Psychology Final
Rehearsal
A way of extending the duration of items in short-term memory by repeating the items to yourself over and over
Chunking
A way of increasing memory capacity by grouping items together instead of remembering each item individually
Heuristic
A way of solving roblems that relies on inexact rules, so it is error prone but faster than algorithms
Egocentric
A young child's difficulty perceiving things from another individual's point of view, resulting in the assumption that everyone else sees, hears, and feels exactly as he/she does
Ogden Lindsley described ____________ as anything that passes the dead person's test.
Answer: Behavior
Mark doesn't like to nag his son about parking in the street, and his son doesn't like being nagged about his parking, but Mark's nagging does lead his son to move where he has parked, so Mark continues this pattern of nagging. Mark and his son are caught in a:
Answer: Behavior trap
In regard to personality, what is the primary difference between behaviorists and social learning theorists (SLT)?
Answer: Behaviorists believe that personality is derived from reinforcement/punishment while SLTs believe that one also learns by observation.
A cognitive therapist would likely aim to assist clients in _____________.
Answer: Identifying and altering their maladaptive viewpoints
Albert Einstein claimed that ______________ is more important than ________________.
Answer: Imagination; knowledge
A controlled testing environment will
Answer: Increase control over variables but decreases real-life application
Which of the following is a theory about how Lithium works to treat mania?
Answer: Increasing the reuptake of Norepinephrine
Wundt would most likely be against a psychological study that examined:
Answer: Individual opinions about social rights
Hugo is a therapist who seeks to echo, restate, and clarify what his clients express. Hugo is practicing ______.
Answer: active listening
Descartes described an evil genius as a way to argue that ____ .
Answer: all sensations can be doubted
Which of the following is not true of the concept of locus of control?
Answer: an internal locus of control is always more adaptive
Psychodynamic model
Freudian approach to psychology that interprets personality in terms of conscious and unconscious forces
Syntax
Rules governing word order in a language
Behaviorism
The view that psychology's goal should be to study directly observable behavior and to understand how the events in the environment outside the organism produce behavior
Gestalt
The view that psychology's goal should be to study experience as a whole rather than the sum of its parts
In-groups
The individuals with whom we directly identify and perceive as most similar to us
Out-groups
The individuals with whom we least directly identify and who we perceive to be the most dissimilar from us
Hypnosis
The induction of a state of consciousness in which a person apparently loses the power of voluntary action and is highly responsive to suggestion or direction
Functionalism
The view that psychology's goal should be to study how consciousness and experiences aid in adjusting to the environment
Humanism
The view that psychology's goal should be to understand human strengths, aspirations, conscious experience, free will, and potential
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)
The standard classification of mental disorders used by mental health professionals
Contiguity
The state of being close together in time or space
Discriminative stimuli
The stimuli that precede a behavior and provide information about the available consequences
Developmental psychology
The study of how the individual changes physically, cognitively, and emotionally over the life span
Sensation and perception
The study of how the senses collect energy from the environment and then process this sensory information
Social psychology
The study of how the social environment, including individuals and groups, influences the behavior of the individual, including how they think, act, and feel
Psychology of intelligence
The study of individual differences in mental capacities and abilities
Cognitive psychology
The study of memory, thinking, reasoning, and other mental activities
Personality psychology
The study of the relatively consistent patterns of thinking, feeling, and behaving within an individual
Positive psychology
The subfield of psychology that aims to understand the strengths, virtues, and values of human behavior
Industrial/organizational psychology
The subfield of psychology that examines the application of psychological principles to work and business
Emotion
The subjective experience of a change in physiological arousal due to environmental events
Science
The systematic, organized approach to understanding the physical and natural world through direct observation and measurement
Differential reinforcement of incompatible (DRI) behavior
The technique in which a behavior is identified that cannot occur at the same time as the problem behavior
Differential reinforcement
The technique of putting a problem behavior on extinction while adding positive reinforcement
Retroactive interference
The tendency for newer learning to interfer with older memories
Bystander effect
The tendency for the likelihood of receiving help to decrease as the number of people witnessing the emergency increases
Correspondence bias
The tendency to believe that people's behavior matches their personal characteristics
James-Lange theory of emotion
The theory that environmental events trigger physiological responses that we then label as particular emotions
Cannon-Bard theory of emotion
The theory that the physiological response and emotional response to a stimulus occur simultaneously
Mesmerism
The therapeutic system of Franz Mesmer, hypnotism in its modern form
Pupil
The tiny transparent hole in the center of the iris that allos light to enter the eye
Transduction
The transformation of one kind of energy into another kind of energy
Encode
The transformation of real-world energy, such as light and sound, into an electrical code that can be stored and processed by the brain
Cornea
The transparent bulge at the front of the eye
Thematic apperception test
The type of test where individuals make up stories about pictures, express themselves through drawings, or complete sentences such as "one thing I wish I could change is..."
Top-down processing
The use of previous experience and expectations about situations to organize sensory information during perception
Structuralism
The view that psychology's goal should be to identify and understand the basic elements of human experience
Maslow's Hierachy of Needs
This theory proposes that we have genetically determined physiological needs that drive our behavior Lowest level: Physiological Next level: Safety Next level: Love/Belonging Next level: Esteem Top level: Self-actualization
Phi phenomenon
When the brain perceives motion in stationary alternating images, such as lights flashing along a string of Christmas lights
Iconic memory is which type of memory?
Answer: Visual sensory memory
The Harlows discovered that infant monkeys were more likely to develop an attachment to something ______________ than to something __________________.
Answer: Warm and soft; that provides food
Who is considered the "Father of American Psychology"?
Answer: Wilhelm Wundt
According to evolutionary psychology, _____________ sexual behavior is geared toward staying with one person, while _______________ sexual behavior is geared toward having multiple partners, in order to best insure survival of their offspring.
Answer: Women's; men's
Which of the following is NOT a problem seen in using a case study?
Answer: You cannot use the information to guide future research
The best example of constructive memory is __________.
Answer: You recall a part of a story, even though it was never told to you.
Using what you know about the Nervous System and forming memories, which of the following events would you be the most likely to recall vividly?
Answer: Your wedding day
Dr. Brent published a collection of clinical cases of clients that he has worked with over the years on issues such as: depression, anxiety, and psychosis. Which subfield of psychology would this work fall under?
Answer: abnormal psychology
When a schema has been identified as too broad and the individual adjusts and redefines that schema in order to account for differences within that category, _____ is occurring.
Answer: accommodation
Psychodynamic theory of sexuality
Suggests children learn gender identity through reconciliation of their own sexual attraction to the opposite-sex parent
Gender schema theory
Suggests that children dovelop schemas of masculine and feminine characteristics, roles, and activities from their experiences in society, and the schemas in turn influence how they interpret and act on new information regarding gender
Cognitive developmental theory
Suggests that children make a conscious decision about their gender identity before they select models form whom to learn their "gendered" behaviors
Correlation coefficient
Summarizes the degree of relatedness between two continuous variables
Traits
Summary terms that capture an individual's stable and enduring tendency to respond in a certain way
Lobotomy
Surgical procedure performed on the brain to help alleviate more severe symptoms of mental illness, such as agitation and aggression
Psychosurgery
Surgical procedures performed on the brain in order to alleviate severe symptoms of mental illness that are not responsive to less invasive treatments
Indirect measurement
Surveys and comparative psychology
Color opponency
The idea that color vision is based on two pairs of opponents, red vs green and blue vs yellow
GABA
a neurotransmitter that acts like the mirror image of dopamine by discouraging neurons from sending action potentials
Four components
(Of emotion) an environmental event or trigger, a phyiological charge, an affective experience, and a cognitive interpretation of the experience
Ocdusion
A monocular depth cue wherein objects that are closer may hide or cover objects that are more distant
Linear perspective
A monocular depth cue wherein parallel lines appear as if they converge in the distance
Spurious correlation
A situation in which two variables are not really related but are statistally correlated
Control condition
A situation in which variables are not changed in order to observe what the behavior looks like in normal circumstances
Mirror drawing
A task in which the participant is asked to draw something seen in a mirror, which reverses the visual image
Palliative care
A multidisciplinary support approach to caring for people with serious illnesses, with the goal of improving quality of life for patients and family
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)
A Jungian personality test that has been used in team building, leadership training, personality development, and marriage counseling
Sleep paralysis
A REM disorder that occurs at the end of REM when part of the brain wakes up but other parts of the brain remain briefly stuck in REM
Cataplexy
A REM sleep disorder in which some parts of the brain remain awake while other parts descend into REM
Exposure therapy
A behavioral technique that involves having the client face his or her fears while engaging in calming strategies
Counterconditioning
A behavioral technique using classical conditioning to replace an undesirable response to a stimulus with a desired response
Imprint
A bonding process that occurs between certain birds and their perceived caregiver
Neuron
A brain cell that stores and processes information using an electrical code
Glial cell
A brain cell that supports the activities of neurons
Medulla
A brain stem structure that controls basic reflexes, such as breathing and heartbeat
Cerebellum
A brain structure that contributes to movements requiring ballance, coordination, and precise timing
Corpus callosum
A broad band of fibers that connects the left hemisphere of the brain to the right hemisphere
suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN)
A bundle of cells in the hypothalamus enbodying the internal clock, which drives the circadian rhythm
Attenproximate (proximate) explanations
A causal explanation of behavior that focuses on immediate situational and physiological factors
Ultimate explanations
A causal explanation of behavior that focuses on the evolutionary forces and functions of the behavior
Schizophrenia
A chronic and often disabling mental disorder characterized by disorganized and/or delusional thinking, distorted sensory and perceptual experiences, and blunted or inappropriate emotions and behaviors
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
A chronic, potentially life-threatening condition caused by the human immunodficiency virus (HIV)
Prosopagnosia
A condition that causes people to lose the ability to recognize faces
Dualism
A consequence of Descartes' doubt of the accuracy of perceptual experience; the belief that there are two kinds of things in the world, physical things and mental things, that exist independently
Reaction formation
A defense mechanism by which a person behaves in a manner opposite to their true feelings, such as an angry person who acts excessively cheerful
Displacement
A defense mechanism in which unacceptable thoughts or feelings about a person or thing are shifted to a more acceptable person or thing
Repression
A defense mechanism in which unwanted thoughts and feelings are pushed out of the conscious into the unconscious
Projection
A defense mechanism in which unwanted thoughts or feelings are assigned to another person
Case study
A detailed observation of a single individual or group of individuals
Camera obscura
A device created by Alhazen, consisting of a dark room with a tiny hole for light tht simulates the human eye
Substance use disorder
A disorder in which use of one or more substances results in a maladaptive behavior and cognition patterns that often impair judgement, finances, and interpersonal relationships
Dissociative identity disorder
A dissociative disorder in which two or more distinct identities are thought to alternately control a person's behavior, often a result of severe trauma
Agonist
A drug that boosts the effectiveness of a neurotransmitter
Antagonist
A drug that reduces the effectiveness of a neurotransmitter
Morphine
A drug that relieves pain by mimicking the neurotransmitter endorphins
Basilar membrane
A flat sheet of tissue in the cochlea that resonates at different requencies at different ends
Family therapy
A form of group therapy in which a therapist works with two or more family members to address dysfunctional family dynamics
Working memory
A form of memory that contains both storage and processing mechanisms
Group therapy
A form of psychotherapy in which one or more therapist work with people/clients as a group
Psychodynamic therapy
A form of psychotherapy that focuses on the client reaching self-awareness of unconscious content and childhood experiences, as well as understanding the impact that they have on past and present behavior
Resonance
A frequency at which something vibrates most energetically
Forgetting curve
A function relating elapsed time to the amount of information that can be recalled; determined by Ebbinghaus's nonsense syllable experiment
Good continuation
A gestalt principle in which our brain assumes that edges are more likely to be smooth than to have abrupt bends or kinks
Closure
A gestalt principle wherein the brain "fills in" gaps in the retinal image
Scatterplot
A graph that shows the relationship between two continuous variables
Antipsychotics
A group of medications used to treat the positive symptoms of psychosis
Limbic system
A group of midbrain structures that contributes to our emotional experience
Prototype
A kind of item that best prpresents a concept; robins are prototypical birds
Aphasia
A language deficit
Mood
A long-lasting, generalized affective state without a direct trigger or target
Atmospheric perspective
A monocular depth cue wherein objects that are closer have more visible detail than objects in the distance
Misinformation effect
A memory phenomenon in which people falsely recall information presented after an event as having been part of the event
Short-term memory
A memory store containing whatever currently inhabits the conscious mind
Sensory memory
A memory store for briefly holding sensory information (primarily sights and sounds)
Dissociative disorders
A mental disorder characterized by a disruption in consciousness, in which a person seems to experience a sudden loss of memory or change in identity, often as a response to overwhelmingly stressful circumstances
Personality disorder
A mental disorder characterized by a maladaptive pattern of behaviors and cognitions that often impair the ability to interact successfully in the social environment
Hoarding disorder
A mental disorder characterized by a persistent difficulty discarding or parting with possessions because of a perceived need to save them
Eating disorders
A mental disorder characterized by abnormal or disturbed eating habits
Bipolar disorder
A mental disorder characterized by alternating periods of extreme highs (mania) and extreme lows (depression)
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
A mental disorder characterized by intrusive memories, nightmares, social withdrawal, hypervigilance, and/or insomnia that lingers for a month or more after experiencing a traumatic event
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)
A mental disorder characterized by tension, excess worry, and a state of physiological arousal that has no specific trigger
Obessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
A mental disorder characterized by unwanted repetitive thoughts (obsessions) and/or actions (compulsions)
Major depressive disorder
A mental disorder that is characterized by feelings of extreme unhappiness and hopelessness and interferes with one's work, sleep, eating, and life
Concepts
A mental map that allows us to know how to react in different situations
Hypothalamus
A midbrain structure that is essential to motivated behaviors, such as feeding or fighting
Thalamus
A midbrain structure that receives incoming sensory information and passes the information on to the limbic system and the cortex
Photopigment
A molecule in a photoreceptor that changes shape when light collides with it
Interneuron
A neuron in the spine that is involved in reflexive movements
Serotonin
A neurotransmitter that affects mood, sleep, and appetite
Acetylcholine
A neurotransmitter that causes a muscle fiber to contract
Dopamine
A neurotransmitter that encourages neurons to send action potentials
Psychological disorder
A pattern of thoughts, feelings, and behaviors that are deviant, disordered, dysfunctional, and/or dangerous
Change blindness
A perceptual phenomenon that occurs when an observer does not notice a change in visual stimulus
Naturalistic observation
A research method in which behavior is observed and recorded in the context where it typically occurs with as little interference from the researcher as possible
Correlation study
A research study that involves the measurement and comparison of two or more variables
Six basic emotions
Anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, surprise
Paraphilias
A person who can only experience arousal and fulfillment via behaviors generally considered to be socially unacceptable
Confederate
A person who pretends to be a candidate for participation but is actually working with the researchers
Person-situation controversy
A person's behavior is different in different situations
Personality
A person's relatively consistent pattern of thinking, feeling, and behaving
Reciprocal determinism
A personality model that posits that an individual's behavior is the result of the interation between an individual's cognition and the environment within which the individual resides
Empiricism
A perspective associated with Berkeley, who argued that in contrast to Cartesian rationalism, the only basis for human knowledge is perceptual experience
Rationalism
A perspective based on Rene Descartes' argument that all knowledge based on perception can be doubted, so the best foundation for human knowledge is logic "I think, therefore I am"
Placebo effect
A phenomenon in which people often feel better when exposed to a treatment, even if the treatment doesn't work
Gender nonconformity
A phonomenon in which prepubescent children do not conform to expected gender-related sociological or psychological patterns or identify with the opposite sex/gender
Ablation studies
A physiological research procedure in which small portions of the brain are removed or destroyed in order to explore the function of a neural system
Conditioned stimulus (CS)
A previously neutral stimulus that begins to elicit the unconditioned response after being paired with an unconditioned stimulus
Problem solving
A process in which a person begins at an intial state and moves through a series of intermediate states to arrive at a desired state
Accommodation
A process in which the lens of the eye changes shape to adapt to different viewing distances
Monism
A rejection of Cartesian dualism by arguing that there is just one kind of thing in the world; because dualism entails two kinds of things, as a response to dualism, there are two kinds of monism
Behavioral model
A scientific approach to psychology concerned only with observable and measurable behavior that can be objectively recorded
Cognitive model
A scientific approach to psychology emphasizing the need to understand the mechanical and internal processes of the mind in order to better understand abnormal behavior
Biopsychosocial model
A scientific approach to psychology that considers biological, psychological, and social factors and their complex interactions when understanding the effects on human behavior and mental disorders
Objective personality inventory
A self-report questionnaire that clearly asks about a wide range of behaviors and feelings and assesses several traits at once
Bulimia nervosa
A serious, potentially life-threatening eating disorder characterized by a cycle of binge eating and compensatory behaviors, such as self-induced vomiting
Anorexia nervosa
A serious, potentially life-threatening eating disorder characterized by self-starvation and excessive weight loss
Mental set
A set of mental assumptions about a situation that can hide possible solutions
General intelligence (g)
A single factor that accounts for much of the variance in intelligence scores across individuals
Axon
A single long wire that sends electrical signals from the soma to other neurons
Experimental condition
A situation in which the level of one or more independt variables has been changed, while holding as many other variables constant as possible
Behavior trap
A situation in which two people's unwanted behavior is maintained by both negative and positive reinforcement
Alzheimer's disease
A specific form of dementia that is irreversible and includes impaired thought, impaired speech, flat affect, and confusion
Kinsey Scale
A spectrum upon which one can measure human sexuality
Operational definition
A statement that clearly explains what is being measured and how to measure it
Factor analysis
A statistical method for grouping items on a test into clusters by evaluating the correlations between items
Algorithum
A step-by-step procedure for solving problems that is guaranteed to work but slow
Positive reinforcer
A stimulus or event that, when presented, will increase the likelihood that the behavior that produced it will occur again in the future
Negative reinforcer (NR)
A stimulus or event that, when removed, will increase the likelihood that the behavior that produced its removal will occur in the future
Positive punisher
A stimulus or event, that is produced by the behavior and causes a decrease in the probability of the behavior occurring int the future
Negative punisher
A stimulus or event, the removal of which will decrease the likelihood that the behavior that produced its removal will occur again in the future
Prejudice
A strong positive or negative attitude toward a group of people that biases the way we think, act, and feel about the members of a particular group
Schemas
A structure in long-term memory for organizing information
Sylvian fissure
A structure of the cortex that separates the parietal and temporal lobe
Evolutionary psychology
A subfield of psychology that aims to understand the evolutionary pressures that shaped behavior and the adaptive function of behavior
Multicultural/diversity studies
A subfield of psychology that explores how behavior is influenced by culture, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender, and disability
Social psychology
A subfield of psychology that focuses on how the social environment - including individuals and groups - influences the behavior of the individual, including how they think, act, and feel
Analgesic
A substance that relieves pain
Corpus callosotomy
A surgical procedure in which the corpus callosum is servered
Introspection
A systematic method of providing research participants with an external stimulus and asking them to provide detailed reports of their internal experiences to provide access to the internal mental process and experiences of their participants
Light exposure therapy
A technique developed to help people who suffer from seasonal affective disorder, a form of depression that most often affects people living in climates far from the equator that have long, dark winters
Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing (EMDR)
A technique to help veterans traumatized by their combat experiences
Analytic introspection
A technique used by structuralists to study mind by breaking sensory experiences into their constituent pieces
Insight therapies
A technique used to help individuals improve functioning through increasing understanding and expression of unresolved conflicts
Functional Magnetic Responance Imaging (fMRI)
A technology that uses MRI techniques to measure changes in blood flow in the brain during mental activity
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
A therapeutic technique in which electric currents are sent through the brain to induce a brief seizure, which causes the brain to reverse symptoms of certain mental illnesses
Active listening
A therapeutic technique in which the therapist pays close attention to his/her clients' words and then echoes, paraphrases, and clarifies what the client says; a key component of client-centered therapy
Applied behavior analysis
A treatment approach that replaces undesirable behavior with positive behavior through conditioning, punishment, or reinforcement
Semantic
A type of declarative memory for word meanings and world facts
Episodic memories
A type of declarative memory; memories for specific events
Statistics
A type of math used to describe and evaluate data
Cones
A type of photoreceptor found mostly in the foveal region of the retina that is responsible for color vision
Client-centered therapy
A type of psychotherapy in which the client is given an accepting, empathetic environment in which to explore and attain personal growth
Behavior therapy
A type of therapy that helps the client/individual change potentially self-destructive behavior through application of learning principles
Cognitive behavioral therapies
A type of therapy that helps the person/client change potentially self-destructive behavior through addressing negative thought patterns that fuel the behavior
Psychoanalysis
A type of therapy that investigates repressed fears and conflicts by bringing them into the conscious mind in order to treat the mental disorder
Decibel (dB)
A unit of measurement that compares the pressure caused by a sound wave to the normal pressure inside the ear
Neglect
A visual deficit in which people tend to ignore everything seen in one half of the visual field
Bodily-kinesthetic intelligence
Ability to control and organize bodily movement, such as in sports
Naturalistic intelligence
Ability to observe, appreciate, and understand the natural world
Logical-mathmatical intelligence
Ability to solve mathematical problems and understand symbolic representation
Practical intelligence
Ability to solve the day-to-day challenges of a particular context while adapting previous strategies and shaping new strategies for success
Spatial intelligence
Ability to understand how objects relate to one another in space and to navigave these objects
Intrapersonal intelligence
Ability to understand the self including your own thoughts, emotions, and motivations
Interpersonal intelligence
Ability to understand the social world, including the thoughts, emotions, and motivations of others
Musical intelligence
Ability to understand, process, and organize music
Afterimage
After viewing one color for an extended period its opponent color appears when looking at a colorless surface
Social learning theory
Albert Bandura's theory that suggests that gender roles are learned from the adults who care for us
Cognition
All mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating
HIV
An STI that interferes with your body's ability to fight the organisms that cause disease
Rorschach inkblot test
An ambiguous stimulus test, the responses to which are thought to reflect an individual's true personality characteristics
Socialcultural model
An approach to psychology that considers the complex effects social and cultural factors have on individual behavior
Blind spot
An area in the eye without any photoreceptors because of the optic nerve
Fovea
An area of high-acuity vision in the center of the retina that is tightly packed iwth photoreceptors
Bronca's area
An area of the cortex typically locate in the left hemisphere associated with language, when damaged causes aphasia
Fusiform face area (FFA)
An area of the temporal lobe that has increased activity when we view faces
Reflex
An automatic behavioral response to a stimulus
Binge eating disorder (BED)
An eating disorder characterized by recurring episodes of binge eating without accompanying compensatory behaviors
Neutral stimulus (NS)
An environmental event that does not elicit an unconditioned response
Strange situation
An experiement conducted by Mary Ainsworth to systematically study attachment patterns in infants
Full report
An experimental technique in which participants are asked to recall all of the study material
Partial report
An experimental technique in which participants recall just a specified subset of the study material, which showed that iconic memory has more capacity than was revealed by the full report technique
Mental rotation
An experimental technique in which participants view images depicting two objects that have been rotated relative to one another and report whether the two objects are the same or different
Phrenology
An idea created by Franz Josef Gall that postualtes bumps on a persons skull are correlated to his or her personality
Evil genius
An imagined character who interrupts motor commands before they reach the body and creates fictitious sensory signals to send to the brain, enabling Descartes to doubt the accuracy of his perceptual experiences
Survey
An indirect form of measurement used to collect data about individuals
Comparative psychology
An indirect form of measurement with the gaol of learning about humans by studying nonhumans
Identity
An individual's consistent sense of who they are
Self-concept
An individual's perception of his or her abilites behaviors, and characteristics
Pelvic Inflammatory disease (PID)
An infection of the female reproductive organs, usually occurs when sexually transmitted bacteria spread from the vagina to the uterus, fallopian tubes, or overies
Respondent behavior
An inherited behavior that is directly caused by the occurrence of a specific stimulus in the environment
Critical period
An optimal time period within which certain events need to take place to foster healthy development
Scientific method
An organized way that helps scientists answer a question or begin to solve a problem
Dementia
An umbrella term for symptoms of a degrading brain, such as impaired thinking and memory
Conditioned Response (CR)
An unconditioned response that was elicited by the presentation of a conditioned stimulus
Emerging adulthood
An unsettled phase of life occuring between ages eighteen to the mid-twenties
Karen is annoying all of her friends with her constant gossip. She keeps telling everyone she is close to about what is happening in her personal life and the personal lives of those around her. If Karen's friends want to her stop spouting out all the events that come to her mind, they should say:
Answer: "No one wants to hear about every single one of your episodic memories!"
A correlational study shows that as the number of beers consumed increases, the level of desire for a crunchwrap supreme also increases. This relationship likely has a correlation coefficient closest to ________.
Answer: 0.89
If people gained the ability to smell like dogs, they would have approximately _____ times as many olfactory receptors as they do now.
Answer: 10
The best-known case study of sleep deprivation was Randy Gardner, who managed to remain awake for a little more than _____.
Answer: 10 days
Gerald just completed an intelligence test. His mental age was the same as his chronological age. Using the mental age and chronological age formula, what would his score be?
Answer: 100
Although all people experience anxiety from time to time, in _______ of adults it is severe and persistent enough to qualify as a disorder.
Answer: 18%
According to the text, how many major historical perspectives of psychology are there?
Answer: 6
Short-term memory can hold about ___________ numbers.
Answer: 7
According to the experiments done by Miller, what is the capacity of our short term memory?
Answer: 7 items +- 2
A person is considered mentally delayed if their IQ score is ___ or ___.
Answer: 70; lower
68% of all scores on an intelligence assessment fall between ___ and ___.
Answer: 85; 115
What factor(s) separated the different perspectives of psychology?
Answer: A & B (A. The methodology used in research/knowledge acquisition B. The primary focus of psychology as a science)
What kind of information could you represent on a scatterplot?
Answer: A correlational relationship between two variables.
Mental illness affects about
Answer: A quarter of the population
When a person experiences interruption in the ability to respond sexually or experience sexual pleasure, they are suffering from a:
Answer: A sexual dysfunction
_____________________ is a kind of procedural memory, which bypasses the hippocampus.
Answer: Acquisition of classically conditioned associations
In 1908, Binet and Simon began to include comparisons of scores across ____________ in order to determine _____________.
Answer: Age groups; mental age
Drugs that increase the effectiveness of a neurotransmitter are
Answer: Agonists
Ned likes to spend his free time volunteering at a local animal shelter and is the person amongst his group of friends that most people feel comfortable going to with a problem. Which of the "Big Five" is Ned most likely to be scored high on?
Answer: Agreeableness
Jan found out his grandfather has dementia. He wants to take steps to decrease his risk of developing dementia in the future. Jan should:
Answer: All of the above (Avoid smoking, Abstain from regular drinking, Include healthy fats in his diet)
Which of the following is an example of psychological disorders being caused by biological factors?
Answer: All of the above (Psychological disorders can run in families, Enlarged ventricles are seen in those with Schizophrenia, Depression is linked to low serotonin)
After six months, the development of a fetus can be affected by
Answer: All of the above (Sound, Stress, Drug use)
Individual behavior is continuously influenced by:
Answer: All of the above (The environment and physiology, Social interactions and cultural practices, mental processes)
By using the scientific method as a framework for building an investigation of the world around them, researchers are able to ensure that their work:
Answer: All of the above (has not been done before, is related to what we already know about how the world works, is protected from personal biases and beliefs about the world)
Human behavior is not affected by which of the following:
Answer: All of these affect behavior (Physiology, Culture, Environment)
The ossicles in your ear serve to:
Answer: Amplify sounds
_____________ is related to the loudness of a sound, while ____________ is related to pitch of a sound.
Answer: Amplitude; Frequency
Filipe loves going to social events and spending time with people. Filipe is:
Answer: An extrovert
Which of the following two terms go together?
Answer: Analgesic/Endorphins
Amnesia is defined as when memories __________.
Answer: Are never stored in LTM
Women experience Menopause around what age?
Answer: Around 50
Around how many overall cells are there in a human brain?
Answer: Around how many overall cells are there in a human brain?
Depression has reached clinical levels and can be diagnosed as Major Depressive Disorder when:
Answer: At least 5 symptoms of depression last 2 or more weeks
A debriefing is often necessary in studies because:
Answer: At times, information must be withheld from the Informed Consent
Which of the following is not one of the main stores of memory?
Answer: Attention Memory
Betsy assumes that most crimes committed in the United States are violent crimes because of how often she sees this type of crime reported on television. In actuality, violent crime only makes up about 12% of the overall crime in the U.S. In this case, using the ______________ heuristic did not work out for Betsy.
Answer: Availability
Which personality disorder falls into Cluster C?
Answer: Avoidant personality disorder
The ___________ model proposes that psychopathology is the result of neurotransmitters not working properly, or structures not formed correctly.
Answer: Biological
While the _______________ aspects of sex and sexuality are not that changeable, the _______________ aspects are.
Answer: Biological; environmental
Dr. Mahatma takes a person's biological factors and environment into consideration when diagnosing her clients. She is taking a ________________ approach.
Answer: Biopsychosocial
Mindy was in a great mood for several weeks. Suddenly, she became depressed and irritable despite nothing bad happening. Mindy is showing signs that she may have:
Answer: Bipolar Disorder
Brett has been trying to get his computer to work. The computer has been frozen on a blue screen. Brett has continuously stared at this blue screen, hoping for it to change. Eventually the blue screen leaves and Brett finds himself seeing yellow for several seconds. What happened?
Answer: Brett saw an afterimage
Client-centered therapy was pioneered by:
Answer: Carl Rogers
Ferguson is shadowing a combat veteran who recently lost a limb to learn more about how amputees emotionally adapt after their loss. Ferguson is using what kind of research method?
Answer: Case study
If a surgeon was to remove an animal's ______________, he would find that the animal would lose its sense of balance and coordination.
Answer: Cerebellum
Sarah loves to dance ballet. This activity requires high levels of balance, coordination, and precise timing. What part of the brain is most active when she is dancing?
Answer: Cerebellum
A male chimpanzee, Harry, experiences a rise in blood pressure when another male chimpanzee shows signs of aggression. When researchers accompanied these signs of aggression with the smell of roses, Harry eventually experienced this rise in blood pressure when exposed to the smell of roses even when no other chimpanzees were present. This is an example of:
Answer: Classical Conditioning
This theory suggests that children develop 'gender consistency,' then actively sort out what it means to be the gender they identify with:
Answer: Cognitive development theory
Which of these is NOT true regarding marriage?
Answer: Cohabitating couples have lower divorce rates than those who do not live together before marriage.
The color theory which explains an effect called an 'afterimage' is the ________________ theory.
Answer: Color opponency
The intensity of an Unconditioned Stimulus determines the maximum intensity of the response to the ___________ that is paired with it.
Answer: Conditioned Stimulus
Miranda always arrives at least five minutes early to every appointment. She is often asked to do things by her boss because she is organized and timely in her execution of that assignment. Miranda is demonstrating ___________.
Answer: Conscientiousness
Which of the "Big Five" personality traits involves being organized, careful, and disciplined?
Answer: Conscientiousness
You have two cookies. You break one into two equal pieces. You then give the whole cookie to one child, and the two halves to another child. The child who receives the whole cookie throws a tantrum because "They got more cookies than I did!" This child has not yet learned _________________.
Answer: Conservation
Samantha's friend Kiki is often talking about speaking to her deceased relatives. Samantha is beginning to worry about her but later learns that praying to relatives is a part of Kiki's culture and is considered normal. This illustrates the importance of __________ in determining if a behavior is pathological.
Answer: Context
Finch is collecting data to provide information that will be helpful as he develops new advertisements for his makeup collection. His research goal is related to:
Answer: Control
Jamal wants to know if a new drug will increase reaction times for drivers. In his study, the use of a group that does not take the drug, which allows for a comparison of reaction times between the drug-taking and non-drug taking groups, is the
Answer: Control group
Danielle is very good at trivia and recalling facts. Danielle probably has high levels of ____________ intelligence.
Answer: Crystallized
Norms and rules that have been adopted by a social group and are part of our social structure are ________.
Answer: Cultural Practices
When a neuron receives a signal from another neuron, which part of the cell will be the first to receive the message?
Answer: Dendrites
Jamal wants to know if a new drug will increase reaction times for drivers. In his study, the reaction time is the ___________.
Answer: Dependent variable
Antianxiety medications alleviate anxiety by __________ the activity of the __________.
Answer: Depressing; Central nervous system
Sarah Beth worked at a women's shelter, and she noticed that as the spring turned to summer, they were receiving more and more donations. She searched through some online journals and found some evidence that warmer weather made people happier, so she wondered whether warmer weather could be directly related to generosity. Which of the following steps in the scientific method has Sara not completed yet?
Answer: Develop a testable hypothesis
Wanda wants to learn about the changes people experience from infancy to adulthood. Her advisor should recommend that she take a course in:
Answer: Developmental Psychology
Dr. Marsh is a psychologist who recently published a case study of the ways in which quintuplets changed over the course of their lifespan, highlighting cognitive, physical, and emotional development. Which subfield of psychology does Dr. Marsh likely belong to?
Answer: Developmental psychology
In the computer metaphor for human memory, the Long-Term Memory is analogous to the _____________
Answer: Disk Drive
The pleasure felt when engaging is activities such as having fun with friends, eating delicious food, and having sex is likely due to:
Answer: Dopamine
Which of the following does not go with the others?
Answer: EEG typical of deep sleep
Which of the following measures muscle tone?
Answer: EMG
Which of the following measures eye movements?
Answer: EOG
Who founded the psychology department at Cornell University?
Answer: Edward Titchener
Transformation of real-world energy such as light and sound into electrical code that can be processed by the brain is called _____________.
Answer: Encoding
In the case of David Reimer, Dr. John Money advised David's parents to raise him as a girl because he believed that gender identity was entirely influenced by:
Answer: Environment
Kendra found herself behaving more aggressively when she was outside for prolonged periods on hot summer days. The influence that the weather had on her is considered to be a(n) _________ influence.
Answer: Environmental
If you believe that what happens to you is determined by fate or chance, you are said to have a(n):
Answer: External Locus of Control
Dale is trying to buy a Dr. Pepper from a vending machine. When he pushes the button nothing happens. Dale pushes the button multiple times over the course of the next thirty seconds before accepting that it does not work. This is an example of a(n)__________.
Answer: Extinction burst
How does the orgasm phase of sexual arousal differ between males and females?
Answer: Females can experience multiple orgasms while males typically experience only one.
An example of an indirect measure is:
Answer: Filling out a survey to measure depression.
Bill receives his paycheck every two weeks. This is an example of what kind of reinforcement schedule?
Answer: Fixed Interval
In children, repeated exposure to people, books, games, etc. correlates with:
Answer: Fondness
Masters and Johnson's research led to the description of:
Answer: Four stages of sexual arousal
The way in which a particular problem or solution is presented is called:
Answer: Framing
The exercise in which someone speaks whatever comes into their mind:
Answer: Free association
The drive to solve evolutionary conflicts occurs outside of our conscious awareness. This is similar to whose idea of the id and unconscious influences on behavior and personality?
Answer: Freud
In experimental studies examining facilitated communication, researchers found that facilitators usually
Answer: Gave the answer of the picture that was shown to them
If a group of men whistle, hoot, and make sexual comments about a woman's body as she walks by, they are engaging in:
Answer: Gender harassment
When her father offered to play princesses with her, Georgia protested, "You can't play a girls' game!" Georgia's reaction best illustrates:
Answer: Gender roles
The tendency to classify toys and songs as either masculine or feminine is most likely to facilitate the process of:
Answer: Gender typing
Gene has schizophrenia. Which of the following does not fit this diagnosis?
Answer: Gene has multiple personalities
Luann was bitten by a dog when she was a little girl and now she is afraid of all furry animals. This is an example of ____________.
Answer: Generalization
The stage when most people become interested in sex is known as the ________ stage.
Answer: Genital
The three elements needed for a healthy environment according to Rogers are:
Answer: Genuineness, acceptance, empathy
Which of the following people does NOT sound like they have Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder?
Answer: Gerald, who is angry and anxious when working because his hallucinations are too distracting.
In the eye, the rods respond best to which color light?
Answer: Green
This therapy has the benefit of enabling clients to see that others share their problems, a social laboratory for exploring behaviors and developing skills, and providing feedback for those behaviors and skills.
Answer: Group
The ability to ___________ and _________ is called phonology.
Answer: Hear sounds; assign them to different words
Henry Molaison, a famous amnesic, lost his ability to store long-term memories after his _________ was/were removed in an attempt to reduce his seizures.
Answer: Hippocampi
Which of the following is the most involved in memory?
Answer: Hippocampus
The subfield of psychology called multicultural/diversity explores the influences of all of the following except:
Answer: Hormones
After telling her therapist about her depression, Allison was asked to make a list of all her goals and dreams. Her therapist then asked her to make another list of Allison's strengths and how they can help her accomplish her goals. Based on this information, Allison's therapist was most likely using what school of thought?
Answer: Humanistic
This type of therapist works with people on achieving "self-actualization."
Answer: Humanistic
According to Sigmund Freud, the ____________ represents the desire for satisfaction, and the ___________ represents the need for conformity.
Answer: Id; Superego
Which is not one of the four general goals of science mentioned in the text?
Answer: Tenacity
Which of the following is the subfield of psychology that examines the application of psychological principles to work and business?
Answer: Industrial/organizational psychology
If people were able to store everything they experience in their long-term memory,
Answer: Information retrieval would be a daunting process
Who should be contacted if you want to conduct research using a non-human species of animal?
Answer: Institutional Animal Care and Uses Committee
The Flynn Effect states that
Answer: Intelligence levels have been steadily increasing over the past few decades
Alfred Binet's desire to differentiate between his two daughters led to the creation of:
Answer: Intelligence testing
Kendra is having a terrible day. She just received a failing grade on her latest math test, which brings her overall grade down to a D. She concludes that it is time she gets a tutor and starts paying better attention in class. Kendra has a(n) ________________ locus of control.
Answer: Internal
Name the part of the eye that is responsible for controlling the amount of light entering the eye.
Answer: Iris
Which part of the eye is responsible for controlling the amount of light that enters the eye?
Answer: Iris
What is NOT a typical criticism of trait personality theories?
Answer: It does not allow us to 'average' our behavior across many different situations.
Which of the following is NOT true regarding motor development?
Answer: It happens as more and more brain cells are created
Which of the following is not a characteristic of an effective punishment?
Answer: It induces fear
Typically, we think of intelligence as something we would like to have because:
Answer: It is usually associated with success and accomplishment
What is the relevance of the Kinsey scale?
Answer: It provides a spectrum for measuring human sexuality
Freud's psychoanalysis is unpopular today because:
Answer: It requires a serious financial and time commitment
Which of the following is not true regarding careers in psychology today?
Answer: Jobs in psychology now do not have the same empirical base that was present when psychology was born years ago.
Davia is 17, Kayla is 45, Alex is 68, and Hope is 30. Which of them is considered to be in middle adulthood?
Answer: Kayla
Compared to people who are considered introverted, people who are extroverted have
Answer: Less active frontal lobes so they are less inhibited socially.
This researcher believed that children develop by interacting with their social environments
Answer: Lev Vygotsky
Luke is from California, but he joined the military and was stationed in Alaska. The decreased hours of sunlight seem to be negatively affecting his mood. Luke may want to consider trying an alternative therapy of:
Answer: Light exposure therapy
Hyde's gender similarities hypothesis states that a person's gender makes ______________ on most psychological variables.
Answer: Little to no difference
Evan observed that all freshman girls seemed to dress alike and wondered if it was because they were reading the same magazines. If Evan wanted to use the scientific method to answer this question, what should his next step be?
Answer: Look for more information in existing scientific literature
What is a primary challenge, when using an indirect measure, that is not a challenge with a direct measure?
Answer: Making sure your participants are answering honestly and giving accurate information.
Who was the first woman to receive a Ph.D. in psychology?
Answer: Margaret Washburn
Which of the following is NOT a middle brain structure?
Answer: Medulla
Which of the following is an accurate example of the phi phenomenon?
Answer: Multiple still images being presented one after another will look like they are moving.
Electrical insulation for axons is provided by ___________.
Answer: Myelin
The more salient the ___, the more quickly the stimulus will become associated with the US.
Answer: NS
Dedra has always appreciated being outside and loves to camp and hike. She has ambitions to work with animals one day and become a recycling activist. She can identify any tree in the area. Dedra exhibits high ______________ intelligence.
Answer: Naturalistic
When someone exhibits deviance, they:
Answer: Need more than deviance to have a disorder
A teenager fails a big test at school because she parties every weekend. Her parents take away her car keys for two weeks, which leads her to stop partying. Taking her ability to drive her car away would be considered a _________.
Answer: Negative Punisher
Jill asked Jack if her pants made her butt look big. Jack responded that the pants had nothing to do with her butt looking big. Jill did not talk to him for a week. Now Jack tries to be more tactful when Jill asks him his opinion. This is an example of what kind of conditioning?
Answer: Negative Punishment
When students get straight A's on their report cards, the basketball coach gives them a day off from doing the extensive sprinting drills they do every practice. The coach is attempting to use a ________________ to ensure his players continue to work hard in class.
Answer: Negative Reinforcer
Which of the following is an appropriate alternative name for a neuron?
Answer: Nerve Cell
Within psychology, the different areas of research that focus on a specific set of influences on behavior are called ____________ of psychology
Answer: Subfields
Sandra, a professional athlete, was always ahead of her classmates in mathematics during school, but ten years after high school graduation, she found that she wasn't as good with arithmetic as she used to be. This is most likely because:
Answer: Neural pathways shut down when they are not used
What is the name of the discovery that neurons are not connected to one another to form a network, but are connected by synapses?
Answer: Neuron doctrine
Non-heterosexual men are _______________ likely to have been smothered by maternal love than heterosexual men. Boys growing up in a father-absent home are ________________ likely to be non-heterosexual than boys growing up with a father present in the home.
Answer: No more; no more
The Kinsey Scale was developed through research which supports the idea that sexual orientation is:
Answer: Non-binary
Jane is trying to train her parrot. She is trying to get him to stop making so much noise at night. When he makes noise, she puts a blanket over his cage. The blanket has not helped to decrease the amount of noise that the bird was making. In this case, the blanket was a:
Answer: None of the above (Punisher, Reinforcer, Conditioned Stimulus)
This part of the brain is targeted by addictive drugs.
Answer: Nucleus accumbens
According to your text, Leonardo da Vinci is a good example of which "Big Five" personality trait?
Answer: Openness
People tend to like Rickie because he is creative and likes to experience new things. He is always willing to have a friendly debate and will always concede a good point when he hears one. Rickie is demonstrating _______________.
Answer: Openness
Dale is trying to buy a Dr. Pepper from a vending machine. When he pushes the button nothing happens. Dale pushes the button multiple times over the course of the next thirty seconds before accepting that it does not work. Later, Dale still does not want to give up on his Dr. Pepper. He remembers that one time he held the button down for ten seconds, which resulted in him getting his drink. He decides to try this. This is an example of _______________.
Answer: Operant variability
The ____________ are three tiny bones in the middle of the ear that amplify airborne vibrations.
Answer: Ossicles
Paul has a mental disorder where he does not have hallucinations of voices making commands or threatening delusions and he does not abuse substances. In relation to violence and his condition, which of the following is true?
Answer: Paul is more likely to be a victim of violence than someone who commits violent acts
_____________ occur(s) primarily in the brain.
Answer: Perception
When a person presents with an enduring behavior pattern that is inflexible and disruptive to their social functioning, they are thought to have a ___________.
Answer: Personality disorder
What is the most fundamental need according to Maslow's hierarchy of needs?
Answer: Physiological
Ron is driving down Gingerbread Ln. and gets pulled over going 75 MPH in a 55 MPH zone. The officer writes him a $250 ticket. After this, every time he travels down Gingerbread Ln. he avoids speeding. This is an example of what kind of conditioning?
Answer: Positive Punishment
____________________ is one of the 3 principles intended to protect participants from unethical practices
Answer: Pre-participation Informed Consent
Nikkita is using the scientific approach to develop methods for detecting traits in people that indicate they may become a serial killer in the future. Her research goal is related to:
Answer: Prediction
Which one of the following is NOT considered to be classified under 'Immediate' types of memory?
Answer: Procedural
This therapy's primary goal is to bring thoughts and feelings we are not aware of to our conscious minds.
Answer: Psychoanalysis
The model of psychopathology that explains mental illness that comes from a more Freudian perspective:
Answer: Psychodynamic model
The impact of the attention from identifying with the same-sex parent on the development of gender identity is most clearly emphasized by:
Answer: Psychodynamic theory
Shenandoah is feeling anxious about everything lately. When she speaks with her guidance counselor about it her counselor tells her she is feeling this anxiety because she is always thinking about the worst possible result of any situation. Shenandoah's guidance counselor is using a ____________ conceptualization of anxiety.
Answer: Psychological
Which model emphasizes the importance of mental functioning and learning experiences?
Answer: Psychological model
Which of the following is not a way that psychological scientists and psychological practitioners work together to move psychology forward?
Answer: Psychological practitioners recruit clients as research assistants.
What is the primary difference that separates Psychology from other disciplines such as sociology and anthropology?
Answer: Psychology focuses primarily on individual behavior.
Jane is trying to train her parrot. She is trying to get him to stop making so much noise at night. When he makes noise, she puts a blanket over his cage. The blanket has not helped to decrease the amount of noise that the bird was making. In this case, Jane was HOPING that the blanket would work as a:
Answer: Punisher
As Beth Loftus discovered, when asked to recall events that have been witnessed, ______________ can influence responses.
Answer: Question wording
A person who is unsure about or exploring their own sexual orientation and/or gender identity is:
Answer: Questioning
The ______________ nervous system is associated with ___________________, while the ______________ nervous system is associated with __________________.
Answer: Sympathetic; Fight or Flight/Parasympathetic; Rest & Digest
Fred likes Jane, but he doesn't think Jane will like him, so when he sees Jane, he gets nervous and says rude things. This causes Jane to dislike Fred and avoid him, leading Fred to believe he was right and causing him to behave this way around other girls in the future. This is a case of:
Answer: Reciprocal Determinism
Kimberly's mom just gave the new password to their home internet right before her phone died. Kimberly cannot find a piece of paper to write it down so she repeats the password over and over in her head until she can write it down. This is an example of __________.
Answer: Rehearsal
Han Solo is studying for a test. He is having a hard time with a list that he's almost certain will be on it, so he's repeating the list over and over in his mind while he waits for the teacher to hand out the exam. Han Solo is practicing:
Answer: Rehearsing
Intelligence tests contain a number of different scales in order to allow for the repeated measurement of mental abilities. If the test is ___________, the test taker will score similarly on each scale in the test.
Answer: Reliable
It is more important for memories to _______________ than to ________________.
Answer: Represent coherent events; record exact copies of events
If you move thoughts, feelings, or even memories out of your conscious mind and into the unconscious, you are using:
Answer: Repression
Mike had a rough childhood. He often did not get enough to eat and was yelled at by his parents even when he didn't do anything wrong. Despite this, Mike grew up to be a well-rounded, emotionally-stable adult. Mike exhibits high ________.
Answer: Resiliency
What is the correct path that an image follows in the processing of an image?
Answer: Retina, optic nerve, thalamus, visual cortex
Which of the following is the newest group of antidepressant medications?
Answer: SNRIs
Eating salty food is pleasurable initially, but can become uncomfortable and even disgusting. The reason for this is that:
Answer: Salt is necessary for bodily functions, but is harmful at high levels
Sara is a behavior analyst. Which of the following would you believe to be true?
Answer: Sara puts an emphasis on how the environment and behavior influence each other
A(n) ______________ is an individual with generally limited mental abilities but outstanding capabilities in one or two areas.
Answer: Savant
Lou was tracking how many times his professor said "um" during class and ranked how interesting each class day was. After a week, he decided to make a graph with points for each day, showing the relationship between the number of "um"s and how interesting the class was. Lou made a ___________.
Answer: Scatterplot
Which of the following is a disorder that manifests the same symptoms across cultures?
Answer: Schizophrenia
_________________ sex characteristics are directly involved in the reproductive process.
Answer: Secondary
You see a baby happily exploring a room in a lobby at a doctor's office. When the mother gets up to sign some papers the baby starts to cry and seeks her comfort. How would you describe this baby's attachment?
Answer: Securely attached
Which of the following is not a gestalt principle?
Answer: Segregation
What was the eventual result of the surgery that H.M. was subjected to?
Answer: Seizure activity was reduced significantly
According to Maslow, which of the following needs is highest/topmost on his hierarchy?
Answer: Self-actualization
The connection between words and word meanings is _____________?
Answer: Semantics
Jan walked into a lab that was examining how people reacted to different types of sensory information. This lab had a focus on:
Answer: Sensation and perception
__________ refers to the collection of sensory information while ____________ refers to the mental experience of the sensory information.
Answer: Sensation; perception
In someone with a real diagnosis of Bipolar Disorder, episodes of depression end after a period of
Answer: Several weeks to a few months
Isaac, a 25-yr-old law student, is heterosexual; his brother Chaim, a 21-yr-old college student, is homosexual. The brothers differ in their:
Answer: Sexual orientation
Who started the "talk" therapy movement?
Answer: Sigmund Freud
An IQ score of 90 would be:
Answer: Slightly below average
According to Freud, a person who was denied the outlet of sucking their thumb as an infant would grow up to do which of the following activities?
Answer: Smoke cigarettes
Mr. Kovacs frowns when his son cries, but hugs his daughter when she cries. Mr. Kovacs' contribution to the gender typing of his children would most likely be highlighted by:
Answer: Social learning theorists
The impact of rewards and punishments on the development of gender identity is most clearly emphasized by:
Answer: Social learning theory
Which of the following is not true regarding psychology careers today?
Answer: Someone must have a doctoral degree to work in the field of psychology
Which of the following is not one of the main parts of a neuron?
Answer: Spine
Raul needs to analyze and evaluate the data he collected. He should use:
Answer: Statistics
Which is NOT a Gestalt grouping principle?
Answer: Stereopsis
Working memory contains both ________ and __________ mechanisms.
Answer: Storage; Processing
The chemical senses refer to:
Answer: Taste and smell
Which of the following is correct about the stage of adolescence?
Answer: Tension between physical & cognitive changes, and social dependence, make adolescence a stressful period.
In the study by Frederick Bartlett (1930), he asked English participants to listen to and recall folktales from an unfamiliar culture. He observed that many participants added elements to the story from their own culture when they recalled the stories. What does this study illustrate?
Answer: That memories are a constructive process
Which book by Charles Darwin explored the expression of emotion across species?
Answer: The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals
According to Freud, which of these generates guilt?
Answer: The Superego
Someone who understands the concept of conservation would know that:
Answer: The amount of soda poured from one cup into another, differently shaped cup remains the same
Where are ion channels located?
Answer: The dendrites
While classical conditioning relies on _____________ , Operant conditioning is focused on ____________ .
Answer: The environment before the behavior; the environment after the behavior.
How is the scientific method different in psychology than in other scientific disciplines?
Answer: The method is the same; it is only different in the types of questions asked and the tools used to answer them.
Which of the following is found in the cell body of a neuron?
Answer: The nucleus
Where is the primary visual cortex located?
Answer: The occipital lobe
Why is it difficult for a 2-year-old to remember what they got for Christmas that year?
Answer: The part of the brain responsible for moving memories into long-term storage had not developed yet.
Joanna is 5 years old and her favorite pair of shoes light up. The best part about these shoes is that the light appears to chase itself around the shoe by one light flashing followed by the next and so on. What are her shoes an example of?
Answer: The phi phenomenon
According to Freud, if Mia is constantly doing whatever feels best and is not considering the consequences of her actions, she is acting on:
Answer: The pleasure principle
Derik wanted to know whether people will perform better on a math test if they have caffeine beforehand. So he put everyone in a lab, had them drink their coffee, and then begin their test. He gave half of the unknowing participants decaf, and the other half regular coffee. He then analyzed the results, and found that those who drank decaf scored significantly lower than those who were given normal coffee. In this experiment, the independent variable is _______________.
Answer: The presence of caffeine
Research on the environmental conditions that influence sexual orientation indicates that:
Answer: The reported backgrounds of non-heterosexuals and heterosexuals are similar
Derik wanted to know whether people will perform better on a math test if they have caffeine beforehand. So he put everyone in a lab, had them drink their coffee, and then begin their test. He gave half of the unknowing participants decaf, and the other half regular coffee. He then analyzed the results, and found that those who drank decaf scored significantly lower than those who were given normal coffee. In Derik's experiment, what is the dependent variable?
Answer: The scores on the math test
In Generalized Anxiety Disorder, all of these are true EXCEPT:
Answer: The sufferer is fixated on the source of their worry for months at a time
Thorndike's puzzle boxes showed which of these results?
Answer: The time needed for a cat to escape the box decreased with subsequent trials.
Which of the following is a Projective personality test?
Answer: Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
Freud's stages are called psychosexual stages because:
Answer: They are based on a developing person's focus to achieve pleasure centered on various parts of the body
How might a young child in Piaget's preoperational stage view death?
Answer: They will not see it as permanent but recognize that death makes people sad
In the 1930s-50s, lobotomies were performed in the hopes that:
Answer: This would calm the patients' more severe symptoms, such as manic agitation and aggression
Which is NOT a prototypical example of a fruit?
Answer: Tomato
Timmy has begun referring to himself as a boy, and he is also able to recognize whether other children are boys or girls. About how old must Timmy be?
Answer: Two to three years old
What is the most recently discovered basic taste that indicates the presence of glutamate, a building block for many proteins?
Answer: Umami
Consider the experiment performed on Little Albert in which a white rat was presented with a loud noise. Since the loud noise elicited a startle response, eventually the presence of the white rat alone could elicit the same response (startle). In this example, what would the loud noise be?
Answer: Unconditioned stimulus
Aiden recently met a person at college who keeps asking him to go out, texting, and even trying to hug and kiss him, despite Aiden having said several times that he does not reciprocate these feelings. Aiden is experiencing:
Answer: Unwanted sexual attention
Manuel believes that, if he can come to understand the way he thinks and feels, he will naturally improve and overcome his problems. If Manuel wants a therapist who thinks this way, he should seek out someone who
Answer: Uses a form of insight therapy
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) are known for performing random safety checks in factories and warehouses. These inspections might be years or weeks apart so businesses need to maintain safety standards at all times. This is an example of what kind of reinforcement schedule?
Answer: Variable Interval
In ____ experiments, participants are exposed to some stimulus such as a sip of wine, and they enumerate all the basic components contained within that stimulus.
Answer: analytic introspection
The prominent behaviorist John Watson denounced ____ as unproductive.
Answer: analytic introspection
Sexual harassment can occur between
Answer: any two people
Cole is about two years old. The first liquid he was exposed to, after milk, was apple juice. Now he believes that all liquids that are not opaque (not able to be seen through; for example, milk) are apple juice. This is an example of _____.
Answer: assimilation
Maggie is about two years old. Her dad reads comic books frequently. As a result of early exposure to comic books she believes that all bound and written material are comic books. This is an example of ______.
Answer: assimilation
Females _________ suicides while males _________ suicides.
Answer: attempt more; complete more
Nora is going on a date. When her date arrives to pick her up, her heart begins beating faster, her blood pressure rises, and her stomach feels upset. Which part of the nervous system is responsible for these changes?
Answer: autonomic nervous system
The _______ runs the length of the cochlea and differences in its width are responsible for the resonant frequency that is heard.
Answer: basilar membrane
Amanda has found herself eating more in order to cope with stress. Her therapist told her that he would like to replace the increase in food with an increase in physical activity, journaling, and playing the violin (which she enjoys). Which strategy is he using?
Answer: behavior modification
Jim believes that depression is a result of stressors in the environment and a lack of coping skills to deal with those stresses. Which model does Jim believe in?
Answer: behavioral
Why do humans and other animals sleep?
Answer: both A and B (A. To repair wear and tear that accumulates during the day while awake B. To facilitate the way each animal makes a living)
An example of a basic physiological need is which of the following?
Answer: breathing
In ____ experiments, while participants carry on a brief conversation, the conversational partner is switched for a different person.
Answer: change blindness
Charlotte would like to increase her retention of a series of numbers in her short-term memory by grouping items together into meaningful pieces. This is known as ______.
Answer: chunking
Tom sells cars and has chosen several cars to be shown in the main showroom. While most of the cars are around $60,000, he has one car in the center that is $200,000. Which principle of human perception could he be acting on?
Answer: contrast between the expensive car and the more reasonably priced cars makes the cheaper cars seem like a good deal
The ability to make surprising connections between seemingly disconnected ideas is:
Answer: creativity
Psychology addresses multiple ways in which factors can affect behavior. Which of the following is not an example of an environmental factor that can affect behavior?
Answer: cultural values
Which of the following is not a characteristic of effective punishment?
Answer: delayed
Although ___________ is the leading cause of people seeking mental health services, ________ is the more common and more disabling worldwide.
Answer: depression; anxiety
Allport, who was influenced by Freud, sought to _____ whereas Freud sought to _____.
Answer: describe consistent behavior; understand what was beneath behavior
In regards to Piaget's theories, research suggests...
Answer: development is more continuous and may occur earlier than he thought
Rats who are exposed to unrelenting sleep deprivation for two or three weeks ____ .
Answer: die
The cortex of every individual is....
Answer: distinct from all other cortices but shares common features
Although ____ is intuitively appealing to most people, unfortunately it leads to the mind-body problem.
Answer: dualism
Which of the following represents Descartes's argument that mental things are distinct from physical things?
Answer: dualism
Naloxone, a drug that blocks endorphins from binding to their receptors, ____ the placebo effect, which shows that the placebo effect targets ____.
Answer: eliminates; the way pain feels
The relationships encouraged by the need to belong must include a certain amount of social, psychological, and ____________ reciprocity.
Answer: emotional
Maslow's theory has good ______ validity.
Answer: face
The corpus callosum...
Answer: facilitates communication between hemispheres
Mae is a therapist who believes that there is not a single member of the family who is responsible for a conflict and works with multiple members in order to improve communication and build relationships. Which type of therapy is she practicing?
Answer: family
The amygdala can form what type of associations?
Answer: fear
Greg is seeking treatment for a fear of flying. He has three days before he must be on a flight across the world for almost 20 hours. Because of the short amount of time that he has in order to overcome this fear, which potential treatment could be effective for Greg?
Answer: flooding
A person with high _______ ___________ is likely to continue living and to pass their genes on to future generations.
Answer: genetic fitness
According to evolutionary theories of motivation, we are motivated to engage in behaviors that increase our overall ______ __________.
Answer: genetic fitness
Which of these is NOT one of the four components of emotions?
Answer: genetic fitness
Heather has been spanking her son for several years now. She has noticed that it does not appear to be as effective as it was earlier. As a result of the frequency of this punisher, which of the following is likely?
Answer: he has become less sensitive to the punisher
Problem-solving procedures that rely on inexact rules of thumb are called:
Answer: heuristics
Experiencing a near accident in your automobile would likely be associated with:
Answer: high negative affect
When Randy Gardner stayed awake long enough to break the previous record of sleep deprivation, ____ .
Answer: his behavior was mostly normal during the ordeal, and his sleep pattern quickly returned to normal
Jon was raised in an orphanage with many children where he was seldom picked up or touched. Which of the following is likely?
Answer: his overall development will be delayed
Which of the following induces a heightened state of attentional focus?
Answer: hypnotism
Which of the following represents Berkeley's argument that there are mental things but not physical things in the world?
Answer: idealism
The purpose of Alfred Binet's first intelligence test was to...
Answer: identify students who could be assisted through alternative education
A key component of our experience of either positive or negative affect is largely determined by the way...
Answer: in which we interpret the physiological arousal
What is good for you is bad for the genetic fitness of the unwanted species of poisonous spider/snake/bug occupying your home environment is an example of which type of major evolutionary conflict?
Answer: interspecies conflicts
Which type of evolutionary conflict is occurring when you find a poisonous (and very much unwanted) spider lurking in your home?
Answer: interspecies conflicts
This type of conflict occurs as members of the same species interact...
Answer: intraspecies conflicts
Getting an A in your classes is something that makes you very happy and proud of yourself. You are motivated to get an A in all of your classes. This is an example of...
Answer: intrinsic motivation
The idea of autonomy is most directly tied to the idea of ____________ _____________.
Answer: intrinsic motivation
People have always told Gena that she has beautiful blue eyes. Which part of the eye are they referring to?
Answer: iris
Which of the following is true of Ebbinghaus's forgetting curve?
Answer: it drops sharply at first but then the curve levels out
Which of the following is true of intelligence?
Answer: it is not physical or directly measurable
Which of the following is true of electroconvulsive therapy?
Answer: it is practiced today with success in many patients
Which of the following is true of iconic memory?
Answer: it is visual sensory memory
Peyton played the piano for many years as a child. He is now 25 years old and has not played in approximately 15 years. What does Ebbinghaus's forgetting curve teach us if he were to relearn the piano?
Answer: it will still be easier than beginning for the first time
Jillian has Schizophrenia and has been recently prescribed an antipsychotic. Which of the following symptoms would the medication most likely not help?
Answer: lack of emotional expressions on her face
Because the internal circadian rhythm is ____ than the external circadian rhythm, ____ is easier to adjust to than ____.
Answer: longer; fall back; spring forward
The idea underlying ____ is that everyone has a kind of animal magnetism that can be influenced by moving magnets around on the body.
Answer: mesmerism
Which of the following represents the argument that there are not two distinct kinds of things (i.e., mental things and physical things), but just one kind of thing in the world?
Answer: monism
Kinslee has recently been diagnosed with Bipolar I Disorder. Which of the following medications would she most likely be prescribed?
Answer: mood stabilizing medication
A psychologist's understanding of cognition includes the mental activities associated with all of the following, except:
Answer: moving
Saying that because something is natural and therefore it is good is an example of which type of fallacy?
Answer: naturalistic fallacy
Maria is trying to get her daughter to behave better when family is visiting. She has found that removing chores leads to her being more positive with her family. What is the removal of chores in this situation?
Answer: negative reinforcer
Lifetime reproductive potential for men is ________ correlated with parenting time.
Answer: negatively
The fulfillment of one's talents, potential, and abilities suggests that an individual has attained the topmost level of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs. What level is this?
Answer: none of these (Safety, self-actualization, physiological)
What can be learned from David Rosenhan's study in 1973 where patients were admitted into a hospital after claiming to hear voices?
Answer: once someone has a psychiatric label people will interpret their behavior as part of that condition
Which type of conditioning are reinforcement theories of motivation based on?
Answer: operant conditioning
What was the experimental method in Johansson et al.'s choice blindness experiment?
Answer: participants view two images of women's faces, indicate which looks more attractive, then describe your reasons for selecting her
Frederic Bartlett's research using English participants and Canadian Indian culture folktales illustrated which of the following?
Answer: people draw on their own experiences to make sense of fragmented ideas
George has found that giving his son an extra chore when his son walks through the house in muddy shoes reduces the amount of times he does this. Adding a chore is an example of what in this situation?
Answer: positive punisher
Greg has been experiencing trouble disciplining his 5-year-old daughter. He has found that giving her candy at church has increased good behavior at church. What would candy be?
Answer: positive reinforcer
The emotions we feel as we interact with the world are examples of what type of explanation?
Answer: proximate
Being jealous of another person flirting with your romantic interest is an example of what type of explanation? The increase in genetic fitness that results is an example of which type of explanation?
Answer: proximate; ultimate
Little Suzie threw a tantrum at the grocery store when her mother refused to get her candy. Eventually her mother gave in and got the candy for Suzie. The next time Suzie and her mother are at the grocery store Suzie will throw a tantrum because doing was _________.
Answer: reinforced
Which of the following is not true of culture and intelligence testing?
Answer: research suggests some cultures are just less intelligent
Whereas conditions like ______ show the same symptoms across cultures, conditions like ____ may vary from culture to culture.
Answer: schizophrenia; anxiety
Margaret is four years old. Whenever she sees people that she does not know, she becomes really anxious and exhibits signs of stranger anxiety. Why is Margaret exhibiting stranger anxiety?
Answer: she cannot assimilate new people in her caregiver schema
Joe is great at understanding how objects relate to each other in space and how to navigate these objects. Gardner would say he excels in what type of intelligence?
Answer: spatial
In ____ experiments, participants view one image projected to each visual field (i.e., right and left), then point with each hand to a matching image, and are finally asked to verbally describe their reasons for selecting the matching image.
Answer: split brain
Tasks requiring ____ are most affected by sleep deprivation.
Answer: sustained attention
Juan has been training as a magician. He has two shows coming up: one for a company luncheon with primarily middle age adults, and one for a child's birthday party. Which group would be better for his first real show?
Answer: the adults because they have more expectations that can be violated and will be easier to deceive
Some people who suffer from seizure disorders have undergone surgery to sever ____ , after which they are said to have a "split brain".
Answer: the corpus callosum
If you were to compare the frontal lobes in a chimpanzee and a human you would find...
Answer: the frontal lobe in the human is larger proportionally
Nai-Kan is a Japanese therapy that focuses on which of the following?
Answer: the goal is for the client to discover how they have been ungrateful or bothersome to others and find ways to demonstrate gratitude and alliance
Joe just watched his son ride a bike for the first time. He knows that this is a memory that he will have for a lifetime. Which structure of his brain will make remembering this event possible?
Answer: the hippocampus
When split brains were asked to verbally describe their reasons for selecting one of several images, they were only able to correctly describe the reasons for selecting the image that had been visible to ____ .
Answer: the left hemisphere
A major difference between the James-Lange and Canon-Bard theories of emotion is that:
Answer: the physiological response occurs after the environmental event
The drug Naloxone, which blocks endorphins from binding to their receptors, is useful in figuring out how ____ works.
Answer: the placebo effect
Which of the following is true of the Flynn Effect?
Answer: there has been a greater impact on fluid intelligence than on crystalized intelligence
Which of the following is true of antidepressants?
Answer: they are often used to treat anxiety disorders
What is a potential problem with taking antianxiety medications?
Answer: they do not resolve the underlying problem but allow the person to avoid anxiety while developing a tolerance to the medication
According to Maslow's hierarchy of needs, which is a likely response to a student lacking motivation in their schoolwork?
Answer: they have lower needs (such as physiological and safety needs) that are unmet
A homeless woman had not eaten in weeks and needed calories to sustain her body so she stole some chips from the convenience store. This is an example of which level of explanation?
Answer: ultimate
The fifth, most recently discovered basic taste is known as:
Answer: umami
Piaget believed that object permanence _____. Research has shown that it _______.
Answer: was a single distinct process; is a gradual and continual process
Which of the following statements would Sigmund Freud most likely agree with?
Answer: what goes on in our minds is mostly outside of our awareness
Lithium was first discovered to be an effective treatment for bipolar disorder in the 1940s and:
Answer:Is still used today
Stranger anxiety
Anxiety born of an infants inabilty to assimilate people (strangers) into the cargiver schema, beginning at approximately eight months
Conflict
Any challenge to the organism's genetic fitness
Subfields of psychology
Areas of research that focus on a specific set of influences on behavior
Projective personality tests
Assessment instruments based on the psychodynamic perspective that are sensitive to the examiner's beliefs and are a way to examine the unconscious
Central route of persuation
Attitude change that is due to a careful weighing and evaluation of arguments and the characteristics of the object or event
Peripheral route of persuasion
Attitude change that is due to quick association with positive or negative cues in the environment or the object or event
Bisexuality
Attraction to both males and females
Pansexuality
Attraction to people regardless of sex, gender, or gender identity
Homosexuality
Attraction to the same sex
Mind-body problem
Because Cartesian dualism entails that mental things are distinct and independent of physical things, there is no way for mental intentions to influence physical things, such as body movements
Differential reinforcement of alternative (DRA) behavior
Behavior change technique that provides reinforcement for behaviors that produce the same reinforcement as the problem behavior
Differential reinforcement of other (DRO) behavior
Behavior change technique that provides reinforcement for the organism when it is doing any behavior that is not the problem behavior
Disordered behavior
Behavior that causes distress for the person exhibiting it and/or distress for those around the person
Dangerous behavior
Behavior that has serious potential to harm self or others
Dysfunctional behavior
Behavior that interferes with a person's ability to perform necessary activities, such as going to work or caring for family members
Extrinsic motivation
Behavior that is activated by stimuli in the environment surrounding the organism
Deviant behavior
Behavior that is different from what most people in a person's reference group exhibit
Intrinsic motivation
Behaviors that are motivated by thoughts, feelings, and values that are inside the individual
Dendrites
Branching neural fibers that collect inputs from other neurons
Sexually transmitted infections (STI)
Can be a consequence of of unprotected sexual contect
Normative influence
Changes in behavior due to a desire for social approval or to avoid social disapproval
Informational influence
Changes in behavior due to a desire to do what is right in a social setting and to act correctly
Reactivity
Changes in behavior that occu because of being observed or recoeded
Neurotransmitters
Chemical messengers manufacted by one neuron that communicates with other neurons via synapses
Maxine is very proud of herself for completing her M.B.A., but her family is more interested in when she plans to marry and start a family. Maxine's family represents a _____ social viewpoint.
Collectivist
Paradoxial sleep
Combines brain activity associated with light sleep with muscle tone associated with deep sleep
Semantics
Connection between a word and the word's meaning
Gender roles
Consist of the attitudes, behaviors, rights, and responsibilities that societies typically associate with each sex
Ear canal
Conveys sounds from the outer ear to the ear drum
Buffy is conducting an experiment to determine the effect that watching vampire movies has on sleep patterns. In her study, what kind of variable is sleep patterns?
Dependent
Obstructive sleep apnea
Difficulty breathing due to loss of muscle tone during sleep, leading to numerous brief awakenings during the night (insomnia)
Sexual dysfunction
Difficulty experienced by an individual or couple during any stage of normal sexual activity, including physical pleasure, desire, preference, arousal, or orgasm
Culture-bound syndromes
Disorders that occur in a particular culture and are closely tied to the values of those societies, though the underlying emotions can be felt universally
Action potential
Electrical impulse that moves from the soma through the axon
Teratogens
Environmental factor, such as maternal stress, viruses, or drugs, that can negatively impact fetal development
Hypersomnia
Excessive sleepiness when trying to remain awake
Four stages of sexual arousal
Excitement, plateau, orgasm, resolution
Implicit social norms
Expectations and rules governing social behavior that are not part of formally adopted laws, rules, or policies
Psychoactive drugs
Externally generated substances that change the way the brain works
Panic disorder
Feelings of tremendous fear, when there is no reasonable causation, and characterized by panic attacks that can last for several minutes or longer
Primary sex characteristics
Females' primary sex characteristics are the vagina, uterus, overies, and mammary glands, while males' are the penis, testicles, scrotum, and prostate glands
Operant conditioning
Focuses on the relation between the behavior and the environment changes that the behavior produces
Institutional Review Board (IRB)
For research involving human participants
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC)
For research involving nonhuman species
Psychodynamic theory
Freud's argument that our psychological experience is the prodcut of the conflict between our id and our superego
Myelin
Glial cell that provides electrical insulation for the axon
Availablility heuristic
Heuristic based on the assumption that the most easily imagined possibility is also the likeliest
Parenting style
How caregivers impart beliefs and standards of behavior to their children
Biopsychology
How the physical systems produce behavior
Fluid intelligence
How we are able to process information and develop solutions to problems
Savants
Individuals with generally limmited mental abilities but outstanding capabilities in one or two limited domains
Receptor sites
Locations where neurotransmitters fit like a key in a lock to activate postsynaptic neurons
Cognitive science
Investigations of how the brain creates the mind that draw from several fields, including psychology, philosopy, economics, neuroscience, and computer science
Self-actualization
Involves making "the full use and exploitation of talents, capacities, potentialities"
Tabula rasa
Latin "blank slate", a metaphor for a newborn baby's mind
Trichromatic theory
Latin for "three colors"; the idea that our eyes have three different kinds of nerves that respond to three colors: red, blue, and green
Observational learning
Learning that occurs through observing the behavior of others; modeling
Primary motor cortex
Lies on the frontal lobe and programs voluntary movements
Primary somatosensory cortex
Lies on the parietal lobe and processes touch sensations
Photoreceptors
Light-sensitive cells in the retina
Amnesia
Loss of memory, typically due to brain damage
Antianxiety medications
Medication that reduces anxiety via depression of central nervous system activity
Antidepressants
Medications that balance out extreme moods by acting on neurotransmitters that influence mood and behavior
Declarative memories
Memories that can be put into words, such as events, facts, and word definitions
Procedural memories
Memories that often can't be expressed in words but are memories for how to do a certain skill
Long-term memory
Memory of past events and facts about the world
Gestalt grouping principles
Methods of grouping disconnected sensory fragments to form a coherent whole
Medical model
Model that conceptualizes abnormal behavior as the result of physical causes that can be treated through medical means
Insight
Moment at which the solution to a problem suddenly becomes clear
Rods
More sensitive type of photoreceptor found mostly on the periphery of the the retina
Sensorimotor stage
Piaget's first stage of cognitive development, occuring from birth to approximately age two, in which babies learn about the world through their senses and actions
Respondent extinction
Occurs any time the conditioned stimulus (CS) is presented without presenting the unconditioned stimulus (US)
Generalization
Occurs when a CR is observed in the presence of stimuli that were not present during training
Discrimination
Occurs when a behavior is observed in the presence of stimuli used during training but not in its absence
Situation attribution
Occurs when we assign the cause of the behavior to something outside the individual such as context or other people in the situation
Personal attribution
Occurs when we assign the cause of the behavior to something within the individual, such as his or her personality, beliefs, or motivations
Conscientiousness
One of the Big Five personality characteristics indicating a tendency to be organized, careful, and disciplined (Michelle Obama)
Openness
One of the Big Five personality characteristics indicating a willingness to try new experiences (Leonardo da Vinci)
Neuroticism
One of the Big Five personality characteristics indicating the tendency to be anxious and insecure (Marlin from Finding Nemo)
Agreeableness
One of the Big Five personality characteristics indicating the tendency to be helpful, empathetic, and trusting (Fred Rogers)
Extroversion
One of the Big Five personality characteristics indicating where people get their energy; an extrovert feels 'recharged' by social interaction, while an introvert feels recharged by being alone (Eddie Murphy)
Self-esteem
Our personal view of ourself
narcolepsy
Overwhelming urges to fall sleep at inappropriate moments during the day
Nucleus accumbens
Part of the brain that underlies feelings of pleasure
Soma
Part of the neuron that contains machinery to keep the neuron alive and functioning
Ion channels
Passageways that enable charged particles (ions) to travel through the neural membrane when opened
Sexual orientation
Patterns of emotional, romantic, and sexual attractions to others; is part of our sexuality
Need to belong
People tend to have an 'inherent' desire to belong and be an important part of something greater than themselves
Intersexed
People who are born with any of several variations in sex characteristics, including chromosomes, gonads, sex hormones, or genitals, that do not fit the typical definitions for male or female bodies
Temperament
Personality characteristics that are made evident shortly after birth relating to emotional reactivity and intensity
Perspectives of psychology
Philosophical ways of thinking about the goals of psychology and the nature of human behavior
Schachter-Singer two-factor theory of emotion
Physiological arousal and the cognative interpretation of the context in which the emotion occurs
Formal operational stage
Piaget's fourth and final stage, age twelve and up, in which children should begin to demenstrate the ability to perform mental operations abstractly, without the aid of actual experience
Preoperational stage
Piaget's second stage of cognitive development, between the ages of two and six, in which children can mentally represent, but not mentally operate objects
Concrete operational stage
Piaget's third stage of cognitive development, bewteen the ages of six and twelve, in which children can perform mental operations as long as they have tangible materials to work with
Psychic determinism
Point of view stating that past experiences influence the present state of mind and that nothing happens by chance
Analytical intelligence
Problem-solving and reasoning abilities used to solve everyday problems, such as information processing, mental calculations, and learning new info
Defense mechanisms
Processes by which the ego reduces anxiety
Hallucinogens
Psychoactive agents that cause perceptual anomalies and false sensory messages
Humanistic theorists
Psychologists who choose to focus on the potential for positive growth and achievement in an individual rather than the individual's deficits
Salience
Refers to how noticeable the neutral stimulus is to the organism
Contingency
Refers to the degree to which one event predicts the occurrence of another event
Heterosexuality
Sexual attraction to the opposite sex
Sexuality
Sexual feelings and attractions to other people
Secondary sex characteristics
Sexual organs and traits that develop at puberty and are not directly involved in human reproduction
Self-fulfilling prophecies
Situations where the expectations of an event increase the likelihood of the event occurring, which reinforces the expectation of the event
Insomnia
Sleep disorders associated with difficulty getting to or remaining asleep
Explicit social norms
Social norms that are formally adopted by a group as written laws, rules, or policies
Negative affect
Subjective experience of distress and unwanted engagement
Positive affect
Subjective experience of energy, engagement, and concentration
Retina
The "projection screen" of the eye, which transforms the light energy received from the outside world into an electrical signal that is passed to the brain
Simultaneous conditioning
The NS and US are both presented at the same time
Trace conditioning
The NS is presented and removed before the US is presented so that there is no over lap between the two stimuli
Delayed conditioning
The NS is presented first and then the US is presented while the NS is still present; there are two key elements to delayed conditioning
Backward conditioning
The US is presented before the NS occurs
Experimental control
The ability of the researcher to control the environment and minimize outside influence on the behavior of interest
Figure-ground segregation
The ability to distinguish objects from the surrounding background
Intelligence
The ability to efficiently and effectively learn from experience, perform mental tasks, and solve problems
Phonology
The ability to hear phonemes and assign the phonemes to words
Creativity
The ability to make surprising connections between seemingly disconnected ideas
Internal validation
The ability to minimize the influence of variables other than those involved in the research question
Resilency
The ability to overcome stress and trauma
Falsifiability
The ability to test a hypothesis with an objective, empirical observation that could demonstrate the hypothesis to be incorrect
Creative intelligence
The ability to use information in new ways, to invent, and to come up with nontraditional solutions to problems (outside the box thinging)
Latent content
The actual fantasy that the id wishes to indulge in dreams, but to avoid arousing the ego, the id disuises the latent content in symbols
Intimacy
The aility to form emotionally close relationships, particularly of a romantic nature
Social clock
The appropriate time, depending upon one's culture, to leave home, get a job, marry, have children, and retire
Frontal lobe
The are of the brain that is implicated in impulse control and personality
Attachement
The association infants make between their caregiver, nourishment, and comfort, this process is integral to cognitive and social development
Consciousness
The awareness of whatever is presently happening in your mind
Object permanence
The awareness that objects continue to exist when not seen
Self-concept
The image individuals have of themselves, consisting of the ability we believe we have and how we perceive them
Dependent variables
The behavior that is directly measured and observed
Adolescent egocentrism
The belief that an adolescent's private experiences are unique and that other's, especially their peers, are always directing their attention toward them
Self-efficacy
The beliefs an individual holds concerning his or her skills and ability to perform certain acts
Expected value
The benefit or cost of an outcome multiplied by the likelihood of the outcome occurring
Sex
The biological classification of a person based on genetic composition, anatomy, and hormones
Stereopsis
The brains ability to generate a three-dimensional view of the wold from two flat retinal images by comparing the two images
Idealism
The branch of monism that claims there are only mental things
Materialism
The branch of monism that claims there are only physical things in the world
Pinna
The carilaginous portion of the outer ear, which collects sound
Neuron doctrine
The claim that the network that appears when examining brain tissue under a microscope consists of separate cells
Iris
The colored ring of muscle in the eye that controls the size of the pupil
Gender dysphoria
The condition of feeling one's emotional and psychological identity as male or female is different than one's biological sex
Circadian rhythm
The daily cycle of waking and sleeping, body temperature, and hormones that is generated by an internal biological clock and synchronized to light and dark patterns due to the Earth's rotation
Face validity
The degree to which a psychological theory or assessment appears to be effective or accurate
External validity
The degree to which findings from the study can be applied to situations and participants outside the original group of participants
Generalizability
The degree to which scientific findings from one context can be applied to a different context group of people, or situation
Environmental realism
The degree to which the testing environment is similar to the real world context where the behavior typically occurs
Moral development
The development of the capacity to distinguish between right and wrong
Hemisphere
The division of the cortex into left and right sides
Reality principle
The driving force of the ego, or its attempts to meet basic needs without violating social constraints
Pleasure principle
The driving force of the id, which constantly seeks gratification of basic desires
Narcotic
The drugs that are related to the chemical extracted from the opium poppy plant
Attitudes
The emotional and cognitive evaluations that we attach to people, places, objects, and ideas
Bereavement
The emotional and role changes that occurs following the death of a loved one
Menopause
The end of the menstrual cycle, resulting in the loss of the ability to bear children
Independent varibles
The environmental conditions that the researcher manipulated during the experiment
Naturalistic fallacy
The erroneous belief that biologically based motives, feelings, or behaviors are morally right or wrong
Fundamental attribution error
The error in which we tend to make more personal attributions than situational attributions when observing others' behavior
Social roles
The expected behaviors of individuals with certain characteristics in a social group
Demandingness
The extent to which parents expect obedience and responsible behavior, regardless of how their children may feel about it
Crystallized intelligence
The facts, information, and details that we know
Self-actualization
The final tier of Maslow's theory of Human Motivation, in which the individual has reached the full potential in every aspect of his or her life
Primary auditory cortex
The first major region of the auditory processing in the cortex
Menarche
The first menstrual period, occurring, on average, around age twelve
Primary visual cortex
The first stage of cortical visual processing in which the visula image is separated into its component parts, such as color, shape, and motion
Spermarche
The first time sperm is part of ejaculation
Cochlea
The fluid-filled portion of the middle ear, which transforms sound into an electrical signal to be sent to the brain
Amplitude
The heigh of a wave, which corresponds to the loudness of a sound
Genetic fitness
The likelihood that an organism's genes will survive either by the continued life of the organism or being passed through reproduction
Occipital lobe
The lobe at the posterior corner of the brain, concerned primarily with basic visual processing
Zeitgeist
The major intellectual theories and philosophies that dominate an area during a specific time in history
Perception
The mental experience of sensory information
Schema
The mental maps in which we store our experiences
Diffusion of responsibility
The more people in the group, the less any one person is responsible for the outcome of the situation
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
The most widely used objective personality inventory, primarily utilized to help diagnose psychological disorders, such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder
Flynn effect
The name given to gains in performance on intelligence scores for the general population that have been observed over the last several decades
Conservation
The principle that quantity remains the same despite changes in shape
Frequency
The number of cycles per second of a wave
Maturation
The orderly sequence of biological growth
Sclera
The outer white portion of the eye
Stereotypes
The overgeneralized characteristics that we assign to all members of a perceived group
Preconscious
The part of Freud's structure of mind that is accessible but not currently consious
Conscious
The part of Freud's structure of mind that is currently accessible
Unconscious
The part of Freud's structure of mind that remains constantly inaccessible to the conscious mind
Id
The part of Freud's structure of personality that houses primitive desires
Superego
The part of Freud's structure of personality that is the conscience, or set of ethics
Ego
The part of Freud's structure of personality that must find a way to act that satisfies basic desires without violating social constraints
Temporal lobe
The part of the cortex that allows us to recognize visual objects, such as faces
Parietal lobe
The part of the cortex that processes visual locations and contains the primary somatosensory cortex
Central nervous system
The part of the nervous system made up of the brain and the spinal cord
Manifest content
The people and things that actually appear in dreams
Locus of control
The perceived source of control in an individula's life that results in the attribution of events to circumstances either within or beyond the individual's control
Puberty
The period of sexual maturation within which we become capable of sexual reproduction
Focus
The point of origin of a seizure
parasympathetic nervous system
The portion of the autonomic nervous system that controls normal organ activity
Sympathetic nervous system
The portion of the autonomic nervous system that controls the body's organ activity in response to threats
Peripheral nervous system
The portion of the nervous system containing all nerves outside the central nervous system
Automatic nervous system
The portion of the nervous system that controls involuntary behaviors (i.e. digestion)
Somatic nervous system
The portion of the peripheral nervous system that controls voluntary behaviors (i.e. walking)
Lifetime reproductive potential
The potential number of offspring that an organism could produce in its lifetime
Attention
The process by which your brain filters out loads of unnecessary sensory information to focus on a small portion
Adaptation
The process in which the brain becomes less sensitive to a particular sensory feature after being exposed to it for an extended period of time
Conformity
The process of adapting our individual behavior to meet the social norms, attitudes, and behaviors of a social group
Accomodation
The process of adjusting a preexisting schema to fit with new information
Sensation
The process of collecting sensory information from the outside world through the five sense
Gender typing
The process of developing an identity through learned gender roles
Assimilation
The process of interpreting new information in terms of what we already know
Reuptake
The process of the sending neuron reclaiming used neurotransmitters from the synapse
Motivation
The process that energizes us to behave in certain ways and in certain contexts
Emergent property
The product of smaller pieces but is not apparent when examining the smaller pieces
Anthropomorphization
The projecting of human experience and abilities onto nonhuman objects
Gender
The psychological aspects associated with being male or female
Affect
The psychological experience of our physiological state
Spontaneous recovery
The re-occurrence of the conditioned response after some time has passed since the last extinction trial
Emergent stage 1 sleep
The stage of sleep that occurs after ascending from deep sleep into lighter sleep; this stage of sleep is called"emergent" to distinguish it from the initial stage 1 sleep that occurs just after desending from wakefulness
Social norms
The rules and expectations of the group concerning the behavior of individual members
Schedules or reinforcement
The rules that specify when reinforcement is delivered and what must be done to earn the consequence
Behavior analysis
The scientific approach to exploring the laws and principles that govern behavior across species and the development of behavior technologies based on these laws
Psychology
The scientific study of behaviors of individual organisms and how environmental, physiological, mental, social, and cultural events influence these behaviors.
Abnormal psychology
The scientific study of psychological problems, including mental illness, and their treatment
Psychopharmacology
The scientific study of the impact drugs have on psychological disorders
Behavior analysts
The scientists who approach behavior from the perspective of behavior analysis
Gender identity
The sense of being female or male
Essence
The set of necessary and sufficient conditions that determines whether a particular item is a member of a concept
Cognitive revolution
The shift in psychology from strict behaviorism to investigating ways in which the brain cells creates the mind
Electooculogram (EOG)
The signal from electrodes connected to the head on both sides of the eye measuring eye movements
electromyogram (EMG)
The signal from electrodes connected to the neck measuring muscle tone
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
The signal from electrodes connected to the scalp measuring brain activity
Morphene
The smallest meaningful unit in a word
Phoneme
The smallest unit of sound in a language
Perceptual constancy
The visual perception that objects remain constant even when their retinal image changes
Framing
The way in which a particular problem or solution is presented
Qualia
The way the world looks and feels inside your conscious mind
Cortex
The wrinkly surface of the brain
Restorative theories
These kinds of theories argue that our bodies and brains accumulate wear and tear while active and awake, so we need sleep to repair damages
Adaptation theories
These kinds of theories argue that sleep is tailored to the way an animal makes a living
Bio-psycho-social-cultural-perspective
This perspective is inclusive of the many factors that work together to influence behavior
Ossicles
Three tiny bones in the middle ear that amplify airborne vibrations
Vesicles
Tiny bags used to contain and transport neurotransmitters from the soma to the end of the axon
Neuromuscular junction
Tiny gap between a muscle fiber and the motor neuron controlling the fiber
Synapse
Tiny gap between two neurons where chemical transmission of neural messages occurs
Confounding variables
Uncontrolled variables that can influence the phenomenon being studied
Hypnotic analgesia
Use of hypnosis for pain relief
Resting potential
Voltage maintained by a neuron when it is not sending any electrical messages
Responsiveness
Warmth, or to what extent parents respond to their children's needs and wants
Self-serving bias
We accept our successes as a product of personal characteristics and losses as due to situational variables
Resurgence
When an old behavior reappears during extinction or a new behavior
Insecure attachment
When infants demonstrate behavior marked by anxiety, avoidance, or a combination of both in regard to relationship
Secure attachement
When infants play happily and readily explore new environments in the presence of their mother
Occam's razor
When trying to explaoin the available data, any unnecessary parts should be trimmed from the explanation as if with a razor
Iconic memory
a brief visual imade of the world held in sensory memory
Institutional Review Board
a committee composed of scientists and administrators that oversee all human research at an institution in order to protect the rights of research participants
Behavior analysis
a scientific approach to the study of learning that focuses on laws and processes of behavior across species and the development of behavior technologies
Linguistic intelligence
ability to understand, analyze, and produce language
Classical conditioning
aka: respondent conditioning, Pavlovian conditioning, and associative learning
Moral intuition
gut feelings that can drive decisions
If newborn babies are given the choice to look at two circles next to each other and above a third circle, or one circle above the two circles next to each other, they would choose ______ because ______.
the first; it resembles a face
Cognitive dissonance theory
the tension we experience when our attitudes and behaviors do not match; motivates us to change our attitudes to be more consistent with our behaviors
Adolescence
the years spent moving from childhood to adulthood