Experimental Psychology PSY 433
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Transcript Experimental Psychology PSY 433
Experimental Psychology
PSY 433
Appendix A – Experimental Psychology:
A Historical Sketch
Origins in Philosophy
Mind-body problem – are the mind and body
the same or different?
If they are different substances, how do they
interact or communicate?
Dualism – mind (soul) is not governed by
physical laws but possesses free will.
Descartes – mutual interaction.
Animals do not possess souls and can be
studied because they are physical.
Rene Descartes (1596-1650)
Physiology Changed Philosophy
Localization of cerebral function by
physiologists showed that the brain is the
organ of the mind.
Mental states were shown to affect the body.
Trauma, mesmeric trance, mental suggestion.
Huxley’s “Epiphenomenalism” – mental states
have no causal efficacy, like paint on a stone
(neurophysiology is the stone, mind is the
paint).
British Empiricism
Locke, Berkeley, Hume, Hartley
Mind may follow laws and thus be modeled
just as the physical world is.
Elements (ideas)
Forces (associations between ideas)
Tabula rasa – mind is a blank slate written
upon by experience.
Mental activity may be mechanical:
Mind as a machine
Application of Scientific Method
Philosophy uses different methods than
psychology:
Anecdote, reflection, logic
Experimental psychology emerged out of the
study of sensation, applying laws of physics
and chemistry.
Now called psychophysics
“Application of scientific method to the
problem of mind” created experimental psych.
Helmholtz (1821-1894)
Used experimental methods to study vision
and audition.
Reaction times were used to determine the
speed of neural impulses.
Test response-times for stimuli from the
shoulder and from the ankle.
Nerve impulses are slow – 50 meters per sec.
Reaction times vary considerably across
individuals and across trials – how is precise
measurement possible?
Weber (1795-1878)
Weber studied perceptions of weight and
tried to relate these to actual physical weight.
Weight is an objective physical property of
objects.
The greater the weight, the greater the
difference between it and a heavier weight
must be in order to be detectable.
Weber’s Law -- Just-noticeable difference
(JND) is a constant across a sensory
modality.
Just Noticeable Difference (JND)
How much must a stimulus change in order for
a person to sense the change.
This amount is called the just noticeable
difference (JND)
The actual size of the JND aries with the size of
the weights being compared.
JND can be expressed as a ratio:
DR
k
R
where R is stimulus magnitude and k is a
constant and DR means the change in R
(D usually means change in science)
Fechner (1801-1887)
Tried to relate physical properties to
psychological sensations:
Related the objective to the subjective.
Fechner’s Law – each JND corresponds to
one subjective unit of measure on a rating
scale
This relationship can be described
mathematically.
Credited with founding psychophysics.
Fechner’s Law
Fechner called Weber’s finding about the JND
“Weber’s Law.”
Fechner’s formula describes how the subjective
sensation is related to increases in stimulus
size:
S k log R
where S is sensation, k is Weber’s constant and
R is the magnitude of a stimulus
He also used catch trials to study guessing.
Relationship of JND to Stimulus
S.S. Stevens modified
Fechner’s Log Law to a
Power Function in the
early 1950’s.
Wundt & Ebbinghaus
Wundt (1832-1920) organized psychology
and helped to establish it as an independent
discipline.
Wrote “Principles of Physiological Psychology”
Did not believe higher mental processes
(memory, thought, creativity) could be studied
experimentally.
Ebbinghaus (1850-1909) demonstrated that
memory could be studied experimentally.
Stucturalism vs Functionalism
Structuralism – focused on the contents of
mind.
Sensations, images (ideas), affections
Used introspection to identify basic elements.
Introspection proved to be an unreliable
method.
Functionalism – focused on the adaptive
function of psychological processes within a
context.
Not much experimental work done.
Behaviorism
Rejected structuralism and functionalism.
Both referred to mentalistic contents of mind
that could not be directly observed.
Emphasized focus on relating behavior to
evoking stimuli and contexts.
Radical behaviorists:
Watson
Skinner
Now nearly all experimental psychologists are
behaviorists to some extent.
Gestalt Psychology
Reaction against structuralism.
Whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
Complex mental phenomena cannot be
understood by examining elements.
Wertheimer’s demonstration of shape
constancy seemed incompatible with
structuralism.
Influential in cognitive psychology.
The Cognitive Revolution (1950present)
Using scientific methods to study mental
processes that are linked to observable
behaviors
The mind actively acquires information,
and stores, retrieves, and uses knowledge
Influenced by the computer analogy and
information processing theory.
Cognitive Neuroscience
Psychophysiology – intersection between
psychology and physiology.
Neuroscientists team with psychologists using
imaging techniques (PET, fMRI) to study
cognitive activity.
Such results must be interpreted with caution
Observing that activity is occurring does not
necessarily tell you what kind of activity is
happening.
Specialization
Today psychologists tend to identify more
with areas of interest than with schools of
thought (behaviorism, gestalt).
Specialization is the mark of a maturing
science.
Experimental psychology is one of 54
divisions in the APA (Division 3).
Other societies: Psychonomic Society, APS,
Society for Cognitive Neuroscience, society
for Research in Child Development (SRCD).