What you'll learnGain a College-level Understanding of Psychology and Behavioral Science
Discover What Drives Human Behavior and How to Learn Faster and More Effectively
Apply Psychological and Behavioral Insights to Our Everyday Lives
Know How to Influence and Persuade, Become More Attractive, and Understand Your Own and Other's Emotions
Develop Key Foundational Knowledge of Human Psychology with Real-World Relevance From an Award-Winning Instructor
RequirementsNo prior experience needed. This is an introductory course!
This is a real university course recorded during the 2020 pandemic when all teaching went online
DescriptionWhat is this course?This course provides an introduction to human cognition and behaviour, addressing foundational topics in psychological and behavioral science. These foundational topics include key concepts such as evolution, genetics, neuroscience, human evolutionary biology and anthropology, and specific topics, such as perception, memory, heuristics and biases, decision-making, child development, psychopathology, personality and individual differences, emotion, attraction and sexuality, cross-cultural differences, social relations, stereotypes and prejudice, norms and attitudes, social learning, social influence and persuasion, and group processes.The course will offer an integrated perspective on these topics, investigating the evolution and variation in human psychology over time, across cultures, and over the lifespan. The course will introduce the history of the study of humans and human psychology, offering students the historical context to trends in research. By the end of the course, students will have a broad knowledge of key topics in psychology and related disciplines. Students will be prepared for more in-depth investigations of more advanced topics in later courses.By the end of this course you should:• Have an introductory understanding of the psychological and behavioural sciences.• Have an understanding of how the psychological and behavioural sciences connect to other closely related social and biological sciences.• Have developed "mental models" of human behaviour that you can apply to understanding interactions in your everyday lives and events occurring in the world around you.• Be able to connect different levels of understanding such that you can zoom into the individual brain, zoom out to the societal-level and contextualize both in the breadth of human history and depth of evolutionary history.This course was recorded for students during the 2020 pandemic year when all courses were delivered online. Profits will be donated to an educational charity.
OverviewSection 1: Introduction to Psychological Science: The Human Animal
Lecture 1 Introduction to Psychological Science
Lecture 2 The Replication Crisis and Course Overview
Lecture 3 The Nature of Science and Housekeeping
Section 2: Major Approaches to Psychological Science: History and Study of Human Evolution
Lecture 4 Introduction to Major Approaches in Psychological Science
Lecture 5 The 18th Century
Lecture 6 The 19th Century
Lecture 7 The 20th Century
Section 3: Genetic and Cultural Evolution
Lecture 8 Introduction to Genetic and Cultural Evolution: DNA and Genes
Lecture 9 Evolution
Lecture 10 Evidence of Evolution
Section 4: Social Learning: The Psychological Foundations of Culture
Lecture 11 Social Learning
Lecture 12 Social Learning Biases
Lecture 13 Cultural Evolution
Section 5: Perception and the Brain
Lecture 14 Introduction
Lecture 15 Brain Plasticity
Lecture 16 Brain Development
Section 6: Cognitive Processes: Attention, memory, etc.
Lecture 17 Introduction to Cognitive Processes
Lecture 18 Attention and Memory
Section 7: Language
Lecture 19 Introduction
Lecture 20 Language and Acquisition
Lecture 21 Elements of Language and Thought
Section 8: Intelligence, Rationality and Reasoning
Lecture 22 History of IQ
Lecture 23 Intelligence and IQ
Lecture 24 Genes and Culture
Lecture 25 Causal Reasoning
Section 9: Psychopathology and Individual Differences
Lecture 26 Introduction to Personality
Lecture 27 Other Individual Differences
Lecture 28 Psychopathology
Section 10: Emotions and Attraction I
Lecture 29 Introduction
Lecture 30 Theories of Emotion
Lecture 31 Emotions in Other Contexts
Section 11: Emotions and Attraction II
Lecture 32 Introduction to Attraction
Lecture 33 Mating Emotions
Section 12: Norms and Preferences
Lecture 34 Norms and Preferences
Lecture 35 Stereotypes
Section 13: Social Learning and Persuasion
Lecture 36 Introduction
Lecture 37 Heuristics and Biases
Lecture 38 Learning
Section 14: Cooperation, Conflict, and Corruption
Lecture 39 Introduction
Lecture 40 Mechanisms of Cooperation and Conflict
Lecture 41 Corruption and Cooperation
Section 15: Group Dynamics and Ethnic Psychology
Lecture 42 Introduction
Lecture 43 Ethnic Psychology
Lecture 44 Cultural-Group Interaction
Section 16: Institutions and Innovation
Lecture 45 Introduction
Lecture 46 The Collective Brain
Lecture 47 Levers of Innovation
Section 17: Development: Psychology Across the Lifespan
Lecture 48 Introduction
Lecture 49 Adolescence and Old Age
Section 18: Cultural Psychology: Psychology Across the World
Lecture 50 Introduction
Lecture 51 Origins of Individual Differences
Section 19: Humans: A New Kind of Animal
Lecture 52 Summary: Humans: A New Kind of Animal
Section 20: Big Questions for a Theory of Human Behaviour
Lecture 53 Big Questions and Connections
Lecture 54 Real World Challenges
This course is perfect for learners interested in understanding human behaviour in a variety of different contexts, and applying these insights to personal, academic and professional realms.,University students, professionals, and all learners curious about human behaviour and psychology!,Those with an interest or even background in psychology wanting an up-to-date refresher
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