Psychology 1101: Chapters 1-8
Jake is sympathetic and considerate of his friends' moods. He really identifies with their feelings and readily understands their point of view. He is well-known around campus, and he has great relationships with his classmates and professors. Which area of the multiple intelligences model does this exemplify?
interpersonal
Which of the following is a symptom of REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD)?
kicking and punching while asleep
Which experiment involves the use of classical conditioning?
knowing that a student fears exams, the instructor wears a bright red shirt only on exam day, every exam day, to see how long it is before the red shirt becomes an object of fear to the student
In Freud's model of dreams, the hidden meaning of a dream is called the ________ content.
latent
What do psychologists call a relatively permanent change in behavior or knowledge that results from experience?
learning
In a person whose eyes work in the usual fashion, the ________ will focus images perfectly on a small indentation in the back of the eye known as the ________.
lens; fovea
Dave's boss told him that he doesn't have to attend the company picnic (which everybody dislikes) if Dave meets his sales quota this month. Dave's boss is using ________.
negative reinforcement
In classical conditioning, the association that is learned is between a ________.
neutral stimulus and an unconditioned stimulus
The empirical method of study is based on ________.
observation of phenomena
Dymesha watches her older sister do headstands. Dymesha falls over when she attempts to do a headstand herself. She watches her older sister more carefully, and she notices that her sister leans backward slightly to complete her headstand. Dymesha is then able to do headstands herself. Which type of learning is this?
observational
A(an) ________ is a basic sound unit of a given language.
phoneme
________ asserts that our genes set the boundaries within which we can operate, and our environment interacts with our genes to determine where within those boundaries we will fall.
range of reaction
When you take a multiple-choice test, you are relying on ________, because you are comparing the information in front of you to that which is already stored in your long-term memory.
recongnition
You see a television commercial for a product you may want to buy, and there is a telephone number you must call to place an order. Because you don't have anything with which to write down the number, you repeat it to yourself over and over again until you feel like you won't forget it. This process is called ________.
rehearsal
Victoria has accumulated a large sleep debt. This means that she ________.
suffers from chronic sleep deprivation
________ is/are often conducted with large numbers of participants and can even be conducted by phone, email, or mail.
surveys
The auditory cortex, in which sound stimuli are processed for perception, is located in the ________ lobe.
temporal
Which of these is not one of the structures that comprises the outer ear?
the basilar membrane
Which of the following is an example of a reflex?
the pupil of your eye contracting in the presence of bright light
According to William James, what was the true purpose of psychology?
Studying the function of behavior in the world
________ concepts are ones that we know by a specific set of characteristics.
artificial
Classical and operant conditioning are forms of ________ learning.
associative
The theory of ________ states that organisms that are better suited for their environment will survive and reproduce, while those that are poorly suited for their environment will die off.
evolution by natural selection
Changes in behavior and cognitive processes over time are studied by ________.
evolutionary psychologists
I am trying to learn the names of all 50 states. Because I am actively and consciously remembering and recalling this information, it is considered ________ memory.
explicit
Molly attempts to condition her puppy to greet her when she enters the house. She repeatedly pairs her entry to the house with a treat for the puppy. The puppy eventually acquires this ability, and Molly realizes how irritating it is for the puppy to run up to her every time she enters the house. She attempts to make the puppy stop, and eventually the puppy no longer feels motivated to greet her when she enters the house. The puppy no longer greeting her when she enters the house is an example of ________.
extinction
In the study of personality, the ________ model includes different traits that are believed to underlie each individual's basic tendencies.
five factor
Gus receives a paycheck at the end of every week. Which reinforcement schedule is this?
fixed interval
The type of intelligence that involves seeing complex relationships and solving problems is ________ intelligence.
fluid
What is the confirmation bias?
focusing on information that confirms your existing beliefs
One principle of civil engineering is that when you design a highway you should have traffic flow in the same direction and avoid interruptions to that flow as much as possible. Exit ramps tend to be curved so that cars don't have to stop rather than having 90-degree angles that force stops and starts. This is an application of which Gestalt principle?
good continuation
Aram is proficient in playing a number of instruments and can easily learn new songs and rhythms. This exemplifies ________ intelligence from the multiple intelligences theory.
musical
Within the semantic network model of memory, what would happen to concepts that are related to (or attached) to one that is currently being activated by thinking about it?
they would also be activated, though at a lower level
Elaborative rehearsal involves ________.
thinking about the meaning of the new information and its relation to knowledge already stored in your memory
Cognitive psychology focuses on studying ________.
thoughts and their relationship to our experiences and our actions
Which type of processing involves the interpretation of sensations and is influenced by available knowledge and expectancies?
top-down
Your ears receive sound waves and convert this energy into neural messages that travel to your brain and are processed as sounds. This is an example of ________.
transduction
Tyrahn's rods do not transform light into nerve impulses as easily and efficiently as they should, so he has trouble seeing in dim light. This is called ________ blindness
night
A negative correlation means ________.
one variable decreases as the other increases
Hideki tells a lie and is grounded. He does this several times, finally learning that his behavior (lying) is associated with a consequence (being grounded). Which kind of learning is this?
operant conditioning
Which nerve carries visual information from the retina to the brain?
optic
Sleepwalking, night terrors, and restless leg syndrome are all examples of________.
parasomnias
The ________ nervous system is responsible for stimulating digestion and causing the bladder to contract.
parasympathetic
In ________ reinforcement, the person or animal is not reinforced every time a desired behavior is performed.
partial
Wesley is in a movie theater with no windows—the only light is low illumination from the emergency lights on the floor. Which photoreceptors will be most useful to Wesley as he attempts to leave the theater?
rods
Ebbinghaus found that about one day after you learn new material, you will only remember ____ percent of it if you have not reviewed it a second time.
30
Recent research conducted by Cowan (2010) has found that the capacity of working memory is how many units of information?
4 plus or minus 1
An intelligence score that falls below ________ indicates significant cognitive delays, and may be indicative of an intellectual disability.
70
Which individual was asked by the French government to create an assessment tool - an intelligence test, of sorts - that would be used to identify schoolchildren who would be more likely to have difficulty in school?
Alfred Binet
A series of dots arranged in the shape of a face will be perceived as a face, not a series of dots. A psychologist studying this phenomenon is applying the principals of ________.
Gestalt Psychology
Which psychodynamic theorist proposed the idea of a collective unconscious that is shared by all members of the human species?
Carl Jung
Although B. F. Skinner and John B. Watson refused to believe that thoughts and expectations play a role in learning, ________ suggested a cognitive aspect to learning.
Edward C. Tolman
How is an explicit memory different from an implicit memory?
Explicit memories are memories we consciously try to remember and recall, while implicit memories are those that are not part of our consciousness.
Which school of thinking in psychology includes the following concepts: figure-ground relationship, law of continuity, and principle of closure?
Gestalt
Which statement about B. F. Skinner is correct?
He is famous for demonstrating the principles of operant conditioning: The motivation for a behavior happens after the behavior is demonstrated.
What is the main idea of levels of processing theory?
If you want to remember a piece of information, you should think about it more deeply and link it to other information and memories to make it more meaningful.
Which of the following conclusions can be drawn from the case study of Phineas Gage's accident, which led to brain injury?
Injury to the brain causes changes in behavior, and specific brain areas are linked to particular behaviors.
From a cognitive psychology perspective, why is getting plenty of sleep the night before an exam important?
It allows for consolidation of studied material in long-term memory.
Which option is the most valid criticism of Watson and Rayner's work with "little Albert"?
It would be unethical by today's research standards.
What is the main idea of social learning theory?
One can learn new behaviors by observing others.
What does the place theory of pitch perception suggest?
Receptors on different portions of the basilar membrane are sensitive to sounds of different frequencies.
According to psychologist ________ classical conditioning is effective because of the ability of a person or animal to predict the relationship between the UCS and the CS.
Rescorla
Who developed the triarchic theory of intelligence?
Robert Sternberg
Which researcher believed that dreams simply reflect life events that are important to the dreamer?
Rosalind Cartwright
Which of the following is one of the reasons that Gestalt psychology did not become more popular in the United States?
The rise of behaviorism overshadowed Gestalt psychology.
Why can amphetamines be used to treat ADHD in children?
They increase neurotransmitter activity within certain areas of the brain associated with impulse control.
Which option is NOT one of the Wechsler tests of intelligence?
Wechsler Adolescent Intelligence Measure (WAIM)
What kind of professional would be most qualified to administer an intelligence test?
a professional trained in psychology
Which of the following is not a risk factor for SIDS?
above average birth weight
Terrance finds it difficult to learn the alphabet, until he hears the alphabet song. Then he can easily remember it. This is an example of ________ encoding.
acoustic
If the principles of social learning theory are true, then children may model aggressive behavior ________.
after seeing a television character receive a reward for taking violent action against another character
What term describes the continuation of a visual sensation after removal of the stimulus?
afterimage
If I am looking at a snake and processing the fear caused by the snake, what part of my brain am I using?
amygdala
What does the equipotentiality hypothesis suggest would happen if the hippocampus was damaged?
another part of the brain would compensate for the damage by taking over the memory function normally managed by the hippocampus
The famous case of H.M. demonstrated ________ amnesia, a condition in which a person can remember previously encoded memories but cannot encode new ones.
anterograde
Which of the following is an example of instinct?
baby turning its head to suckle when its cheek is stroked
________ disparity refers to the slightly different view of the world that each eye receives, and is a distance cue that allows us to perceive the depth of a given visual stimulus.
binocular
The scientific process is ________, involving both inductive and deductive reasoning.
circular
Ashya wants to focus on the diagnosis and treatment of psychological disorders and other problematic patterns of behavior. What area of psychology should she work in?
clinical psychology
When a child works on a "connect the dots" puzzle, she can often see the completed work before she has finished all of the dots. Once there is enough visual information present, she's able to perceive the completed picture even though it is still incomplete. Which Gestalt principle does this demonstrate?
closure
________ encompasses the processes associated with perception, knowledge, problem solving, judgment, language, and memory.
cognition
________ are categories or groupings of linguistic information, images, ideas, or memories, such as life experiences.
concepts
Stanley was diagnosed with lymphoma and had to undergo several months of chemotherapy. During this time he would become very nauseated as a side effect, and unintentionally came to associate that nausea with his favorite grilled cheese sandwich. Now, years later, even thinking about a grilled cheese sandwich makes him sick. In this example, Stanley's nauseous reaction to a grilled cheese sandwich is the ________.
conditioned response
Petra walks into a brightly lit Psychology lab to participate in an experiment involving the ability to perceive the colors of the rainbow. Which photoreceptors will be most useful during this experiment?
cones
Carmela believes her assistant, Lian, is incompetent. She notices only what Lian does wrong while ignoring the above average quality of most of her work. This exemplifies ________ bias.
confirmation
Ronaldo was born without the ability to experience pain, though he can perceive temperature differences and changes in pressure. What is his condition called?
congenital analgesia
Light waves are first transmitted through the ________ at the front of the eye and enter an opening called the ________ before shining onto the retina.
cornea; pupil
Kai cuts her foot while hiking. She forgot to pack bandages, but she has a tube of superglue and uses that to seal the wound. Kai's ability to invent a solution uses the ________ intelligence component of the triarchic theory of intelligence.
creative
The amplitude of a wave is the height of a wave as measured from the highest point on the wave________ to the lowest point on the wave ________.
crest; trough
Amarah has an exam in a week, so she schedules 30 to 60 minutes each night to review her course material. She does this rather than waiting until the night before the exam so that she can avoid a "cram session." Amarah's approach to studying is called ________ practice.
distributed
Rudy is amazing in all of his school classes, except math. He struggles to understand basic arithmetic concepts, confuses mathematical symbols like "+" and "=", and gets very frustrated and upset at the thought of doing math homework. Rudy has a normal level of cognitive functioning in other areas, and reads and writes with ease. Rudy's parents may want to have him evaluated to see if he suffers from ________.
dyscalculia
Barney used to live in Pittsburgh, and his telephone number started with the area code 412. Now he has moved to Baltimore, and his new telephone number has an area code of 410. Barney remembers his new area code by connecting it to the old one and just "subtracting two." This is an example of ________ rehearsal.
elaborative
The ________ theory explains that the immediate associations involved in a conditioned taste aversion are a result of adaptation that helps us learn to avoid foods that are potentially harmful.
evoluntionary
Which kind of psychologist would be consulted in jury selection and witness preparation?
forensic
Which concept is a type of mental set where you cannot perceive an object being used for something other than what it was designed for?
functional fixedness
Parsons and her colleagues are doing a study comparing differences in brain activity levels between patients with schizophrenia and controls with no psychological disorders. Their hypothesis requires a high level of detail and good detection of differences over time. Which of the following is the best brain imaging technique to use?
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
The myelin sheath is made from ________.
glial cells
________ amplitudes are associated with ________ sounds.
higher;louder
Your memory of how to ride a bicycle is probably something that you don't actively think about while you're riding. You just sort of "do it" without thinking of how you do it. This is an example of a(n) ________ memory.
implicit
As you are talking to a friend on your cell phone, you might find that you can't hear them because they are speaking very softly. If you ask them to "speak up," from a physical perspective you are asking them to ________ of the sound waves they are producing.
increase the amplitude
Knowing what a dinosaur is because you looked through a book with pictures of dinosaurs and watched the film Jurassic Park is an example of a natural concept that was developed through ________ experience.
indirect
Which term refers to the vocabulary of a language, or the words contained within that language?
lexicon
Within the visible spectrum, our experience of red is associated with ________ waves of light.
longer wavelengths
Gonzalo is attempting to open his car door using the auto lock button on his keychain. He pushes the button twice, but his car door does not open. He continues to push the button even though it is likely that the auto lock feature has stopped working, and he will need to open the door manually with his key. This illustrates a ________.
mental set
Emily is an adult with a 4th-grade skill level in reading, writing, and math. Her doctor suggests she would be capable of holding a job and living independently. Which subtype of intellectual disability describes Emily?
mild
When Benito was five he cut his leg on some glass and needed stiches. Years later, his mother tells him the scar came from being bit by a dog. Now, when people ask about his scar he distinctly remembers the dog biting him. This is an example of the ________.
misinformation effect paradigm
Gabrielle watches her father put batteries into her toy phone, and she is then able to put the batteries into the toy phone herself without further instruction from her father. In this example, Gabrielle's father is a ________.
model
Dr. Singh has just completed her PhD program and is now applying for a year-long program at a nationally-recognized hospital. If accepted, she will greatly advance her knowledge of behavioral neuroscience. Dr. Singh is applying for a(n) ________ training program.
postdoctoral
If you watch a flock of birds flying overhead, each very close to the next one, you may perceive them as all being part of the same group. If they were all spaced very much apart, however, you may see them as individual birds not flying together. This distinction takes advantage of which Gestalt principle?
proximity
"Each person is born with a genetic potential to reach a certain level of potential, but whether or not they accomplish that level depends on their environments and experiences." This is the foundation of the ________ model.
range of reaction
Kenethia enjoys knitting. When she begins college, she has less time for knitting and finally stops altogether. After graduation, she wants to knit again, so she practices with her needles until she is good at it again. This is an example of ________, a means of retrieving information out of your long-term memory storage system.
relearning
The act of getting information out of memory storage and back into conscious awareness is known as ________.
retrieval
Which term refers to the process by which we derive meaning from morphemes and words?
semantics
Which term best describes rewarding successive approximations of a target behavior?
shaping
Catherine is at a crowded baseball game when she loses track of her son, Nick. Despite the loud cheering and noise of the crowd, she can pinpoint his location when he calls for her because she can distinguish the sound of his voice from the all the other voices. This illustrates ________ theory.
signal detection
Which of the following senses is not first routed through the thalamus?
smell
After a hurricane warning came across the television, young Eli became terrified of the alarm sound that signaled a severe weather warning. Over the next few months he heard it several times when the "required monthly tests" came on the television, and his fear faded away. One day the alarm sounded and Eli jumped up and ran out of the room. This return of a previously extinguished response is called ________.
spontaneous recovery
Which statistic is a measure of how data are dispersed in a population and can be used to give context to larger data sets?
standard deviation
The practice of administering, scoring, and interpreting an assessment tool in the same manner is called ________.
standardization
Which of the following is not a way you can use what you know about memory to help you remember the names of all 50 states?
stay up the night before your exam to maximize the amount of time you have to study
Gambling at a slot machine is an example of which reinforcement schedule?
variable ratio
Vinnie is standing on one leg with his arms in the air. The ________ sense helps keep him balanced so he has less chance of falling over.
vestibular
Which individual wrote Principles of Physiological Psychology and is credited with establishing a scientific laboratory of Psychology at the University of Leipzig?
Wilhelm Wundt
When considering the wavelength of a radio wave - like the kind you hear when listening to music as you drive along - you would be correct to think that the size is this wave is about as long as
a building
Elena finds it very difficult to remember a long string of numbers, so she tries to memorize three numbers at a time. Later, she is able to repeat the numbers correctly because she grouped the numbers into more manageable groups of three. This is an example of ________.
chunking
A public opinion poll was administered to 50 people before the election of President Barack Obama. Polls taken before election night showed 50% of the people polled believed Barack Obama would be elected president. After the election results, the same people were asked if they believed Barack Obama would be elected president, and this time 75% of the people said yes. This may be an example of ________ bias.
hindsight
Which part of my brain is probably damaged if I am unable to recognize basic objects around my house?
hippocampus
What is episodic memory?
information about events we have personally experienced
________ (IRB) reviews research that is involves the use of human participants.
institutional review board
You are a big fan of your grandmother's chocolate chip cookies. Just the smell of them causes you to feel hungry. One night she is making chocolate chip oatmeal almond cookies, a variation of her usual recipe. You smell the baking cookies and even though it is different than her usual cookie scent, you still suddenly feel hungry for a treat. This demonstrates the classical conditioning principle of ________.
stimulus generalization
Which correlation coefficient best represents a moderate relationship showing fewer anxiety symptoms in people who report higher life satisfaction?
-0.53
What stage of sleep are you most likely experiencing if an EEG of your brain activity showed sleep spindles and K-complexes?
2
Which choice is an accurate definition of a hypothesis?
A tentative explanation
________ is a neurotransmitter with roles in pleasure and pain modulation.
Beta-endorphin
What occurs during stage 1 sleep?
Both our respiration and heartbeat slow down.
Which of the following areas is located in the frontal lobe of the brain?
Broca's area
Henry Gustav Molaison (H. M.) had brain surgery for which of the following reasons?
He had severe seizures
Which perspective within psychology that emphasizes the potential for good that is innate to all humans.
Humanism
Mona lives on the east coast of the USA. She takes an overnight flight to the west coast to visit with family for a month; when she arrives she is fatigued, sluggish, and irritable. For the next week or so she has trouble sleeping. Mona is probably suffering from ________.
Jet lag
The first woman to earn the PhD degree in psychology was ________.
Margaret Floy Washburn
Which famous female psychologist completed all of the requirements for a doctorate in psychology but was denied that degree because of her sex?
Mary Whiton Calkins
Which of the following statements about sleep deprivation is false?
Sleep deprivation has been found to lead to ADHD.
In order to assess whether viewpoints on decriminalization of marijuana for medical purposes change with age, four groups of participants, ages 20, 30, 40, and 50, are asked whether they support this issue. What is one flaw of this design?
Social or cultural factors may influence the results, not age.
This organization, one of the largest professional groups of psychologists in the world, was founded in 1892.
The American Psychological Association
Lesley, a sociology major, believes that money is the key to happiness. Her friend Stephen, a psychology major, believes that good health is the key to happiness. How might the two friends resolve their disagreement?
They could research peer-reviewed articles to see if either perspective is supported.
What do structuralism, Gestalt psychology, and Sigmund Freud all have in common?
They were all concerned with describing and understanding the inner experience.
Which word is the most appropriate synonym for the term validity?
accuracy
Which is the main type of chemical messengers secreted by the male gonads?
androgens
Introspection refers to a process by which someone examines ________ as objectively as possible.
another person's consciousness
Simplicity of conducting the study is to ________ as ability to test large numbers of participants is to ________.
archival research; surveys
Penelope studies how the structure and function of the nervous system is related to behavior. She is a ________.
biopsychologist
Studies that cannot ethically be conducted as experiments with typical human participants ________.
can sometimes be tested with animal studies
Bev likes to be up late at night and sleep in; Caleb likes to wake up with the sun and go to bed early. A psychologist would say they have different ________.
chronotypes
When studying personality traits, someone who is hardworking, dependable, and organized will score high on the ________ trait.
conscientiousness
Ali is aware of his feelings, emotions, and thoughts. He is also aware of his surroundings, the warmth of the sun, and the sound of nearby traffic. Ali is in a state of ________.
consciousness
An upper-level psychology class is conducting an experiment on racial prejudice that involves having participants rate the likeability of faces in a set of photos. However, they tell participants that the study is about the effects of aging on likeability. When participants are finished, they are thanked for their time and leave the experiment. In this example, the class forgot to ________ in order to resolve the ________ in the study.
debrief participants; deception
Alcohol is considered a ________ because it tends to suppress central nervous system activity.
depressant
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are drugs commonly prescribed for ________.
depression
Which of the following is not a part sympathetic activation during the fight or flight response?
digestion functions become more active
________theory suggests that when people are hypnotized they have voluntarily divided their conscious: one half aware of reality and the other half tuned in to the hypnotist.
dissociative
Which two neurotransmitters have roles in appetite suppression?
dopamine; norepinephrine
In a ________ study, both the researchers and the participants are unaware of the group assignments.
double-blind
Which psychological perspective might advance the argument that our sleep patterns evolved as an adaptive response to predatory risks, which are higher during periods of darkness?
evoluntionary
Which of the following research designs will allow cause-and-effect conclusions?
experimental
Dr. Guttierez is examining a research question and has posted a hypothesis, but his student points out, "Dr. G., the assumption that you have made cannot be disproven no matter what data we gather!" This research study suffers from an absence of ________.
falsifiability
Wendy's mother has blue eyes and her father has brown eyes. The allele for brown eye color is dominant (B) to the allele for blue eye color (b), but Wendy has blue eyes. Therefore, Wendy's ________ must be ________ and her father's must be Bb.
genotype; bb
Mescaline is considered a(n) ________ drug because it results in profound alterations in sensory and perceptual experiences.
hallucinogenic
Which term describes the tendency to maintain a balance, or optimal level, within a biological system?
homeostasis
Elaina has been diagnosed with a small brain tumor. She first went to see her doctor after experiencing symptoms such as feeling very cold, almost fainting, a reduced appetite, and reduced sexual desire. Which of the following structures is her tumor most likely affecting?
hypothalamus
The belief that strange behavior is linked to the occurrence of a full moon is an example of a(n) ________.
illusory correlation
A group of researchers investigated the effects of two vocabulary learning strategies on word retention two weeks later. In this example, learning strategy is the ________ variable and word retention is the ________ variable.
independent; dependent
________ assesses the consistency of observations by different observers.
inter-rater reliability
Marlowe wakes up from a dream about his teeth falling out. He looks in a dream dictionary and finds losing teeth is usually dream symbolism for anxiety. Marlowe is focused on the ________ content.
latent
One example of ________ is the differences between hemispheres in the areas underlying language function.
lateralization
Randolf is walking down the street of his hometown, after being away for several years, when he smells the scent of freshly baked pie coming from a local baker. He suddenly has vivid memories of walking down this street as a child, holding both of his parents' hands, and swinging between them, feeling relaxed and happy. This is because the sense of smell projects directly to the ________, which is responsible for emotional memories.
limbic system
The ________ is the difference in charge between the intracellular and extracellular space of a neuron.
membrane potential
Kelsey had a CT scan that showed a tumor in the right frontal cortex. Which of the following behavioral symptoms most likely prompted the scan to take place?
motor skill deficits in the left side of her body
People who have their corpus callosum severed for medical reasons would be able to tell you about which images shown to ________.
only the right visual field
A(n) ________ is a description of how the researchers will measure the variables of interest.
operational definition
Ainsley is participating in a study that aims to determine whether the occipital cortex becomes more active in response to moving versus stationary stimuli. When she arrives at the lab, she ingests a "tracer" and then enters the scanning machine. What type of brain imaging is most likely being conducted in this study?
positron emission tomography (PET)
Tariq depends on cigarettes to relieve his stress, though he smokes so frequently that he experiences no significant, noticeable physical symptoms when he is not smoking. What does this exemplify?
psychological dependence
The ability of a research study or psychological instrument to consistently produce a given result is called ________.
reliability
Stan and Jenny are in a psychology course that requires them to repeat an experiment that researchers have conducted in the past, in order to determine whether they produce the same results. This is called ________.
replication
The fact that some well-known studies have been repeated without finding results consistent with those in the initial report describes a(n) ________ that is currently affecting research in psychology and other fields.
replication crisis
________ are the most commonly used species for animal research.
rodents
Psychology refers to the ________.
scientific study of the mind and behavior.
Which of the following choices refers to a broad explanation or group of explanations for some aspect of the natural world that is consistently supported by evidence over time?
scientific theory
Susan wants to study prejudice, attraction, how we explain our own behavior versus how we explain the behavior of others, and how we resolve interpersonal conflicts. Susan should conduct research in the area of ________.
social psychology
Shoresh suggests that Ted cluck like a chicken during the hypnosis not because he is experiencing an altered state of consciousness but because he is playing the role of a hypnotized person. This is a good example of the ________ theory of hypnosis.
social-cognitive
Cocaine is considered a ________ drug because it tends to increase overall levels of neural activity.
stimulant
Behaviorism focuses on making psychology an objective science by ________.
studying overt behavior and deemphasizing the importance of unobservable mental processes
The ________ of a neuron contain ________ that house neurotransmitters, the chemical messengers of the nervous system.
terminal buttons; synaptic vesicles
The cognitive revolution created an impetus for psychologists to focus their attention on better understanding ________.
the mind and mental processes that underlie behavior
Functionalist psychologists focus on the function of behavior and ________.
the operation of the whole mind rather than the individual parts
Which of the following is a criticism of structuralism?
the process was highly subjective
Research shows that people who smoke cigarettes are more likely to get lung cancer than those who do not smoke. This research alone demonstrates that ________.
there is a relationship between smoking and lung cancer
Tayla smokes marijuana. At first, just a few inhalations were enough to cloud her mind. Over time, she needs to smoke more and more to achieve the same effect. This is an example of ________.
tolerance
A particular electrical signal being transmitted to a neuron is sufficient to generate an action potential. If the magnitude of the incoming electrical signal is doubled, the action potential will ________.
undergo no changes in strength, speed, or duration
Individuals undergoing hypnosis ________.
usually have clear memories of the hypnotic experience and are in control of their own behaviors
Which of the following is an example of research someone might conduct in the area of health psychology?
whether people working at a desk are more likely to be obese