Ultimate AP Psych tool
What two parts does autonomic system break down into?
Sympathetic and parasympathetic system
Endocrine system
System of glands that secrete and regulate hormones
Function of dendrites
Take in/receive messages
100 ______ _______ each with 50-100 ______ _______ ____ that send message to "matching partner cell" In _____ lobe
Taste buds, taste receptor cells (transducers), temporal
BF Skinner's students experiment
Taught Racoons to put coins in piggy bank; instinct caused them to investigate coins and not care about food)
Prosocial behavioral models
Teach children positive behaviors (Ghandi and MLK Jr taught to inspire others and peaceful protest; children often imitate parents behavior)
Quantitative trait loci (QTL) approach
Technique that looks for the location of genes that might be associated with particular behaviors
Technology across the lifespan
Technological advances have given greater access to information at virtually every stage of development
Hearing loss has risen in _____ by 33% since 1990's
Teens
Women and emotion
Tend to talk about emotions more than men do Outperform men in accurately recognizing facial expressions of emotion Tend to smile more often
Bystander effect
Tendency for any person to be less likely to give aid if other people are present (more ppl=less chance to help)
Conformity
Tendency of people to adjust their behavior to what others are doing to adhere to the cultural norms.
Hindsight bias
Tendency to believe, after learning outcome, we should have for seen it.
Fundamental attribution error
Tendency to cite dispositional causes for others behavior; purposefully ignoring situational variables (only applying to others)
State dependent memory
Tendency to have improved retrieval when in the same state of consciousness as when memory was encoded (if high energy when studying, perform better with high energy on exam)
serial positioning effect
Tendency to recall best the last and first items in a list
Out-group homogeneity
Tendency to see members of out-group as the same
laws of similarity
Tendency to see/perceive smooth patterns rather than disjointed ones
Ethnocentrism
Tendency to view ones own group as superior to others and as the standard for judging the worth of foreign ways
Reuptake
Terminal buttons take back the neurotransmitters (vacuum), and can use it to make copies after
Educational and School Psychology
Test and counsel children having difficulties in school. (Special ed to gifted)
inferential statistics
Test hypothesis and predict how likely a sample score is to occur in the population
Hypothesis
Testable prediction, services from a theory
What controls the sex drive in men and women?
Testosterone; men have higher levels
Visual Cliff (Gibson and Walk)
Tests depth perception in infants and young animals (all glass box with one side covered with print; they don't walk on the glass side because of right)
Marijuana
Tetrahydrocannabinos (THC) 7 seconds to hit brain (smoking) Lower inhibitions Amplifies sensitivity to colors, sounds, tastes, and smells Not possible to gain dependence; can build up tolerance Smoke before brain develops=less frontal lobe development Impaired motor coordination (don't drive! Impairs memory)
Hair cells send messages to the _____, then to the _______ ______ of ______ lobe
Thalamus, auditory cortex of temporal lobes
What does 95% in terms of a p value mean?
That's the IV has caused change in DV; the manipulation worked
Glial cells
The "glue" that holds the nervous system together
Combination of philosophy and physiology (Aristotle said mind and body work together)
The Origins of psychology
Empathy
The ability to share the feelings of others and understand their situations
According to the gate control theory, what opens the gate?
The activation of small fibers
Persuasion
The active and conscious effort to change an attitude through the transmission of a message
Relearning
The amount of time saved when acquiring knowledge for the second time (psych intro—> psych AP)
Prototype
The best fitting example of a category (dog = first one is lab)
Apparent motion
The brain and accurately interprets the sensation of the light on our retinas (see movement when there is none; optical illusion)
Applied psychology
The branch of psych concerned with everyday practical problems
Rehearsal
The conscious repetition of information, either to maintain it in consciousness or to encode it for storage
intimacy versus isolation
The development crisis is whether or not one will join their identity with another person Love is the main concern, but if this is already achieved, can be about forming live friendships
Tolerance
The diminishing effect with regular use of the same dose of a drug (need to take more to get same effect)
Principle 4 of behavioral genetics
The environment affects how and when genes affect behavior
Reciprocity norm
The expectation that people will helo those who have helped them
Heritability
The extent to which a characteristic is influenced by genetics. Ranges on a score from 0-1, more heritable closer to one (it's never 0 or 1, always in the middle; even .4 is considered significant)
Wilhelm Wundt (1879)
The father of psychology. He started the first psych lab in Germany, measure "atoms of mind" (memory and attention; experimental psych)
figure-ground
The figure stands in front of a somewhat unformed background/ground Ex. Rubins face-vase figure
Acquisition
The final product of classical conditioning (NS becomes CS and produced CR)
Process of the three mid ear bones
The hammer hits the anvel, which then moves the stirrup (created vibration) Vibration of the stirrup activated the inner ear (specifically the cochlea)
Monogenic transmission
The hereditary passing on of traits determines by a single gene (very few examples)
Multitasking
The implication of shifting attention; Rapid switching from one task to another
Attribution theory
The inferences we make about what causes behavior.
Conditioned response (CR)
The learned response to a CS (which was originally an NS)
Threshold
The level of strength a stimulus much reach to be detected
Nurture works on what nature provides (both are important); the environment interacts continuously with biology to shape who we are and what we do
The modern debate of nature vs nurture
The more area on the strip for a body part means....
The more sensitive that body part is the Ex. More area for the hands than feet because hands are sensitive
Resting potential
The neurons stable negative charge when it is inactive
Frequency
The number of wave cycles per second; pitch (higher frequency = higher pitch) Short wavelength = higher frequency
Dominant gene
The one that is expressed when paired genes are different
Dependent variable
The outcome/result of manipulation (what found out from experiment)
Reliability
The overall consistency of a measure (hits the same spot)
Percentile-rank
The percentage of scores in a distribution lower than the score
Recall
The person must retrieve information learned ealier without cues (fill in the blank test)
Recognition
The person needs to only identity items previously learned (MC test)
P-value
The probability that two sets of data are significantly different from each other (you want the lower probability; when p is less than or equal to .05, groups are significantly different; significance=there is a difference)
Modeling
The process of observing and imitating a specific behavior (monkey see money do)
accommodation
The process of the lens changing shape to focus near or far objects on the retina
Evolutionary model (instinct theory)
The purpose of any living organism to perpetuate itself (pass on genes) Major motives all involve basic survival and reproduction needs and drives (stay alive long enough pass genes): hunger, thirst, body temp regulation, oxygen, sex (gene pass) We do things to feel good; live in to feel gold though these things
Metabolism
The rate at which we consume energy (some fast/others slow) 4 biological components that drive our metabolism
Principle 1 of behavioral genetics
The relationship between genes and behavior is complex
What was the NS in Pavlov's study?
The ringing of the bell (completely un associated with food unless taught to make this connection
congnitive psychology
The science of how people think, learn, remember, and perceive
Developmental psychology
The scientific study for physical (biological), cognitive (thinking), and social change throughout the lifespan
Psychology
The scientific study of thought and behavior. Psych=mind
Twin adoption studies
The study of hereditary influences on twins, both identical and fraternal, who were raised together and apart. (Identical = 100% same genes, fraternal = 30-60%)
social psychology
The study of how living among others influence human thoughts, feelings, and behavior
pyschopysics
The study of how we make psychological meaning of physical stimuli
Biological psychology (neuroscience)
The study of the link between physiological (genetic, hermonal, and neural) and pyschological process (how physiolgy affects thought and behavior)
Spacing effect
The tendency for distributed study or practice to yield better long-term retention than is achieved through massed study
Own-race bias
The tendency for people to recognize faces of their own race more accurately than faces of other races
False consensus effect
The tendency to over estimate the extent to which others share our beliefs and behaviors.
Mood congruent memory
The tendency to recall experiences that are consistent with ones current good or bad emotions (good mood now = happy bad memory)
Which structure does smell bypass and why?
The thalamus because evolutionarily smell has developed before the thalamus (embryologically)
How is 50% of variation in personality across family members explained?
The unshared environment (birth order, parents, teachers, friends, etc)
Framing
The way that an issue is posed can often change the way ppl interpret info.
What are adolescents searching for?
Their identity (figuring out who you are in all aspects of life)
triarchic theory of intelligence
Theory by Robert Sternberg; intelligence broken down into 3 categories of successful intelligence (skills and cognitive abilities needed to achieve life success): practical intelligence (solving everyday problems); analytic intelligence (IQ test information); creative intelligence: solving new problems (inventive)
Sigmind Freud (1920's)
Theory of personality based on early childhood experience; studied the unconscious (psychoanalysis; very controversial)
Conclusion of 2nd cat experiment?
There is a critical period for norms sensory and perceptual development
post synaptic potential
These affect the probability of receiving a neurons message.
Structuralism/functionalism, functionalism
These don't really exist today but just current fields stem back to this school of psych
Festinger and Carlsmith
These two psychologists conducted a study where after completing a boring task some participants were paid $1 and others were paid $20 to convince others waiting to do the same task that it was fun and interesting. Those paid $1 rated it as interesting while the group that was paid $20 rated the task no differently than a control group. (Cognitive dissonance experiment)
What happens to authoritarian influenced children later in life?
They act out more (ex. In college they binge drink)
What do behavioral psychologists believe today?
They agree that psychology is an objective study, but it does reference cognition
What are photoreceptor and what 2 types are there
They are transducers, rods and cones
Wernicke's aphasia
They believe that they are speaking fine but no one actually understands them.
What does the IACUC do?
They ensure humane care (no abusing) and healthful conditions (fed well) in testing should minimize discomfort (no extra pain); basically the IRB for animals
Why do psychologists perform autopsies?
They focus on the brain and determine if a person had any brain abnormalities by comparing it to the brain of a healthy person.
What is the flaw with eye witness testimonies?
They usually take several mins because witnesses are pressured to ping out the correct perpetrator; should take under 10 sec
Heuristic (mental shortcut)
Thinking strategy that is quicker but more error prone than algorithms (may not get right solution)
Imaginary audience
Thinking that ppl (typically peers) are watching and judging your every move Ex. Jen wants to tell her friends a secret but thinks everyone in the room is listening
What defines attractiveness and why?
Thinness, because of food surplus (contiene is seen as ideal) (in past with low food it used to be fat)
Nature vs nurture debate
This is the controversy over the relative contributions of biology and experience to the development of our traits and behaviors
biopsychological perspective
This perspective takes every other psychological perspective into account
Nature
This side says that biological genes play the role in the debate
Nurture
This side says that the environment plays the role in the debate
conditioned stimulus (CS)
This starts off as an NS. Then when the NS is paired with a US, it becomes this
Behaviorism
This theory is based off of the manipularon of the environment
Creativity
Thought/behavior that is novel (original) and useful (adaptive)
Genetic markers of behavior
Thrill seeking Impulsivity Neuroticism (anxiety) (Mixture of genes passed down causes each)
What is does it mean with "experience is critical" with early sensory development"?
Through cat research and others it was found critical periods exist; we must be exposed to many sensations at a young age so we can develop normally
Thomas and chess
Through naturalistic observation of children they identified three basic temperaments for infants; difficult, slow to warm and easy
Puberty
Time period of when sexual maturation occurs
normative social influence
To gain acceptance (ex peer pressure)
Stranger situation technique (Mary Ainsworth)
To test attachment style; brings baby and mother into a room and see how the baby reacts when the mother leaves the room Focuses on the reunion (key determinant) or how the baby reacts when mom comes back
External validity
To what extent can any affect in research be generalized to populations and settings (sleep study in lab—-> cannot be generalized because it's not at home—-> low external validity)
Nicotine
Tobacco (in all of its forms) 5-4 million die from diseases caused by tobacco Behind in early adolescence As addictive as heroin and cocaine Monkey experiment with cocaine (12,000 times press lever)
Functional MRI (fMRI)
Tracks metabolic changes by looking at blood flow and which part of the brain requires the most oxygen (this tells us the function of a specific brain part)
Mechanoreceptors are a type of _____
Transducer
Emerging Adulthood (18-25)
Transitional time between adolescents and young adult hood; most Americans spend this time in college and starting their career Increase responsibility and demands
Lewis Terman
Translated test into English + coined term IQ Established national norms and applied the ratio score MA/CA to IQ Stanford-Binet test
Lens
Transparent eye structure that focuses the light rays falling on the retina; uses the prices of accommodation
Two theories for the perception of color
Trichromatic color theory, opponent processing theory
What do hair cells do?
Trigger impulses (action potentials) in auditory nerve (sends to brain)
True or false, true color blindness is very rare
True, usually just involves color specific deficits
Door-in-face
Turn down large request; then agree to smaller request
Who founded conjunction fallacy?
Tversky
How many strands does the optic nerve have and where do each go?
Two strands; one goes to visual cortex on same side of the brain other goes to optic chiasm on opposite side of the brain
Correlation
Two variables are related to each other
Achievement
Typically after going through an identity crisis and exploration; made commitment to identity Ex. Jimmy married Tina after years of dating women and discovered what he wants in a wife
adolescent egocentrism
Unable to tell the difference between what you believe your peers think about you and what they actually believe about you Ex. Think everyone hates you when no one even knows you
Which track of dual processing is used more often?
Unconscious tract because it saves time for conscious activities that require energy (don't think about breathing you just do it; but think of math homework); sometimes we need to use conscious process to override unconscious
What comes first, understanding or speaking?
Understanding comes first (wernickes develops before broca's)
Naturalistic
Understanding plants and animals (botanist)
Theory of mind to IA
Understanding that other people aren't thinking the same things we are (no sense of self development)
Object permanence
Understanding that things exist when you can't see then
Intrapersonal
Understanding yourself (controlling and regulating emotions; monk/priest)
Personality
Unique and relatively enduring set of behaviors (consistent through life), feelings, thoughts, and motives that characterize and individual
Short term decay
Unless rehearsed, verbal information is quickly forgotten
Altruism
Unselfish regard for the welfare of others (social psych argues that there's never a true altruist act)
Synesthesia
Unusual sensory experience in which a person experiences sensations in one sense when a different sense is stimulated (ex smell is processed in occipital lobe)
Social norms
Unwritten rules about acceptable behavior imposed by the cultural context in which one lives (group held beliefs)
Motivation
Urge to move toward ones goals; to accomplish tasks (3 parts)
Grammar and syntactical language
Used by Homo Sapiens 150,000-200,000 years old Evolved with the complexity of the human brain
test-retest reliability
Used to assed the consistency of a measure from one time to another (take today, then 5 years later and get the same score = high reliability; IQ test as an example)
Inter-rater reliability
Used to assess the degree to which different raters/observers give consistent estimates of the sane phenomenon (same number of counts —-> High, train people ahead of time)
Body Mass Index (BMI)
Used to evaluate ones weight; ideal BMI is between 20-25, 26-29= overweight, obese= over 30
Three mountains task
Used to investigate egocentrism in the preoperational stage. A child is allowed to view a model of three mountains from all sides. The child is then seated with a view of the mountains and a doll is placed in a different position. The child is asked to choose a picture that shows how the mountains would look to the doll. Preoperational children typically choose a picture of what the mountains look like from their own perspective rather than the doll's perspective.
descriptive statistics
Used to summarize data (specific to your study) Ex: mean, median, and mode
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)
UsedUsed to make hiring decisions in the workplace, but uses Barnum statements (make people more likely to believe the outcome truly describe their personality) Ex: today will be full of success (can happen in any way)
Fixation
Using a single mental set (approach to a program), rather than exploring different options in problem solving (using same formula over and over again)
African culture view on intelligence
Value social skills such as being socially responsible, cooperative, and active in family and social life
Conventional level
Valuing caring, trust, and relationships as well as the social order and lawfulness (wouldn't do it because I would go to prison or I would do it because of love)
What makes people happier?
Valuing non-competitive goals Having higher EQ Finding meaning in life
Left hippocampus holds?
Verbal information (sound of voices)
Phineas Gage
Vermont railroad worker who survived a severe brain injury that changed his personality and behavior; his accident gave information on the brain and which parts are involved with emotional reasoning (before accident he was nice guy but after he became rude and aggressive)
Gender (intelligence)
Very few, if any, true differences between men and women (for intelligence); more variability among men than among women
Protolanguage
Very rudimentary language also known as prelanguage; no grammar or syntax rules
BF Skinner and John Watson (Behaviorism)
View that psych should be an objective science and focus completely on behavior, not mental process (what can see)
Right hippocampus holds?
Visual designs and locations (pictures)
Visual imagery
Visual representations created by the brain after the original stimulus is no longer present (imagination)
Symbolic thought
Visualizing something that isn't there (seeing in your head)
Vocal expression
Vocal and facial response systems work together in emotion expression Talk about negative emotions more specifically than positive ones Voiced-laughs indicate friendliness
Somatic system
Voluntary and conscious decisions
What are the new versions of the Weachler test and what do they include?
WAIS-III/WISC-IV 4 factors: verbal comprehension, perceptual reasoning, working memory, processing speed
Implicit Association Test (IAT)
Way to test implicit bias from the speed at which people respond to pairings of concepts—such as black or white with good or bad.
Biology of classical conditioning
We are predisposed to make associations that help adapt to our environment (evolution)
Halo effect
We believe what is pretty is good (also happy, healthy, and successful); beauty is in the eye of the culture (where you live and when)
Sociocultural theory
We develop Lang through our parents, peers, television Ex Ebonics
Nativist theory of language development
We discover Lang rather than learn it ; Lang development is inborn (biologically present) Created by Noam Chomsky
infantile amnesia
We don't have episodic memories from out first 2 years if life (for some up to 4)
Truth about flashbulb memories...
We feel they are vivid and accurate; but research shows that they really aren't (distorted)
Law of proximity
We group nearby figures together (makes use of chunking)
Perceptual constancy
We interpret objects as unchanging even one retinal images changes
Confirmation bias
We look for info that aligns with our belief and ignore info that contradicts them
Law of closure
We perceive a whole figure in the absence of complete information
Gestalts law of grouping
We perceive wholes as more than the sum of their parts
Hearing with early sensory development
We prefer our mothers voice and other sounds we heard in the womb after a few days
Freud's explanation to infantile amnesia
We repress early memories because they're sexual (not true)
Optimal arousal model
We seek out ideal level of energy (ex. in test= need a balance amount of stress)
Primary: serial positioning effect
We tend to remember the first items of a list (longer time to process)
Overconfidence
We think we know more than we do
Self serving bias
We use situational attributions for our failures and dispositional attributions for our successes (only ourselves)
Thorndikes law of effect
We will continue behaviors if they are followed by favorable outcomes
Generativity vs Stagnation
We. We to be creative and contribute to the world around us, as opposed to becoming more self focused and unproductive Midlife crisis may occur but it not common
How do beliefs about dreams differs across cultures?
Western cultures see dreams as insignificant and meaningless; non western cultures view them as important sources of info about oneself, future, or spiritual world
zone of proximal development
What a child can do with help (we learn best when things aren't too easy it too difficult; how much help to give comes intuitively to parents)
They attempt to explain how a psychological phenomenon works
What are perspectives of psychology
Unique
What distinguishes us from one another
GAS
What happens when we experience stress? 1. Alarm reaction 2. resistance 3. exhaustion
Extinction
When CR fades (US no longer follow CS so association is weakened)
Positive punishment
When a behavior is followed by the presentation of an unwanted stimulus (Bobby hits brother so mom grounds him)
Negative punishment
When a behavior is followed by the removal of a desirable stimulus (Allison late so dad takes phone away)
Statistical significance
When a probability that the observed findings are due to chance is very low
When do prosocial models work best?
When a thins and words are consistent (practice what you preach)
Placebo effect
When an outcome is due to your belief in treatment (fake pills to help sleep problems causes thinking of getting treatment—-> solves issue)
Imprinting
When animals are first born they follow the first person they see
Critics of Mischel say...
When behavior exam and overtime, personality tends to be more consistent than just looking at one example Ex: Tested by a summer camp of juveniles; girls who are nice were treated nice by kids and guards who are rude were treated bad by kids
Convergence
When eyes move in word as an object moves closer
social trap (tragedy of the commons)
When individuals act in their own best interests and ignore what is best for the group; people act to obtain short term individual gain, which in the long run leads to a loss for the group as a whole
Oval windows
When it vibrates it causes the fluid to move, it covers the cochlea
In what situations do social facilitation show up?
When it's an easy task When you have practiced it more
Polygenic transmission
When many genes interact to create a single characteristic. (Much makes common than monogenic transmission; proved my mapping genome)
Arborization
When neurons grow more dendrites; allows more messages to be received
Relative size
When objects are supposed to be the same size, we assume smaller one is farther away
Interposition
When objects overlap the one on top is closer to the viewer
Associations
When one piece of information from the environment is linked repeatedly with another and the organism begins to connect them (ex. Hearing bell ring and knowing to leave class)
Drive reduction model
When our physiological systems are out of balance or depleted cells we see motivated to reduce depleted state
When is persuasion most influential?
When people pay attention, understand message, and find it convincing
Obedience
When people yield to the social pressure of an authority figure (compliance to someone in charge)
Zygote
When sperm and egg combine (about 1 week after conception; not fully fused)
Social inhibition
When the presence of others hinders performance
Social facilitation
When the presence of others improve performances.
What marks the end of the germinal stage and beginning of embryonic?
When the zygote attaches itself to the uterus wall (morning sickness can begin)
Sleep deprivation and sleep debt
When we get too little sleep, our bodies "owe" our brain a debt of sleep to be paid back later
Overjustification effect
When we start earning rewards (positive reinforcement) for the things we already enjoy, then it decreased our internal motivation (getting as can reduce motivation to work)
Test bias
Whether test predicts outcomes equally well for different groups (very little existence in IQ test)
Black
White
William James
Who is credited with functionalism
Edward Bradford Titchener
Who is credited with the idea of structuralism
Skinner
Who is known for operan conditioning and helping the greater humanity?
John Watson
Who is known for the Little Albert experiment
Who inspired psychologists to measure the brain? He also thought the steam of consciousness (thought flow) was important, therefore figuring out how the brain creates this was important.
William James
What did Hubel and Wiesel do and discover in the 2nd experiment?
With cats found that eye closes for week or more permanently impairs development (baby); good eye takes over part of the brain processes by bad eye (first weeks life; not completely blind but trouble with feature detectors)
How can cognitive decline be reduced?
With physician and mental exercise (ex working out and doin puzzles)
Who is synesthesia more common in?
Woman and left handed people
Yap culture (South Pacific)
Woman worn until day or birth and directly after Husband can join in and "feel the pain"
Which gender across cultures is more sensitive to smell and why?
Women; during pregnancy they have to be careful which good they eat and give the fetus (evolutionary)
Placebo effect and alcohol
Works surprisingly well when fooling ppl; ex flavorless alcohol (just water) people pretend to be drunk and believe they are
What stage of the 8 occurs during adolescence?
Years 12-18, identity vs confusion
Blue
Yellow
Fixed = ?, variable = ?
You know (predictable), you don't know (unpredictable)
Prodigy (only as child)
Young children who are extremely gifted in one area (memorization/chess); average intelligence
Approach-Avoidance
a choice must be made about to pursue a single goal that has both attractive and unattractive aspects ex. you are offered a new job with a higher pay, but must have to move to the city (which you do not like)
Approach-Approach
a choice must be made between two attractive goals (but can only choose 1) ex. if free afternoon, should I play tennis or racquetball
avoidance-avoidance
a choice must be made between two unattractive goals ex. collect unemployment check or take degrading job
Category
a concept that organizes other concepts around what they all share in common (more specific than concept)
Need to excel: Achievement
a desire to do things well and overcome obstacles
Display rules
a group's informal norms about when, where, and how one should express emotions
GABA
a major inhibitory neurotransmitter Slows CNS; correlates with anxiety and intoxication (with higher levels)
Inhibitory PSP
a negative voltage shift that decreases the likelihood that the postsynaptic neuron will fire action potentials
Action potential
a neural impulse; a brief electrical charge that travels down an axon (shift in charge of neuron)
Neuropsychoanalysis
a new scientific movement started in the late 1990s that combined Freudian ideas with neuroscientific methods Has provided sound scientific support for core Freudian ideas that was absent during Freuds time
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
a projective test in which people express their inner feelings and interests through the stories they make up about ambiguous scenes Analyze theme of story, better then ink blot
Reflex
a simple, automatic response to a sensory stimulus
Stage 2
about 10-25 mins (first time takes longer and gets shorter throughout night); periodic sleep spindles
authentic= and hubristic=
accomplishment, overall sense
moods
affective states that operate in the background of consciousness; tend to be longer than most emotions
A (OCEAN)
agreeableness (high=very forgiving, not stubborn, very sympathetic)
Two-Factor Theory
also known as Schachter-Singer theory; to experience emotion one must (1) be physically aroused and (2) cognitively label arousal
binge eating disorder
an eating disorder in which people overeat compulsively (caused by an imbalance of neurotransmitters)
Cannon-Bard theory
an emotion-arousing stimulus simultaneously triggers (1) physiological response (2) subjective experience of emotion
prejudice
an unjustifiable (and usually negative) attitude toward a group and its members.
What is the collective unconscious made up of?
archetypes: ancient images that result from common ancestral experience) Ex: hear of hights
What is the best parenting style?
authoritative, it causes the better outcome for kids
What are the two types of encoding?
automatic processing and effortful processing
Preconventional level
avoiding punishment or maximizing rewards (steal money to buy a toy)
Sedatives
barbiturates and benzodiazepines (anxiety), and tranquilizers Induce sleep and reduce anxiety (effect serotonin levels)
emotion
brief acute changes in conscious experience and physiology that occur in response to a personally meaningful situation in a person's environment.
regulation of emotion
cognitive and behavior efforts people use to modify their emotions (ex. Reappraisal, expressive suppression, and facial feedback hypothesis)
universal
common to all humans beings and can be seen in cultures all over the world (ex. motherese=baby talk high pitch)
Type A personality
competitive, impatient, verbally aggressive, anger-prone, time conscious (neuroticism higher=stress) More prone to heart disease (heat attack)
Opponent processing theory
cons linked together in three color pairs that oppose one another, so that activation of one in each pair inhibits activity in the other
C (OCEAN)
conscientiousness (high=organized and not impulsive)
expressive suppression
controlling facial associated with emotion
Olfactory bulbs
controls sense of smell
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross
created the 5 stages of grief (finding out someone will/had died/or yourself) 1. Denial (can't be true) 2. Anger (why them;aggressive) 3. Bargaining (ask for deal, ask why) 4. Depression (sadness) 5. Acceptance (better place now)
Control group
do not receive treatment
Erikson's Psychosocial Theory
each stage builds on tasks of the previous stage, successful mastery leads to sense of self (We always move on to the next stage even it didn't solve previous one)
Type B personality
easy going and relaxed (lower levels of stress)
Full consciousness
ebbs and flows throughout the day (back and forth from full to moderate to low)
affect
emotion
self conscious emotions
emotions that occur as a function of how well we live up to expectations of ourselves, others, and society
The three parts of memory
encoding, storage, retrieval
David Weschler
established an intelligence test especially for adults (WAIS); also WISC (children); most frequently administered in the US
appraisal
evaluation of a situation with respect to how relevant it is to one's own welfare type of appraisal that occurs=type of emotion generated appraisal may happen on unconscious level
Broaden and Build theory
experiencing positive emotions allow us to have "richer" experiences; positive emotions promote broader attentional focus (help you see the big picture)
Controls
experimental conditions that remain constant (so no extraneous explanations)
types of long term memory
explicit and implicit memory
culturally relative
expressions vary across cultures and can only be understood in their cultural context
E (OCEAN)
extraversion (high=sociable, enthusiastic, and energetic) (low=introversion)
Prosopagnosia
face blindness; sensation without perception of faces (see face but no recognize)
sympathetic nervous system
fight or flight; arouses and expands energy; accelerates heart rate, raised blood pressure, slows digestion, raised perspiration
Spermarche
first ejaculation (nocturnal emission=wet dream)
facial feedback hypothesis
forcing yourself to show an emotion on your face can make you feel that emotion
Hans Selye's Stress Response Theory
general adaptive syndrome
Duchenne smile
genuine smile
Stages of Prenatal (before birth) Development
germinal, embryonic, fetal
medium wavelength
green cones
Need to belong (affiliation)
humans are inherently social creatures (rely on each other) Rejection can lead to both physician health and psychological problems (Baumeister and Leary)
Orexin
hunger-triggering hormone secreted by lateral hypothalamus
Two types of sensory memory
iconic and echoic memory
Parental investment theory
if pregnancy results, the cost of having sex is quite different for men and women (women a lot more)
Joseph LeDoux
info from the thalamus to the amygdala allows us to act quickly (fast path allows amygdala to send signals to active autonomic nervous system)
Prefrontal cortex
involved in determine options for response or reappraisal; damage to the left prefrontal cortex leads to depression (left involved w/ positive emotions)
insula
involved in interospection; aka perception of bodily senses
Conditioned = ______, unconditioned = _____
learned, not learned
Which hemisphere of the brain controls language?
left hemisphere
Visual Mnemonics
memory aids, especially techniques that use vivid imagery and organizational devices; imagery is an effective memory aid
Agonist
mimics the action of a neurotransmitter (excitatory)
Alarm reaction
mobilize resources (activation of sympathetic nervous system; increased heart rate/breathing)
Glutamate
most common excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain; sends messages long distances and faster May play a role in schizophrenia
Neurotic trends
moving toward others, moving against others, moving away from others
Feature detectors
nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of the stimulus, such as shape, angle, or movement
N (OCEAN)
neuroticism (emotional stability) (high=tense, moody, low self confidence)
Recessive Gene
one that is masked when paired genes are different
O (OCEAN)
openness to experience (high=imaginative and unconventional)
James-Lange Theory
our experiences of emotion is our awareness of our physiological responses to emotion-arousing stimuli
Life satisfaction
overall evaluation of our lives
Nociceptors
pain receptors sensitive to temperature and pressure (ex feeling frostbite or someone sit on finger) was
PATHS
providing alternative thinking strategies
anterior cingulate cortex
recall/imagine emotional experiences
Experimental group
receives treatment
reappraisal
reevaluating your response
Test fairness
reflects values, philosophical differences, and the ways in which test results are applied; IQ results designed for application for jobs and schools (can be unfairly used)
Thyroid gland
regulates metabolism
Exhaustion
resources depleted; more susceptible to illness (daily stressors add up and overwhelm us) Daily hassles deplete resources more than catastrophes for life changes b/c of frequency and duration
Richard Lazarus
said appraisal is subjective
What was the UR in Pavlov's experiment?
salivation (pretende of food (US), our mouths tend to water
subjective well-being
satisfaction in different domains (such as career and social networks) and the balance between positive and negative affect in life
Roger Sperry
scientist who won a Nobel Prize for work with split brain patients
Abraham Maslow
self-actualization stood atop the hierarchy of needs •spontaneity, simplicity, naturalness •problem centered (having a life calling) •creativity (inventive/artistic) •deep Interpersonal relations •resistance to enculturation (adapting to new ways)
Olfaction
sense of smell
Gustation
sense of taste
Basic emotions
set of emotions that are common to all humans (neurocultural theory of emotion)
examples of self conscious emotions
shame, guilt, humiliation, embarrassment (revealed something unintentionally), pride
superordinate goals
shared goals that override differences among people and require their cooperation
Two parts of the peripheral nervous system
somatic and autonomic systems
Broca's area
speech production (boca=mouth)
Michael Gazzaniga
split-brain research; understanding of functional lateralization in the brain; how the cerebral hemispheres communicate
affective traits
stable predispositions toward certain types of emotional responses, such as anger
binocular depth cues
stimuli that enable us to judge depth using both eyes
Monocular depth cues
stimuli that enable us to judge depth using only one eye; rely on input from one eye
Hubel and Wiesel
studied feature detection in visual cortex and discovered simple, complex, and hypercomplex cells; won 2 Nobel prizes; experiments with cats
affective neuroscience
studies the structures/systems involved in emotion process; no main emotion system in brain but some areas more important than others
effects of emotional intelligence
teaching kids emotional regulation and awareness skills reduces maladaptive behavior and improves academic performance
Constructive coping
the beneficial actions a person makes to handle the stresses of life (ex. taking the assignment head on by sitting down and starting to plan on how to complete it in a timely manner)
withdrawal symptoms
the discomfort and distress that follow discontinuing the use of an addictive drug
Mental age
the equivalent chronological age a child has reached based on his or her performance on an IQ test; compares a person to same age group
Stranger anxiety
the fear of strangers that infants commonly display (survival adaptation; some babies have lesser or greater extent determined by socialization)
anima/animus
the feminine side of a man/the masculine side of a woman (we try to repress the memories from the past opposite sex ancestors; we are in constant conflict deciding gender)
Menarche
the first menstrual period (onset of puberty for girls)
Neurogenesis
the formation of new neurons
Rorschach inkblot test
the most widely used projective test, a set of 10 inkblots, designed by Hermann Rorschach; seeks to identify people's inner feelings by analyzing their interpretations of the blots Looks at themes of responses, works for ppl who use repression of feelings
Conservation
the principle that properties such as mass, volume, and number remain the same despite changes in the forms of objects Ex. Coin activity, gram crackers, liquids in difft glasses test
Natural selection
the principle that, among the range of inherited trait variations, those contributing to reproduction and survival will most likely be passed on to succeeding generations
REM rebound
the tendency for REM sleep to increase following REM sleep deprivation (created by repeated awakenings during REM sleep; immediately go into REM)
Size constancy
the tendency to interpret an object as always being the same actual size, regardless of its distance Ex: Ames room (tilted room)
Shape constancy
the tendency to interpret the shape of an object as being constant, even when its shape changes on the retina Ex. Viewing a door from the front and the side and knowing it's the same
Defensive coping
the use of Freud's defense mechanism to protect the person from the uncomfortable feeling brought on by stress. (ex. denying that corona virus exists)
Stress
the way we appraise (think) and cope (deal) with environmental threats and chellenges (obstacles that challenge our safety)
Chromosomes
threadlike structures made of DNA molecules packed with protein that contain the genes. Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes in the nucleus of each cell body (one pair from each parent)
Automatic processing
unconscious encoding of incidental information, such as space, time, and frequency, and of well-learned information, such as word meanings
Interpersonal
understanding others (psychology)
postconventional level
universal moral rules that may trump local rules (saying everyone deserves free health care so you would steal it)
facial action coding system
we often categorize peoples emotions based on their facial expressions
Humanistic theories
~Optimistic about human nature ~Humans are interested in realizing their potential (self actualization) ~Contributed to the development of positive psychology Humanists=theoretical, positive=texted ideas
Stanley Milgram Experiment
• a study that involved the role of a "teacher" who shocked a "learner" • every single person administered some shock to the learner, and about two-thirds of the participants, of all ages and from all walks of life, obeyed to the fullest extent • found that situations are powerful in terms of pressure and human action
True facts about older population
•Only 5% of those 65 and over are in nursing homes •A significant portion of older adults have incomes well above the federal poverty level •Older drivers have few were accidents per miles driven and tend to avoid speeding and driving at night •If crabby when young crabby when old and vice versa •Old people have a harder time sleeping = sleep less because more prone to sleep disorders •Elder people are increasingly targets for fraud and scams •Older people tend to become more religious as they grow older (start thinking of after life; want to get into heaven)
Other environmental influences on fetal development
•Week immune system (ex flu) •week reproductive systems (uterus not ideal living conditions) •stress (maternal stress gives off hormones which affects baby negatively)
Ideas supported by neuropsychoanalysis
•importance of early childhood experience on later personality development (looks at neuroplasticity) •unconscious motivation •repression and defense mechanisms •pleasure principle •dreams as wishful thinking
Other types of teratogens
•prescription drugs (antidepressants) •alcohol (fetal alcohol syndrome;FAS) •nicotine and tobacco (smaller baby; trouble with breathing)
Size of embryos after 5 weeks? 7 weeks?
5=sesame seed, 7=blueberry
Interneurons
Communicate only with other neurons, by far the most common type of neuron
Dopamine
"Feel good" reward Many drug additions involve dopamine
Cognitive psychology (subfield)
"Higher" mental process (this is unique/different to humans) Ex. Memory, language, and problem solving
Retrieval failure
"It's on the tip of my tongue"; stored but cannot access it
Pituitary gland
"Master" gland that regulates other endocrine glands. Produces hormones during puberty and growth.
informational social influence
"They know better than I do" (ex. People in smoke room thought others knew better than they did)
What can be used to help reduce ageism?
(Stereotypes of old ppl) tech can be used to help if used to educate
catharsis + effect
(release of negative emotion) can help or hinder depending on how emotion is expressed
Babbling state
(5-6months)-use of phonemes
Cooing stage
(First 6 months)- repetition of vowels (oooo-ahhh); automatic without needing to be taught
which stage of Erikson's can be found in middle adulthood?
(Individuation is important) Generativity vs Stagnation
How does Alzheimer's disease impact personality?
(Most drastic changes) openness decreases, conscientiousness decreases, neuroticism increases
Survey
(Questionnaire or interview) a technique for ascertaining the self-reported attitude or behavior of a particular group
Population
(Usually college students volunteer) the entire group a research in interested in
Central nervous system
(brain and spinal cord) takes sensory information in through spinal chord and makes decision about how to respond (react or do nothing)
Phenotype vs. Genotype
- Phenotype: expressed physical traits - Genotype: Genetic make-up
Visual representation
How we think about images that we see (see and analyze)
Can other species learn human language?
-Chimps and other animals do not have a vocal apparatus that allows them to speak like humans (bio restraint model) -Some primates have been successful using nonvocal sign language, such as American Sign Language (ASL), in communicating with humans and each other -Even very skilled animals only achieve a very rudimentary ability to communicate with human beings (less frontal lobe development)
When do babies start to perceive depth?
6-10 months of age (begin to crawl) Found with visual cliff test
Critical thinking
Ability to analyze, evaluate, and form ideas
Oral
0-18 months; mouth/sucking, biting, chewing
Statistics process
1 test research question 2 calculate (descriptive) 3 does my data fit with how it works in the real world (inferential) + compares results to other studies
Likert's Scale
1-5 or 1-10 on a questionnaire
What are the two main ways we perceive movement
1. Complexity of background (moving more than plain white) 2. Size of object (smaller is faster because less mass)
Two key points of memory test activity
1. Details are lost and story gets shorter=leveling 2. Details changed based on gender (usually follows stereotypes)
The two different categories of intelligence theory are...
1. Either you are smart or not 2. You are smart in your own ways
Order of Needs described by Maslow
1. Food/oxygen/water = physiological 2. Safety (shelter and protection) 3. Love and longingness/friends, family, SO 4. Esteem (loving self) 5. Self actualization=reaching full potential
Sternber's Triangular Theory of Love
1. Intimacy= closeness; how much you share (emotionally) 2. Commitment= dedication/loyalty 3. Passion= physical attraction
Part 1 of three stage processing model
1. We first record info as a fleeting sensory memory
Richard Lazarus' Appraisal Theory of Stress
1. the way we think about a stressful event can lead to negative emotions, thus making us feel stressed (all about interpretation of events) 2. subjective, different from person to person (some feel aggression toward a mistake and this causes stress, others just say its an accident) 3. We also feel positive emotions in stressful situations (ex. grateful for good health during plague)
Kurt Lewin's Motivational Conflicts Theory
1. when two or more competing motivations exist, we have to choose between them 2. 3 types of conflicts: approach-approach, avoidance-avoidance, and approahc-avoidance
Difficult child
10% Never sleep, trouble eating, very fussy
Holophrase
12 months- one word stage (first word is usually familiar person/object) (we usually say words with "da" cause it's easier)
She. Can you tell the sex of the fetus?
12-16 weeks
Slow to warm up
15% Qualities of both; Begin difficult but become easier as time goes on
Telegraphic speech
18 months- two word stage (simple sentences)
Anal
18-36 months; anus/bowel and bladder control
Paul Ekman
1934-present; Field: emotion; Contributions: found that facial expressions are universal
Functionalism
19th century school of psychology that argued they it was better to look at why the mind works the way it does rather than to describe its parts (asking deeper questions; need to know why it is that way)
Structuralism
19th century, school of psychology that argued that breaking down experience into its elemental parts offer the best way to understand thought and behavior (how it is rather why it is)
Birth Order Theory
1st born children have a slight advantage over 2nd born children, who have advantage over 3rd born child, and so on
Cerebrum is made up of...
2 hemispheres with 4 lobes
Prisoners dilema
2 people acting in their own self interest often don't produce the optimal outcome
Time period of embryonic stage and what is in formation?
2-8 weeks Formation of major organs [heart(not working still), lungs, skin (it's clear)] Placenta and umbilical cord form
Sentence phase
2.5-3: closer to adult language but often grammatically incorrect (3 yrs old = 80% brain development complete)
Size of baby at 20 weeks? 28 weeks?
20(5months)=banana, 28(7months)=eggplant
Stage 3
3 and 4 combined takes about 30 mins (becomes longer and the night goes on); transitional stage going into slow wave sleep (delta waves= not much activity)
Phallic
3-6 years; genitals/masturbation
_____-_____% of pregnancies end during this stage, without any recognition that the pregnancy occurred
30-50% (miscarriages mostly occur then the zygote cannot attach itself to the uterus wall)
How big if the baby at 33 weeks? 40 weeks?
33(8-9months)= pineapple, 40(full term)=pumpkin
Percent of children not falling into 3 categories of temperament and their characteristics?
35%, good sleep but bad with eating for ex
Snel
39
Lipup
40
Easy child
40% Don't cry a lot, sleep well, not fussy
What is the heritability percentage of most genes found by twin studies?
40-60%
How large does the baby grow in the last 6 months?
400x bigger than the second trimester
Siri
41
Aenroc
42
Aniter
43
Aevof
44
Evren citpo
45
Tops dnilb
46
Binge drinking
5 drinks in a row for men, 4 drinks in a row for women
Latency
6yrs-puberty; repression of sexual feelings
Fine motor skills
7-12 months First seen with crawling Coordination of smaller muscles Often assessed using drawing skills (to see how well use muscles)
Average newborn weight and length and facts
7.5 pounds and 20 inches long (size of pumpkin) Weight doubles in about 5 months Grow up to 10 inches in first year Sleep about 16 hours per day (half that time in REM)
Fetal stage time period and what is it characterized by?
8 weeks through birth Characterized by growth (for ex the formation of bone cells)
When can an ultrasound usually detect the heartbeat of the baby?
8-12 weeks
Psychological dependence
A "mental" need to use a drug, such as to relieve negative emotions (get nervous when don't take)
retinal disparity
A binocular depth cue where each eye Provides slightly different image; combine them to get full image
Cochlea
A bony fluid filled tube shakes like a snails shell
Flashbulb memories
A clear memory of an emotionally significant moment or event
Pain
A complex emotional and sensory experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage; necessary for survival (evolutionary perspective; would do stupid things if didn't hurt)
Social learning theory
A description of the kind of learning that occurs when we learn vicariously (indirectly) Ex. We see something in a movie (modeling is a type of social learning)
just-world phenomenon
A fallacy that people get what they deserve; idea that a persons actions always result in fair consequences (karma)
Institutional review board
A group that reviews potential research studies to ensure ethical behavior (decides if a group can create study)
Endorphins
A hormone that eases our sense of pain naturally (in complete shock and feel no pain=body priding many endorphins)
Carl Rogers
A humanistic positive psych theorist, researches unconditional positive regard
Recovered memories
A memory from a real event that was encoded, stored, but not retrieved for a king period of time until some later event brings it suddenly back to consciousness
Cognitive map
A mental representation of the layout of ones environment; know map of school in our heads; proves its learning not just behavior
linear perspective
A monocular cue where the more that the likes converge the greater distance we perceive
Unconditioned response (UR)
A natural, unlearned response that results from an unconditioned stimulus; similar to reflex, it just happens
Correlation coefficient
A numerical index of the degree of relationship between two variables
Sleep
A periodic, natural loss of consciousness (not induced; automatic); lasts about 90 mins (5 stages and 4 cycles per night (6 hours))
Sensation
A physical process where features of the outer world stimulate our sense organs (receiving info, not making sense of it)
Physical dependence
A physiological need for a drug, marked by unpleasant withdrawal symptoms when the drug is discontinued (shivers; fever)
Normal distribution curve
A plot of how frequent data are that is perfectly symmetrical with most scores clustered in the middle (learn to draw bell curve)
Perception
A pychological process; act of organizing and interpreting (making sense of) what the sense organs have received Compares new stimuli to previous experiences
Effect size
A quantitative measure of the strength of a phenomenon (size of the difference; tells importance; tells if pill for example is worth buying; bigger #=larger effect)
Learning
A relatively permanent change in an organisms behavior due to experiences
Role
A set of expectations (norms) about a social position, defining how those in the position ought to behave.
Theory
A set of related assumptions from which scientists can make testable predictions
operational definition
A statement of procedures used to define a research variable (how you measure variable)
Neutral stimulus (NS)
A stimulus that does not elicit a response before conditioning is performed
Unconditioned stimulus (US/UCS)
A stimulus that triggers a natural response
Sample
A subset of the population studied in research project (does not always represent the population)
social desirability bias
A tendency to give socially approved answers to questions about oneself
response set
A tendency to respond to questions in a particular way that is unrelated to the content of the questions
corpus callosum
A thick bundle of nerve fibers that connect the two cerebral hemispheres
adolescence
A transition period between childhood and adulthood extending from puberty to independence
classical conditioning
A type of learning in which one learns to link two or more stimuli and anticipate events; Pavlov used dogs in demonstrating this concept
Afterimage
A visual image that persists after a stimulus is removed
Heinz dilemma
A woman is dying and needs an expensive medication. Husband cannot afford the medication, should he steal it or should she die? Answer lies not in what they would do but the explanation of why they would do it.
Musical
Ability in performing, composing, and identifying aspects of music
Emotional competence
Ability to control emotions and know when it is appropriate to express certain emotions (involves regulation) (also how well you can see emotions)
Metacognitive thinking
Ability to first think and then to reflect on ones own thinking; the awareness of ones own thinking process
Selective attention
Ability to focus awareness on specific features in the environment while ignoring others (listen to teacher, not looking outside)
Linguistic
Ability to learn and understand spoken and written language (writer/poet)
Discrimination
Ability to tell the difference between a CS and stimuli that DO NOT signal an US (depends on person)
How long do pregnancies last?
About 40 weeks or 10 months (280 days)
Avoidant attachment
Absence of obvious distress during separation and reunion (neglectful parents)
Unconditional positive regard
Acceptance of another person of his or her behavior no matter the circumstances (love no matter what) (If experience with family it helps get you to self actualization; small difference between real self and ideal self)
Representative sample
Accurately portrays the population of interest
Pro social behavior
Action that is beneficial to others
anterior cingulate cortex
Activation for both physical and emotional pain occurs here (ex. Rejection)
accommodation
Adapting/changing schemas to incorporate new information Ex. See cow but says dog—> parents say no it's a cow=you accommodate and create new category
higher-order conditioning
Adding a new NS after classical conditioning is achieved (new NS can signal the old NS and go down the chain)
formal operational stage (in terms of cognitive development)
Adolescente can think both about how things are and how they could become as well (good/bad=how will they turn out)
Bait and switch
Advertised good not available; pressured into buying more expensive option (ex. Offer 5 things as cheap in store, get people to buy more)
Dorethea Dix (1850's)
Advocated for mental care reforms. Started the 1st mental health hospital, have aid to hospitals by writing down everything and with hospital treatment of mental disorders.
Prevalence of insomnia
Affects men more than women (women more willing to identify problem and seek treatment)
Sensitivity period (second language)
After around age 7, learning a second language becomes more difficult (teach as infant or in pre school)
Part 3 of three stage processing model
After rehearsal, it moves into long-term memory for later retrieval (it goes back into short if reminded of info)
Operant behavior
After the effects the actual behavior
Pathway of Smelling
After transducers it travels to olfactory bulbs in forebrain then to temporal lobe or frontal lobe
sensorimotor stage of cognitive development
Ages 0-2 Infants learn about the world by taking in information (touching things) from the outside world and by moving their bodies (throwing arms + legs) Object permanents is not yet achieved (will be achieved by end) Stranger anxiety present
Formal operational stage
Ages 12 and up Reasoning abstract concepts and problems become possible (scientific method) Potential for higher level moral reasoning seen (universal rights ex) No more limitations/we build off this foundation
preoperational stage
Ages 2-5 Begins with the emergence of: symbolic thought , Animalistic thinking, egocentrism Conservation is still not possible
concrete operational stage
Ages 6-11 Overcoming limitations of the preoperational stage (overcoming egocentrism and conservation)
Foot-in-door
Agree to small request, then a larger request (ex. Sign your name here for candidate, then wear the button to advertise)
Which of the Big 5 change over the life span of a person and in which ways?
Agreeableness increases after adolescence Conscientiousness increases because of job Neuroticism decreases (ppl become more emotionally stable from adolescence to middle adulthood)
Who conducted the Bobo doll experiment?
Albert Bandura
Who is Social cognitive perspective associated with?
Albert Bandura
What else can slow down reproduction of receptor cells?
Alcohol and smoking
Who created the birth order theory?
Alfred Adler
Personal unconscious
All our repressed thoughts, feelings, and motives (similar to freuds concept of unconscious)
How is sexual orientation determined?
All sexual orientations are seen in different species of animals (not a choice;biological) Influenced by nature and nurture Exposure to testosterone in womb leads to higher likelihood of being attracted to women (lower exposure = opposite)
Genome
All the genetic information in an organism; all of an organism's chromosomes.
All or nothing principle
All= if action potential reached threshold, the message sends (going over threshold doesn't do anything) Nothing= if action potential doesn't reach threshold, it doesn't send
Benefit of sensory adaption?
Allows us to be highly sensitive to changes in stimulation (if smell room every day you forget the smell exists)
Depth perception
Allows us to see in 3-D and judge distance
What type of waves when awake but relaxed/drowsy?
Alpha waves (rhythmic)
Ebonics
American black English regarded as a language in its own right rather than as a dialect of standard English.
Results of Michigan fish test for Americans and Japanese
Americans: saw large fish and ignored background info Japanese: commented on all aspects of the image (took it as a whole)
Meaning (what we encode)
Amount remembered depends on time spent learning and if you make it meaningful (deep processing)
What are the two physical properties of hearing?
Amplitude and frequency
Which parts of the brain deactivate when having sex? (Especially for women)
Amygdala, hippocampus, and parts of the cortex involving unconsciousness
neural influences of aggression
Amygdala/frontal lobe works to inhibit aggression.
Testing effect
An enhancement in the long-term retention of information as a result of taking a memory test (MC practice for psych test)
Identity vs confusion
An identity crisis that provides the potential for adaptive or maladaptive adjustment Testing, experimenting, and "trying on" identities is normal during this period (Can have good or bad things added to personality if don't reach goal in the end)
Long term potential
An increase in a synapses firing potential after brief, rapid stimulation; believed to be a neural basis for learning and memory
What needs to happen for the action potential to send? How does this happen?
An increase in charge for it to fire, sodium and potassium ions enter cell to increase the voltage
Wakefulness
An individual's degree of alertness(drift off but wake up suddenly to a sound); Distinguishes between being awake and asleep
Instinctive drift
Animals tend to go back to the instinctual behaviors after being operantly conditioned (ex imprinting)
Projection
Attributing ones own thoughts, feelings, or motives to another Ex: you're angry with feelings toward coworker, you then blame them for seducing you
Processing style of left hemisphere
Analytical and focused
Basic hostility
Anger that originated in childhood; stems from being rejected by parents (parents don't love you)
examples of basic emotions
Anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, surprise (also called emotional family)
Studies by Gosling and John proved...
Animals from primates to fish exhibit many consistent and unique personality traits •tested thru behavioral observation •primates most similar (primates and horses can be conscientious)
Relative motion
As we move, it can look like fixed objects are moving with us; as you get farther away from fixation point, objects seem to move faster
Stereotype threat
Anxiety in a situation where a person has the potential to confirm a negative stereotype about their social group.
Incentive
Any external object or event that motivates behavior (getting promotion; outside you)
Aggression
Any physical or verbal behavior intended to hurt or destroy (males usually physical, females usually verbal)
Extraneous variables
Any variable other than the IV that seem likely the influence the DV in a study
Reinforcer
Anything that strengthens the behavior it follows
John Carroll
Applied Cattell-Horn theory to IQ test and developed measure that looked at both fluid and crystallized intelligence (CHC test)
social-cognitive perspective
Applies principles of learning, cognition, and social behavior to understanding personality
Motor cortex
Area at the back of the frontal lobes that controls voluntary movements. (Less area on the strips = less practice of movement)
Sensory Cortex
Area at the front of the parietal lobe; processes body touch and movement sensations
When can fetal movement be detected by the mother?
As early as 4 months
Darley and Latane Study
Asked participants to fill out a survey and split them up into two groups: 1 group only had participant in the room/2 group had participant and confederates in room. Filled smoke into the room and observed how long it took for participants to leave. 1 group= under 1 min 2 group= 5-20 mins Proved conformity caused by confederates made people not leave the room.
Down syndrome
Associated with mild to severe; 21st chromosome (extra one); 1 in 730 births, odds increase with mothers age
parallel distributed processing (PDP)
Associations between concepts activate many networks at the same time (my dog is daisy; daisy he also a Disney character)
diffusion of responsibility
Assuming it's not our duty to take actions, likely because we think someone else has already helped (if you give accountability= someone will do something)
Who created the three stage processing model?
Atkinson and Shiffrin incorporated sensory, short term, and long term memory into that model
Mean
Average (add up numbers and divide but the total number of numbers)
Standard deviation
Average distance of scores from mean
Lucid dreaming
Aware of dreaming and can exert control over dream (20% experience it regularly; 50% at least once) (cognitive theory supports this)
Consciousness
Awareness of ones surroundings and of what's in ones mind at a given moment (internal and external awareness)
Fovea
Back of the retina; points of central focus (greatest visual activity) because it contains the most cones (sharper visions created; detects fine details)
Bodily sense
Based on skin/surface of the body
Empiricism
Based on tabula rasa or blank slate (everyone starts out blank and then experiences make them who they are)
Social influences of aggression
Being blocked from a goal increase chances of aggression
McCrae and Costa: Big 5/five favor model
Basic tendencies correlate with big 5 •traits are biologically based •tendencies: all of the other words that describe personality (out of the 4000)
When does Temperament personality and differences begin to form? What is an example?
Before birth; mothers level of stress can affects baby's level of trait anxiety (more stress=more anxiety)
Young adulthood (mid 20's through late 30's)
Begins when key tasks of emerging adult hood have been completed Differs across cultures
Reaction formation
Behaving in a way that's exactly the opposite of ones true feelings Ex: ppl who are homophobic are gay
behavior observation
Behavior assessment method that involves observing individuals' behavior as they interact with their environment; direct and relatively objective
Behaviorism
Behaviorist camp says psychology should be an objective science and study behavior without referring to mental processes
Personal fable
Belief that adolescents hold about how special/unique they are Unaffected by life's greatest risks (invincibility) Ex. Immune to disease, death, etc. Henry drove home drunk after a party b/c he believes that he will never be pulled over by a cop
Charles Spearman General Intelligence
Believed intelligence is a single general capacity; seen through the g-factor
Theory by Francis Galton
Believed that those with best "natural abilities" should mate (thus creating superior race), but his measures did not work (many ppl wanted to prove him wrong)
Egocentrism
Believing that everyone has your thoughts (everyone thinks the same as you; no independent thought) Determines by three mountains task
Justice
Benefits and costs (of participating in research) must be distributed equally between participants (can't discriminate based on race etc.)
What type of waves when awake?
Beta waves which are sporadic and all over the place (more activity)
Why do psychology?
Better understand why people think and feel. Identity why and how humans make errors. Use scientific method in order to determine how our intuitions and observations can lead to us to the wrong conclusion
Implicit bias
Bias that you aren't necessarily aware of; typically follow stereotypes
Actions and attitudes have a ______ relationship. Meaning...
Bidirectional, actions can lead to attitude but we can also change attitude to fit an action
Range
Biggest score from the lowest score (subtract)
_______ appears to enhance cognitive processing, is associated with a lower rate of dimentia in elderly (keeps neurons working), and enhances cognition (reflection on thinking)
Bilingualism
Temperament
Biological (genetic) based tendency to behave in certain ways from early in life Ex. Easy to sleep/no crying vs hard to sleep/lots of crying (babies have no personality; created by the environment)
Hans Eysenck
Biological theorist of personality Connection between central nervous system arousal and personality traits
grasping reflex
Birth-12 months Close our hand when something is placed in or near it
rooting reflex
Birth-4 moths Sucking on things in mouth (evolutionary to attach to nipple)
The 5 basic taste qualities
Bitter Sweet Salty Sour Unami (savory/meaty) (ex. MSG flavor)
external (situational) attributions
Blame the environment Ex. Trips in hallways—-> "someone must have tripped them"
Internal (dispositional) attributions
Blames personality (it's just the way they are) Ex. Someone trips while walking—> "they're clumsy"
Bobo doll experiment
Blow up clown doll (meant for punching) Showed children adults who either beat up the doll or were nice to eat Kids followed the actions that were rewarded
short wavelength
Blue cones
Identification
Bolstering self esteem by forming an imaginary or real alliance with some person or group. Ex: young ppl identify with celebs to feel better
Robber's Cave Study
Boys at a camp were split into two groups randomly. They were made to take part in competitive activities and came to hate each other. Confederates creates problems all around the camp, boys needed to work together to fix them. All the boys got along in the end. Served as a form of conflict resolution (reaching an agreement during some form of dispute). Came to conclusion that "you have to be taught to hate".
Late adulthood neural changes (65+)
Brain mass decreases, and frontal lobe changes account for many of the cognitive changes of the later years (normal to get agitated b/c logic center is impacted)
Neuroplasticity
Brains ability to adapt/change
Stage 1
Brief stage (1-7 mins for first time; takes less time throughout night) in which you may experience hallucinations (sense without stimuli present) Ex: feeling like you're falling; sleep paralysis demon
Howard Gardner theory of multiple intelligences
Broke down into 8 distinct capacities; ppl can have different combinations of strengths; it only tests preferences not actual ability
what causes stress
Brought upon by catastrophes, significant life changes, and daily hassles Depends on our body's response system and our personality
What were the results of the Jane Elliot study?
Brown eyes students suddenly more confident and condescending; gave nasty insults to other students. Children with blue eyes made silly mistakes. They stopped playing with each other and fights broke out. Found that prejudice is learned and can be unlearned
Sleep spindles
Bursts of rapid, rhythmic brain activity=brains tries to keep us asleep)
Function of synapse/synaptic gap/synaptic cleft
Buttons release neurotransmitters into this and the next neurons demerites soak it up
Conditioning and learning theory
By skinner: Lang develops just like any other behavior= reinforced and shaped Lang development emerges because of shaping and reinforcement
rapid cell division
By the end of the 1st week 100-150 cells more than beginning
Which traits does collectivism affects?
C, A
Effects of sleep deprivation
Can lead to injuries and deaths (car accidents); damaging to mental health
Words most widely consumed psychoactive drug...
Caffeine
Uses of hypnosis
Can be therapeutic in several contexts (to stop smoking and others)
Ostracism: aggression
Can breed aggression; observing aggression in media desensitizes individuals to cruelty
Antisocial behavior models
Can have negative effects on children; domestic abuse in monkeys experiment (abusive behavior between mates, switched babies with calm parents and found they followed parents behavior); bullying (at home = do it at school); television
What are two examples of cognitive dissonance?
Change attitude Change behavior
anterograde amnesia
Can't remember after injury (new memories) (A=after)
Retrograde amnesia
Can't remember stuff before injury (usually episodic info) (retro=old)
What are the disadvantages of EEG?
Can't see below into the depths of brain, only surface level. Not as accurate as other localization measures.
Three important issues it early adulthood
Career identity Sexual identity Ethnic identity
Motor neurons
Carry commands for movement, included mirror neurons
Random assignment is used to establish____ for the purpose of
Cause and effect, equal chance of being in control and experimental groups (random assignment reduces confounding variables)
Sensorineural (nerve deafness) hearing loss
Caused by damage to cochlea's hair cells or do auditory nerve; hear sounds but trouble in determining what they are saying Caused by disease, aging, or prolonged exposure to loud sounds Most common hearing loss
Conduction hearing loss
Caused by damage to the ear drum and middle your bones so that sound waves are not sent to cochlea; cannot hear anything (no transduction occurring)
Para amnesia theory
Caused by repressed memories (Freud)
Cell phone theory
Caused by subliminal cues (have experienced it before just didn't process)
Cell specialization
Cells have a built in GPS and know what type of cell they have to be (arm/leg); they move to that location
Neurons
Cells that process and transmit information in the NS
Genetic component of synesthesia
Certain chromosome or gene causes it
Drugs explanation to synesthesia
Certain hallucinogenic drugs can temporarily create synthetic experiences
What changes did K-ABC and CHC test lead to?
Changed the minds of creators (IQ test) In the tests (Stanford-Binet + Weachler scale) 1990= start incorporating CHC into tests
Enzymatic degredation
Chemical becomes unrecognizable to neuron (changes the shape of the neurotransmitter so it can't be used again)
Hormones
Chemical substances released by the endocrine glands
psychoactive drugs
Chemical substances that alter perception and moods
Neurotransmitters
Chemicals that transmit information from one neuron to another
Perceptions of pain during ________ ________ differ across cultures
Child birth
Freud said children are not mini adults but...
Childhood experiences created their personality
Cochlear implants work best for_____
Children (Ideal before age 1, if not, by preschool to become proficient in oral communication)
Visiones of the fetus
Children are not born blind, but their vision does most of its development after birth (least developed sense at birth)
Moving toward others
Clinging to ppl, wanting pity from others, belittling oneself, regressing anger (Super agreeable; aka compliant personality)
Hearing converts to neural energy in the ____
Cochlea
What structures make up the inner ear?
Cochlea, hair cells, semicircular canals
Caffeine
Coffee, tea, cocoa, soft drinks, energy drinks (cause heart problems) Lasts 3-4 hours (at first; layer need for servings) Produce tolerance and withdrawal symptoms
Loss if sensitivity to taste and smell (adulthood)
Cognitive and early brain development in adulthood
Trichromatic color theory
Color that we experience results from the mixing of three colors of light (red, green, blue) What we see depends on the wavelength and number of cones activated
Iris
Colored part; adjusts for the size of the pupil to allow more/less light (dark = larger, light = smaller)
5 main characteristics of intimacy vs isolation
Commitment Passion Cooperation Competition Friendship
Shared environment
Common with both twins or siblings
Why do smells sometimes evoke emotional memories?
Communication with the amygdala which communicates with the hippocampus
Cross sectional
Compare groups of different ages at the same time (not long time)
Moving against others
Competing with others at almost everything, being prone to anger, "puffing oneself up" in an obvious and public manner Aka: superior complex; the aggressive personality
Conscious wakefulness
Completely aware and wakeful; coma is opposite
Grammar
Comprises the entire set of rules for combining symbols and sounds to speak and write a particular language
Time period of germinal stage
Conception (act of sex) to 2 weeks
Schemas
Concepts that organize and interpret information Ex. We have a schema for what a dog looks like (if golden retriever: big with blond hair)
Blindsight
Condition where a person can respond to visual stimulus without consciously experiencing it; occurs when a visual cortex of occipital lobe is damaged (couldn't see paper but picked it up and put it in mailbox)
Avoid _____ variables to increase confidence in conclusion
Confounding
Brain stem
Connects the brain and spinal cord; keeps brain from falling onto chord
Reliability
Consistency of results of a measurement; IQ tests are very reliable + tests internal consistency is also high
Relatively enduring
Consistent (across time and situation) Ex. If hit in the hallways vs hit in the car you would act the same way
Collective unconscious
Consists of shared experiences of our ancestors that have been transmitted across generations (spiritual; ex. All are afraid of dark at first)
Learned helplessness
Constantly being put in a situation where there is no way to escape or resolve; when you experience something similar again, you don't try to find a solution unless you are specifically taught
Function of soma
Contains the nucleus (brain of the cell) and action potentials created here
Unconscious
Contains thoughts, memories, and Desiree's that are well below the surface of conscious awareness but that nonetheless exert great influence on behavior
1. Stomach
Contractions (goes in and out when hungry)
We use ____ to reduce alternate explanations
Controls
Mid brain- reticular formation
Controls arousal (keeps awake)
Limbic System: Hypothalamus
Controls eating, drinking, and body temperature
Hindbrain: medulla
Controls heart rate and breathing (autonomic receives info)
Acetylcholine (ACh)
Controls muscle movement (released by motor neurons) Plays role in learning, memory, attention, sleeping, dreaming,
Transduction
Conversion of physical into neural information; the process that occurs between sensation and perception (smell into neural info)
The stages in language development
Cooing, babbling, holophrase, telegraphic speech, sentence phase
Limbic system: Basal Ganglia
Coordinate eye movement and muscle control (related to survival instincts; see gun run away)
Resistance
Cope w/ stressor (resources begin to deplete; problem solving, running, using built up energy) Immune system depleted the most
Hit
Correctly identifying a stimulus that is present
disadvantages of behavioral observation
Costly and time consuming
How does brain injury impact personality?
Could increase aggression, lower impulse control, increase neuroticism (impacts emotionally based personality) Could also cause increase in introversion
Hallucinogens
Create sensory images without input
Nadeen and Alan Kaufman (1983)
Created K-ABC test; based off theories of psych and neuroscience about how the brain worked and developed; more widely used IQ test
Leading questions
Created a memory that wasn't actually true Doesn't leave room for open ended answers Encourages eye witness to reinvent memories
Multiple factor theory of intelligence
Created by Raymond Cattell; defined intelligence as multiple abilities through fluid and and crystallized intelligence
Cognitive problem-solving theory
Created by Rosalind Cartwright; dreams are not that different from everyday thinking (but weird since frontal lobe not working)
Psychoanalytic theory
Created by Sigmund Freud; says dreams are "the royal road to the unconscious" (wish fulfillment that cannot be done IRL)
William James (1890)
Created functionalism and wrote one of the most famous psych textbooks (principles of psych)
Carl Jung
Created ideas of personal unconscious and collective unconscious
William Stern
Created intelligence ratio=intelligence quotient Mental age/chronological age times 100 equals IQ
BF Skinner
Created studies based on Thorndikes law of effect; designed an operant chamber (Skinner box= animals would push lever to get food)
Rationalization
Creating false but plausible excuses to justify unacceptable behaviors Ex: after scamming someone, say "everyone does it"
Flinn Effect
Criteria to meet the 100 (IQ score) has gone up (although average it takes into account of developing education)
social clocks
Culturally specific timetable outlining when certain events should occur Ex, at age 30 must get married (marriage by 30/baby by 32/retirement by 60)
Different ____ have different sensory experiences (vision olfaction pain)
Cultures
Aphasia
Damage to the area (of the brain) creating difficulty in particular brain function.
What causes face blindness?
Damage to the fusiform face areas
Shadow (part of collective unconscious)
Dark and morally objectionable part of ourselves (equivalent of id)
Light and shadow
Darker objects seen father away than light objects
Thinking-Feeling Dimension
DecisionsMade based on logical principles and objective truth versus personal opinionated and consideration of other motives
What happens to the amount of time in REM as we age?
Declines rapidly between birth and childhood; continues dropping as we age
Latent level (psychoanalytic theory)
Deeper, unconscious level, where the true meaning lies; often reveals hidden conflicts (hate school and want destroyed)
Preparation
Defining the problem and attempting to solve it
Alzheimer's disease
Degenerative disease marked by progressive cognitive decline (will kill you) Marked by: confusion (causes falls; worse muscle memory) Memory loss Mood swings
Pruning
Degradation of synapses and dying off of neurons that are not strengthened by experience (will happen one way or another but bad if related to sensory development)
Validity
Degree to which a test accurately measures what it stays it measures 1. Test really measures intelligence 2. IQ scores can predict real-world outcomes
Giving people a uniform so that they lose awareness of self and feel like part of a group is an example of what?
Deindividuation
Albert Bandura
Demonstrated that when we watch people and see consequences for their actions, we assume the same consequences will occur for us; we like to imitate role models (ppl similar to ourselves, we perceive as successful, we perceive as admirable)
Addiction
Dependence on a drug; can result from physical or psychological dependence
Experiments contain
Dependent and independent variables
What can rejection cause?
Depression (rejection from friend or lover) Suicide (chances increase) Anger, violence and aggression towards others (ex. School shooters in columbine and Virginia teach were socially rejected)
Gordon Allport's Trait Theory
Determined 4000 words from an English dictionary that described personality from an original 18,000; narrow down to 10 Central personality traits
Alfred Binet (first test)
Developed a measure of children who would benefit from extra assistance in school; created mental age
Opponent-Process Theory
Developed by Solomon; views emotions as pairs of opposites (ex. fear-relief, pleasure pain) States that when one emotion is experienced, the other is suppressed
Cochlear implants
Device for converting sounds into electrical signals and stimulating the auditory nerve through electrodes in the cochlea (implant is the transducer) Used for sensorineural hearing loss Wire through eardrum and medium ear straight to inner ear
clinical psychology
Diagnosis and treatment of psychological disorders (born with disorder)
cultural test bias hypothesis
Differences in IQ scores caused by different cultural and educational backgrounds, not real differences in intelligence (regions of world)
Framing effect
Different reaction depending on presentation of loss or gain (doctor says 70% of people do not have complications, not 30% do)
Insomnia (most common)
Difficult falling and/or staying asleep (2 separate things or combination of both); typically caused by depression, anxiety, lack of exercise, or chronic illness
Resistant attachment
Difficulty being comforted and may actively struggle against contact with parents during reunion (parents inconsistent with meeting needs)
Marcia's Stages of Identity Development
Diffusion, foreclose, moratorium, and achievement Don't always go through all four stages (don't have to overcome one to get to another)
Sexual orientation fits within which three categories
Disposition to be attracted to either the opposite sex (heterosexual), the same sex (homosexual), or both sexes (bisexual)
Trait
Disposition to behave consistently in a particular way (many of these make up personality) They are evenly distributed in the population (most ppl are outgoing; can hang out but need alone time too)
Retroactive interference
Disruption of new learning on the recall of old information (new stuff makes it hard to remember old stuff)
Proactive interference
Disruption of prior learning on the recall of new information (old stuff makes it hard to recall new stuff)
Displacement
Diverting emotional feelings (usually anger) from their original source to a substitute target Ex: have a bad day= slam a dot and yell
What did Jane Elliot do to distinguish between the brown and eyed colores students?
Divided children by eye color. Told children that brown eyes makes children faster, smarter, and better than those with blue eyes. Blue eyes had to put on green paper armband. Brown eyes children got lunch first and longer recess; also got to drink from water fountain.
Integrity vs Despair
Do we feel the sum total of our life's choices is coming together in an integrated way? If success=wisdom and integrity If fail=despair (can result in isolation)
predictive validity
Does it produce real world outcomes? = IQ do; mainly academic importance WAIS predicts academic class rank and college GPA
Disadvantage of Young Helmholtz theory?
Does not explain afterimages
What was the US in pavlov's experiment?
Dog food (it produced salivating which is natural and uncontrollable)
Experiment of learned helplessness
DogShocks: shocked restrain dogs until they stop trying to escape even if not restrained, only jumped out when's our other dogs jumped out
What is the activation-synthesis model of dream?
Dreams are a result of prefrontal cortex trying to make sense of random neural firing (neurons still fire but frontal lobe is off)
When does neural migration occur? What can effect (interfere) with it?
During months 3-5 of the fetal stage Certain toxins and viruses may interfere with normal neural migration (or genetic disorders)
When is the hippocampus active and what is being processed?
During slow wave sleep and memories are being processed
When do teratogens effect the baby the most?
During the embryonic stage (because organs are forming) Ex. Viruses and the flu can cause cancers if extended long time
Tympanic membrane
Eardrum; when sound waves hit it, it activated the middle ear
Hearing of the fetus
Ears are connected to the brain (auditory nerve) by about 18 weeks Responses to sound as 26 weeks (ear bones completely form)
Why do lifestyle changes work over diets?
Eating frequency small meals, drinking lots of water, and moderate exercise daily will work long term; genes are responsible 70% fat during adulthood
deja vu
Eerie sense of "Ive experienced this before", cages from the current situation trigger retrieval of earlier experiences
Who is famous for studying false memories and what the she say?
Elizabeth Loftus; memory is influenced by people in both good and bad ways
Attachment
Emotional connection between an infant and his/her caregiver (usually mother)
Forebrain: Limbic System
Emotions and drives
Asian cultures view on intelligence
Emphasize humility, awareness, doing the right thing, and mindfulness
Carl Rogers and Abraham Maslow (humanism)
Emphasizes the growth and potential of the whole person (health); people have a choice
Effort processing
Encoding that requires attention (conscious awareness)
Mindfulness meditation
Encourages attention to details of an immediate experience; can improve attentional skills
Debriefing
End of study; explain purpose and why it was important. Provide resources at end and let participants have counseling if negative emotions occur
Norepinephrine (hormone + neurotransmitter)
Energizing and arousing Called adrenaline Produced by brain and Adrenalin glands Created through the sympathetic nervous system—-> fight or flight
Effects of mindfulness meditation
Enhance well-being Reduce stress and depression Improve physical health (through mental health) Reduce pain (take mind away)
Principle 1 ______ events can interact with genes to make behaviors more or less likely
Environment
Conjunction fallacy
Error that occurs when ppl believe that the combination of two events is more likely to occur than either of the events alone
Representative heuristic
Estimate the probability of one event based on how typical it is of another event (ex. Late 5/6 days= today shall be late)
Critical thinking
Evaluating evidence (scientific method)
How often do taste buds reproduce themselves and what happens later in life?
Every 1-2 weeks but this slows as we age and decrease sensitivity (fewer cells=less flavor)
Death and dying between culture
Every culture has its own set of standards for how to regard death (but there are universal traits)
Four phases of sexual response cycle
Excitement (getting ready) Plateau (starts developing/rising, not reach full inter course) Orgasm (less common for females; hight of experience) Resolution (followed by refractory period for men)
Internal LOC (locus of control)
Expectancy that one is responsible for the major outcomes in life; can influence your own life
External LOC (locus if control)
Expecting that you cannot influence your outcomes in life; up to fate, chance or luck
Taste can be influenced by ______ during infancy and _____
Experience (if give baby junk it'll like junk later in life) Expectations (if good yelp review the food will taste better) You can make yourself like food by eating it at least 8 times
What is an example of moderate consciousness?
Experienced during sleep; we don't lose awareness of world around us when we sleep
John Watson and Little Albert experiment
Experiment where Watson paired playing with a white mouse with a load noise (causing fears) with test subject/child Albert NS: white mouse US: loud noise CS: white mouse UR: fear CR: fear
Nimchimpsky
Experiment with Chimp in 70's; treated it like a real child and taught sign language (how to express wants and emotions); eventually became violent and returned to normal monkey behavior
false beliefs task
Experimental task where child was shown granola box and asked what's inside (they say granola) bud actually candles Now asked to assume if someone saw the box what would they think is In it If answer is granola=they have overcome egocentrism If answer is candles=they have not overcome egocentrism
Moratorium (stage)
Exploring multiple identities w/out making a commitment Considered to be experiencing identity crisis Ex. Enter college without major (Not necessarily bad, just figuring out what you want)
Validity
Extent to which a concept, conclusion, or measurement is well founded and measures what it intends to (accuracy; average will give you want you want)
First dimension of MBTI
Extraversion Vs Introversion
Hypersomnia
Extreme sleepiness during the day (feel need to always sleep); typically sleep for 10+ hours per day but never feel rested; effects 5% of population worldwide; sometimes caused by depression
Savant
Extremely gifted in one area; low intelligence (IQ<70)= mental disability Very rare; half have autism other half from brain injury; could get as an adult
What are the three models of employee motivation according to industrial organizational psychologists
Extrinsic motivation, intrinsic motivation, perceived support by supervisors and organizations
Semantic memory
Facts and knowledge
Miss
Failing to identify a stimulus that's present
change blindess
Failing to notice a difference in the environment (talk with someone—> they change clothes and you don't notice)
inattentinal blindness
Failing to see visible objects when our attention is directed elsewhere (gorilla and ball test as an ex)
Color constancy
Familiar objects have consistent color, even if lighting is changed Ex. Picture of grey strawberries that actually come out red when see
Lawrence Kohlberg
Famous for his theory of moral development in children; made use of moral dilemmas in assessment
People tend to become _____ as they age b/c the lens becomes less _____ (no adapt —> visión worse)
Farsighted, flexible
Conditional regard
Feeling like you have to earn someone's love (if you get an F in the class I won't love you)
Attitudes
Feelings, often influenced by our beliefs, that predispose us to respond in particular ways to objects, people, and events
Lev Vegotsky
Felt cognitive development is more of a social event than Piaget did (asked how do parents and siblings influence development) Empathized scaffolding and created zone of proximal development
Permissive cultures
Few restrictions on sex (South America)
Which areas of the body has the most mechanoreceptors?
Fingertips and face
first trimester of pregnancy
First 3 months of pregnancy which include stages of prenatal development
Mary Calkins (1905)
First female president of the APA; denied PhD from Harvard
Margaret Washburn (1908)
First woman to receive a PhD in psychology, studied animal behavior (started in Columbia then went to Cornell)
How many major senses develop at different rates?
Five
Late adulthood intelligence changes
Fluid intelligence decreases; crystallized intelligence typically increases (but dementia decreases it)
Central route to persuasion
Focus on evidence/arguments (results in more durable attitude change); facts such as phone numbers
Peripheral route to persuasion
Focus on incidental cues (ex. Attractiveness of spokesperson/color of car)
Empirical method
Focuses on questions that characterize the group the questionnaire is intended to distinguish (Find the different between two groups) Ex: ask who goes to the supermarket and test if all depressed ppl go to this one
cocktail party effect
Focusing on one conversation among many (hear your name in crowded room=focus on that conv; form of selective attention)
Synaptogenesis
Formation of synapses; abundant in early childhood (explains plasticity at young age)
G. Stanley Hall (1892)
Founded the American psychological association (APA). Started 1st psych lab in the US at Johns Hopkins university.
Jean Piaget
Four stage theory of cognitive development: 1. sensorimotor, 2. preoperational, 3. concrete operational, and 4. formal operational. He said that the two basic processes work in tandem to achieve cognitive growth-assimilation and accomodation
Scaffolding
Framework offering temporary support as children develop higher levels of cognitive development (guidance/advice; ex. When teaching how to tie shoes if you don't show how they'll never learn but if you always do it form then you never learn=need to show only a few times)
Psychosexual Theory of Development
Freud; individuals were subject to the unconscious sexual desires and motivations, beyond their control; 5 stages: oral, anal, phallic, latency, and genital
Moderate consciousness
Freuds term preconscious (long term memory); a state of "tip of the tongue" phenomenon
Which lobe is involved in fluid intelligence tasks?
Frontal lobe (not really crystalized)
What's caused the evolving of the brain?
Frontal love became larger due to more groups and socializing (communication)
Frustration-aggression principle
Frustration (blocking of an attempt to achieve some goal) creates anger, which can generate aggression
Social referencing
Gaging others emotions and regulating own behaviors (ex, throw food at mom and look for frown=don't do it again)
G-factor
General factor made up of 3 specific components; spatial, quantitative (numbers), and verbal
John Carroll's Three-Stratum Theory of Intelligence
General intelligence: based off Spearmen's G factor Broad intelligence: Based off Cattell's theory Narrow intelligence: 70 abilities (all skills that help broad and general)
Deductive reasoning
General statements to specific conclusions (all dogs have fur= my dog has fur)
According to Adler, what happens if you don't compensate for feelings of weakness?
Generate inferiority complex=unhealthy need for competition
Scientific thinking
Generate, test, and revise theories (we don't use this in our daily lives)
Principle 1 Specific ___ can chase specific diseases, but play only a ___ part in creating a given behavior.
Genes, small (multiple answers, it's different for every person)
Principle 3 Teasing apart and identifying _____ and _______ influences on behavior requires special techniques.
Genetic and environmental
Reaction range
Genetically determined range of responses by an individual to his or her environment Typical range is about 25 IQ points: 100 in poor environment, 112 in average environment, 125 in prosperous environment No affection=poor environment, attention and help=prosperous environment
Attraction: proximity
Geographic nearness is most powerful predictor of friendship (ex mere exposure effect= you like them more)
Who discovered the magical number of 7 +- 2 (# of items in short term memory)
George Miller
Retrieval
Getting information out of the memory system
Fixation
Getting stuck in a psychosexual stage Ex: if parents don't let you chew, you'll develop dirty habits with mouth such as smoking)
4. Hormones and neuro chemicals that cause hunger
Ghrelin: produced when stomach is empty Leptin: produced when overeating (reduces the pleasure associated with food; feels gross)
Animistic thinking
Giving human qualities to non-humans (ex toy story)
2. Blood
Glucose level (when to little=eat) Hypothalamus monitors glucose level
Innately Guided Learning Hypothesis
Gramma is innate (gut instinct when something sounds wrong); vocabulary is more environmental (hear someone else say it); the brain and Lang skills change together over time; (based off of observational learning)
Red
Green
Race and Ethnicity (Intelligence)
Groups vary on IQ scores; tests potentially biased
Who founded psychophysics?
Gustav Fechner
Malpass and Devine (1981)
Half of participate in staged act told perpetrator was in line up while others told may or may not be there Results: participants led to believe the perp was present chose someone and usually chose the wrong person
Effects of FAS
Halts the process of neural migration (seen in racism changes and cognitive deficits)
Distant idea
Happened in the past
Secure attachment
Happy connection and evident warmth; upset when parent leaves and soothed upon return
Cornea
Hard covering that protects the lens (stops debris from getting in eye)
In what situations do social inhibition show up?
Hard tasks Not really practiced
Teratogen
Harmful chemicals to baby in the womb (ex. Alcohol)
men and emotion
Have greater amygdala activation when exposed to pictures of animal or human attacks MORE SIMILARITIES THAN DIFFERENCES
Convergent thinking problems
Have known solution; require analytical thinking and learned strategies
Divergent thinking problems
Have no known solutions; require novel solutions
Diffusion (stage)
Have not experienced identity crisis (not crosses your mind) Not exploring identities b/c unsure of what they want (can't stay in this stage for very long)
Social-cultural/sociocultural (2000's)
How behavior and thinking vary across situations and cultures
Amplitude
Height of a wave; determines volume ? (Taller = louder and shorter = quieter)
Mindfulness
Heightened awareness of the present moment; experience objectively rather than subjectively (ex. Meditation and not judgment; saying the sky is gray instead of depressing)
Counseling psychology
Help people struggling with everyday problems (life situations)
Psychodynamic/psychoanalytic (1920's)
How behavior arises from unconscious drives and conflicts
Real movement neurons
Help the brain distinguish between actual and false movement
Mirror neurons
Help us copy people, linked to empathy (feel what other feel
Hindbrain: pons
Helps coordinate involuntary movement (reflexes and organ use)
Hindbrain: cerebellum
Helps coordinate voluntary movement; balance (bell=balance)
Industrial and organizational psychology
Helps improve business through HR department, improving staff morale, and other tasks.
Semicircular canals
Helps us maintain balance (vestibular sense) (associated with cerebellum)
Giftedness
High end of intelligence spectrum IQ of 130-140 or above Either prodigy or savant syndrome
Consummate Love (Sternberg)
High in all three components (married couples)
Fatuous Love (Sternberg)
High in commitment and passion (secret crush)
Companionate Love (Sternberg)
High in intimacy and commitment (friends)
Romantic Love (Sternberg)
High in intimacy and passion (friends with benefits)
How is mental illness tied to creativity?
Higher in artists, writers, painters, and poets than "normal population"
Relative height
Higher objects are farther away
Explicit memories are processed in the _____
Hippocampus
What is the relay station of memories and sends them for storage elsewhere?
Hippocampus
Neurogenic hypothesis to IA
Hippocampus isn't fully formed yet
Pupil
Hole (small adjustable opening) (black portion; adjusts for light rays)
Biochemical of aggression
Hormones, alcohol, and serotonin (higher level of testosterone in boys)
Phallic fixation: Oedipus complex
Hostility towards same sex parents and attraction towards opposite sex parent (Electra complex vice versa) Kids develop gender identity: boys act like father and girls act like mother
Psilocybin (mushrooms)
Hours feel like minutes Transcending themselves (out of body experience)
Physiological psychology (subfield)
How genes affect behavior; brain and chemicals
Developmental (subfield) psychology
How humans grow, change, and stay the same through life
social psychology (subfield)
How interaction effects people
Perceived support by supervisors and organizations
How much employee believes the organization appreciate their contributions and well being (thank you for the hard work) Leads to employees who are happier, less stressed, and more motivated to stay at their jobs Less likely to skip work, be late, or take long lunch breaks (higher productivity)
What creates personality according to the id, ego, and superego theory?
How much of each a person uses in their daily lives
Perceptual set
How our frame of mind impacts perception; influenced by schemas (category for all knowledge of a topic) Ex. Context (depends on perspective; ex Pedestrians v drivers) Culture (ex. Seeing metal bucket instead of window)
Biological/neuroscience (1950's-1960's)
How the body and brain enable emotions, memories, and sensory experiences
Epigenetics
How the environment changes gene expression.
Evolutionary (1980's)
How the natural selection of traits promotes the survival of genes (people pick their partners base off of this)
Cognitive (1960's)
How we encode, process, store, and retrieve information
Behavioral Perspective (1910's)
How we learn observable responses
Humanism (1950's)
How we reach our full potential
Verbal representation
How we think about the things we hear (knowing friend from just hearing voice)
Adaptive behavior
How well a person adjusts to everyday life (less= worse IQ)
Principle 4 Environmental events influence _____ and ____ genes are _____ and _____
How, when, activated, deactivated
What does "the power of the situation" mean?
Human behavior is strongly influenced by the environment.
Evolution of personality traits
Human personality traits evolved as adaptive behavioral responses to problems of survival and reproduction (certain traits help us survive and reproduce; agreeable or flirtatious)
Cognitive dissonance
Humans act to reduce the discomfort we feel when our thoughts or our thoughts and behavior are inconsistent
Which part is the brain is larger in men which creates a higher sex drive than in women?
Hypothalamus
What are the brain differences between heterosexual and homosexual ppl?
Hypothalamus (a part of it) is smaller in homosexuals brains; corpus callosum is thicker in homosexuals
Social exchange theory
Idea that we help others when we underhand that the benefits to ourselves are likely to outweigh the costs
Set point
Ideal fixed setting of a particular physiological system (temp=98.6)
How do twin-adoption and family studied demonstrate interconnectedness?
Identical twins reared apart are more similar than fraternal twins raised together; but environment does help contribute
False alarm
Identifying a stimulus that is not present
group polarization effect
If a group is like-minded, discussion will strengthen its prevailing opinion (it's called this name because it can be either a good or bad thing; ex KKK meeting v animal rights meeting)
Anal fixation
If can't learn potty train, you become over controlling of bowels
Exclusion vs. Inclusion
If excluded from group it's natural to have prejudice against them, if included to group natural to like them more (due to an evolutionary standpoint, not having access to resources to survive causes hate)
How does parenting change personality?
If mother wants baby: positive changes such as increase in A and O If unwanted pregnancy: negative changes such as low self esteem (Dad doesn't change much, if baby difficult then maybe low self esteem)
actor-observer bias
If we do something wrong, we blame the situation; if we see someone do the same thing, we blame their disposition (both you and them)
Part 2 of three stage processing model
If we pay attention to the stimulus, the memory will become short-term (it's encoded through rehearsal)
Phi phenomenon
Illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on and off in quick succession Ex light up arrows in storefront
Farsighted
Image focuses behind the retina (can't see up close)
Nearsighted
Image focuses in front of retina (can't see far away)
What are the standard processes used in dreaming?
Imagery, memory, speech, problem solving (cannot dream new face)
Sensory memory
Immediate, brief recording of info from touch, taste, sound, sight and smell (doesn't get stored for long unless practice)
Priming (way of accessing implicit memory)
Implicit memory that arises when recall is improved by earlier exposure to similar stimuli (giving 1st letter of a word=D__ ___ when say a dog in the morning)
Cerebellum
Important for implicit memories and conditioned responses
How are the two methods of picking questions used?
In combination
Difference between indulgent and permissive neglectful
In terms of few rules: •indulgent=cause want to be friends; spoil •neglectful=not around, don't want to parent Autonomy: •indulgent=don't want kid to get mad at them •neglectful=they can do it themselves like I did Monitoring behavior: •indulgent=want kids to have fun (too much) •neglectful=don't know birthday or rn things about you
What motivates people? What was the actual prisoners dilema?
Incentives motivate people, the activity of bank robbers was the dilema, results are different
What are the characteristic of consciousness?
Includes aspects of being awake and aware; is crucial for a wide spectrum of cognitive events (must be conscious to be effected)
formal operational stage (in terms of brain development)
Includes frontal lobe growth (logic from education classes), increased neural complexity (strengthen neurons), and neural pruning (stop doing things so connections die)
Disorganized/disoriented attachment
Inconsistent behaviors and demonstrates possible fear of the parents (during reunion) (sign of physical abuse)
Narcolepsy
Incontrolable sleep attacks; caused by inability to regulate sleep-wake cycle (circadian cycles; producing too much melatonin); can you directly into REM
Signal detection theory
Incorporates stimulus intensity and decision making process; contains four possible outcomes
Misinformation effect
Incorporating misleading information into ones memory of an event (did actually happen changing detains; accidentally)
Stimulants
Increase neural activity and speed up bodily functions
Excitatory PSP
Increase voltage and increase the probability that the posy synaptic neuron will fire action potential
Conditioned (secondary) reinforcer
Increases behaviors only once it is associated with a primary reinforcer (money helps you buy food so that you are no longer hungry)
The two hemispheres of the brain do not operate _____ due to the ______.
Independently, corpus callosum
Life satisfaction based on Maslow's hierarchy of needs
Industrialized countries have higher well-being Money leads to happiness (to some extent)
Beneficence (ethical standard)
Inform participants if the costs and benefits of participation (costs must not out-way benefits)
Encoding failure
Information never goes from short term into long term memory (did not make meaning)
How do neurons communicate?
Information travels within a neuron in the form of an electrical signal by action potentials.
Needs
Inherently biological states of deficiency (cellular or bodily) that compel drives (water food) (the thing that relieves)
Antagonist
Inhibits the action of a neurotransmitter (inhibitory)
Cocaine
Inject (free base) (snort) Smoke (crack) Deplete body supply of: dopamine (can't make yourself happy), serotonin (adrenaline) High lasts 15-30 mins
Positive Emission Tomography (PET)
Inject radioactive colored sugar into participant and see where it is transported in the brain. The faster a part of the brain metabolizes it the more active that part it.
Processing style of right hemisphere
Insight and solutions to ideas
Why did Jane Elliot conduct the study?
Inspired by the assassination of MLK and wanted to see if kids could hate each other over eye color
Which of the 8 Erikson stages occurs during late adulthood?
Integrity vs Despair
Although there are different theories, what do they all agree upon?
Intelligence sets us apart from animals
Reciprocal determinism
Interacting influencers between personality and environmental factors by (directional) Environment effects personality in the same sense that someone's personality effects the environment Ex: room and office show personality through decoration
Which LOC tends to have better life outcomes?
Internal
Which LOC has reduced risk of obesity at age 30?
Internal; they go out and exercise
Assimilation
Interpreting new experiences in terms of our schemas Ex. That have chihuahua, they point and say dig= fit into schema as a dog
What's stage of Erikson's theory occurs during early adulthood?
Intimacy vs Isolation
Autonomic system
Involuntary and unconscious decisions; controls glands and muscles of internal organs (heart beat, digestion; can be consciously overridden but usually works on own)
Serotonin
Involved in dreaming Emotional states (especially anger, anxiety, and depression)
Association areas
Involved in higher mental functions such as learning, remembering, thinking, speaking, and integrating information. Makes up the rest of the cerebral cortex (parts that make us human)
Gene-by-environment interaction research
Involves observing the interaction of genetic differences and the environment to asses the impact of how certain behavior are produced in some people but not others. Looks at non shared environment (different friends/groups) Many studies all put together for conclusion
rational (face valid) method (to pick question)
Involves using reason or theory to come up with a question, but can result in socially desirable responding Ex: Being very plain; are you extroverted; sometimes band because people try to figure out the study or make themselves look good Looking for validity/accuracy
Limitation of PET
It is less precise than a fMRI
Causation
Is established through random assignment
"Open"
Is free to change (new words are born)
Philip Zimbardo- "Bad apples or bad barrel"
Is it bad people who do bad things (apples) or will anyone do a bad thing given a certain situation (barrel) Answer: yes barrel is more powerful
How is the brain adaptable?
It builds new pathways to make up for lost ones (neurons migrate to new areas —-> brain damage as a child is easier than as an adult)
Computer tomography (CT)
It combines computers and x-ray technology. It allows you to see the brain from all angles and it's good for showing brain changes (ex tumor or brain damage)
Does brain growth stop or continue after adolescence?
It continues throughout the life span
What is an advantage of the opponent processing theory?
It explains afterimages
How do we recognize faces from different view points?
It happens when feature detectors send information to the fusiform face area in the right temporal lobe
Role of spinal cord in pain
It has an active role of amplifying pain through glial cells (help send out pain messages)
How does self esteem change throughout the life span?
It tends to dip in adolescence but then increases in emerging adulthood (college)
Why was the 2nd cat experiment allowed to be conducted?
It was conducted before the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) was established
Who's work laid the foundation for behaviorism (particularly learned research)?
Ivan Pavlov; work with classical conditioning
Frontal lobe
Judgment and planning
Other names for difference thresholds...
Just Noticeable Difference (JND)
Frequency (automatic processing)
Keep track of how many times things happen
parasympathetic nervous system
Kicks in after action is done; produced opposite effects of sympathetic (rest + digestion)
What do bodily senses also include?
Knowing where our body parts are Sensing things inside body (heart rate, organ pain, heavy breathing)
Theory of mind (opposite of egocentrism)
Knowledge and ideas about how other people minds work. Tested through the false belief task; usually achieved by concrete operational stage.
Implicit memory
Knowledge based on previous experience (ex skills); resides outside conscious awareness
Crystallized intelligence
Knowledge from experience, learning, education, and practice (learned through studying); affected by culture
Whorf-Sapir Hypothesis
Lang created thought as much as thought created Lang (they co-exist and develop together)
linguistic determinism hypothesis
Lang determines our way of thinking and our perception of the world.
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid)
Large coiled molecule that resides in every cell in the body, except red blood cells, and contains all the information needed for human development and function. (Storage for genetic material)
According to the gate control theory, what closes the gate?
Large fibers block the pain signals (like a boulder blocking water in a canal)
recency: serial position effect
Last items are still in working memory so you can recall them well and quickly
REM (rapid eye movement)
Lasts about 10 mins, but gets longer as night goes on Brain waves look almost like wakefulness (beta) Heart rate rises (like awake) Breathing becomes rapid Brainstem blocks messages to muscles so you are paralyzed Most streams occur during this stage (brain uses occipital (vision) and other lobes)
When learning is ____, it's not apparent until there is an incentive to demonstrate it
Latent (has to do with cognitive aspect; provide ppl opportunity to learn something)
Observational learning
Learning by watching others
Biological constraint model
Learning can only occur up to a certain point when species has physical or cognitive restraint (Gorilla can learn sign but can't speak)
Cognitive map and latent learning proves...
Learning doesn't just involve behavior, it also involves cognition
Latent learning
Learning that occurs but it's not apparent until there is an incentive to demonstrate it
Memory
Learning that persists over time
Which hemisphere is more active in processing speech and language?
Left hemisphere more active because it contains Broca's and Wernicke's area
Verbal tasks use ____ side, ____ tasks activate occipital lobe
Left, spatial
____ bends light so that image is upside down; _____ reorients it
Lens, brain
Split brain research
Lesioning (cutting) the corpus callosum and studying the effects it has.
Are there benefits of alcohol?
Light to moderate use might have health benefits
Unconscious parallel processing
Like running on auto-pilot; frees your conscious mind to deal with new challenges (if you thought about breathing you wouldn't have time for anything else)
Size of fetus at 12 weeks
Lime
Solomon Asch Experiment
Line test where confederates gave absurd answers as to how long a line is; participants answer was observed. 70% of subjects conformed to a wrong answer rather than giving a correct answer. Example of conformity; people chose the wrong answer to fit in.
prenatal programming
Links environmental conditions during fetal development with risks of diseases Ex. Maternal nutrition; if mother obese they are not producing enough folic acid which weaken neural tube/umbilical cord
Stage 4
Long slow delta waves indicate deep sleep (very difficult to awaken) Kids wet the bed during this stage
Personality psychology (subfield)
Looks at consistency in behavior (regardless of situation); unique
Experimental psychology (subfield)
Looks at learning, motivation, and emotion.
Why does dieting not work in the long term?
Losing and regaining weight associated Seth heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and altered immune function (need to lose weight slowly to make it count)
Dementia
Loss of mental function in which many cognitive processes are impaired (middle between loss of brain mass and Alzheimer's; not as bad)
Deindividuation
Loss of self-awareness in groups; can't be blamed solely because now you're part of a group
Middle adulthood (40-65): sensory and brain development
Loss of some hearing and visual abilities is normal as we age; can be affected by gender and profession
Absolute threshold
Lowest intensity level of the stimulus we can detect 1/2 the time (ex. Average person can see lit candle 30 miles away 1/2 the time)
LSD
Lysergic acid diethylamine (25) Acid Takes 3-4 hours to kick in, lasts 12 hours Held under tongue (paper thin) Mental clarity (thinks it gives you powers; confidence boost) Objects take on human qualities Senses mixed up; tasting colors/seeing sounds
Ecstasy
MDMA Serotonin levels are depleted 1/2 hour to start working; 3-4 hours of high Love drug=makes people feel connected Suppressed immune system and permanent effects (after 1 use)
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
Machine where you place a cap on with electrodes. It shows the electrical activity in the form of brain waves when part of the brain is active. It's commonly used in sleep research.
Foreclosure (stage)
Made a commitment w/out exploring other options Ex. Time become a mechanic because his father is one, doesn't question if another career might suit better
Insecure attachment
Made up of avoidant attachment , resistant attachment and disorganized/disoriented attachment
Optic nerve
Made up of axons of ganglion cells; transmit signals from the eye to the thalamus, which sends info to visual cortex of occipital lobe (right left rule applies)
Magnetic resonance imagining (MRI)
Magnets cause hydrogen atoms to converge in activated part of the brain. It created a 3-D image of the brain (shows structure)
Respect for persons (ethical standard)
Maintaining people's dignity (no embarrassing actions)
availibility heuristic
Make decisions based on the ease with which estimates come to mind or how readily they come to mind (recent events) (ex. See jaws = not go swimming)
Which gender is hearing loss more common in?
Males because they are not worried or being attacked so loud music in headphones isn't a problem
Independent variable
Manipulated by researcher (results in outcome); made up of experimental and control group
What are the two events that may occur during the stage of young adulthood?
Marriage: age of marriage has increased over the last 50 years Parenthood: not required as a sign of becoming an adult
Human sexual respond cycle was created by who?
Masters and Johnson
Statistics
Mathematical procedures for collecting, analyzing, and interpreting numerical data
Logical
Mathematical; quantitative ability (scientist/accountant)
Human development is based on _____ (define)
Maturation: orderly sequence if biological growth (ex. Can't jump without walking first
Smell and taste of the fetus
May be influenced by chemicals in amniotic fluid (stuff baby floats around in) Ex. If mom craved pickles=you crave pickles
Physiological cause of synesthesia
May involve cross activating of different areas of the brain (through bimodal neurons)
Negative skewed bell curve
Mean on the left side, median in the middle, mode on the right side
Inter-rather reliability
Measure OfHow much agreement there is in ratings when using two or more raters or coders to rate personalities or other behaviors Correlation of .8 or higher is good and overall reliable
Face validity
Measure of how representative a research project is at first glance, and whether is appears to be a good project (IQ test shouldn't be asking what's your favorite color)
Internal validity
Measure which ensures that a researchers study is objective and lacks experimenter bias (was told is aggressive—-> believes it and ruins data)
Psycho metrics (subfield)
Measurement of behavior through psychological tests (can help all sub categories)
Peg-word system
Memorize a jingle; eventually you can visually associate "peg words" with times you need to remember (one is bun, two is shoe)
False memories
Memory for events that never happened, but were suggested by someone or something
source amnesia
Memory loss due to injury or disease (more severe damage = more impact on memory)
Working/short-term memory
Memory that holds a few (about 7) items briefly; Info is either stored or forgotten (technically 5-9)
Which gender has a higher drive for casual sex?
Men (duhh)
Concept
Mental grouping of objects, events, or people and our knowledge about these things; helps us organize perceptions of world
Cognition
Mental process involved in acquiring, processing, and storing knowledge
What is an example of visual imagery?
Mental rotation (parking a car in a tight spot)
Amphetamine
Meth Energizing and lose weight Deplete dopamine (feel depressed afterwards) Lasts 8 hours (not as bad crash)
Median
Middle, divides upper from lower part of data
What else can activate large fibers?
Mindset, massaging, acupuncture
MMPI
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory Takes in stages Most valid/reliable one out there
Group think
Mode of thinking in which the desire to keep harmony within the group overrides a realistic appraisal of alternatives.
Positive skewed bell curve
Mode on the left side, median in the middle, and mean on the right side
Normal distribution curve
Mode, median, and mean are all in the middle
Echoic memory
Momentary sensory memory of auditory information (lasts 3 to 4 seconds)
Iconic memory
Momentary sensory memory of visual stimuli (photographic but lasts no more than a few tenths of a second)
Awareness
Monitoring of information from the environment and/or ones own thoughts (this + wakefulness determines consciousness; being in vegetative state does not count)
Night terrors
More sever than nightmares and often not remembered; person is visibly upset during sleep and very difficult to awaken (don't even try to wake up)
Cortisol arousal
More=get nervous easy Lower=need more social interaction to feel "full" Introverts=higher baseline cortisol level Extroverts=lower baseline cortisol level
______ people conform to social norms (they change their behavior to match the group)
Most
Reduction in vision (adulthood)
Most adults need glasses at some point (usually for reading)
What are some common things ppl dream about?
Most are mundane/unfold in familiar setting with family + friends/colleagues Ex: chased and pursued, sexual experiences, falling, school/teachers/studying
Principle 2 of behavioral genetics
Most behaviors derive from multiple genes.
Night terrors prevalence
Most commonly experienced in ages 3-12; stops during adolescence (experienced by 40% of children)
Mode
Most commonly occurring
When is the brain most adaptable?
Most plastic (moldable) in early childhood (6 or younger)
2nd child
Motivated, cooperate, yet overly competitive (trying to keep up with second sibling)
Extrinsic motivation
Motivation that comes from outside a person and usually involved rewards and praises (allowance ex) Has drawbacks: if reward is removed, motivation can disappear; if reward stays the same (not increase) motivation can drop
Intrinsic motivation
Motivation that comes from within a person and includes four different elements 1. Challenge (right level of difficulty) 2. Enjoyment (love doing it) 3. Mastery (show we've learned) 4. Autonomy (more choices and freedom) and self determination
Atkinson said the tendency to achieve success is a function of 3 things... which are?
Motivation to succeed= how much want it (time and effort) Expectation to succeed=probability of success (more likely=more effort) Incentive value of the success= importance (is it vital?) and difficulty level (feel better when accomplish difficult tasks)
What activates the transducers?
Movement of fluid and cochlea
Neural migration
Movement of the neurons from one part of the fetal brain to their more permanent destination in the brain(genetically determined)
Kitty Genovese
Murdered outside apartment- prompted to investigate bystander effect due to diffusion of responsibility
Three parts to overcome bystander effect
Must notice Interpret that something is wrong Responsibility-do we have an obligation
Interviewing (Personality interviews)
Natural and comfortable Open ended questions Scoring the responses reliably can be difficult (if ppl not trained=problematic results) (Need Inter rater reliability)
Hierarchical model; Maslows hierarchy of needs
Needs range from most basic physiological necessities to highest psychological needs for growth fulfillment
What's the charge if a neuron at rest?
Negative charge
Negative reinforcement
Negative=stimulus taken away Increasing behaviors by stopping or reducing aversive stimuli
What can be detrimental to brain development?
Neglect or not stimulating senses so they do not develop
Nervous system
Network of nerve cells and fibers which transmit nerve impulses between parts of the body.
Neural growth middle adulthood
Neural plasticity continued as we age, thi neurogenesis tapers off in middle adulthood
Retina
Neural tissue lining inside back surface of the eye which absorbs light, processes images, and sends visual info to the brain
Refractory period
Neuron has to take a break before it can send another message (1-2 milliseconds)
____ and _____ connections hold our memories
Neurons and synaptic
Mirror neurons
Neurons in the frontal lobe that fire when observing someone perform an action (also feeling empathy); also fire when we perform same action (linked to empathy)
Bimodal neurons
Neurons that are activated when 2 or more senses are used (ex seeing and smelling shapes)
sensory neurons
Neurons that bring in messages to brain and spinal chord for processing from the outside world (recurve incoming info from outside world)
Interneurons
Neurons used to transmit messages within the CNS (help to communicate between different lobes of brain)
What contributes to phantom limb pain?
Neuroplasticity does= neurons take over area of missing body part
The three dimensions created by Eysenck
Neuroticism Extraversion Psychticism (combo of 3) PEN
Endorphins
Neurotransmitters that resemble opiate drugs in structure and effects. Contributes to pain relief and some pleasure emotions
Learning new skills can lead to new neural growths (examples in adulthood)
New language Learning a new musical instrument
Faces with age development
Newborns mimic expressions of adults 5 month old: can discriminate facial expressions in terms of emotion 1 year old: rely on faces for info about how to act
Symbolic
No true connection between sound and meaning
Can someone effectively multitask?
No, we cannot do more than one thing at a time (as effectively); it robs us of performance on primary task (multitasking comprises learning)
Who created the language acquisition device and what is it?
Noam Chomsky; an innate biologically based capacity to acquire language; humans are built to speak (we have system for this purpose)
Neuroscience explanation to hypnosis
Not an imitation, but is real brain activity Stroop effect (delay in resigning time when color of words on a text and their meaning differ) helps explain
Correct rejection
Not identifying stimulus because there is not
Delayed reinforcers don't work and work on who?
Not on animals but yes on humans; we are often more attracted to immediate reinforcers (marshmallow study)
What are bodily senses referring to?
Not referring to sight or hearing but when a physical object comes into contact with us (ex. Pain)
Moving away from others
Not responding emotionally, not caring, being "above it all" (too cool attitude) (Act like don't care but actually do; aka the detached personality)
functional fixedness
Not seeing alternative uses for objects (improvising) (ex. Using a chair as a ladder)
Which traits does individualism affect?
O, E, N
Case study
Observation technique; one person studied in depth in the hope of revealing universal principles (usually 1 person; something strange happened to them genetically)
naturalistic observation
Observing and recording behavior in real world situations without trying to manipulate/control the situation
anorexia nervosa
Obsessive desire to lose weight characterized by not eating
Bulimia nervosa
Obsessive desire to lose weight; involves binging (3000-4000 calories) and purging (throwing up)
Imprinting
Occurs in lower animals, but not human beings (follows the first person they see after birth)
Experimenter bias
Occurs when a researchers expectations or preferences about the outcome of a study influence the results obtained
Operant conditioning
Occurs when we associate our actions with their consequences; type of learning in which behavior is strengthened if followed by reinforcement but diminished if followed by punishment and
Cultures vary in their acceptability of _____ (olfaction)
Odors; ex cleanliness and body odor based in experience, climates and cuisine
Alcohol
Often beloved to be a stimulant; frontal lobe is slowed down so you act on impulse Lowers inhibitions=impulsive Reduce self awareness Disrupts memory formation Can lead to hazardous accidents and physical ailments (DUI; cirrhosis)
What type of neurons are in the nasal cavity and what do they contain?
Olfactory sensory neurons in upper nasal cavity contain cilia (hair cells/transducers)
Generalization
Once a response is conditioned, stimuli similar to the CS tend to produce similar responses (different from person to person)
Longitudinal
One group repeatedly over time (long time)
Self efficacy
One's belief in his or her own ability to succeed and accomplish tasks. It stays the same throughout the life span according to Bandura
Russian study in 1800's
Only let 1 twin be adopted per family, tested environment vs nature
Disadvantage of MBTI
Only measured 4 dimensions and there is no middle ground
Limitation of CT
Only shows structures not function of the brain
disadvantage of absolute threshold?
Only talks about stimulation, not perception
When does the cochleae implant for for adults?
Only works for adults if their brain learn to process sound during childhood because he really has a critical period; it works well for children because of brain plasticity
Hypnosis prevalence
Only ~15% of population is highly hypnotizable (more open)
Narcolepsy with cataplexy
Onset of sleep attacks due to strong emotions; lose voluntary control of muscles (happy/laugh or stress/sadness)
Ppl are more creative when they are more _____ to new experiences
Open
Human language
Open and symbolic communication system specific to Homo Sapiens that has rules (grammar and syntax) and allows its users to express abstract and distant ideas
Superego
Operate on the moralistic principle (develops by age 2-3) Angel side on shoulder; do the right thing Ex: study the entire night and no TV
Ego
Operated in reality principle and mediated between id and superego (develops before age 2) Can be conscious act ex: math test but 8 episodes you wanna watch—-> watch 2 episodes and study (balance)
Id
Operated on pleasure principle (develops in infancy) Ex: eating entire pizza, watch TV and not study; devil side on shoulder
What outside of the body can relieve pain?
Opioids and surgeries (severe options), acupuncture, massage, meditation, hypnosis and placebos (ex sugar pill)
Opioids
Opium, morphine, heroin, codeine, oxycodone, and hydrocodone Pain reduction Most highly addictive depressant (stop the body natural production of endorphins=pain killers)
Attraction: similarity
Opposites do not attract; birds of feather flick together (same characteristics makes you friends)
Judging vs perceiving
Organized And task oriented vs spontaneous and flexible
Chunking
Organizing items into familiar, manageable units; often occurs automatically
Hierarchies
Organizing words/concepts into groups based on similar characteristics help us remember them better (using chunks but making meaning out of them)
Circadian rhythms
Our body's 24 hour biological cycle which affects our sleep cycle and body temp (cold=sleepy)
Episodic memory
Our experiences (knowing where you were when Trump was elected)
How does technology allow us to create stronger social identities?
Our group memberships help us define who we are Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter We create more connections and relationships
Cerebral cortex
Outer layer of brain and the bodies ultimate control and information processing center. This is the part of the brain that makes human unique because it has so many unique functions.
Benefits of using median
Outliers will not drag it out and impact the data as it would with mean (use this for skewed bell curve)
Storage decay
Over time, memories fade (natural)
Stage theories of development
Overcoming an obstacle from an earlier part of life in order to move onto the next "phase"
Pain perception
Pain can seem more severe if we lay more attention to it; at the same time we remember things as less painful if the end if it was less painful than the rest (serial positioning effect of pain)
nociceptive pain
Pain from skin damage
Phantom limb pain
Pain in a limb/tissue that is missing Amputees experience thus Neurons in the brain already in position
What life circumstances can change your personality?
Parenting Brain injury Alzheimer's disease
______ become less influential to adolescents
Parents Positive relationships with parents=positive relationships with peers Girls fight parents over dating (relationships; usually dads); boys fight over behavior and hygiene (acting out; smelling bad)
Permissive
Parents provide few rules and let children have their way Autonomy more important than obedience Less likely to monitors child's behavior (ex. Can have friends over when parents gone)
Authoritarian
Parents set rules that children are expected to follow without question (ex. Ask why—> "because I said so") Emphasizes on obedience Characterized by conditional regard
Who are the most important social influencers to babies ?
Parents; babies learn everything from them (including gender roles) according to social learning theory
suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN)
Part of the hypothalamus which sends messages to the pineal gland which reduces melatonin (sleep hormone) in the morning and increases it at night (activates through light)
Projective tests
Participant is presented with a vague stimulus or situation and asked how to interpret it or tell a story about what they see (Looks at the theme of your responses b/c rooted in Freud; low validity; low reliability)
Privacy and confidentiality
Participants stay anonymous (storage keeps identity protected)
Auditory canal
Passages to gene tympanic membrane (put cue tip through this)
Philip Zimbardo's Stanford Prison Experiment
Payed college students to participate as playing either a prisoner or prison guard. Had the participants arrested at home and treated like criminals. Lived in cell 24/7 so cut off from environment. Prison guards started acting aggressive and cruel without previous instruction. No one "quit" the experiment, they all believe it was real life. Study stopper after 6 days because it was cruel and broke morels. Deindividuation stripped students of identity and have then group of prisoners to be part of.
Sensing vs. Intuition
Paying attention to info as it is presented versus finding deeper meaning Ex; eye in great gatsby
____ can be more important than parents by mid-late childhood
Peers (helping us with everything socially related; eventually comes back to family later in life)
Informed consent (ethical standard)
People agree to terms of participation; can withdraw at any time (sign contract willingly; they tell you general info but no specifics)
Michigan Fish Test
People are shown a picture of the ocean with different creatures and strange background objects + setting Then asked what do they remember from it
Stanley Milgram- obedience (shock experiment)
People conducting study had PhD and were wearing lab coats; used real ordinary adults The confederates caused obedience within the participants Recreated in 2006; same results found
Social loafing
People exert less effort in a group than when working alone (group projects one person does all the works; measured through tug of war activity)
NEO Personality Inventory (NEO-PI) (aka the big 5)
People from different cultural backgrounds exhibit traits of all of the following personality dimensions to varying extents
Confederates
People who are part of research team but act like participants
empathy-altruism hypothesis
People will help others selflessly only when they feel empathy for them
Walter Mischel
Peoples personality traits aren't consistent across all situations (Zimbardo follower; power of the situation)
Drives
Perceived states of tension that occur when our bodies are deficient in some needs (feeling hunger) (the feeling)
bottom-up processing
Perception is a process of building a perceptual experience from smaller pieces Ex. Reading (pick individual words to create sentences)
Illusory correlation
Perception of a relationship where none exists (lucky pencils gives you good grades)
Interoception
Perception of bodily senses (ex. Awareness of breathing or blinking)
top-down processing
Perception of the whole guides perception of smaller elemental features Ex. Facial recognition
Where do the signals go from the CVS and what happens there?
Peripheral NS received decisions/messages and informs the rest of the body of what's going on
Biological theories basis
Personality Differences are affected by the the combined influence of genes, neurochemistry, and characteristics of the nervous system
Homeostasis
Physiological equilibrium or balance around an optimal set point
Structures of the outer ear
Pinnae, auditory canal, and tympanic membrane
Space (automatic processing)
Place of the page where the material is in the book
Function of placenta and umbilical cord...
Placenta is a filter between the mom and baby (keeps bad stuff out) Umbilical cord brings in nutrients from mother to baby
amygdala
Plays a role in appraisal of the emotional significance of stimuli with a specialized function for noticing fear-relevant info
Behavior thresholds
Point at which a person moved from not having a particular response to having one (lower makes behavior more likely, higher vice versa; level at which traits appear after stimulus) Ex. Low= hit in hall you fight, high= got punched then you fight (behavior is anger)
Blind spot
Points where optic nerve exits eyes(eye ends/nerve begins); no receptor cells here so nothing is seen
Explanations to inaccurate memories
Poor lighting Distance in viewing Short exposure Something covering the face of perp Hightened stress and anxiety levels Presence of weapon
How big are you at the end of the 2 week period?
Poppy seed
What's happens after the action potential fires?
Positive ions flow and the neuron rests
Positive reinforcement
Positive=stimulus added Increasing behavior by presenting desirable stimulus (money for good grades)
Conclusion of Michigan fish experiment
Ppl from Easter cultures tend to perceive the world as more of a whole (communalistic culture) Westerners tend to focus on foreground objects (individualistic culture)
Physical attractiveness
Predicts frequency of dating, feelings of popularity, and impressions of personality
in-group/out-group bias
Prefer people we belong with, negative feelings toward outsiders (no reason to dislike outsiders, just do)
Mere exposure effect
Prefer things we see more often (ex. We like letters in our name more than any other letters)
Discrimination
Preferential treatment of certain people, usually driven by prejudicial attitudes (action of/behavior)
Scapegoat theory
Prejudice offers an outlet for anger by providing someone to blame
What are the stages of creative problem solving?
Preparation, incubation, insight, verification-elaboration
Sensitivity period (critical period)
Principle of Lang development states when children not exposed to any human Lang before a certain age= Lang abilities never fully develop (use it or lose it) (1-12 yrs)
Dual processing
Principle that information is often simultaneously processed on separate conscious and unconscious tracks
Yerkes-Dodson Law (1908)
Principle that moderate levels of arousal lead to optimal performance (moderate energy and anxiety) Ex. Flow (getting in the zone)
Behavior modification
Principles of operant conditioning used to change behavior (BBT episode)
Suggestibility
Problem with memory that occurs when memories are implanted in our minds based on leading questions, comments, or propositions by someone else (create completely new memory; purposeful)
Algorithm
Procedure that guarantees problem will be solved; covers every option but is time consuming (using every single math formula to answer question)
Limbic System: Amygdala
Process aggression and fear
sensory adaptation
Process by which our sensitivity diminishes when an object constantly stimulate our senses
Temporal lobe
Process hearing; left side processes what right ear heard and vice versa
Reasoning
Process of drawing inferences inferences or conclusions from principles and evidence
Retrieval
Process of getting info out of memory system
Limbic system: Cingulate Gyrus
Process pain and avoid negative consequences (helps avoid negative experience and emotion)
Occipital lobe
Process vision
Parietal lobe
Processes touch and body position
Limbic System: Hippocampus
Processing memory
Encoding
Processing of info into memory (stuff from outside world into brain)
Adrenal glands
Produces adrenaline to prepare our body for fight or flight. Both a hormone and a neurotransmitter.
Genital
Puberty +; maturation of sexual orientation
What is the purpose and what make up the middle ear?
Purpose is to amplify sound, structures include: hammer, anvel, and stirrup (three bones that vibrate and amplify sound)
Repression
Pushing thoughts out of consciousness (on purpose or involuntary, stop processing memory) Most basic of the defense mechanisms that enables all others
Incubation
Put problem aside for period of time and work on something else
Contextual effects
Putting yourself back in the setting of an experience can aid your retrieval
What are the new versions of the Stanford-Binet tests assessing other than Fluid and Crystalized Intelligence?
Quantitative reasoning, visual-spatial processing, working memory
Low ball effect
Raise price after initial offer (ex. Small charges get added to bill for hotel); it is due to cognitive dissonance (already planned the trip; have to pay hotel to match action/already agreed so don't want to back down)
Fluid intelligence
Raw mental ability, pattern recognition, and abstract reasoning; how quickly can learn new things; culture free (don't have to know anything from school to do well)
What happens when others notice your injury?
Reaction to pain is enhanced so you feel worse
Well-learned information (Automatic Processing)
Reading and advertising
Youngest children
Realistically ambitious but also pampered and dependent on others (parents older and wealthy; last opportunity to spoil a kid) (used to having help of sibling and attention of parents)
Spontaneous recovery
Reappearance of extinguished CR after a pause in time (US and CS are not paired together, then brought back with conditioning)
Late adulthood cogntitive changes
Recall gets worse; recognition slightly slower (speed of recognition)
Complex cells
Receive from simple movement and all locations
Hypercomplex cells
Receives from complex movement and patterns (makes the image whole; full image)
Mechanoreceptors
Receptor cells on the top layer of skin that are sensitive to different tactile qualities (tell us what we are touching) •shape (circle/square) •groove (divet golf ball) •vibrations (ex vibration of bug flying by us) •movement
longer wavelength
Red cones
What is the most common form of color blindness?
Red/green cone deficiency
Sublimation
Redirecting repressed motives and feelings into more socially acceptable channels Ex: child of neglectful parents is running for public office
Depressants
Reduce neural activity (slow down firing of neurons) and slow bodily functions (breathing and heart rate)
What consists of early motor development?
Reflexes (grasping + rooting) and fine motor skills
Denial
Refusing to acknowledge a painful or threatening reality Ex: ray has cancer, think it's only a cold
Punishment
Reinforcement increases a behavior, but punishment decreases it; used to reduce undesirable behavior (what not to do)
Shaping
Reinforcers used to guide subject toward desirable behavior; increasing expectations (need to do this for OC to work)
Fixed interval
Reinforces a response after a specific amount of time has passed
Variable ratio
Reinforces a response after an unpredictable number of responses (slot machine; more effective)
Variable interval
Reinforces a response at unpredictable time intervals (time in between emails)
Fixed-ratio
Reinforces a response only after a specified number of responses (buy 3 get 1 free)
Confounding
Related to IV in ways that make separating effects difficult
Long term memory
Relatively permanent and limitless storehouse of memory; includes knowledge, skills, and experiences
Function of terminal branches with buttons
Release neurotransmitters (stores I'm sacs of buttons)
Method of loci
Remembering things by associating them with a physical location (create "memory palace" in mind—> go through rooms in order and place first things on list in strange places)
Sleep apnea
Repeated momentary awakenings due to stopping breathing; some people don't remember waking up, others do (frightening); usually use oxygen mask to prevent it
Replication
Repeating the essence of a research study (using different sample/situation) and obtaining the same result (necessary to prove not by chance)
Thinking outside the box
Requires breaking free of self-imposed conceptual constraints and thinking about a problem differently
Double blind procedure
Research strategy in which neither subjects nor experimenters know which subjects are in the experiment or control groups
Tuskegee Syphilis Study
Research study conducted by a branch of the U.S. government, lasting for roughly 50 years (ending in the 1970s), in which a sample of African American men diagnosed with syphilis were deliberately left untreated, without their knowledge, to learn about the lifetime course of the disease.
Triplett cycling experiment
Researcher Triplett had people ride stationary bikes. When places next to each other they competed and went faster than just alone; therefore social factors increased performance (proved social facilitation)
Experiment
Researchers manipulates a variable under carefully controlled conditions and observes whether any changes occur in a second variable as a result
Two types of explicit memory
Semantic and episodic memory
Partial (intermittent) reinforcement
Response is only reinforced sometimes; We learn the response slower than in continuous reinforcement, but extinction less likely to occur (money for good grades sometimes)
Cones
Responsive to color (function in daylight or well lit conditions)
Rods
Responsive to light and dark contrast (black and white); help see better in dark
What are the functions of sleep?
Restores neural growth (connection between neurons); consolidates memory (hippocampus); produces enzymes that protect against cellular damage
The three kinds of societies in terms of sexual attitudes (Ford and Beach)
Restrictive, semirestrictive, and permissive
What causes colorblindness?
Results from an inherentes pigment deficiency in the photoreceptors; mostly occurs in men
Storage
Retention of encoded info over time (can store it for various amounts of time)
Regression
Reversion to immature patterns of behavior Ex: fired executive brags about huge accomplishments
Which part of the brain is most active when engaging in creative problem solving?
Right frontal lobe (but creative ppl show balance between both hemispheres)
Which side of the brain is more active in processing nonverbal stimuli (or sounds not speech)?
Right side
What was the CS in Pavlov's study?
Ringing the bell (first was NS, but when paired with presence of food at the same time it gradually became a CS)
What does the movement of fluid result in?
Ripples in the basilar membrane, which bends Jaír cells (transducers of sound)
Which type of photoreceptor is more used?
Rods
semi-restrictive cultures
Rules about sex before and outside of marriage aren't strictly enforced (social consequences)
Syntax
Rules for arranging words and symbols in sentences or parts of sentences in a particular language
Ethics
Rules governing the conduct of a person or group in a specific situation- the standards of right and wrong
Function of axon
Send the messages
Ivan pavlov
Russian physiologist who observed conditioned salivary responses in dogs (1849-1936) (classical conditioning; behaviorist)
Karen Horney
Said Freuds theory was sexist and false She instead focused on social aspects of personality, not aware of Also focused on what makes ppl emotionally unstable (parents who neglect children)
G. Stanley Hall (APA)
Said adolescent is a time if storm and stress; did research into puberty
Ernest Hilgard (1977)
Said hypnosis is a stage in which part of the brain operates independently (frontal lobe slows down)
Robert Zajonic
Said presence of people can facilitate or inhibit performance
Carol Gillian
Said that females are more likely to value relationships; naked more likely to value law and order Therefore the two should be as equal (didn't disagree with Kohlbergs theory just added on to it)
Sigmund Freud (psychoanalytic theory)
Said the unconscious is the most powerful face in personality and created 3 key components: id, ego, and superego
What was the CR in Pavlov's study ?
Salvation
Test-retest reliability
Same results it taken again in the future (very high in IQ tests)
Sampling bias
Sample is not representative of the population from which it is drawn
Elaboration liklehood model
Says attitude change depends on how long someone thinks about the contents of the message
What creates action potentials?
Sensation
Stereotypes
Schemas of how people are likely to behave based on groups to which they belong (beliefs)
Leptin
Secreted by the lateral hypothalamus when glucose drinks; signals to stop eating
What appears in the 2nd trimester
See fingernails and eyelashes
Examples of Synesthesia
Seeing #'s or letters as colors Seeing sounds as colors Tasting shapes
Introspection
Self observation of own conscious experience (what happened throughout the day; not why)
Questionnaires
Self report instruments that indicate the extent to which a person agrees or disagrees with a series or statements Most common cause cheap and quick
Positive psychology
Seligman: Focus is on positive states and experiences; more likely than humanism to employ research
Basic anxiety
Sense of being along and helpless in a hostile world (causes by basic hostility being so intense that individual blames themselves) (if parents don't love me than no one will love me)
What are chemical senses and what consists of them?
Senses that interact with molecules (turn molecular energy into neural energy) Taste and smell They can reproduce themselves very quickly 1-3 weeks only
The CNS is connected to _____ _____ by nerves
Sensory receptors
Forebrain: thalamus
Sensory relay station; interprets 4 senses and distributes then to other parts of brain
Time (automatic processing)
Sequence of events; you can backtrack if you lose time.
Sleep waking (somnambulism)
Series of complex behaviors during sleep; more common in children and ppl who are sleep deprived; 1-15% of population experience it; important to wake them up
Anxiety as an evolutionary trait
Serves as a signal of danger and threat Absence would lower likeliood of survival; too much can impair daily functioning (not too much/not too little; yerkes Dodson)
Intelligence
Set of cognitive skills that's included abstract thinking, reasoning, problem solving, and ability to acquire knowledge.
Authoritative
Set rules and give justification (set and enforce rational rules) Allow for discussion and changing of rules (gray areas)
restrictive cultures (sexuality)
Sex before and outside of marriage is unacceptable (women are punished with exile or death)
What emerges in adolescence?
Sexual interest and relationships
What orientation occurs during teenage years?
Sexual orientation 10% report confusion during teenage years (not enough chances to explore) True "rates" are very difficult to know for certain (personal topic, ppl don't always tell truth)
Kinsey's argument on sexual orientation
Sexuality is a continuum (few are exclusively homosexual or heterosexual); on a spectrum
Reaction range is made up of ____ and _____ environment
Shared: being in the same household and having similar experiences Non shared: unique environmental experiences (prenatal development; hormone levels (stress) or sickness)
Case of Genie
She was kept in a dark room, ignored and neglected, strapped to a potty and fed baby food for 10 years. She was found when she was 13, she couldnt walk or talk, had a deformed body (physical retardation), strange mannerisms, behaved like an infant. After she was found she started to talk (making sounds and repeated words) - in the childrens hospital and she was able to develop an attachment with one of the psychologists. Also after she was found, every year her mental age increased by 1 year.
Random sample
Should represent the population but doesn't always; everyone has an equal chance of being chosen to participate
Which sense is the least mature of all senses at birth?
Sight
Which external factors influence what we eat
Sight of food, smell of food, cultural preferences, eat things difficult to get (sugar/fat), exposure to certain foods (8-10 times you'll like it)
Intellectual disability
Significant limitations in intellectual functioning: IQ of 70 or below (2 SD below average) Mild (50-70) Moderate (35-50) Severe (20-35) Profound (below 20)
What is the key theme of social psychology? What was social psych created out of?
Situations are powerful, WW2
Weber's law
Size of JND is a constant fraction of the intensity of the stimulus (proportions of intensity) Ex. How many pounds does it tame for you to notice someone's lost weight? ~3% 3/100=6/200 pounds
What is the largest organ in the body?
Skin
contact comfort
Skin to skin contact is good for bonding and is good for development of the baby
What is seen in the 3rd trimester?
Sleep wake cycle (can tell in REM)
Serial conscious processing
Slower than parallel, used to deal with new challenges, which require focused attention (learning stick shift; parallel is cruise control)
Rate of brain growth (connection of neurons) ________ _____ after age _____, then more after adolescence
Slows down, 6
Genes
Small segments of DNA that contain the blueprints or plans for the production of proteins. Located in pairs of alleles (one from each parent)
difference threshold
Smallest amount of change between 2 stimuli that a person can detect half the time. Describes by Ernst Weber
Phonemes
Smallest units of sounds (ex saying ba instead of ball)
Principle 4 Does not change the ____, but rather the _____ of DNA
Structure, activity
What plays a large influence on human behavior and why?
Social factors, because we are social creatures and rely on others for a lot of things
Only children
Socially mature, but sometimes lack social interest and have exaggerated feelings of superiority (parents thought this is an amazing child cause nothing to compare to)
Insight
Solution comes immediately to mind (Eureka insight); similar to "light bulb" moment (it just clicks)
verification-elaboration
Solution needs to be confirmed even if it feels certain that it's right
Spatial
Solving 3-D problems (architects/sculptors)
bodily-kinesthetic
Solving problems through movement (sports)
Each part is the skin is mapped in the ______ ______ In the ______ lobe
Somatosensory cortex (sensory cortex), parietal lobe
Two other names for sensory cortex
Somatosensory cortex or sensory strip (the more sensitive a part is the more area it takes up on the strip)
Genetic influences of aggression
Some animals bred for aggression; twin studies show evidence of genetic component
Reduction in hearing (adulthood)
Some is preventable (keep sensorineural hearing loss in mind)
What is the criteria for useful?
Someone finds value in the thought/behavior
self-fulfilling prophecy
Something came true because we believed it would; eating disorders involve negative ______ (often viewers as delusions or firm beliefs in things that aren't real)
Primary reinforcer
Something that innately increase behaviors (eating food so no longer hungry; biologically makes us feel good)
Inductive reasoning
Specific evidence to general conclusion (less certain than deductive) (my brother good=all brothers good)
Procedural memory
Specific kind of implicit memory; memory of physical skills (ex walking; muscle memory)
Wernicke's area
Speech comprehension
Function of myelin sheath?
Speeds up and protects messages (it's fatty tissue around axon- more used =fattier)
Gate-way control theory (Melzack and Wall)
Spinal cord served as a "gate" that is opened or closed by neural messages, made up of small and large fibers
What type of waves when non REM?
Stage 1-4; theta waves=1-2; delta (deep) waves =3-4
Pinnae
Structures in the side of the head that collect and funnel sound into the auditory canal
Hypnosis
State (of consciousness) characterized by focused attention, suggestively, absorption of voluntary control over behavior, and suspension of critical faculties (breathing slows down) (occurs when instructed by someone trained in hypnosis)
Flow
State of involvement during which one loses sense of time (In the zone;time flys)
Second theory of hypnosis
Stated that persons being hypnotized is role playing, and that consciousness is not altered at all
Simple cells
Stationary and middle of visual field (fine detail)
T-test
Statistical hypothesis test used to determine if two sets of data are significantly different from each other (helps test if placebo and real drug actually did anything; helps us find the p value)
Personality of baby
Stems from temperament Involves behaviors, thoughts, and feelings Can be affected by parental personality (if easy baby=you see smile so baby smile; if difficult baby= you see angry so baby angry)
Konrad Lorenz
Stole duck eggs and they followed him at the pond (he was the mother due to imprinting) Other ppl gave them treats but in the end always came back to mother duck
The inner ear is a _____ space for parts
Storage
Defense mechanisms
Strategies the mind used to protect itself from anxiety by denying and distorting reality in some way; most strategies are unconscious
_______ ______ increase the retention of certain information but disrupt memory formation or other things.
Stress hormones (attention comes into play)
1st born
String feeling of superiority and power; nurturing but highly critical and strong feeling of "need to be right" (Usually better at things because they have more practice)
Alfred Adler
Striving for superiority (main drive behind behavior) (infants are helpless; strive to show not weak)
Principle 3 of behavioral genetics
Studying twins and adoptees helps separate heredity and the environment (nature vs. nurture)
Teratogens
Substances that interfere with development and can cause birth defects (ex. Harms neural migration)
Raisin task
Suck on raisin and think of qualities that are objective (ridges and juicy; not saying good or bad); should make you feel peaceful and balanced
Eureka Insight
Sudden solutions that came to mind in a flash and insight solutions
Manifest level (psychoanalytic theory)
Surface level, recalled about awakening; what you actually dream (plot; ex is T. rex attacks school)
Autopsy
Surgical procedure that examine a course through the process of dissection; usually performed to determine cause of death (psychologists focus on the brain)