Tag: Psychology

  • Psychological Experiments Went Wrong , Ruined Men Details.

    Homosexual aversion therapy
    Homosexual Aversion Therapy.

     

    Psychology is an  uncharted course even to-day.

    Most of the terms they use are undefined,……Personality,Intelligence,unconscious(by the way it is ‘unconscious’ because you are not conscious of it, then how do you say it is there?)

    I know funny explanations will flow.

    Now onto some psychological experiments that went wrong and ruined people.

    God save the  Patients!

    ( before some one pounces on me, unfortunately I hold a degree in the Subject!)

    I  also have observed that the Psychiatrists seem to be in need of Behavioural Therapy and counselling for their  odd behaviour and view of Life- well at least for some of them.

    One of my Psychiatrist friends admitted to this fact and said that it is due to to constant interaction with mentally disturbed people!

    Story:

    Psychology as we know it is a relatively young science, but since its inception it has helped us to gain a greater understanding of ourselves and our interactions with the world. Many psychological experiments have been valid and ethical, allowing researchers to make new treatments and therapies available, and giving other insights into our motivations and actions. Sadly, others have ended up backfiring horribly — ruining lives and shaming the profession. Here are ten psychological experiments that spiraled out of control.

    Stanford Prison Experiment.

    In 1971, social psychologist Philip Zimbardo set out to interrogate the ways in which people conform to social roles, using a group of male college students to take part in a two-week-long experiment in which they would live as prisoners and guards in a mock prison. However, having selected his test subjects, Zimbardo assigned them their roles without their knowledge, unexpectedly arresting the “prisoners” outside their own homes. The results were disturbing. Ordinary college students turned into viciously sadistic guards or spineless (and increasingly distraught) prisoners, becoming deeply enmeshed within the roles they were playing. After just six days, the distressing reality of this “prison” forced Zimbardo to prematurely end the experiment.

    The Monster Study:

    In this study, conducted in 1939, 22 orphaned children, 10 with stutters, were separated equally into two groups: one with a speech therapist who conducted “positive” therapy by praising the children’s progress and fluency of speech; the other with a speech therapist who openly chastised the children for the slightest mistake. The results showed that the children who had received negative responses were badly affected in terms of their psychological health. Yet more bad news was to come as it was later revealed that some of the children who had previously been unaffected developed speech problems following the experiment. In 2007, six of the orphan children were awarded $925,000 in compensation for emotional damage that the six-month-study had left them with.

    MK-ULTRA.

    The CIA performed many unethical experiments into mind control and psychology under the banner of project MK-ULTRA during the 50s and 60s. Theodore Kaczynski, otherwise known as the Unabomber, is reported to have been a test subject in the CIA’s disturbing experiments, which may have contributed to his mental instability. In another case, the administration of LSD to US Army biological weapons expert Frank Olson is thought to have sparked a crisis of conscience, inspiring him to tell the world about his research. Instead, Olson is said to have committed suicide, jumping from a thirteenth-story hotel room window, although there is strong evidence that he was murdered. This doesn’t even touch on the long-term psychological damage other test subjects are likely to have suffered.

    Elephant on LSD.

    In 1962, Warren Thomas, the director of Lincoln Park Zoo in Oklahoma City, injected an elephant named Tusko with 3,000 times the typical human dose of LSD. It was an attempt to make his mark on the scientific community by determining whether the drug could induce “musth” — the aggressiveness and high hormone levels that male elephants experience periodically. The only contribution Thomas made was to create a public relations disaster as Tusko died almost immediately after collapsing and going into convulsions.

    Milgram Experiment.

    n 1963, in the wake of the atrocities of the Holocaust, Stanley Milgram set out to test the hypothesis that there was something special about the German people that had allowed them to participate in genocide. Under the pretense of an experiment into human learning, Milgram asked normal members of the public to ask questions to a man attached to an electric-shock generator and shock him in increasing measure when he answered incorrectly. The man was an actor, the shocks fake; but the participants didn’t know this. The terrifying part? People overwhelmingly obeyed the commands of the experimenter, even when the man screamed in apparent agony and begged for mercy. A little evil in all of us, perhaps?

     

    Toni  LaMadrid.

    Many medicated schizophrenics enrolled in a University of California study that required them to stop taking their medication in a program that started in 1983. The study was meant to give information that would allow doctors to better treat schizophrenia, but rather it messed up the lives of many of the test subjects, 90% of whom relapsed into episodes of mental illness. One participant, Tony LaMadrid, leaped to his death from a rooftop six years after first enrolling in the study.

    Pits of Despair.

    Psychologist Harry Harlow was obsessed with the concept of love, but rather than writing poems or love songs, he performed sick, twisted experiments on monkeys during the 1970s. One of his experiments revolved around confining the monkeys in total isolation in an apparatus he called the “well of despair” (a featureless, empty chamber depriving the animal of any stimulus or socialization) — which resulted in his subjects going insane and even starving themselves to death in two cases. Harlow ignored the criticism of his colleagues, and is quoted as saying, “How could you love monkeys?” The last laugh was on him, however, as his horrific treatment of his subjects is acknowledged as being a driving force behind the development of the animal rights movement and the end of such cruel experiments.

    The Third Wave.

    Running along a similar theme similar to the Milgram experiment, The Third Wave, carried out in 1967, was an experiment that set out to explore the ways in which even democratic societies can become infiltrated by the appeal of fascism. Using a class of high school students, the experimenter created a system whereby some students were considered members of a prestigious order. The students showed increased motivation to learn, yet, more worryingly, became eager to get on board with malevolent practices, such as excluding and ostracizing non-members from the class. Even more scarily, this behavior was gleefully continued outside of the classroom. After just four days, the experiment was considered to be slipping out of control and was ceased.

    Homosexual Aversion Therapy.

    In the 1960s homosexuality was frequently depicted as a mental illness, with many individuals seeking (voluntarily or otherwise) a way to “cure” themselves of their sexual attraction to members of the same sex. Experimental therapies at the time included aversion therapy — where homosexual images were paired with such things as electric shocks and injections that caused vomiting. The thought was that the patient would associate pain with homosexuality. Rather than “curing” homosexuality, these experiments profoundly psychologically damaged the patients, with at least one man dying from the “treatment” he received, after he went into a coma.

    David Reimer.

    In 1966, when David Reimer was 8 months old, his circumcision was botched and he lost his penis to burns. Psychologist John Money suggested that baby David be given a sex change. The parents agreed, but what they didn’t know was that Money secretly wanted to use David as part of an experiment to prove his views that gender identity was not inborn, but rather determined by nature and upbringing. David was renamed Brenda, surgically altered to have a vagina, and given hormonal supplements — but tragically the experiment backfired. “Brenda” acted like a stereotypical boy throughout childhood, and the Reimer family began to fall apart. At 14, Brenda was told the truth, and decided to go back to being David. He committed suicide at the age of 38.

    http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/2JVXx0/:1xty7B!q$:9TbxsTd_/brainz.org/10-psychological-experiments-went-horribly-wrong/

     

     

     

     

  • ‘I am being Brain Washed’

    I sometimes wonder whether I know anything at all,I mean about the fundamental daily activities.

    Tooth brush Manufacturers  tell me that my brushing practice is not correct.

    Tooth paste manufacturer’s advise me that I should have salt in my tooth paste.

    ( It is a different issue that the same manufacturers told me some time back that Salt in tooth paste was harmful to teeth.)

    I am scared of walking on the road lest some white coated gentleman would accost me with a gadget like a Pen Torch and take me to a weird apparatus to check ‘Germ Build Up’

    Another Doctor(All white coated men are Doctors) tell  me that if I eat, food particles would enter between teeth and I will get cavity.

    I never knew that washing hands would be such a serious affair!

    If I use Dettol or something similar to wash my hands, it would take an inordinate time of O>>>>ne Minute and I am advised to use new Lifebuoy.

    I am surprised at a visiting Doctor carrying Lifebuoy with him and dropping it the patient’s house!

    I thought I was taking bath in a proper way until I came across ads saying that I should use a particular soap in a particular way.

    I was unaware that a soap can prevent Ten infections!

    I never knew that washing Face was such a complex affair.

    It had to bleach, moisturize and improve skin tone.

    If I want to go out, I need to have my face fully covered or should apply a cream.

    I was taught that borrowing is a sin and Hocking a crime.

    Now if I don’t have a Credit Card or do not hock my jewels I am a misfit.

    If my child gets wet, it will lead to life threatening disease.

    I did not know that children grow taller, stronger and sharper by using a Food Drink.

    Nor a food drink increases your Stamina by three times.

    I am surprised that you need an absorbent to absorb Milk.

    How do I escape from this Brain washing day in Day out?

    Read On:

    While it’s pretty unlikely that you’re a target of deliberate brainwashing, it is likely that you’re subject to some of the common techniques associated with the less-than-ethical practice. Here are a few common methods you encounter on a regular basis and what you can do to avoid them.

    First things first, what is brainwashing exactly? Wikipedia offers a concise definition:

    Mind control (also known as brainwashing, coercive persuasion, mind abuse, thought control, or thought reform) refers to a process in which a group or individual “systematically uses unethically manipulative methods to persuade others to conform to the wishes of the manipulator(s), often to the detriment of the person being manipulated”.

    Basically, it’s a form of extreme manipulation. We often associate the practice with cults and don’t consider its presence in everyday life, yet the techniques used in brainwashing are frequently leveraged by advertisers, news networks, politicians, and others. Alex Long, writing for hacking blog Null Byte, provides an outline of some of the most common brainwashing techniques. Here are the most notable:

    • The manipulator offers you a number of choices, but the choices all lead to the same conclusion.
    • The same idea or phrase is frequently repeated to make sure it sticks in your brain.
    • Intense intelligence-dampening is performed by providing you with constant short snippets of information on various subjects. This trains you to have a short memory, makes the amount of information feel overwhelming, and the answers provided by the manipulator to be highly desired due to how overwhelmed you feel.
    • Emotional manipulation is used to put you in a heightened state, as this makes it harder for you to employ logic. Inducing fear and anger are among the most popular manipulated emotions.
    • When reading this list, you’re likely able to think of a few examples of these techniques. News channels and political parties often repeat a consistent message when they want to get their point across. Short snippets of information is also a common tactic on news networks. Advertisers love to offer choices that all lead to their product, and emotional manipulation is common in people you’ll encounter as well as in most forms of media—even seemingly (and sometimes actually) harmless mediums like film. These techniques are everywhere. They aren’t turning you into a zombie, but they are informing many of your choices. The good news is that you can avoid them if you’re proactive.

      How to Avoid Brainwashing Techniques

      Mind Control
      Mind Control (Photo credit: Conor Keller | fortysixtyphoto.com)

      Avoiding brainwashing techniques often involves avoiding the brainwashers themselves, but this is next to impossible. Taking advertising as an example, you can’t avoid them all and attempting to do so can be rather expensive if you still want to watch television and movies. Your best bet is to cut out what you can and, when you can’t, seek balance. Finding balance is often easiest by simply providing yourself with the information you need. All you need to do is the following:

       

      1. Identify the manipulative message you’ve received.
      2. Find an opposing message, whether it’s manipulative or not. Also attempt to find the most neutral and unbiased account of that same message.
      3. Compare your different sources and decide how you feel.

      Brainwashing, whether mild or extreme, is possible in a large part due to isolation. If you only hear the brainwashed message on a regular basis, and rarely (or never) expose yourself to alternatives, you’re going to be far more likely to accept what you hear without thinking. If you want to avoid the brainwashing techniques discussed in this post, your best bet is to surround yourself with a spectrum of information rather than simply settling for the message that makes you feel comfortable. After all, that’s often what the message is aiming to do.

      http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/2YK0Lt

  • On-line Educational Courses Downloadable, Licensed.

    I came across this website which contains Free courseComputer Science, Engineering, Medicine, Management and Accounting, Dentistry, Nursing, Psychology, History, Language Training, Literature, Law, Economics, Philosophy,Astronomy….

    Please click the Link .

    “FREE to its visitors… This site provides free video and audio lectures of whole courses conducted by faculty from reputed universities around the world. Science Animations provide students with fun and innovative ways of learning. Free live timed online tests with instant feedback and explanations will help you refine your test taking skills. Most of the materials offered are licensed by   respective institutes under a Creative Commons License.

    http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/2gFR7B/:1W0!AoIj6:CAhynZXD/www.learnerstv.com/course.php?cat=Computers/

  • Green helps you to be Creative.

    Red tends to make one prone to be violent,Blue calmness .

    Refers to:

    Writer’s block? In a static slump? Think green.

    Yup, Kermit’s favorite color may actually get our creative juices flowing, according to a recent study.

    The study, published in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletinasked 69 men and women to take two minutes to come up with as many uses for a tin can as they could. Before the time started, half the group was shown a white rectangle, and the other half a green one. After the two minutes, a trained coder rated each idea for its creativity. The findings? Participants who saw green before the test came up with the more interesting, imaginative answers.

    The study volunteers were also presented with other creativity challenges, where a flash of green was pitted against flashes of red, blue or grey. “The green effect,” as the German researchers dubbed it, again produced the most creative responses.

    Why is our creativity sparked by green? Study author Dr. Stephanie Lichtenfeld, an assistant professor of psychology at Ludwig-Maximilians-University in Munich, told MSNBC that the reason behind the creativity hike may be that green is a signal of growth (both physical and psychological). Lichtenfeld says, “Green may serve as a cue that evokes the motivation to strive for improvement and task mastery, which in turn may facilitate growth.”

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/03/green-colors-creative_n_1386190.html?ncid=edlinkusaolp00000003

  • Talking To Toddlers.

    Teaching Children by Talking to them  at an early age  really helps.
    My talking to my two-year old Grandson is unrestricted unbridled non sense which he enjoys immensely-incidentally I enjoy it too.
    The nonsense gibberish brings him delight and if I give him any direction like asking him to drink (slipping the words ‘drink the Milk), he does it without demur, which otherwise would have taken Herculean effort.
    True, children respond to verbal communications at an early age.
    Probably because of the Cultural differences, emphasis   in the West seems to be  more on looks,grooming rather than sharing,affection,dependence on parents   siblings and Faith.
    However these Indian concepts are on the wane as the present lot is more western than the west.
    Well written article.
    The difference in gender does not matter to children at an early age, not withstanding Freudian Nonsense.
    Going back to my Grandson, he uses the female gender verbs irrespective of Gender.( our mother tongue Tamil has different verbs for Gender)

    Story:

    Teaching girls that their appearance is the first thing you notice tells them that looks are more important than anything. It sets them up for dieting at age 5 and foundation at age 11 and boob jobs at 17 and Botox at 23. As our cultural imperative for girls to be hot 24/7 has become the new normal, American women have become increasingly unhappy. What’s missing? A life of meaning, a life of ideas and reading books and being valued for our thoughts and accomplishments.

    That’s why I force myself to talk to little girls as follows.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lisa-bloom/how-to-talk-to-little-gir_b_882510.html