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AQA PSYCHOLOGY PAPER 1 2024 QUESTIONS WITH COMPLETE SOLUTIONS GRADED A+
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They thought that the allocation of roes was random, but it was predetermined. They also thought the shocks were real. Milgram dealt with this by debriefing participants. However, Baumrind (1964) criticised Milgram for deceiving his participants - lasting psychological consequences for ppts and researchers. Research support - findings were replicated in a French documentary (Le Jeu de la Mort) - their behaviour was almost identical to that of Milgram's ppts - nervous laughter, nail-biting and other signs of anxiety. Supports Milgram's findings about obedience to authority, and demonstrated that the findings were NOT just due to special circumstances. Low internal validity - may not have been testing what it was meant to be - Milgram said 75% of ppts said they believed the shocks were genuine/Orne and Holland (1968) argued that ppts were 'play-acting'. This suggests that ppts may have been responding to demand characteristics, trying to fulfil the aims of the study."
may influence a person's behaviour."
studies support the role of the agentic state in obedience. Most of Milgram's ppts resisted giving the shocks at some point - asked the EXPERIMENTER 'who is responsible if Mr Wallace is harmed?'. When they were told they were not responsible they continued with no objection. Explains cultural differences - many studies have shown that countries differ in the degree to which people are obedient to legitimate authority. Kilham and Mann (1974) found that only 16% of Australian women went all the way up to 450 volts in a Milgram-style study. However, David Mantell (1971) found 85% obedience in German ppts. Shows that, in some cultures, authority is more likely to be accepted as legitimate. Reflects the structure of society and how children are raised."
personality) that influence behaviour."
Personality: a personality that is susceptible to obeying people in authority. Thought be submissive to a higher authority and dismissive of inferiors.
Origins of AP: harsh parenting (conditional love) results in hostility but cannot be expressed so is displaced onto weaker others (scapegoating)."
over 2000 middle-class white Americans and their unconscious attitudes to ethnic groups. Procedure: used the F-scale to measure Authoritarian Personality. (F-scale: agree/disagree with items - 'obedience and respect for authority are the most important virtues children should learn'). Findings: high F-scale score linked with identification with the 'strong, contempt for the weak' (Authoritarian Personality)."
Milgram interviewed a small sample of people who had participated in the original study (F- scale). 20 obedient ppts scored higher on the F-scale than a comparison of 20 disobedient ppts. Political bias - the F-scale only measures right-wing ideologies. Christie and Jahoda (1954) argued that the F-scale is politically biased. Extreme right and left-wing ideologies both emphasise the importance of obedience to political authority. Adorno's theory does not account for obedience to authority across the whole political spectrum."
(visual = iconic/acoustic = echoic. Duration is less than half a second. Capacity is unlimited. To move to STS, we must pay attention to it. STM: Acoustically coded. Duration is 18s unless it is rehearsed, otherwise it is forgotten. Capacity is 5-9 items (7 +/- 9). Maintenance rehearsal passes it to LTM. LTM: Semantically coded. Duration = lifetime. Capacity is unlimited.
Procedure: he reared 16 baby monkeys with 2 wire model 'mothers'. In one condition the milk was dispensed by the plain-wire mother/in the other the milk was dispensed by the cloth- covered mother. Findings: baby monkeys sought comfort from the cloth-covered mother, regardless of which mother dispensed milk. Supports contact-comfort. Also concluded that there was a critical period for attachment - 90 days. If maternally deprived, they lacked the ability to form relationships (were neglective, aggressive and less sociable)."
an unfamiliar playroom.
attachment: explore happily but often go back to their caregiver. Moderate separation and stranger anxiety. Require comfort in the reunion stage. 60-70% of babies are secure. Insecure-avoidant: explore freely, do not seek proximity. No stranger or separation anxiety. Do not require comfort on reunion. 20-25%. Insecure-resistant: seek proximity, explore less. High levels of stranger and separation anxiety. Resist comfort on reunion. 3%."
critical period - Koluchova (!976) found that in the case of the Czech Twins (experienced abuse 18 months - 7 years old) a critical period does not apply. Sensitive period - received care, by their teens they had recovered. Research support - Gao et al. (2010) found that poor maternal care is associated with high rates of psychopathy in adults."
setting (hospital/orphanage) on children's attachment and later development."
study of the cognitive and social development of orphans adopted in England aged 4-15 and 22-
Findings: some attachment problems (disinhibited attachment) and low IQ in those adopted after 6 months."
longitudinal study of the social development of orphans fostered in Romania. Findings: there was higher levels of insecure and disinhibited attachment i n children who remained in institutions and were not fostered."
(overly-friendly and affectionate) and delayed intellectual development (low IQ)."
improved understanding of the effects of institutional care (Langton, 2006). Led to improvement in conditions. Children in care have a chance to develop normal attachments/avoid disinhibited attachments. Social sensitivity - results show that late-adopted children have poor developmental outcomes."
Mowrer (1960) argued that phobias are acquired through classical conditioning and maintained by operant conditioning.
SSRIs increase levels of serotonin at the synapse - compensates for the low levels of serotonin in people with OCD. Often used alongside CBT to treat OCD."
Cost-effective and non-disruptive to people's lives - many doses can be manufactured in the time it takes to conduct one session of therapy. Ability for people to take drugs until their symptoms decline - different to therapy where you have to set time aside. Popular with patients/doctors. Serious side-effects - drugs will not benefit a minority of people. Indigestion, blurred vision. Side effects are temporary but distressing. Stops people from taking them, making them ineffective."
individual has little autonomy and carries out the acts of their "Agent" The shift from exercising free will to agency and obeying others is known as the agentic shift."
DEPARTMENT - they need to show consistency, commitment and flexibility. Consistency is the minority keeping the same beliefs, both other time and between all the individuals that form the minority. - IN THE CASE OF JENNY SHE COULD SHOW THIS BY CONTINUALLY REPEATING THE SAME MESSAGE ON BENEFITS OF VERBAL FEEDBACK - "IT PREVENTS STUDENTS FROM BEING DISTRACTED OVER GRADES" - IN EACH OF THE DEPARTMENT MEETINGS Commitment is the minority demonstrating their dedication to their position. JENNY COULD SHOW THIS BY EXPLAINING THE PERSONAL SACRIFICE SHE HAS MADE BY INVESTING TIME IN RESEARCHING AND WORKING HARD ENSURING STUDENTS HAVE QUALITY FEEDBACK. Flexibility is that the minority must accept compromise and debate and understand others views. JENNY COULD SHOW THIS BY LISTENING TO OTHER'S IN THE DEPARTMENT AND COMING TO A COMPROMISE - LIKE A TRIAL OF HER METHODS - THIS WILL HELP HER APPEAR LESS RIGID" "Discuss what psychological research has found about conformity
Conformity is a change in a person's behaviour or opinions as a result of pressure. There are three types of conformity - internalisation(deepest from - accept as we see as correct),identification(moderate - act with the group as we want to be apart of it ) and compliance (superficial and temporary privately disagree) Two explanations of conformity - Informational social influence - we agree with the opinion because we believe it to be correct - we accept it because we want to be correct Normative social influence - we agree with the opinion of the majority as we want to be accepted, gain social approval and be liked." "Discuss what psychological research has found about conformity
some trials and found that out of 18 and 12 critical trials. 75% of PPT's conformed at least once. The PPT gave the wrong answer 36.8%. The study provided support for NSI. In post-experimental interview participants said that they changed their answer to avoid disapproval from the rest of the group which clearly shows that NSI had occurred, as the participants conformed to fit in. When ppt's wrote down answers conformity rates fell to 12.5% provided further evidence for NSI because the reduction in public pressure reduced the rate of conformity." "Discuss what psychological research has found about conformity
Spencer conducted an Asch-style experiment and found a conformity level of 0.25%. Therefore, it could be argued that the results of Asch are the results of a different era and do not represent conformity and the idea of NSI in 2017. Their sample was of English engineering students. So they could argue that the level of conformity differed due to PPT'S expertise in problem-solving tasks." "Discuss what psychological research has found about conformity -
initially make independent judgements about the number of jelly beans contained in a jar and then discuss their estimates in a group. Following the discussion, participants then made another individual private estimate. The second private estimate moved closer to the group estimate and that females typically conformed more. This shows that ISI will occur in unfamiliar, ambiguous situations as the participants believed they gained knowledge from the group and are now more likely to be right. While Jenness provides convincing evidence for the role of ISI, it must be noted that his experiment has been criticised for lacking ecological validity. Providing an estimate of the number of beans in a jar is a rather mundane task with no social consequences. Consequently,
Reverse the order - Events shouldn't be recalled in chronological order to prevent people reporting their expectations."
forgetting because one memory blocks another, causing one or both memories to be distorted or forgotten. Proactive interference - forgetting occurs when older memories, already stored, disrupt the recall of newer memories. The degree of forgetting is greater when the memories are similar. Retroactive interference - forgetting occurs when newer memories disrupt the recall of older memories already stored. The degree of forgetting is again greater when the memories are similar."
The absence of cues that were present when we learnt the information (encoding) being there when we recall leads to more forgetting. There are two examples of cues: context-dependent forgetting (external cues) and state-dependant forgetting (internal cues.) Context-dependent forgetting - environment can make a difference - in Godden and Baddeley's experiment those who recalled and learnt in the same place had 40% higher recall rate. State-dependent forgetting -when there is a mismatch between internal state at the cues and recall (for example, you are drowsy when recalling information but had been alert learning it) then there is more forgetting." "Evaluate this explanation of
which has supported interference. Thousands of studies have been carried out into forgetting, including McGeoch and McDonald's research. Most of these studies have shown both types of interference are very likely to be common ways we forgot information from LTM. This is a strength because lab studies control the effects of irrelevant influences and thus give us confidence that interference is a valid explanation for at least some forgetting" "Evaluate this explanation of forgetting? -
retrieval failure explanation of forgetting. Studies by Godden and Baddeley and Carter and Cassaday are two examples of research. This is a strength because supporting evidence increases the validity of an explanation - especially true when the evidence shows that retrieval failure occurs in real-life situations as well as in highly controlled conditions of the lab."
children showed signs of retardation. There is damage to intellectual development. Disinhibited attachment - children are equally friendly to all people, struggle to make friends their age & inappropriate physical affection."
Half the eggs were hatched with the mother goose in the their natural environment - a control group, The other half hatched in an incubator where the first moving object they saw was Lorenz. The following behaviour, of either the mother goose or Lorenz, was recorded to indicate attachment. Lorenz then marked the goslings so he knew in which condition they were hatched and then placed them under an upside-down box. The box was then removed and their following behaviour of the mother goose and Lorenz was recorded again to see if they were attached to the mother or to Lorenz."
sample of sixteen baby rhesus monkeys were used across the four caged conditions: 'wire mother - milk,towelling mother - no milk, 'wire mother' - no milk and 'towelling mother' - dispensing milk, 3. 'wire mother' dispensing milk, 4. 'towelling mother' dispensing milk. The amount of time the baby rhesus monkey spent with each mother was recorded alongside how long they spent feeding at each one as an indicator of their attachment. To test for mother preference (and therefore attachment) during periods of stress, the monkeys were startled with a loud noise and their responses recorded." "Outline and evaluate learning theory and Bowlby's monotropic theory
theory is split into two: operant conditioning and classical conditioning. Classical conditioning involves associating two stimuli together so that we can respond to one in the same way we originally responded to the other. For attachment, food serves as an unconditioned stimulus. Being fed gives us pleasure - we don't have to learn that - it's an unconditioned response. A caregiver starts as a neutral stimulus. When the same person provides food over time they're associated with food. The NS has become the CS. Once conditioning has taken place the sight of the caregiver produces a conditioned response of pleasure." "Outline and evaluate learning theory and Bowlby's monotropic theory
conditioning - learning to repeat behaviour as it's reinforced. Operant conditioning explains why babies cry for comfort - an important behaviour in building attachment. Crying leads to a
model. They found a positive correlation between early attachment types and later adult relationships. This supports Bowlby's idea of an internal working model and suggests that our early childhood experiences do affect our later adult relationships."
"Discuss the cognitive approach to treating depression
Cognitive theories for explaining depression include Beck's Cognitive Triad and Ellis's A-B-C Model. Beck claimed depression is caused by negative self-schemas and cognitive biases that maintain a cognitive (negative) triad: a negative view of ourselves, the future and the world around us. According to Beck, depressed people possess negative self-schemas, caused by negative experiences in childhood, for example, criticism from parents. Furthermore, Beck found that depressed people are more likely to focus on the negative aspects of a situation, while ignoring the positives. This distorts information, a process known as cognitive bias, and includes overgeneralising. For example, 'I've failed one test so I will fail ALL of my exams!'" "Discuss the cognitive approach to treating depression
Ellis proposed the A-B-C three-stage model, to explain how irrational thoughts can lead to depression. An activating event (A) occurs, for example, you pass a friend in the corridor at school and they ignore you, when you say 'hello'. Your belief (B) is your interpretation, which could either be rational or irrational. According to Ellis, an irrational belief (e.g. 'my friend must hate me') can lead to unhealthy emotional consequences (C), including depression." "Discuss the cognitive approach to treating depression
strength of the cognitive explanation for depression is its application to therapy. Cognitive explanations have been used to develop effective treatments for depression, including Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), and Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy (REBT), which was developed from Ellis's ABC model. These therapies attempt to identify and challenge negative, irrational thoughts and have been successfully used to treat people with depression, providing further support to the cognitive explanation of depression." "Discuss the cognitive approach to treating depression
However, one weakness of the cognitive approach is that it does not explain the origins of
irrational thoughts. Since most of the research in this area is correlational psychologists are therefore unable to determine if negative, irrational thoughts cause depression, or whether a person's depression leads to a negative mindset. Consequently, it is possible that other factors, for example, genes and neurotransmitters, are the cause of depression and the negative, irrational thoughts are the symptom of depression." "Discuss the cognitive approach to treating depression
addition, there are alternative explanations which suggest that depression is a biological condition, caused by genes and neurotransmitters. Research focused on the role of serotonin has found lower levels in patients with depression. In addition, drug therapies, including SSRIs (Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibiters), which increase the level of serotonin, are found to be effective in the treatment of depression, which provide further support for the role of neurotransmitters, in the development of depression. This therefore casts doubt on the cognitive explanation as a sole cause of the disorder." "Discuss the cognitive approach to treating depression
There is research evidence which supports the cognitive explanation of depression. Boury et al. (2001) found that patients with depression were more likely to misinterpret information negatively (cognitive bias) and feel hopeless about their future (cognitive triad). Further to this, Bates et al. (1999) gave depressed patients negative automatic thought statements to read and found that their symptoms became worse. These findings support different components of Beck's theory and the idea that negative thinking is involved in depression."
follows a direct order from a figure of authority."
answer to why such a high proportion of the German population obeyed Hitler's commands to murder over 6 million Jews in the Holocaust and other social groups during WW2. Procedure: 40 US men were given the role of TEACHER through a fixed draw - ordered to administer (fake) electric shocks to LEARNER (confederate) by an EXPERIMENTER, increased by 15 volts with each mistake made on memory task - reaching 450 volts. Findings: no ppts stopped before 300 volts and 65% went all the way to 450 volts. Many showed signs of stress, most objected by continued anyways (qualitative observations). Findings were unexpected - 14 students introspectively predicted that no more than 3% of the participants would continue to 450 volts.
Binding factors (aspects of the situation) maintain us in an agentic state they allow us to minimise obedient behaviour and reduce moral strain. Legitimacy of authority: some people have positions of authority because they have been entrusted by society with certain powers and responsibilities (head teachers/police/doctors)."
withstand the social pressure to conform to the majority or to obey authority. Influenced by both situational and dispositional factors."
to conform/obey (dissenters). Act as role models."
found that adolescents with an older 'buddy' were more likely to resist the pressure to smoke than a control group of ppts who did not have a 'buddy'. Research support of the role of dissenting peers (link to obedience) - Gamson et al (1982) told ppts to produce evidence for an oil campaign in groups. Found higher levels of resistance that Milgram did - groups/discussion. 29/33 groups rebelled. Shows that peer support undermined legitimate authority."
have control over their life. Internal locus of control: they are responsible for what happens to them. External locus of control: luck/other outside forces."
repeated Milgram's study to measure LOC. Found 37% of internals and 23% of externals did not go the 450v. Shows resistance is related to LOC - increased validity of LOC as an explanation of disobedience. Contradictory research - Twenge et al. (2004) analysed data - found that over a 40-year period, people became more resistant to obedience, but also more external (would expect more internals). Suggests that locus of control is not a valid explanation of how people resist social influence."
influence individuals in a larger group to accept their beliefs (leads to internalisation)."
minority stays united (synchronic) and maintains views over time (diachronic)."
views. Augmentation principle - personal sacrifices show minority not acting out of self-interest."
counterargument from majority."
minority view, then the snowball effect takes place = minority view becomes majority."
(1970) found that KF's (could not recall words spoken to him, but could when he read them himself) phonological loop was damaged but his visuo-spatial sketchpad was intact. Supports separate visual and acoustic stores. Low external validity - studies used to test memory models are artificial - recalling sequences of numbers and letters. Also carried out in highly-controlled lab conditions."
suggested the cognitive interview be used to improve the accuracy of EWT. It uses psychological insights."
everything (even irrelevant details).
when to establish eye contact. Ideas to reduce anxiety and distractions. Witness speaks slowly. Open-ended questions."
by Kohnken et al. (1999) found the cognitive interview to be 41% more accurate than regular interviews. Shows its effective.
Schaffer and Emerson (1964) found that a significant amount of babies formed multiple attachments at the same time/argued that the first attachment is 'different' NOT more important. Support for the IWM - Bailey et al. (2007) found that mothers with poor attachment to their own primary attachment figures were more likely to have poorly attached babies."
observation procedure designed to measure the security of attachment a baby displays towards a caregiver - uses a one-way mirror/camera. Lab experiment."
good inter-rater reliability. Bick et al. (2012) found a 94% inter-rater agreement on attachment type. Does not depend on subjective judgements. Culture-bound: developed in the UK and US. Mother separation is rare in Japan - Takahashi (1986) found high levels of separation anxiety in babies (more than 3% were resistant)."
at the proportions of attachment types across countries - cultural variation. Procedure: meta-analysed 32 studies of attachment types. Findings: in all countries secure was the most common attachment type. Difference in rates is resistance and insecure in individualist and collectivist cultures. More variation of attachment types within the same country than between countries."
Conducted by indigenous psychologists - issues with cross-cultural research is avoided (misunderstandings/bias). High validity of data collected. Imposed etic - behaviours measured in the 'Strange Situation' may not have the same meanings in other cultural contexts."
that mother-love is as important for mental health as vitamins are for physical.
Prolonged separation from a primary attachment figure in first 2.5 years of life = lack of emotional care = serious consequences (low IQ, affectionless psychopathy - inability to feel guilt and empathy)."
assessed for affectionless psychopathy, early separations established through interviews with parents. Findings: 14 affectionless thieves, of which 12 had early separations."
Childhood relationships: securely attached children have better friendships. Insecure-resistant are bullies, insecure-avoidant and victims (Wilson and Myron-Smith, 1998). Adult relationships/friendships: securely attached adults tend to have better relationships (McCarthy, 1999). Parenting: securely attached adults tend to form secure attachments to their own children (Bailey et al., 2007)."
confounded with other factors. Research support - Roisman at el. (2017) concluded that early attachment predicts later attachment."
behaviour is classified as abnormal if it is rare or statistically unusual. Deviation from social norms: behaviour is abnormal is if violates social norms. Deviation from ideal mental heath: do not have a positive view of ourselves, do not have the capability for self-development and is not independent. Failure to function adequately: considered abnormal if they cannot cope with the demands of everyday life."
mental illness.