
Kelly;psychopathology
cognitive psychology: schemas`
the self schema
self maintaining
self schema: maintenance
self verification motive
maintenance
negative self concept
clinical applications
clinical applications 1-5
schemas in cognitive therapy
black and white thinking
overgeneralization
selective abstraction
catastophizing
excessive self refrence
schemas and automatic thoughts