Category: Psychology

  • Attitude in Social Psychology

    History of Attitude in Social Psychology The late 1910s and early 1920s were a crucial time for the study of attitudes. By the late 1920s, the attitude had established itself as a distinct branch of social psychology (Baumeister & Bushman, 2017). In current social psychology, attitude has emerged as one of the essential ideas. With…

  • Nature vs. Nurture in Child Psychology

    Table of Contents Introduction The Arising Influence Intelligence Quotient Nurture’s Effects Nature’s Effects Conclusion References Introduction Children depend wholly on their parents or guardians for support and care. At birth, they have hereditary material (genetic effects) acquired from their parents, and as they grow, they experience the influence of the psychological, social, and physical settings…

  • Breaking the Law: Psychological Reasons

    The law is an integral element of every society that regulates the life of people inside it. Nevertheless, although the rules were created for the safety of the humans themselves, individuals who violate them have always been found. The purpose of this essay is to study the factors that force people to commit crimes. It…

  • Self-Esteem: Comparing and Contrasting Main Psychological Approaches

    Table of Contents Cognitive Approach Self-Esteem and Self-Objectification Similarities Differences Conclusion Reference List The issue of self-esteem is critical in clinical psychology and understanding the wider processes in the field of psychology. There are two types of approaches to self-esteem – cognitive and constructivist, which consider self-esteem as a product of sociocultural influences. The Rosenberg…

  • Social Influence Psychology Summarization

    When one thinks of social influence, the usual type of example that readily comes to one’s mind is a direct attempt at persuasion, which is when one person deliberately tries to change another person’s behavior or attitude. However, to social psychologists, social influence has a broader meaning. For them, social psychology is a scientific study…

  • Psychology and Language Advancement in Children

    Diversity of language and culture Back in elementary school, a Korean boy had some speech problems. His problem in the speech was notable when speaking letters r, l, and sh. The problem was as well notable in words that contain these letters. His reading skills were poor, coupled with unusually slow writing full of mistakes.…

  • Psychology and Its Importance for the Sports Team

    From an early age, people compete and assert themselves. The development of various sports training methods is impossible without studying, on the one hand, the characteristic features, and sports activities, and, on the other, the personality of the athlete as a subject of this activity. Therefore, it can be argued that sport is psychological in…

  • Everything Psychological Is Simultaneously Biological

    Myers & Dewall (2018) identify the beginning of psychology history in 387 B.C.E. when Plato identified the brain to be a centrum for the mental process. At the same time, Aristotle believed the heart to be a core organ that is responsible for mental decisions in 335 B.C.E (Myers & Dewall, 2018). The next important…

  • Genogram and Forms of Therapy. Educational Psychology Practice

    A genogram is a tool in psychology that shares common features with a family tree and provides a visual representation of a person’s family ties (Tobias, 2017, p.92). According to the genogram of the psychologist, you can analyze the history of relationships in the family, patterns of hereditary relationships. Usually, genograms are used in family…

  • Voluntarism, Experimental and Gestalt Psychology

    Experimental psychologists were, in fact, the first researchers to try to study mental processes by utilizing the experimental method to understand the influence of the body and the physical world on the mind. On the other hand, voluntarism came about with Wundt’s discovery that it is possible to measure the speed with which consciousness switched…