Sunday, October 6, 2013

MOVIE REVIEW: DELUSYON

GUIDE QUESTIONS
A. Summary 
 With 20 sentences, maximum of 30, provide the plot of the film.
B. Analysis
1.     Identify at least three main characters in the film. Describe their developmental attributes in terms of:
a.       Psychosocial Stages (Erikson)
b.      Psychosexual Stages (Freud)
c.       Moral Development Stages (Kohlberg)
d.      Cognitive Development Stages (Piaget)
2.      What opposing views have you seen in the film? Give examples of the scenarios that expresses such differences and Explain why their perceptions are different from each other based on your answer in no. 2. You may also use the Ecological theory of Urie Bronfrenbrenner to support your claim.
3.       What is your favorite scene in the story? Why?
4.       Describe your developmental attributes in terms of:
a.       Psychosocial Stages (Erikson)
b.      Psychosexual Stages (Freud)
c.       Moral Development Stages (Kohlberg)
d.      Cognitive Development Stages (Piaget)

5.       Based on your answers in number 4, how did this affect your perception towards the story of the film? What are the other factors which made you arrive on these realizations?   

FORMAT:
 Handwritten neatly and legibly in a yellow pad paper. NEVER ask someone to write it for you. Love your own handwriting.

SUBMISSION IS ON OCT. 14, 2013. The president/ representative must collect the movie review until 12:00 pm., enclose it in a brown envelope and submit it personally to me in the Department of Social Sciences. Late papers within the day will be given minus points. Anyone who submits his/her work on Oct. 15 onwards will not be accepted anymore unless presented with valid excuse letter noted by the Guidance Office.

 All tickets are considered sold. If still unpaid, please pay asap.

This is your PROJECT. Please conform to the rules set herein.

Psychopathology

Psychopathology is the study of mental illnesses, mental distress and abnormal or maladaptive behavior. Abnormal Psychology is a similar term used more frequently in the non-medical field of psychology. 

To understand what "abnormal" means, first consider "normal". Normal simply means average. People who behave normally are those who act and behave in an average, typical way. Statistically speaking, normal behavior is that which we would expect from the majority of people. Abnormal, therefore, refers to any behavior that is not typical. In the practice of psychology it has further come to mean mental illness. Simply, abnormal behavior is any behavior that deviates from the norm.

Causes of abnormal behavior are as follow:
1) BIOLOGICAL: genetic inheritance, medical conditions, brain damage, exposure to environmental stimulus
2) PSYCHOLOGICAL: traumatic life experiences, learned associations, distorted perceptions, faulty ways of thinking
3) SOCIOCULTURAL: disturbances in intimate relationships, problems in extended relationships, political or social unrest

Personality Disorder is basically a set of traits that combine to negatively affect your life. They have a wide range of causes and some are easier to treat than others.

List of Personality Disorders

  •  The first group is the Eccentric Personality Disorder. These people often appear strange or peculiar to others.

Paranoid Personality Disorder – individual generally tends to interpret the actions of others as threatening.
Schizoid Personality Disorder – individual generally detached from social relationships, and shows a narrow range of emotional expression in various social settings.
Schizotypal Personality Disorder – individual is uncomfortable in close relationships, has thought or perceptual distortions, and peculiarities of behavior.

  •   The second group is the Dramatic Personality Disorder. These people have intense emotional mood swings and distorted perceptions of themselves and impulsive behaviors.

Antisocial Personality Disorder – individual shows a pervasive disregard for, and violation of, the rights of others.
Borderline Personality Disorder – individual shows a generalized pattern of instability in interpersonal relationships, self-image, and observable emotions, and significant impulsiveness.
Histrionic Personality Disorder - individual often displays excessive emotionality and attention seeking in various contexts. They tend to overreact to other people, and are often perceived as shallow and self-centered.
Narcissistic Personality Disorder – individual has a grandiose view of themselves, a need for admiration, and a lack of empathy that begins by early adulthood and is present in various situations. These individuals are very demanding in their relationships.

  • The third group is the Anxious Personality Disorder. These people are often fearful and anxious of one or many things.

Avoidant Personality Disorder – individual is socially inhibited, feels inadequate, and is oversensitive to criticism
Dependent Personality Disorder – individual shows an extreme need to be taken care of that leads to fears of separation, and passive and clinging behavior.
Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder – individual is preoccupied with orderliness, perfectionism, and control at the expense of flexibility, openness, and efficiency.

References:
http://www.humana-military.com/library/pdf/depression-glossary.pdf
http://www.apa.org/divisions/div12/rev_est/anxiety.html

Individual Differences & Personality

http://imgc.allpostersimages.com/images/P-473-488-90
/21/2141/ZTPED00Z/posters/individuality.jpg
Individual Difference Psychology (also regarded as differential psychology) is a branch of psychology that studies how and why individuals differ. Its main sub-branches are the study of cognitive abilities, motivation, personality, and temperament (including both mood and emotion). This also examines how people are similar and how they differ in their thinking, feeling and behavior.

Individual differences can be characterized by the following attributes:
1. Variability and Normality – We have mentioned how even organisms within a species vary greatly in their pattern of adaptive behavior and how anatomical, physiological differences exist among different people.
2. Differential rates of growth and learning – Developmental schedules vary for all individuals. These variations can be seen in cognitive abilities, in physical, emotional and moral aspects of growth.
3. Interrelation of traits – The growth of personality for instance, is the result of the continuing interaction of many factors – biological, social or environmental and we cannot accurately attribute the causations of behavior to one factor alone.
4. Hereditary and environmental factors – Hereditary and environmental contributions can never be completely separated because they are in continuous interplay in the production of every physical and psychological trait.

Factors Affecting Individual Difference
1. Physiological factors
  Endocrine gland activity, brain tissue damage, as a result of accidents, illness infection or chemical stimulation can cause changes in intellectual functioning, mood and relations with others.
2. Cultural influences 
      In some cultures, physical stature and muscular strength are socially attractive. These norms affect individual self-concepts as well as social adjustments. These values can also change within a society.
3. Interaction between biological and social factors
         An individual, as a complex product of many interacting variables, is really more than the simple sum of different influences. One physiological characteristic may produce a different effect in another social context or a given social context will affect an individual differently depending on the physical conditions imposed. 
http://www.cleverfish.co.za/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/CF_IndividualDiff2.jpeg
Personality is our distinctive and characteristic patterns of thought, actions and behavior. It is all about the most essential psychological aspects of a person’s life – our thoughts, feelings, motives, skills, and behaviors.The term is coined from the Latin word ‘persona’ meaning ‘mask’. This means that people put on a ‘mask’ that distinguishes them from the rest. We can choose to portray different personas which constitute to our personality but our inner selves have a greater representation of our true characters.

Fundamental Characteristics of Personality
Our personalities may be collectively characterized into four fundamental characteristics:
1. Consistency -This means that we demonstrate a pattern of regularity or uniformity to our behaviors as recognized and identified by other people. In essence, we tend to act in similar ways and respond similarly to various situations.
2. Impacts behaviors and actions- It causes us to take action or respond to various situations and experiences in certain ways aside from affecting how we act and react in certain situations. 
3. Psychological and physiological – A person’s character and identity is built up by the patterns of thoughts, feelings, and behavior. However, some researches would mention that biological aspect also affects or influences personality.
4. Multiple expressions -It is more than just a person’s attitude or behavior but also identified through patterns of thoughts, emotions, relationships, and interaction with other people.

Theories of Personality

a. ) Psychoanalytic
Sigmund Freud created the psychoanalytic theory. Although the psychoanalytic approach has its shortcomings as a scientific theory, its account of personality remains the most comprehensive, far-reaching, and influential amongst other personality theories and also determined by the struggle between our instincts, our logical thinking, and our conscience. This theory has been one of the most influential theories of our time. It breaks the human personality down into three critical parts: Id, Ego and Superego.

  • The Id is the most basic part and is present at birth. The Id functions with the pleasure principle. This means it tends to be a little animalistic. It can be irrational and illogical. 
  • The Ego works to maintain or control the Id. It operates on the reality principal and tries to keep the Id straight. The Ego makes a person have rational and realistic thoughts while interacting with others. 
  • The Superego is the conscience. It contains the principles and ideals of society. The Superego operates on idealism. Its goal is to inhibit the desires of the Id and convince the Ego to work towards more moral goals rather than realistic ones.

b.) Person-Centered Theory
This theory claims that individuals perceive the world in a unique phenomenological way so that no two people's perceptions of the world are the same. This was developed by psychologist Carl Rogers and is one of the most widely used models in mental health and psychotherapy. The PCT places great emphasis on the individual's ability to move in positive directions. Rogers believes in the trustworthiness of individuals and in their innate ability to move toward self-actualization and health when the proper conditions are in place. He also believes that individuals have the inner resources to move themselves in such positive directions. 

c.) Somatotypes
Somatotype is the word used by the famous psychologist William Sheldon to describe a body-type using his method of classifying the human physique. According to him, the body type of a person reflects one’s personality. Human physique is classified into three: (1) Endomorph (feature: rounded body, characteristic: pleasure lover and friendly); (2) Ectomorph (feature: skinny and thin, characteristic: loner and introvert) and; (3) Mesomorph (feature: athletic body, characteristic: adventure-seeking).

Psychological Assessment is a process of testing that uses a combination of techniques to help arrive at some hypotheses about a person and their behavior, personality and capabilities.

Four Components of Psychological Assessment

1. Norm-Referenced Tests
A standardized psychological test is a task or set of tasks given under standard, set conditions. It is designed to asses some aspect of a person’s knowledge, skill or personality. A psychological test provides a scale of measurement for consistent individual differences regarding some psychological concept and serves to line up people according to that concept.
2. Interviews
Valuable information is gained through interviewing. When it’s for a child, interviews are conducted not only the child, but the parents, teachers and other individuals familiar with the child. Interviews are more open and less structured than formal testing and give those being interviewed an opportunity to convey information in their own words.
3.  Observations
               Observations of the person being referred in their natural setting — especially if it’s a child — can provide additional valuable assessment information. In the case of a child, how do they behave in school settings, at home, and in the neighborhood? Does the teacher treat them differently than other children? How do their friends react to them?
4. Informal Assessment
                Standardized norm-referenced tests may at times need to be supplemented with more informal assessment procedures, as such as projective tests or even career-testing or teacher-made tests. For example, in the case of a child, it may be valuable to obtain language samples from the child, test the child’s ability to profit from systematic cues, and evaluate the child’s reading skills under various conditions.The realm of informal assessment is vast, but informal testing must be used more cautiously since the scientific validity of the assessment is less known.

References:
www.wikipedia.com

INTELLIGENCE: Its Meaning and Measurement

I. Definition
Intelligence comes from the Latin word “intellectus” which means perception or comprehension. It is interchangeably called “mental ability”. It is the global capacity to act purposely, to think rationally, and to deal effectively with the environment. Meanwhile, Bustos defined intelligence as a composite of general and specific abilities characterizing an individuals level of neurological functioning in the context of his effectively applied experience and manifested in his dynamic coping with the challenges for adjustment which makes day – to – day living while Ceci defined it as the ability for complex thinking and reasoning.

II. Origin and Nature of Intelligence

  • Hereditary Influence 

          Sir Francis Galton, an early investigator of individual differences, observed that there were family differences in ability and concluded mental ability was hereditary.  Heritability is defined as the extent to which genetic individual differences contribute to individual differences in observed behavior

  • Environmental Influence

1. Changing environmental conditions
 People are being exposed via televisions and other media resulting in an increasing amount of information.
2. Environmental Deprivation
Intelligence can be reduced by the absence of certain forms of environmental stimulation early in life.
3. Environmental Enrichment
removing children from unproductive, restricted environments and placing them in more favorable settings seems to enhance their intellectual growth.
4.School Environment
Students who attend school regularly score higher on intelligence tests than students who attend irregularly.
5.Biological Factors Influencing Environment 
Many biological factors that children encounter while growing up can affect their intelligence. These are: (1) prolonged malnutrtion and; (2) alcohol and drugs

III. Intelligence Tests

  • Characteristics of intelligence tests

1. Validity
It is the extent to which a test measure what it purpose to measure. For intelligence test, these four types of validity are to be considered with guided question: (1) Face Validity; (2) Content Validity; (3) Concurrent Validity and; (4) Predictive Validity
2. Reliability
It refers to the accuracy, precision or consistency of a score obtained through the test.
3. Practicability\utility
It refers to the ease and feasibility of administering the test.  Practicability would include “efficiency.”


  • Salient Intelligence tests

   A. Wechsler Scales - are a series of standardized tests used to evaluate cognitive abilities and intellectual abilities in children and adults.

   Characteristics of Wechsler Subtests:
A. Verbal Scale 
Information - general information and in part assess learning and memory
Comprehension- tap social comprehension, the ability to organize and apply knowledge.
Similarities- determine the ability to analyze relationships. 
Arithmetic- provides measure of an ability to work with arithmetic problems.
Vocabulary- measures one’s ability to learn words and express their feelings
Digit Span\sentences- asks the examinee to repeat the series of numbers in the sequence
Letter-number Sequencing- taps marking memory
B. Performance Scale
Picture Arrangement- measures the ability to perceive and visually organize a sketch
Block Design- tap the ability to comprehend or size up  a whole situation, attention , concentration and able to see cause and effect.
Object Assembly- pattern recognition & psychomotor speed.
Coding \Animal Pegs- taps learning ability, rote recall ability, psychomotor speed, concentration and attention.
Mazes- measures perceptual motor skills, psychomotor speed.
Geometric Design- provides index of child’s perceptual motor skills.
Symbol Search- taps cognitive processing speed.
Matrix Reasoning- a nonverbal analogy task designed to tap perceptual organizing abilities and reasoning

B. Stanford-Binet Test - an individually administered measured of an individuals intellectual status. It became the standard by which other tests were judged, due to the care with which it had been developed, its validity, and its use of the “IQ” concept.  

Subtests of the Stanford Binet test
1. Verbal reasoning
2. Abstract/visual Reasoning
3. Short term memory

IV. Intelligence Quotient
An index of measured intelligence expressed as the ratio of tested mental age to chronological age, multiplied by 100.
IQ (intelligence quotient) = MA (mental age)
        CA (chronological age) x 100
V. Levels of Intelligence

  • Mental Retardation or feeblemindness

Mental retardation is a general term used to refer to hundreds of conditions that share common symptoms of subnormal intellectual functioning and impaired adaptive behavior that seem to originate during the developmental period of the individual. 
According to IQ level, these individuals below 70 are potentially mentally retarded. Whether they require institutional or other specialized care depends in large part upon the general social situation in which they find themselves.

1. Severe Mentally Retarded (Custodial)
IQ’s below 25 ;M.A. of less than 3 years
the lowest  in intelligence
incapable of learning to any noticeable degree
require close supervision and care in such simple habits.

2. Moderate  Mentally Retarded (Trainable)
IQ’s between 25 and 50; M.A. of 3 to 8 years
higher in the scales of intelligence than the custodial.
cannot learn to read, spell, or do arithmetic.
seldom acquire much of a speaking vocabulary.
3. Mild Mentally Retarded (Educable)
higher of the mentally retarded group.
IQ of 50 to 70 and, as adults; M.A.of 8 to 11 years.
can usually complete the first three or four grades of elementary school but fails frequently and is considered stupid by teachers and fellow students.  
  • The Borderline Defective to Very Superior Intelligence Level.

1.  Borderline Defective
-IQ scores of 70 and 80
-Quite capable of following routine if sufficient patience is exerted to establish.
2. Low Average
-IQ scores between 80 and 90
-can learn all the basic skills-reading, writing, and motor activities but frequently with some difficulty.
3. Normal or Average
-IQ scores between 90 and 110.
-the vast bulk of the population, 50 per cent or more, falls into this category.
-Have the capacity for relatively easy accomplishments of skills demanded.
4. High average
The group with IQ’s of 110 to 120 is not nearly so well-defined as the counterpart on the opposite side of the average group.
5. Superior
The group with IQ’s 120 to 130 include the largest number of those with the capacity for reasonably easy accomplishment of the schooling necessary for professional scientific work.
6.Very Superior  
Those with IQ’s of 130 to 140 are classified as very superior.

A genius refers “to those who manifest very superior general intelligence” often defined as 140 or greater and who have demonstrated their superiority through an unusually high level of achievement in an intellectually demanding pursuit. Prodigy, on the other hand, is generally used to refer to individuals who have achieved special distinction in a specific enterprise, usually at an early age, but without the requirement of superior psychometric (test) intelligence.  

VI. Theories of Intelligence

  • The Psychometric Approach of Charles Spearman presents the measurement (metric) of individual differences in behaviours and abilities. Spearman required that people need a certain “general” ability, which he called “g”. Additionally, he also suggested that each tasks or all tasks require the use of a “specific” ability, which he called “s”. Thus, intelligence consists of general ability plus an unknown number of specific abilities such as mechanical, musical, mathematical, logical, and spatial ability.
  • Fluid and Crystallized Intelligence by Raymond B. Catell explained that fluid intelligence is the capacity to develop ability to learn new skills and it also consists of the power of reasoning and using information, the ability to perceive relationship, solve unfamiliar problems, and gain new types of knowledge, whereas, crystallized intelligence consists of acquired skills and knowledge and the application of that knowledge to the specific content of a person experience. It also includes the skills previously automatically learned and practiced by someone who has had the training and education for years.
  • Multiple Intelligences by Howard Gardner claimed that people have numerous unrelated forms of intelligence. 

  • Triarchic Theory of Intelligence of Robert Stenberg formulated the detailed processes of intelligence called “Triarchic theory” . This theory deals with the three aspects of intelligence as stated below:

    1. The cognitive process that occur within the individual includes components such as learning the necessary information, planning an approach to a problem, and combining the knowledge with the plan to solve a problem.
    2. The identification of situations that require intelligence i.e. to differentiate novel situations from repeated situations, they require different responses.
    3. The relationship between intelligence and the external world wherein an intelligent person either adapts to the environment or tries to improve the environment, or if fails, escapes to better environment.        

Motivation and Emotion

Motivation and Emotion 

I. MOTIVATION refers to the aspect of behavior that deals with understanding why human being behave the way they do. The word MOTIVE comes from the Latin word MOVERA which means to move.

Theories of Motivation

1.Instinct theory
 - people are motivated to behave in certain ways because they are evolutionary programmed to do so.
2. Incentive theory
  - people sure motivated to do things because of external rewards.
3. Drive theory
    -people are motivated to take certain actions in order to reduce the internal tension that is caused by unmet needs.
4. Arousal theory
    -people take certain actions to either decrease or increase levels of arousal
5. Humanistic theory
   - people also strong cognitive reasons to perform various action

An example of Humanistic Theory of Motivation by Abraham Maslow
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Classification of Motivation

  1. Psychological or biological drives
    • Hunger
    • Thirst
    • Oxygen need
    • Fatigue
    • Sleep
    • Avoidance of pain
    • Elimination
    • Sex
    • Material drive
    • Warmth and cold
  2. Social or psychological drives
    • parent-child
    • peer group
    • competence or achievement 


Notes on Memory

Memory
-is an active system that receives, stores, organizes, alters and recovers information.

There are two types of memory: Short  term memory (STM) and Long term memory (LTM).

Short Term Memory 

  • George Miller found that short term memory is limited to only 7-bits of information (±2)
  • STM has seven slots or bins into which separate items can be placed. Thus, ehen all slots are filled, there is no room for new data.
  •  Process/technique to increase capacity to recall more information bits: (1) Recoding; (2) Grouping of information; and (3) Maintenance Rehearsal
  • STM appears to weaken and disappear very fast (18-30 seconds), but can be prolonged by silently repeating it until it is needed.
  • Elaborative Rehearsal - technique that links new information with information already in the LTM to make information more meaningful.

Long Term Memory

  • Information is relatively permanent because as new long term memories are formed, older memories are often updated, changed, lost, or revised.
  • Classification of Long Term Memory        
  1. Skill Memory - memory for doing learned tasks and is associated with the lower centre of the brain
  2. Declarative Memory - comprises of facts like names, data, address, place, dates, and ideas; expressed in symbols and words and is associated with the higher brain centre.
    • Division of Declarative Memory
      • Semantic Memory - mental dictionary of basic knowledge.
      • Episodic Memory - record of personal experiences and life events; easily forgotten than semantic memory
http://www.human-memory.net/images/memory_types.jpg

The Information Processing System

Information processing models consist of a series of stages which represent stages of processing. Input processes are concerned with the analysis of the stimuli. Storage processes cover everything that happens to stimuli internally in the brain and can include coding and manipulation of the stimuli. Output processes are responsible for preparing an appropriate response to a stimulus.

Forgetting

  • According to Herman Ebbinghaus, forgetting  happens very rapidly after learning.
  • Type of memory affects the rate of forgetting.
  • Mnemonics - memory aids that help in remembering data accurately. 
  • Causes of forgetting

Notes on Learning

Learning is a relatively permanent change in behavior that result from exposure or practice provided that the behavioral change is not cause but native response tendencies, maturation or temporary states.

Theories of Learning & their Proponents
1. Classical conditioning (Associative learning) - Ivan Pavlov
2. Connectionism (Trial and error learning) - Edward Thorndike
3. Operant Conditioning (Instrumental Conditioning) - Burrhus F. Skinner
4. Social Learning (Observational learning) - Albert Bandura

Classical Conditioning 

Stages of Classical Conditioning

1.      Before Conditioning
Stage 1 : NS is the Bell ---- no response
            UCS is Food ---- salivation (UCR)

2.      During Conditioning
CS is the Bell ---- UCS is food---salivation (UCR)

3.      After Conditioning
CS in the bell ---- CR is salivation

Phenomena about Classical Conditioning

1. Stimulus Generalization -occurs when something similar o conditioned stimulus creates
 the same responses.
 2. Stimulus Discrimination- occurs when one new stimulus is too different from our original
conditioned stimulus to cause the effect we want.
3. Extinction-occurs when the conditioned stimulus is presented a number of times without the
unconditioned stimulus.
4. Spontaneous Recovery- occurs when there is re-appearance of an extinguished conditioned
response after a rest period.

Connectionism

  • 3 Laws on Learning
  1. Law of Effect - Reinforcement/satisfier
  2. Law of Readiness - Motivation, preparation and proper mind-set
  3. Law of Exercise - “Practice makes perfect”

Operant Conditioning 

  • Largely based on Thorndike’s law of Effect. 
  • Learning happens when organism operates on something or does something to the environment in order to produce a result.

https://wikispaces.psu.edu/download/attachments/56633350/Operant+Conditioning.jpg?version=1&modificationDate=1275002733000

Observational Learning

4 Conditions that should be present for learning to occur:

  1. Attention
  2. Retention
  3. Motor Reproduction
  4. Motivation

Sensation & Perception

KEY TERMS:

Sensation - detecting stimuli from the body or environment

Perception - organizing sensations into meaningful patterns

Stimulus - Form of energy that can affect sense organs

Psychophysics  - study the relationship between stimuli & our psychological response to them

Sensory receptors - cells designed to serve very specific functions such as to detect stimuli & convert energy into neural impulses

Thresholds - a minimum amount of any given sensation that has to be present for us to notice it

Absolute threshold -This is the minimum amount of a stimulus that is necessary for us to notice it 50% of the time

Sensory adaptation - If a stimulus is unchanging, we become desensitized to it. Keeps us focused on changes, not constants

Just noticeable difference (JND) - smallest difference in amount of stimulation that a specific sense can detect

Weber’s law - states that the size of the JND is a constant proportion of the initial stimulus

VISION 

Hue determines color
Intensity determines brightness
Transduction - the process where the eye converts electromagnetic energy (light) into nerve impulses

The Eye 


Parts: 
Cornea - light is initially focused by this transparent covering over the eye
Pupil - Light enters the eye through this opening
Iris - Muscle connected to the pupil that changes its size to let in more or less light
TRIVIA: Everyone has a unique iris (thus it is a new security technique being employed by some organizations)
Lens - This flexible disk under the cornea focuses light onto the back of the eye. It has capacity of
Accommodation - Flexibility of the lens allows eye muscles to adjust light from objects at various distances away
Retina - Light reflected from the lens is received by this sheet of tissue at the back of the eye; it contains the receptors that convert light to nerve impulses
Cones - retinal cells that respond to particular wavelengths of light, allowing us to see color and are located mostly on the fovea, which gives us the sharpest resolution of visual stimuli
          Theories on Seeing Colors
         A. Trichromatic theory - our eyes have three types of sensors (Red, blue & green receptors)
         B. Opponent-process theory - receptors respond to pairs of colors (White-black / red-green / yellow-blue)
Rods - retinal cells that are very sensitive to light but only register shades of gray (i.e., no color); are located everywhere in the retina except in the fovea (we see best at night without light in the periphery of our vision) and allow us to see at night without strong light (this is why we see less color at night)
Optic Nerve - this is where the converted impulse from light is directed from the receptor cells in the retina; it is a large bundle of nerve fibers that carry impulses from the retina to the brain and sits on the retina but contains no cones or rods, so this is where you experience a ‘blind spot’
(TRIVIA: We aren’t aware that we have a blind spot because our brain completes patterns that fall across our blind spot and because our eyes are constantly moving (‘filling’ it in) as discussed in Gestalt Principles of Perception.)

Processing of Visual Information
The retina processes electrical impulses. It encodes and analyzes sensory information (at the most basic level) then in the optic nerve, the neurons pick up the messages from retina, transmit to the thalamus, then on to the visual cortex, then on to more specified areas.

Gestalt Principles of Vision
Figure-ground - we recognize figures (objects) by distinguishing them from the background
Proximity - Marks that are near one another tend to be grouped together
Closure - we tend to fill in gaps in a figure
Similarity - Marks that look alike tend to be grouped together
Continuity - Marks that tend to fall along a smooth curve or a straight line tend to be grouped together

Depth Perception - the ability to perceive a 3-dimensional object when our eyes only project a 2-dimensional image on our retinas
Different cues to perceive depth:
Binocular disparity - since we use both our eyes to focus on an image, the angles used by each eye to put the image on the fovea of our retina is used by the brain to perceive distance
Monocular cues - Our brain also uses information from the stimulus that does not involve our use of both eyes
Motion - specifies distance of an object based on its movement
Motion parallax - objects that are closer to us move farther across our field of view than do objects that are in the distance
Texture gradient - progressive changes in surface texture that signal distance
Linear perspective - parallel objects seem to get closer together as they get farther away

Perceptual Constancy - The image of an object on your retina can very in size, shape, and brightness but we still continue to perceive the object as stable in size, shape and brightness
Size constancy - The tendency to view an object as constant in size despite changes in the size of its image on the retina (as we move)
Shape constancy - The tendency to see an object as retaining its form despite changes in orientation
Color constancy - The tendency to view an object as retaining its color despite changes of brightness in the environment

AUDITION

Pitch - Frequency of air waves
Loudness/volume - Amplitude of air waves

The Ear

http://www.ndt-ed.org/EducationResources/HighSchool/Sound/Graphics/Ear.gif
Outer ear: Pinna
& external auditory canal
Middle ear: Eardrum (tympanic membrane), hammer, anvil & stirrup
Inner ear: Oval window, cochlea (basilar membrane inside)

The Hearing Process
Air waves move the tympanic membrane (eardrum), which moves the hammer, anvil and stirrup (these all amplify the air wave and pass it on)to the basilar membrane in the cochlea. Here, different frequencies are transduced via hair cells (i.e., the receptors of the ear) into nerve impulses that are sent to the auditory cortex of the brain.

Theories on Hearing
There are two theories on transduction in basilar membrane (i.e., how we perceive sound):
Frequency Theory states that neural impulses are stimulated more with higher frequencies of air waves
More plausible for small frequencies, rather than high frequencies because we can hear freqs higher than the maximum rate of neural firing (1,000 neurons a second)
Place Theory states that different frequencies of air waves activate different places along the basilar membrane

TACTILE - SENSE OF TOUCH

  • Skin is the body’s largest sensory organ. Millions of skin receptors mix and match to produce specific perception. 
  • Four basic types of sensations are: Pressure, warmth, cold, and pain. Skin senses pain and warns us of impending danger. 
  • Our brain releases endorphins which are neurotransmitters that have a pain-killing effect.
  • Gate-control theory explains that pain impulses can be inhibited by closing of neural gates in the spinal cord. 


Kinesthetic sense 


  •  provides info about position of joints, muscles, limbs; gives us control over body movements


Vestibular sense 


  •  provides info about body’s orientation relative to gravity and head’s position in space; helps us maintain balance
  • relies on semicircular canals in the inner ear

Olfaction 


  • sense of smell through detecting molecules in the air  
  • Olfactory receptors are built so that only molecules with particular shapes will fit in particular receptors
  • Receptors send neural signals to the brain, passing the thalamus (memory) and the limbic system (emotions) along the way this is why odors often trigger emotional memories 

Gustation 


  • sense of taste through detecting molecules of substances that have dissolved in saliva
  • the sense of taste combines with the sense of smell to produce perception of flavor of food
  • Research suggests that neural impulses for both senses converge to some degree in brain area associated with the perception of flavor
  • When the sense of smell is blocked, we have a harder time detecting most flavors

Taste buds - clusters of hair-like receptor cells; within each bud is a cluster of 50 to 150 receptor cells
TRIVIA: We have about 10,000 taste receptor cells (most on tongue)
Four types of taste: sweet, sour, salty & bitter


References:

Myers, D. (2005) General Psychology

Biological Basis of Behavior Part 2: (Endocrine System)

Endocrine System

 - collection of glands that produce hormones that regulate body's growth, metabolism, and sexual development and function

Functions:
a) Secrete affective hormones directly into the bloodstream;
b) Regulate hormone secretion to normal levels needed by the body and;
c) Maintain interaction with the central nervous system to promote normal body functioning.

Key parts:
a) Pituitary Gland – primarily dubbed as the “Master Gland”, it controls the activities of the other endocrine glands. It secretes growth hormones (crucial for controlling body growth) and an antidiuretic hormone (controls water excretion through the kidney)
b) Thyroid Gland – it is located at the base of the throat and is responsible for the secretion of hormones that control basal metabolism.
c) Adrenal Glands – These are located on top of each kidney. The glands’ inner layer secretes adrenaline or epinephrine, which gives the body energy in times of stress. The outer layer is responsible for the production of cortical hormones (stress hormones).
d) Islet of Langerhans  – This gland is located in the pancreas which is responsible for the secretion of insulin that prevents the accumulation of sugar in the blood.
e) Gonads – The testes for males and the ovaries for females consecutively make up the gonads or sex glands. The former secretes testosterone and the latter secretes estrogen and progesterone.

Associated Illnesses/Disorders
- caused by either the oversecretion or undersecretion of the hormones of the glands mentioned above.
a) Oversecretion –
   Giantism (growth hormone)
   Hyperthyroidism (metabolic hormones)
   Extreme body weakness (Insulin)
b) Undersecretion –
   Dwarfism (growth hormone)
   Hypothyroidism (metabolic hormones)
   Diabetes (Insulin)

http://www.inspirationgreen.com/assets/images/Issues/2013/endocrine-glands-and-their-hormones.jpg

The Biological Basis of Behavior: Part 1 (Nervous System)



CONTENTS:
       I. The Nervous System
       II. Cells in the Nervous System
 III. Neurotransmitters

DISCUSSION: 
I. The Nervous System
      The nervous system is the body’s electrochemical communication circuitry. The field that studies the nervous system is called neuroscience, and the people who study it are called neuroscientist.

      Characteristics of Nervous System
      a. Complexity - due to the orchestration of the billion of cells in the brain and nervous system, the individual can do complex or different kinds of activities.
      b. Integration - the ability of the brain to pull information together
      c. Adaptability - although the composition of the brain and the nervous system have hereditary       foundation, both have the ability to constantly adapt to the changes in the body and the environment.   
      d. Plasticity - denotes the brain’s special capacity modification and change. 
      e. Electrochemical transmission - the brain being the information processing system, powered by electrical impulses and chemical messages allows the individual to perceive and respond stimuli.

     Organization of the Nervous System
     The nervous system is organized into two main parts:
     1. The central nervous system (CNS), encased in bone, consists of the brain and spinal cord. The CNS is the nervous system’s central executive.
     2. The peripheral nervous system extends throughout the body and relays information to and from the brain.

http://classes.psy.ohio-state.edu/100/upload/farmer/images/nervoussystemorganizationchart.jpg

      I.A.  The Central Nervous System
     The CNS performs different functions through different networks of neurons. Clusters of neurons are called nuclei and pathways that connect the networks are bundles of axons called fiber tracts.
     I.A.1. The Brain 
     1. The Hindbrain - is found just above the spinal cord and is composed of the following structures:
           a. The medulla controls vital life functions (e.g., blood pressure, heart rate, and breathing).
           b. The reticular formation is a web of neurons is involved in arousal and attention.
           c. The cerebellum coordinates fine motor movements, stores a memory code for well-rehearsed   
               behaviors, and participates in cognitive tasks such as reading.
    2. The Midbrain - relays information from the eyes, ears, and skin and controls certain types of automatic behaviors. The midbrain and its connections to the forebrain permit the smooth initiation of movement. The midbrain is connected to the brainstem which is the posterior part of the brain, adjoining and structurally continuous with the spinal cord. Reticular formation is a region in the brainstem that is involved in multiple tasks such as regulating the sleep-wake cycle and filtering incoming stimuli to discriminate irrelevant background stimuli.
    3. The Forebrain - the largest part of the brain regulates many complex aspects of behavior and mental phenomena. Interior structures include the following:
        a. thalamus- processes inputs from sense organs (except for smell) and then relays sensory information to appropriate “higher” forebrain areas. It is the primary sensory relay into the rest of the brain. The brain’s “clock” that sets biological rhythms for the body.
      b. hypothalamus- is a portion of the brain that contains a number of small nuclei with a variety of functions. Its functions are:  (1) link the nervous system to the endocrine system via the pituitary gland (hypophysis) and; (2) control body temperature, hunger, important aspects of parenting and attachment behaviors, thirst, fatigue, sleep, and circadian cycles.
      c. The limbic system includes the amygdala and the hippocampus. The amygdala is involved in memory and emotion. It links different kinds of sensory information together in memory. The amygdala also plays a role in fear and other emotions, linking emotions to sensations. The hippocampus is critical to the ability to form new memories.
      d. The cerebral cortex, is a thin sheet of neurons comprising the forebrain’s outer surface. It folds in itself, giving the brain a wrinkled appearance. The cerebral cortex is divided down the middle, creating two halves called the left and right cerebral hemispheres. The corpus callosum connects the two halves. The folds of cortex produce gyri (ridges) and sulci,or fissures (valleys or wrinkles), on the brain’s outer surface. Several deep sulci make convenient markers for dividing the cortex of each hemisphere into four anatomical areas: the frontal, parietal, occipital and temporal lobes.
         d. 1. The Frontal Lobe of the brain is located deep to the Frontal Bone of the skull. It plays an integral role in the following functions/actions: Memory formation, Emotions, decision making/reasoning and personality.
           d. 2. The Parietal Lobe of the brain is located deep to the Parietal Bone of the skull. It plays a major role in the following functions/actions: Senses and integrates sensation(s), Spatial awareness and perception (Proprioception - Awareness of body/ body parts in space and in relation to each other).
        d. 3. Occipital Lobe involves two major parts: (1) Primary Visual Cortex – the primary area of the brain responsible for sight -recognition of size, color, light, motion, dimensions, etc; and (2) Visual Association Area – interprets information acquired through the primary visual cortex.
           d. 4. The Temporal Lobes are located on the sides of the brain, deep to the temporal bones of the skull. They play an integral role in the following functions: Hearing, Organization/Comprehension of language, Information Retrieval  (Memory and Memory Formation).
      I.A.2.The Spinal Cord
      It receives and sends signals to and from the brain. There are 31 pairs of spinal nerves which run through the spinal cord. These nerves are called “mixed” nerves because each nerve contains a sensory and a motor axon. The spinal cord can also be a minor coordinating centre for some simple reflexes like the withdrawal reflex.
http://www.siumed.edu/~dking2/ssb/brainday/inout.jpg

Meanwhile, reflexes are simple, involuntary behaviors controlled by spinal cord neurons, without requiring instructions from the brain. These are controlled by a feedback system. Information about the consequences of an action goes back to the source of the action for further adjustment, if necessary.

     I.B. The Peripheral Nervous System
     It has two subsystems:
      I. B. 1. The Somatic Nervous System - carries signals between the senses and CNS and between the CNS and skeletal muscles. Sensory neurons bring information to the brain, and motor neurons send information from the brain to the muscles.
      I. B. 2. The Autonomic Nervous System - carries messages between the CNS and the heart, lungs, and other organs and glands. The ANS has two divisions that may act on the same body areas, with their relative “balance” regulating the state of the targeted organs:
         I.B.2.a. The sympathetic system directs the body to spend energy (e.g., increased heart rate, faster breathing, sweating, sometimes called the fight-or-flight” response) to react to stress.
         I.B.2.b. The parasympathetic system directs the body’s functions to conserve energy (e.g., slower heart rate, increased digestive activity). Parasympathetic activity helps “calm” a person after increased sympathetic arousal.

II. Cells in the Nervous System
There are two main cell types in the nervous system. Neurons (also known as nerve cells) are specialized to respond rapidly to signals and send signals of their own while glial cells provide energy, help restore damage, and respond to signals from neurons. These cells have some features in common. They both have an outer membrane that selectively allows only some substances to pass in and out. The only notable differences between neurons and glial cells are neurons' possession of axons and dendrites, and capacity to generate action potentials.
  
Moreover, neurons have: cell body (also known as soma) which contains the nucleus; mitochondria turn oxygen and glucose into energy; axon which is a cell fiber that carries signals away from the cell body and a dendrite which is a cell fiber that receives signals from other neurons and carries information toward the neuron’s cell body. Most neurons have one axon but have many dendrites. Some axons are wrapped in a myelin sheath formed from the plasma membranes of specialized glial cells known as Schwann cells which serve as supportive, nutritive, and service facilities for neurons. The gap between Schwann cells is known as the node of Ranvier, and serves as points along the neuron for generating a signal.
http://brainu.org/files/tn_about_neurons.jpg


As mentioned, neurons have special features that permit effective signal communication and they have the capacity to generate action potentials. Action potentials are electrochemical pulses that shoot down the neuron’s axon. They are “all-or-none” which means that a neuron either fires an action potential at full strength or does not fire at all. After an action potential, there is a brief recovery time called a refractory period, during which a neuron cannot fire another action potential. The speed of an action potential depends on the thickness of the axon and on the presence of myelin sheath, a white, fatty substance that speeds up action potentials. At the axon endings, the action potential causes bag-like vesicles to release stored chemicals called neurotransmitters into a space between the two neurons. This space is called a synapse, a connection that is a narrow gap separating the axon of one neuron from the dendrites of another. It is the means by which two neurons communicate. Released neurotransmitters “float” across the synapse to “bind” with receptors and proteins on a dendrite of a receiving neuron. The interaction between neurotransmitters and receptors is very specific, like a lock and key.  This interaction creates a signal called a postsynaptic potential (PSP) that might make action potentials in the receiving, or postsynaptic, neuron either more or less likely. A number of PSPs sum together at the junction of the cell body and the axon. Whether or not an action potential “fires” depends on the kind of signals that are most numerous.

Neurons have three kinds (as taken from wikipedia.com):
1. Sensory neurons are neurons responsible for converting various external stimuli that come from the environment into corresponding internal stimuli. They are activated by sensory input, and send projections to other elements of the nervous system, ultimately conveying sensory information to the brain or spinal cord. Unlike neurons of the central nervous system, whose inputs come from other neurons, sensory neurons are activated by physical modalities such as visible light, sound, heat, physical contact, etc., or by chemical signals for example in the case of smell or taste.
2. Motor neuron (or motoneuron) classically applies to neurons located in the central nervous system (CNS) that project their axons outside the CNS to directly or indirectly control muscles. Motor neurons are efferent nerves also called effector neurons that carry signals from the spinal cord to the muscles to produce (effect) movement.
3. An interneuron (also called relay neuron, association neuron, connector neuron or local circuit neuron) is a neuron that forms a connection between other neurons. Interneurons are neither motor nor sensory. The term is also applied to brain and spinal cord neurons whose axons connect only with nearby neurons, to distinguish them from "projection" neurons, whose axons (projection fibers) project to more distant regions of the brain or spinal cord.

http://images.tutorvista.com/content/nervous-coordination/types-of-neurons.jpeg
      III. Neurotransmitters
    There are about 100 neurotransmitters that have been identified (which means some are still undiscovered). A group of neurons that communicate using the same neurotransmitter is called a neurotransmitter system.  Neurotransmitters are chemical messengers that traverse the synaptic gaps between neurons. When released, these travel across the synapse and bind to receptor sites on the receiving neuron, thereby influencing whether it will generate a neural impulse. Below are some of its types:
a) Acetylcholine is used by sets of neurons involved in controlling movement of the body, in making memories, and in slowing the heartbeat and activating the digestive system. Alzheimer’s disease may result from disruptions of this system.
b)  Norepinephrine affects arousal, wakefulness, learning, and mood. Disruptions of this system have been linked to depression.
c) Serotonin affects sleep, mood, aggression, and impulsive behaviors. Serotonin levels can be affected by what is eaten.
(1) Malfunctions in serotonin systems can result in mood and appetite problems seen in some types of obesity, premenstrual tension, and depression.
 (2) Antidepressant medications such as Prozac, Zoloft, and Paxil are thought to act on serotonin systems to relieve some of the symptoms of depression.
d) Dopamine is used by sets of neurons involved in controlling movement, and damage to these systems contributes to shakiness experienced by people with Parkinson’s disease. Other dopamine systems are involved in the experiencing of reward, or pleasure, which is vital in shaping and motivating behavior. Certain other dopamine systems are suspected to be responsible for the perceptual, emotional, and thought disturbances associated with schizophrenia.
e) GABA (gamma-amino butyric acid) is the main inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain—it slows down the brain’s neural activity.
(1) Some drugs amplify the inhibitory action of GABA. One example is alcohol, which results in impairments of thinking, judgment, and motor skills. Drugs that interfere with GABA’s inhibitory effects produce intense repetitive electrical discharges, known as seizures
(2) Impaired GABA systems are thought to contribute to severe anxiety, Huntington’s disease, and epilepsy.
f. Endorphins - natural opiates that mainly stimulates the firing of neurons. It shields the body from pain and elevates feelings of pleasure.


References: 


Carlson, N. R. (1997). Psychology: the science of behavior. Allyn & Bacon
Gazzaniga, M. S., Ivry, R. B., and Mangun, G. R. (1998). Cognitive neuroscience: the biology of the mind. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
Goldstein, E. B. (1999). Sensation and perception (5th ed.). Pacific Grove, CA:Brooks/Cole Pub.
Kolb, B. and Wishaw, I.Q. (1996). Fundamentals of human neuropsychology (4th ed.). New York, NY: Freeman.
Rosenzweig, M. R., Leiman, A.L., and Breedlove, S. M. (1999). Biological psychology: An introduction to behavioral, cognitive, and clinical neuroscience (2nd ed.). Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Associates, Inc.
http://serendip.brynmawr.edu/- Articles and links on the brain and behaviour.
http://www.neuroguide.com/ - Links to journals, images, and  resources.
http://anatomy.umas.edu/HTMLpages/anatomyhtml/neuro_atl as.html – Complete pictorial atlas of the brain.
http://www.cc.emory.edu/ANATOMY/AnatomyManual/nervous_system.html – Illustrated tutorial of the nervous system
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuroglia 
http://www2.estrellamountain.edu/faculty/farabee/biobk/biobooknerv.html