Man i've recently gotten into psychology (my original background is in music) i did 3 athabasca courses as a pre req for masters of music therapy in canada, and i gotta tell you, you do a very good job in repressenting your ideas. the amount of articulation you have in your speach is impresive, i have been teaching piano for 8 years now and i'm super into theory and music therapy and would be very greatful if you can talk about music and psychology in a video. Thanks for your hard work!
Thanks for the compliments! Playing music has always been an important hobby of mine, but I don't have any background in music therapy, maybe it's something I can spend more time looking into and talk about in the future.
5:07 I need to ask, which research methods are used to find out which information is in which level of consciousness? What possible ways are there for such a quest? Qualitative methods are used most? After all we can't see thoughts and information by looking at the brain (yet): we only got the testimony of the subject, yes? Does this field of psychology suffer from subjectivity?
Another great question. While conscious information would be easiest to assess (participants can report it), assessing preconscious might include things that can be brought to mind by prompting (such as recognizing something when attention is directed to it). Subconscious/unconscious influences are more difficult to identify and attempts to measure these often use implicit measurements such as reaction time, blinking rate, galvanic skin response, etc. to stimuli, rather than participants' conscious responses. As you note, this can lead to subjectivity in interpreting results, and this has been a major issue for replicating studies on things like priming. Finally, nonconscious would be for information that seems to be impossible for an individual to have access to, even though the body is controlling it, such as liver or digestive functioning, specific brain activity, or release of neurotransmitters controlling muscle contraction, etc. Even knowing all the details of these biological processes doesn't allow people to have access to them as they occur in their own bodies. Hope this helps!
@PsychExamReview Do you have a video about the subconscious and unconscious influences and inform structure and the methods of inquiry? I went to the consciousness playlist and you didn't address these (your second paragraph here).
@@ZoiusGM I don't have a video specifically on this topic (maybe I will make some more detailed methods videos in the future) but I explain an example and the challenges of studying things like subconscious attitudes in this video on the implicit association test: ruclips.net/video/Qn6YdJpuejg/видео.htmlsi=W7RucXEJXhyT31MH
Forensic psychology combines general psychology with criminology (the study of crime) and the legal system. Being in forensic psychology I can assure you that it's not all Sherlock Holmes stuff.... you'll slog day in and day out to prepare legal reports about victims and accused.
hello sir can you please make refreshed videos on psychology with more content and video length will be extremely grateful if you do so , more over enjoying your playlist
I'm hoping to eventually remake videos for some of the older topics that are better quality, though it may take some time for me to get to these. For the moment I'm focusing on new videos for statistical methods though I may also make some more detailed review videos for each unit in introductory psychology. Thanks for commenting!
Could you make a video about "Thinking"? 🥺 I'm watching your introduction to psychology course. It's really helpful for my exam. But I need to know more about "Thinking" 😢.
If you have more specific areas of thinking maybe I can provide more help, but this playlist on cognition may be helpful: ruclips.net/p/PLkKvotUGCyLchrXdVSumXAEDDIlwZUoib&si=2NnEI1L5sbYTT1Gt
I have some videos introducing approaches to treatment in the playlist below. I'm not trained as a counselor or clinical psychologist, but maybe I can add some more advanced topics in the future. ruclips.net/p/PLkKvotUGCyLdI27RQn2uFjQNj1ElbJOIh&si=RLyG-EBHIsfiZUj6
hi i am a psychology student and interested in cognitive psychology. so i plan to specialize in this field. Can you suggest me something about it before graduation? For instance; strongly recommended books, which undergraduate courses should i focus on more , other topics etc. and also i wonder your opinions about the future of cognitive psychology. what experts can do etc.
Without knowing which topics in cognitive psychology you'd like to focus on, a general recommendation would be to focus on learning as much as you can about statistical methods and data analysis, since this will be important preparation for any area of research. It's an area that many psychology students struggle with and being prepared will give you a strong advantage. As for the future, given a number of recent issues with replication failures and even fraud in psychological research, I think skills in data analysis for young researchers will be even more important than they have been in the past. Hope this helps!
Hii Michael, I hope you're doing well. I had a suggestion regarding the Intro to Psych Playlist of yours having 245 videos. If you can merge all those parts into a single video of 35 hours, it would be much easier to study from. It is way too overwhelming to start the playlist knowing there's like 200 more of these short videos left. I hope you'll consider my request and make it into 1 big course in a single video.
Hi, I think there's a 12hr cap on total video length, but maybe I could create one long video for each unit, as it would also shorten the intro and outro time. Thanks for the suggestion!
Sure, my book is Master Introductory Psychology, and is available on Amazon here: amzn.to/48N29Xl It's also available as a series of ebooks from several ebook sellers. If you have any questions you can email me at psychexamreview at gmail.com
i learn more on here in 22 minutes, than 1 hour classes every day in person with a teacher handing me paper expecting me to know it without explaining
@@Unfortunately-dv5vq A bit sad to hear that but I hope my videos can be a helpful supplement to your class and you continue learning!
could not have explained it or broken it down any better myself
Insightful and interesting as always❤
Man i've recently gotten into psychology (my original background is in music) i did 3 athabasca courses as a pre req for masters of music therapy in canada, and i gotta tell you, you do a very good job in repressenting your ideas. the amount of articulation you have in your speach is impresive, i have been teaching piano for 8 years now and i'm super into theory and music therapy and would be very greatful if you can talk about music and psychology in a video.
Thanks for your hard work!
Thanks for the compliments! Playing music has always been an important hobby of mine, but I don't have any background in music therapy, maybe it's something I can spend more time looking into and talk about in the future.
Love these kinds of videos
Thanks a lot
At the moment I’m preparing for an exam about the scientific methods of psychology
You're welcome, best of luck on your exam!
5:07 I need to ask, which research methods are used to find out which information is in which level of consciousness? What possible ways are there for such a quest? Qualitative methods are used most? After all we can't see thoughts and information by looking at the brain (yet): we only got the testimony of the subject, yes? Does this field of psychology suffer from subjectivity?
Another great question. While conscious information would be easiest to assess (participants can report it), assessing preconscious might include things that can be brought to mind by prompting (such as recognizing something when attention is directed to it).
Subconscious/unconscious influences are more difficult to identify and attempts to measure these often use implicit measurements such as reaction time, blinking rate, galvanic skin response, etc. to stimuli, rather than participants' conscious responses. As you note, this can lead to subjectivity in interpreting results, and this has been a major issue for replicating studies on things like priming.
Finally, nonconscious would be for information that seems to be impossible for an individual to have access to, even though the body is controlling it, such as liver or digestive functioning, specific brain activity, or release of neurotransmitters controlling muscle contraction, etc. Even knowing all the details of these biological processes doesn't allow people to have access to them as they occur in their own bodies.
Hope this helps!
@PsychExamReview Do you have a video about the subconscious and unconscious influences and inform structure and the methods of inquiry? I went to the consciousness playlist and you didn't address these (your second paragraph here).
@@ZoiusGM I don't have a video specifically on this topic (maybe I will make some more detailed methods videos in the future) but I explain an example and the challenges of studying things like subconscious attitudes in this video on the implicit association test: ruclips.net/video/Qn6YdJpuejg/видео.htmlsi=W7RucXEJXhyT31MH
well done, awesome breakdown
This is a really useful outline for studying. Does your text book follow a similar outline?
Yes, my book covers all of these topics and some others I didn't mention here in more detail.
@@PsychExamReview Great. Thanks for the info.
Thank you for your efforts, hope you’re doing well 😇
I am, thanks, hope you are too!
Thank you
I am interested in Foresinc Psychology. What is the difference between that and normal psychology?
Forensic psychology combines general psychology with criminology (the study of crime) and the legal system.
Being in forensic psychology I can assure you that it's not all Sherlock Holmes stuff.... you'll slog day in and day out to prepare legal reports about victims and accused.
hello sir can you please make refreshed videos on psychology with more content and video length will be extremely grateful if you do so , more over enjoying your playlist
I'm hoping to eventually remake videos for some of the older topics that are better quality, though it may take some time for me to get to these. For the moment I'm focusing on new videos for statistical methods though I may also make some more detailed review videos for each unit in introductory psychology. Thanks for commenting!
@PsychExamReview thank you Sir
Could you make a video about "Thinking"? 🥺
I'm watching your introduction to psychology course. It's really helpful for my exam. But I need to know more about "Thinking" 😢.
If you have more specific areas of thinking maybe I can provide more help, but this playlist on cognition may be helpful: ruclips.net/p/PLkKvotUGCyLchrXdVSumXAEDDIlwZUoib&si=2NnEI1L5sbYTT1Gt
Please give lessons on counseling psychology
I have some videos introducing approaches to treatment in the playlist below. I'm not trained as a counselor or clinical psychologist, but maybe I can add some more advanced topics in the future. ruclips.net/p/PLkKvotUGCyLdI27RQn2uFjQNj1ElbJOIh&si=RLyG-EBHIsfiZUj6
@@PsychExamReview Yes please do continue to post and thank you for your efforts:)
Awesome ❤
Thanks!
hi i am a psychology student and interested in cognitive psychology. so i plan to specialize in this field. Can you suggest me something about it before graduation? For instance; strongly recommended books, which undergraduate courses should i focus on more , other topics etc. and also i wonder your opinions about the future of cognitive psychology. what experts can do etc.
Without knowing which topics in cognitive psychology you'd like to focus on, a general recommendation would be to focus on learning as much as you can about statistical methods and data analysis, since this will be important preparation for any area of research. It's an area that many psychology students struggle with and being prepared will give you a strong advantage. As for the future, given a number of recent issues with replication failures and even fraud in psychological research, I think skills in data analysis for young researchers will be even more important than they have been in the past. Hope this helps!
yes it did. thanks for your answer@@PsychExamReview
Kindly complete statistics portion
Don't worry, I'll still have more statistics videos coming out in the near future!
Hii Michael, I hope you're doing well.
I had a suggestion regarding the Intro to Psych Playlist of yours having 245 videos. If you can merge all those parts into a single video of 35 hours, it would be much easier to study from. It is way too overwhelming to start the playlist knowing there's like 200 more of these short videos left.
I hope you'll consider my request and make it into 1 big course in a single video.
Hi, I think there's a 12hr cap on total video length, but maybe I could create one long video for each unit, as it would also shorten the intro and outro time. Thanks for the suggestion!
@@PsychExamReview That would be great, thanks :)
can you please send me the book so i can read more
Sure, my book is Master Introductory Psychology, and is available on Amazon here: amzn.to/48N29Xl It's also available as a series of ebooks from several ebook sellers. If you have any questions you can email me at psychexamreview at gmail.com
Ahhh now I'm ready. Someone give me a master's degree
❤
Promptenso miflikk