"Psychodynamic and cognitive perspectives" Essays and Research Papers

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    Our judgement is affected by cognitive biases‚ “a cognitive bias refers to systematic patterns of deviation from norm or rationality in judgement‚ whereby inferences about other people and situations may be drawn in an illogical fashion” (Wikipedia‚ 2016). In simpler terms cognitive biases are natural ways our brains work that causes distortions or errors in thought or judgement. There are multiple types of cognitive biases‚ three examples I have experienced are confirmation bias‚ representativeness

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    mental health and recovery field‚ where I currently work. I see a lot of Cognitive-Behavioral theory. At my work place we have a large poster on the wall with a list of safe coping skills. Since my job is a 24 hour temporary crisis stay we see many individuals daily in and out. I’m fairly new to the field and company. I’m coming up on my 1 year there on-call‚ but I do see many people at their worst of times and the Cognitive-Behavioral Theory comes to mind. As I read through the chapter I couldn’t

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    Social Cognitive Theory

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    Social Cognitive Theory: Its Concepts and Affects in the Classroom Stefanie Daniels Edu 1001 Dr. Trasborg St. John ’s University Social cognitive theory serves as an explanation that an individual’s knowledge is obtained by observing others within the context of social interactions‚ experiences‚ and outside media influences. This theory can be executed in typically three areas of study that expand broadly from them. They are: psychology‚ communications‚ and education

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    Atticus Perspectives

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    Harper Lee‚ the author of To Kill a Mockingbird‚ wrote her novel with the intentions of showing people that people’s actions and perspectives or ways of thinking reflect their morals or beliefs. Each perspective of each person was different according to their age‚ sex‚ race‚ economic background and many other factors. Reading this novel showed that not everyone sees things the same way or understands why some people do the things they do. Atticus teaches Scout that sometimes breaking the rules is

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    The cognitive dissonance theory states that if there is a discrepancy – an aversive emotional state – between our beliefs and behaviors‚ we are likely to experience inconsistency between these two cognitions. For instance‚ if you smoke‚ despite knowing that smoking is harmful‚ then this may result in cognitive dissonance. Furthermore‚ the college students who put themselves through hazing to join a fraternity could be another example. These students also most likely to experience cognitive dissonance

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    help them with out having to do a lot. Infants ( Cognitive & Language Development) Put a mobile over the crib‚ he/she will enjoy it Let them listen to classical music Read to infants. They may not understand you but it helps develop early literacy skills Play peek-a-boo Let the infant play with an unbreakable mirror so they can see their reflection Sing/Talk to infants during feeding and while changing diapers Toddlers (Cognitive & Language Development) While reading to toddlers‚

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    Cognitive Dissonance is a psychological discomfort caused by inconsistency among a person’s belief‚ attitudes‚ and or actions. There are three hypotheses that explain the theory. The first hypothesis is selective exposure which is the tendency to avoid information inconsistent with one’s belief and attitudes. One only accepts information that is consistent with their own thoughts. Hypothesis two is post-decision dissonance; which are close call decisions and can affect a decision one makes. And

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    Cognitive Restructuring Schemas Renay Gartner‚ Psy.D • First‚ an example: Cognitive Restructuring • Thinking errors or cognitive distortions were identified early on (Beck 1976‚ Beck et al 1979‚ Beck et al 1985b) from clinical observations • Biases lead people to selectively focus attention on the negative and/or not attend/discount contrary information – in line with their dysfunctional schema – Schema = core organizing beliefs or personal meaning structures; out of awareness

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    Conflicting Perspectives

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    What is your understanding of “ truth” after your study of conflicting perspectives and their representation? The notion of truth being a defined reasoning and represented as a one sided argument is unmistakably how most audiences visualize it. The concept cannot be interpreted in such close mindedness‚ as to tell the truth is to speak what appears “truthful” to “you”. Conflicting perspectives arise when the visualization of how feasible or veracious something is differs between individuals. The

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    Cognitive science‚ in the study of how organisms process information as well carry out life functions. The study of Cognitive science is said to have been originated in the 1940’s and 1950’s when researchers in various fields of science began to develop theories on the mind based on "complex representations and computational procedures" (Thagard‚ Cognitive Science). There are numerous branches of science whose theories contributed to the development of Coginitive Science. These subdivisions include

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