Applying Psychology
ANALYTIC PHILOSOPHY AND NARRATIVE
Why do some individuals experience stress when others in the same
circumstances do not? How has learning theory been applied to treatment for
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)? What are the psychological
explanations for autism? Are police officers better at detecting lies than the
rest of us? How is social cognition and memory research relevant to
interviewing witnesses to crime? What social psychological theories can
explain computer-mediated communication? Does psychoanalysis inform
our understanding of how we relate to others at work?
You will find the answers to these questions and a multitude of others in
Book 3, Applying Psychology, which is your final study block of the course.
Soon you will need to decide which questions you are most interested in, as
you are required to read only two of the seven chapters. To help you make
that decision, we would here like to introduce you to the different chapters
and to the volume as a whole. You will see that this book is concerned with
the application of psychological theories and research methods to problems
that are everyday ones for some individuals.
In response to the book’s title, Applying Psychology, you may be thinking
that the psychology you have already been studying in this course is relevant
to all our daily lives and experiences as human beings – memory, language,
identity and consciousness being just some of the examples that you have
already encountered. The topics in this book, however, are more obviously
linked to the practical application of psychology, and you may be surprised
by the extent to which psychology can be applied to our everyday lives – in
the workplace, for example, through topics such as computer-mediated
communication (Chapter 6) or relationships at work (Chapter 7).
In addition,
the topics reveal what professional applied psychologists do in their work;
for example, how health psychologists and occupational psychologists have
contributed to our understanding of stress (Chapter 1); how forensic
psychologists have assisted the interviewing of a child witnesses (Chapter 3);
and how clinical psychologists have approached PTSD (Chapter 2).
Through exploring psychology in these applied contexts, our overriding
aim is to enable you to see how psychologists have drawn widely on different
knowledge bases, perspectives and methods to facilitate our understanding
of complex issues. In Books 1 and 2, the focus was on the perspectives
themselves, and how they relate to each other. In Book 3, however, the
chapters are problem-centred, and show how psychologists have worked
within these perspectives to further our understanding of different problems
and issues. You will realize, reading these chapters, that everyday issues are
‘messy’, and that psychologists addressing problems often need to be eclectic
and pragmatic in drawing upon research and theory. You will also see how
professional psychologists draw on multiple perspectives and on data using
multiple methodologies. In brief, then, you will find out how the psychology
you have already learned can be addressed to applied issues.
445 Pages Of Valuable Information you need to know about Applying Psychology.
GET IT NOW
2.99
USD
InStock