revision cards for aqa psych paper 3 issues and debates topic. please excuse spelling or grammar mistakes! made entirely by me using the standard year 2 textbook, for reference i achieved an a* :)
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
AQA Psychology A Level Revision Cards - Issues And Debates Topic
1. Gender bias
Alpha bias: research that exaggerates the differences between the sexes,
often devaluing women (e.x. Freudian superego)
Beta bias: research that underestimates the differences between the sexes,
often leading to inadequate treatment for one sex (e.x. fight or flight
response not necessarily being the same in females)
Androcentrism: psychology has consequently presented a male-dominated
view of the world/the human mind, and females are often discarded by the
psychological industry and its research as a result
2. Gender bias – Eval
Biological vs social explanations: gender differences are often presented as
fixed and enduring when this is not always the case, for example boys as
‘doers’ and girls as ‘thinkers’; must be wary in accepting research as fact and
not just stereotype
However, this is not to discourage studying real gender differences in the
brain, which are suggested to be present through scans (females are better at
multitasking due to better neurological connections)
Sexism in research: gender bias promotes sexism in the research progress, and
can produce biased results that draw bias conclusions as a result of internal
prejudice
Gender-biased research: research that challenges gender bias may not be
published; gender bias research is funded less often and is published by less
prestigious journals, it may not be taken as seriously as other forms of bias
3. Cultural bias
Ethnocentrism: a particular form of cultural bias that refers to the thought
normality of one’s own ethnic group, and judging other groups based on
the standards and values of one’s own. For example, Ainsworth’s Strange
Situation is ethnocentric as it is based on the workings of the
western/American child-rearing practice
Cultural relativism: the idea that norms and standards of a certain culture
can only be understood meaningfully in the context of that culture, within
specific social and cultural contexts
Etic approach: looking at behaviour from outside of a given culture and
attempting to ascribe that as universal
Emic approach: looking at behaviour inside a given culture and identifying
behaviours specific to that culture
4. Cultural bias – Eval
Classic studies: many of the most influential studies in psychology are culturally bias,
working from western norms and ascribing them to other cultures (e.x. Ainsworth’s,
Milgram, Asch etc.), and when reproduced in other cultures did not produce the same
results- meaning that our understanding of psychology as a whole could be limited due
to cultural bias
However, in an age of globalisation, many behaviours and norms previously isolated
have begun to spread across cultures, suggesting that findings in certain cultures may
become more generalisable
Cultural psychology: due to the discovering of cultural bias, cultural psychology has
emerged; this psychology aims to understand how people are shaped by their cultural
experience, which will lead to a richer understanding of the human condition and means
psychologists are mindful of the bias’ existence when researching
Ethnic stereotyping: psychological findings can and have been used to create racial
prejudice, for example early US intelligence tests were centred on a US cultural
experience, and those who were not white or US citizens scored lowly- instead of being
taken as a sign of inadequacy, it was used to fuel prejudice and incorrect stereotyping
5. Free will and determinism
Free will: the notion that humans can make choices and their
behaviour/thoughts are not determined by biological or external forces
Determinism: the view that an individual’s behaviour is shaped or controlled by
internal or external forces rather than individual will
Hard determinism: all behaviour is caused by a discoverable something/free
will is an illusion
Soft determinism: personal choice exists but behaviour is most often
predictable and influenced
Types of determinism: biological (behaviour is influenced by biological
mechanisms), environmental (behaviour is influenced by uncontrollable factors
of environment), psychic (behaviour is influenced by unconscious
psychodynamic conflicts)
Scientific approaches usually ascribe to hard determinism as science itself
states that there is a cause to everything, and so many lab studies in
psychology become determinist
6. Free will and determinism – Eval
Practical value: free will has practical value as it appears as common sense
to the general public and therefore is more generalisable, and it improves
mental health to think such
Research evidence: brain scans tend to support determinism, as in
experiments of ‘choosing’ to move, the brain had more unconscious motor
activity beforehand
However, these experiments only show that the brain is involved in
decision-making, not that our decisions are determined
The law: if determinism were to become the popular view, then there
would be a large question of criminal responsibility- if all actions are
determined, is it viable to punish an individual for committing crimes that
were ‘predetermined’ by some uncontrollable factor?
7. Nature-nurture
Nature: refers to the idea that human characteristics are innate due to genetics and heredity
Nurture: refers to the idea that human characteristics and behaviour are influences by our
environment and how we develop as children/adolescents
Nature and nurture are often measured through twin studies using concordance rates
The interactionist approach: nature and nurture are not seen as lone influences on all
behaviour and characteristics, most often in psychology it is studied what contribution each
makes to a certain trait or behaviour, for example how influential genetics or early
relationships are on mental health/disorders
Diathesis-stress model: an extension of the interactionist approach, this states that to have a
certain trait (usually used in reference to mental illnesses) one will usually have a dormant
biological or environmental vulnerability that can be ‘triggered’ by an additional biological or
environmental influence
Epigenetics: refers to a change in genetic activity without a change to the gene itself, through
environmental influences- for example, permanently lowered lung capacity after extended
smoking- that can affect an individual for the rest of their life and even pass to their children
8. Nature-nurture – Eval
Adoption studies: adoption studies are useful in research into the nature-nurture debate
as they separate the competing influences, and can allow for detailed insight into each
potential influence on behaviour
However, it is questionable whether nature and nurture can be truly separated, and
therefore whether any research trying to do such has any meaningful conclusions that
can be applied to life
Epigenetics: there is support for epigenetics in that during the Dutch Hunger War of
1944, babies born were of low birth weights and were twice as likely to develop
schizophrenia in adulthood than average populations, showing that previous
generations’ life experiences can leave epigenetic ‘markers’ on offspring
Real-world application: OCD is an extremely heritable disorder, and so the existence of
research into nature-nurture can allow individuals who carry the genetics for the
disorder to access advice about the likelihood of offspring and adequate treatment for
the disorder, showing the practicality of nature-nurture as not just a theoretical debate
9. Holism and reductionism
Holism: an argument or theory which proposes that it only makes sense to
study an indivisible system rather than its constituent parts
Reductionism: the belief that human behaviour is best understood by
studying the smaller constituent parts
Levels of explanation: socio-cultural, psychological, physical,
environmental/behavioural, physiological, neurochemical
Biological reductionism: a form of reductionism which attempts to explain
behaviour at the lowest biological level
Environmental reductionism: the attempt to explain all behaviour in terms
of stimulus-response links that have been learned through experience
10. Holism and reductionism – Eval
Practical value: holism lacks this, as holistic accounts of human behaviour
become hard to apply to real-life scenarios and are too complex to explain to
the average individual, whereas reductionism may have more practical value
Scientific approach: reductionist approaches often ascribe to the scientific
approach and therefore gain more validity within most psychological spheres
of influence
However, reductionist approaches have been criticised for simplifying complex
phenomena, and this reduces its validity rather than adds to it- they can only
form part of an explanation
Higher level: some behaviours can only be understood fully at a higher level of
explanation, and it trying to reduce this down to a lower level, reductionist
approaches may miss crucial detail that holism will not
11. Idiographic and nomothetic
Idiographic approach: an approach to research that focuses more on the individual case
as a means of understanding behaviour, rather than aiming to understand the
phenomena as a whole
Nomothetic approach: aims to study human behaviour through the development of
general principles and universal laws of characteristics or behaviours
Most idiographic research is qualitative, and is most likely to be conducted in the form
of case studies or interviews with small sample groups, an example of this being in the
humanistic and psychodynamic approaches
Most nomothetic research is quantitative, and tends to use larger sample sizes with
more scientific method, and example of this being in the behaviourist and biological
approaches (e.g. split-brain research)
Objective vs subjective: objectivity is at the core of the nomothetic approach, whereas
those working in idiographic research might believe that objectivity in psychology is
practically impossible if one wants the full image of behaviour
12. Idiographic and nomothetic – Eval
Complete account: the idiographic approach can help fill in the gaps missed
by the broadness of a nomothetic account of behaviour, completing the full
understanding of that aspect, suggesting the use of an interactionist approach
However, it is still important that supporters of the idiographic approach
acknowledge the narrow and restricted nature of their work, as it is difficult to
build effective general theories of human behaviour in the absence of
nomothetic research
Scientific credibility: both approaches fit with the aims of science, and both
raise psychology’s status as a science and have their own individual uses within
it
Losing the person: a concern with the nomothetic approach is that is
medicalises human behaviour far too much, and loses the individual person in
attempting to formulate general laws, it fails to relay experience
13. Ethical implications
Ethical implications: the consequences of any research in terms of the effects on the individual
participants or on the way in which certain groups of people are subsequently regarded; there
may also be consequences on a wider societal level
Social sensitivity: defined by Sieber and Stanley (1988) as studies in which there are potential
consequences or implications, either directly for the participants or for the class of individuals
represented by the research
Implications for the research process: all stages of planning and conducting a study are
important when thinking of social sensitivity, as well as later in handling the findings
Research question: the way in which research questions are phrased or worded can have an
effect on the way in which findings are interpreted
Dealing with ppts: issues such as informed consent, confidentiality, psychological harm are
particularly important in SSR, as studies could reveal private information about individuals
that are not meant to be publicly known
The way findings are used: researchers should consider in advance how they are going to use
these findings, as well as how they will be used in the wider world, whilst considering whether
or not to publish their work- conclusions with good intentions still have the potential to be
purposefully misinterpreted to fuel agendas
14. Ethical implications – Eval
Benefits for groups: SSR can have benefits for marginalised groups, such as
anonymous interviews with gay individuals by Kinsey (1948) that eventually
had homosexuality removed from the DSM as a mental illness, illustrating the
importance of SSR
However, it can also have the opposite effects, such as with the supposed
research on a ‘criminal gene’ that can lead to both class and race prejudices,
demonstrating the need for careful consideration in terms of SSR
Real-world application: real world groups (e.g. policymakers) rely on SSR to
make adequate policy or rules related to investigated groups, demonstrating
the need for SSR to be conducted to high quality and its importance
Poor research design: bad designs may lead to erroneous findings in SSR, and
this can have dire consequences for affected groups, for example the UK 11+
that is still used despite proof that it is an inadequate measure of a child’s
academic potential, showing the need for SSR to be very carefully planned