If you want to improve your psychological knowledge in a way that is more fun than just studying and trying to memorise, I recommend reading a popular science book. You will be surprised how often the ideas in these books pop up in your actual course! And you’re far more likely to actually understand these ideas having read about their wider context.
Check out my website [ Ссылка ] for my review of each of these books including why they will help with your A level!
My top 10 psychology(ish) books for psychology students.
Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari [ Ссылка ]
Bad Science by Ben Goldacre [ Ссылка ]
The Psychopath test by Jon Ronson [ Ссылка ]
The Anatomy of Violence by Adrian Raine [ Ссылка ]
The Brain by David Eagleman [ Ссылка ]
Peak Performance by Brad Stulberg [ Ссылка ]
The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat by Oliver Sacks [ Ссылка ]
Humankind: A Hopeful History By: Rutger Bregman [ Ссылка ]
The Psychology book by Nigel Benson [ Ссылка ]
Freakonomics by Steven Levitt [ Ссылка ]
The links to these books are affiliate links, you don’t pay more if you use the link and decide to buy! But I do earn a small fee that goes towards funding Psych Boost!
If Psych Boost is helping in your studies, and you want additional resources, check out my pateron! [ Ссылка ]
This video includes:
Revision video condensing all of Aggression Psychology for AQA paper 3 psychology into a quick rundown.
See the Gender Psychology playlist for more in-depth information and evaluation writing for each section.
www.psychboost.com for more resources and support.
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Covered in this video:
• Neural and hormonal mechanisms in aggression, including the roles of the limbic system, serotonin and testosterone. Genetic factors in aggression, including the MAOA gene.
• The ethological explanation of aggression, including reference to innate releasing mechanisms and fixed action patterns. Evolutionary explanations of human aggression.
• Social psychological explanations of human aggression, including the frustration-aggression hypothesis, social learning theory as applied to human aggression, and de-individuation.
• Institutional aggression in the context of prisons: dispositional and situational explanations.
• Media influences on aggression, including the effects of computer games. The role of desensitisation, disinhibition and cognitive priming.
0:00 Intro
0:58 Neural and hormonal
3:15 Genetic factors
5:34 Ethological & evolutionary
7:34 Social psychological explanations
10:07 Institutional aggression
12:33Media influences
14:44 Outro
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