Introduction To Psychology
Introduction To Psychology
Clinical
Crime
Legal
Military Plant
Industrial Animal
Educational
BRANCHES OF PSYCHOLOGY
Basic branch Applied branches
• General psychology • Educational Psychology
• Abnormal psychology • Clinical psychology
• Developmental Psychology • Industrial psychology
• Experimental Psychology • Forensic Psychology
• Social Psychology • Health Psychology
• Personality Psychology
• Abnormal Psychology:
*study unusual pattern of behavior.
General Psychology:
*study human development, emotions,
motivation, learning, perception, thinking, memory,
intelligence and processing.
Behavioral Psychology:
*study the behaviors of living organisms.
Biological Psychology:
Behavioral neuroscience, also known
as biological psychology, biopsychology, or
psychobiology is the application of the principles
of biology (in particular neurobiology), to the
study of physiological, genetic, and
developmental mechanisms of behavior in
humans and non-human animals.
Cognitive Psychology:
Cognitive psychology is the study of
mental processes such as "attention, language
use, memory, perception, problem solving,
creativity, and thinking."
• Comparative Psychology:
Comparative psychology refers to the
scientific study of the behavior and mental
processes of non-human animals, especially as
these relate to the phylogenetic history, adaptive
significance, and development of behavior.
Educational Psychology:
Educational psychology is the branch
of psychology concerned with the scientific study
of human learning.
Experimental Psychology:
The branch of psychology concerned
with the scientific investigation of the responses
of individuals to stimuli in controlled situations.
• Forensic Psychology:
Forensic psychology is the intersection
between psychology and the justice system.
Health Psychology:
Health psychology is the study
of psychological and behavioral processes
in health, illness, and healthcare.
Personality Psychology:
Personality psychology is a branch
of psychology that studies personality and individual
differences.
Its areas of focus include: Constructing a
coherent picture of a person and his or her major
psychological processes.
Investigating individual differences, that is, how
people can differ from one another.
Social Psychology:
The branch of psychology that deals with social
interactions, including their origins and their effects on the
individual.
PSYCHOLOGY - METHODS
• Introspection Method
• Observation Method
• Anecdotal Method
• Experimental Method
• Case Study Method
• Questionnaire Method
• Introspection Method:
examination of one's own conscious
thoughts and feelings. In psychology the process
of introspection relies exclusively on observation
of one's mental state, while in a spiritual context
it may refer to the examination of one's soul.
Observation Method:
the observation and description of a
subject's behavior. Researchers utilizing
the observational method can exert varying
amounts of control over the environment in
which the observation takes place.
• Anecdotal Method:
Method based on personal
recollections of a case, as opposed to specific,
empirically derived investigation. Can provide
ideas to fuel further research.
Experimental Method:
The experimental method involves
manipulating one variable to determine if
changes in one variable cause changes in another
variable.
This method relies on controlled
methods, random assignment and the
manipulation of variables to test a hypothesis.
• Case study method:
In order to prepare a case history
of data are taken from many sources for
example his or her family history, educational
life, medical history and social life.
This method is very popular in clinical
psychology and life span developmental
psychology.
Questionnaire Method:
• A questionnaire consists of a set of questions to
which the individual is required to respond.
Functionalism
Existential School
SCHOOLS OF PSYCHOLOGY
Sigmund Freud’s
Gestalt School school of
Psychoanalysis
• 1. STRUCTURALISM: This school of psychology
was started by wundt. The goal of structuralism
was to find the elements which make up the
mind. The main method used by them to discover
the elementary units of mind as introspection.