MCAT Psychological, Social, and Biological Foundations of Behavior
Flow of verbal inputs to the ear (hemispheres)
1. Verbal inputs to the ear first go to the auditory cortex in the right hemisphere 2. and are then processed by the language areas of the left hemisphere
sensory memory
<1 sec stimuli received through the five senses of sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch, which are retained accurately, but very briefly.
insecure attachment
A child with the anxious-avoidant insecure attachment style will avoid or ignore the caregiver - showing little emotion when the caregiver departs or returns
subset of counterculture
A counterculture is a subculture whose values and norms of behavior differ substantially from those of mainstream society, often in opposition to mainstream cultural mores
nature vs nurture
a debate regarding the contributions of genetics (nature) and environment (nurture) to an individual's traits. Family, twin, and adoption studies are used to study nature vs. nurture --> aggression is very much environmentally linked
Divided attention
a higher-level skill where you have to perform two (or more) tasks at the same time, and attention is required for the performance of both (or all) the tasks
life course approach to health
a holistic perspective that calls attention to developmental processes and other experiences across a person's life
recovered memory
a memory of a traumatic event (such as sexual abuse) experienced typically during childhood that is forgotten and then recalled many years later that is sometimes held to be an invalid or false remembrance generated by outside influence
false memory
a memory report that is inaccurate but expressed with extreme confidence
autobiographical memory
a memory system consisting of episodes recollected from an individual's life, based on a combination of episodic (personal experiences and specific objects, people and events experienced at particular time and place) and semantic (general knowledge and facts about the world) memory
amnesia
a partial or total loss of memory
social status
a person's standing or importance in relation to other people within a society
Sensory coding
a process wherein there is a one-to-one correspondence that occurs between the attributes of the stimulus and the attributes of the neuronal activity
Research on cognitive aging has demonstrated that, in general, aging does NOT diminish a person's:
ability to retrieve general information --> The capacity for retrieving general information is unaffected by aging --> capacity for acquiring new declarative information, capacity of controlling his or her memory processes, ability to cope with Alzheimer's Disease IS affected by aging
context effects
an aspect of cognitive psychology that describes the influence of environmental factors on one's perception of a stimulus. The impact of context effects is considered to be part of top-down design --> e.g., seeing a word with a missing letter and being able to identify the word, based on the sentence in which it is contained
reminiscence bump
an atypical finding that represents enhanced memory performance in an otherwise decreasing retention function --> It is an increase in early memories above what would be expected by a monotonically decreasing retention function, as normally seen with forgetting over time
Directly related
as one amount increases, another amount increases at the same rate
How neurotransmitters function
binds to a receptor on a postsynaptic membrane within the CNS --> neurotransmitters are manufactured in neurons and are exocytosed from presynaptic neurons into a synaptic cleft
hypothalamus
concerned largely with the maintenance of homeostatic equilibrium --> damage to the hypothalamus would be unlikely to interfere with discrimination learning or attention skills --> maintains homeostasis and integrates with the endocrine system through the hypophyseal portal system that connects it to the anterior pituitary
In operant conditioning studies, the subject's motivational state is most typically operationally defined by
depriving the subject of some desirable stimulus item for a period of time
Gestalt theory
emphasizes the idea that the ways in which people's visual perceptual experience is organized results from how human brains are organized (similarity, continuation, closure, proximity, figure and ground) --> figure and ground: The eye differentiates an object form its surrounding area. a form, silhouette, or shape is naturally perceived as figure (object), while the surrounding area is perceived as ground (background)
episodic memory
events, experiences --> declarative information people have of specific experiences
hindsight bias
explains the tendency of people to overestimate their ability to have predicted an outcome that could not possibly have been predicted
semantic memory
facts, concepts
norepinephrine/epinephrine
fight-or-flight (sympathetic) responses, wakefulness, alertness
dizygotic twins
fraternal twins --> meaning that they develop from two different eggs. In fraternal twins, each twin is fertilized by its own sperm cell
front stage self
front stage behavior is what we do when we know that others are watching or aware of us. In other words, it's how we behave and interact when we have an audience
source amnesia
he inability to remember where, when or how previously learned information has been acquired, while retaining the factual knowledge
Predictive validity
how well a specific tool predicts future behavior
monozygotic twins
identical twins --> meaning that they develop from one zygote, which splits and forms two embryos
sensitive period
identifies a point in early development that can have a significant influence on physiological or behavioral functioning in later life
Negative correlation
if one variable is increased the other is decreased, and vice versa
incentive stimulus
includes a motivational component to a rewarding stimulus
instinctual drift
instinctual drift is the tendency of an animal to revert to instinctive behaviors that interfere with a conditioned response --> the phenomenon whereby established habits, learned using operant techniques, eventually are replaced by innate food-related behaviors. So the learned behavior "drifts" to the organism's species-specific (instinctual) behavior
partial reinforcement
Partial reinforcement, unlike continuous reinforcement, is only reinforced at certain intervals or ratio of time, instead of reinforcing the behavior every single time
practice effects
Practice effects are influences on test results when a test is taken more than once. As a simple example, a practice effect occurs when you take multiple practice SAT exams; practice can increase your overall score
feature detectors
The ability to detect certain types of stimuli, like movements, shape, and angles, requires specialized cells in the brain called feature detectors
Positive correlation
The correlation in the same direction is called positive correlation. If one variable increases, the other also increases and if one variable decreases, the other also decreases
hippocampus
memory
decay
memory fades due to the mere passage of time
serotonin
mood, sleep, eating, dreaming
Interpretation of intelligence test scores is based on the assumption that the scores are normally distributed within a population such that:
more than two-thirds of children will score between 85 and 115 --> Based on the standardization system used to score IQ, the Wechsler Scales of Intelligence (WISC) scores are "normalized" to a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 15. So 68% of the scores will be between 85 and 115.
agent of socialization
parts of society that are important for socialization (the process of learning the norms and values in a society) e.g. popular culture, schools, family, religion, media
flashbulb memory
people claimed to remember detail of what they were doing when they received news about an emotionally arousing event
bottom-up processing
processing sensory information as it is coming in
statistical adjustment
refers to controlling for variables that could affect the relationship between the independent variable and the dependent variable
agent of social reproduction
refers to the emphasis on the structures and activities that transmit social inequality from one generation to the next
chunking
refers to the process of taking individual pieces of information (chunks) and grouping them into larger units. By grouping each piece into a large whole, you can improve the amount of information you can remember.
sensory stimulus
refers to the type of information being received by your receptors which elicits a response (i.e., light, heat, touch, sound)
thalamus
relay station for sensory information
partial report technique
requires participants to identify a subset of characters from a visual display using cued recall. Due to the fact that participants do not know which row would be cued for recall, performance in the partial report condition can be regarded as a random sample of an observer's memory for the entire display
top-down processing
sensory perception driven by cognition
dopamine
smooth movements, postural stability
Sensory memory
the ability to retain impressions of sensory information after the original stimuli have ended. It acts as a kind of buffer for stimuli received through the five senses of sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch, which are retained accurately, but very briefly
Recall
the act of retrieving information or events from the past while lacking a specific cue to help in retrieving the information
distal stimulus
the actual stimulus or object in the real world that you end up sensing and then perceiving, which results in the proximal stimulus
Selective attention
the capacity for or process of reacting to certain stimuli selectively when several occur simultaneously
culture shock
the feeling of disorientation experienced by someone who is suddenly subjected to an unfamiliar culture, way of life, or set of attitudes
culture lag
the notion that culture takes time to catch up with technological innovations, and that social problems and conflicts are caused by this lag
recency effect
the phenomenon that when people are asked to recall in any order the items on a list, those that come at the end of the list are more likely to be recalled than the others
spacing effect
the phenomenon whereby learning is greater when studying is spread out over time, as opposed to studying the same amount of time in a single session. That is, it is better to use spaced presentation rather than massed presentation
cultural assimilation
the process by which a person's or group's culture come to resemble those of another group
Discrimination learning
the process by which animals or people learn to respond differently to different stimuli
medicalization of illness
the process by which human conditions and problems come to be defined and treated as medical conditions, and thus become the subject of medical study, diagnosis, prevention, or treatment --> this act of reducing illness to strictly a medical definition ignores the social context of disease
repression
the psychological attempt made by an individual to direct one's own desires and impulses toward pleasurable instincts by excluding the desire from one's consciousness and holding or subduing it in the unconscious
Why is continuous reinforcement the best for the beginning of the acquisition phase of operant conditions
the schedule unambiguously informs the subject which behavior is correct --> Thereafter, if every correct response is reinforced, other (incorrect) responses are infrequent and the behavior gains strength and learning results
serial-position effect
the tendency of a person to recall the first and last items in a series best, and the middle items worst
proactive interference
the tendency of previously learned material to hinder subsequent learning
proximal stimulus
the type of stimulus registered by the sensory receptors (e.g. the pattern of light falling on the retina) --> the stimulation that actually occurs when your sensory receptors are activated, i.e. the neural activity
cultural transmission
the way a group of people within a society or culture tend to learn and pass on information. Learning styles are greatly influenced by how a culture socializes with its children and young people
similarity
things that look alike are more likely to be grouped together during perceptual processing
implicit memory
unconscious
psychophysical discrimination testing
varying a physical stimulus slightly and observing the effect on a subject's experience or behavior in order to better understand perceptual processing. (ex. change the size slightly between two objects until subject notices a difference)
back stage self
what we do when no one's looking, or when we think no one is looking
Inversely related
when one value decreases at the same rate that the other increases
Interpreting p values
≤ 0.05 = statistically significant --> A small p-value (typically ≤ 0.05) indicates strong evidence against the null hypothesis, so you reject the null hypothesis. --> A large p-value (> 0.05) indicates weak evidence against the null hypothesis, so you fail to reject the null hypothesis. --> null hypothesis: the hypothesis that there is no significant difference between specified populations, any observed difference being due to sampling or experimental error.
Interpreting a normal distribution curve
--> n normal distribution, 68 percent of all values lie within one standard deviation --> 95.45 percent within two standard deviations --> and 99.8 within three standard deviations --> In a normal distribution, the mean, mode and median are all the same
Interpreting correlation coefficients
--> Exactly -1. A perfect downhill (negative) linear relationship --> -0.70. A strong downhill (negative) linear relationship --> -0.50. A moderate downhill (negative) relationship --> -0.30. A weak downhill (negative) linear relationship --> 0. No linear relationship --> +0.30. A weak uphill (positive) linear relationship --> +0.50. A moderate uphill (positive) relationship --> +0.70. A strong uphill (positive) linear relationship --> Exactly +1. A perfect uphill (positive) linear relationship
social network
A social network is a social structure made up of a set of social actors (such as individuals or organizations), sets of dyadic ties, and other social interactions between actors.
operational span testing
A task in which subjects are asked to perform a simple mathematical verification (e.g., 4/2 +1 = 3) and then read a word, with a recall test following some number of those verify/read pairs. The maximum number of words that can be recalled is the "operation span".
Shadowing
An experimental technique in which subjects repeat speech immediately after hearing it
Effects of cocaine
Because cocaine is a stimulant, it would have a physiological effect similar to stress and hence glucose metabolism is expected to increase
Behaviorist theory
Behaviorism is a learning theory that only focuses on objectively observable behaviors and discounts any independent activities of the mind. Behavior theorists define learning as nothing more than the acquisition of new behavior based on environmental conditions
closure
Closure occurs when an object is incomplete or a space is not completely enclosed. If enough of the shape is indicated, people perceive the whole by filling in the missing information.
Cognitive theory
Cognitive theory is focused on the individual's thoughts as the determinate of his or her emotions and behaviors and therefore personality
continuity
Continuation occurs when the eye is compelled to move through one object and continue to another object
recall cues
Cued recall is the retrieval of memory with the help of cues. Such cues are often semantic. Cued recall differs from free recall in that a cue or word is presented that is related to the information being remembered. This aides in the process of memory retrieval.
frontal lobe
Executive function, impulse control, long-term planning (prefrontal cortex), motor function (primary motor cortex), speech production (Broca's area)
word association testing
In a word association test, the researcher presents a series of words to individual respondents. For each word, participants are instructed to respond with the first word (i.e., associate) that comes to mind.
social construction of illness
For the medical profession, disease is a biological condition, universal and unchanging; social constructionists define illness as the social meaning of that condition -->In social constructionist theory impairment refers to a physical illness or injury; disability is the social experience of impairment. -->Illness can reshape an individual's identity. For example, deafness can be a cultural identity that supplants individual identity.
Humanistic theory
Humanism is a psychological perspective that emphasizes the study of the whole person. Humanistic psychologists look at human behavior not only through the eyes of the observer, but through the eyes of the person doing the behaving
stimulus generalization
In the conditioning process, stimulus generalization is the tendency for the conditioned stimulus to evoke similar responses after the response has been conditioned
What area of the brain is linguistic information processed?
Left hemisphere
subset of material culture
Material culture refers to the physical objects, resources, and spaces that people use to define their culture. These include homes, neighborhoods, cities, schools, churches, synagogues, temples, mosques, offices, factories and plants, tools, means of production, goods and products, stores, and so forth
proximity
Proximity occurs when elements are placed close together. They tend to be perceived as a group.
What area of the brain is the auditory cortex located?
Right hemisphere
Kohlberg's theory of moral development
Six stages are divided into three main phases: pre-convential, conventional, and post-conventional --> A person promoting social welfare as their reason for moral behavior is at the highest level
socioeconomic gradient in health
Social scientists have examined the associations between social class and health. In general, wealthy people are found to live longer on average than middle-class people, and middle-class people live longer than poor people, but not longer than rich people
assimilation
The process by which a person or persons acquire the social and psychological characteristics of a group
operant extinction
When operant behavior that has been previously reinforced no longer produces reinforcing consequences the behavior gradually stops occurring
