ALL AP Psychology Allender
Stroop effect
"colored words" experiment done to test the reaction time of a task; often used to demonstrate the nature of automatic processing vs. visual control
massed practice
"cramming" of rehearsal within a short time period; produces short-term learning that is not as effective as distributed practice
F (false - only medical doctors, e.g. psychiatrists, family doctors, neurologists can perform biomedical therapy)
(T/F) biomedical therapy can be performed by any trained psychologist
T (true)
(T/F) certain cell clusters in the hypothalamus are greater in gay men and women than straight men
T (true)
(T/F) children with a secure attachment to their parents grow up to be secure and self-reliant adults
T (true)
(T/F) children without sufficient care from their fathers tend to have more aggressive tendencies.
F (false)
(T/F) clinical psychologists are also medical doctors and can prescribe medication
T (true)
(T/F) cognition can skew the effects of aversive conditioning
T (true)
(T/F) cultures and societies affect the way we think
T (true)
(T/F) depression is less commonly diagnosed in collectivist cultures
T (true)
(T/F) depression is more common in women
F (false - depth perception is indeed innate as most 6-14 month old children did NOT cross the cliff)
(T/F) depth perception is not innate, as proven by Eleanor Gibson's visual cliff test in which 6-14 month-old infants still crossed the visual cliff
F (false)
(T/F) discrimination is a negative attitude held against a certain group.
F (false - these are true in schizophrenia)
(T/F) dissociative identity disorder has a high diagnosis rate, is identified around age 18-25, has biological basis, and is found around the world
T (true)
(T/F) dissociative identity disorder was not a common diagnosis until 1980
T (true)
(T/F) during free association, pausing, joking or changing the subject are considered signs of hidden anxiety
T (true)
(T/F) during infancy, there is no accurate predictor of a child's future intelligence levels
F (false - the patient is awake)
(T/F) during rTMS therapy, the patient is unconscious
T (true)
(T/F) electroconvulsive therapy can result in short-term memory loss
T (true)
(T/F) everyone dreams
F (false)
(T/F) fear requires cognitive processing
F (false - functionalism has been replaced with modern neuroscience)
(T/F) functionalism is still a valid scientific field of psychology
F (false - opposite is true)
(T/F) girls outnumber boys at both the high and low extremes of the intelligence bell curve
T (true)
(T/F) group therapy is preferred over individual therapy because it is less costly, saves time and allows for more empathy
F (false - only tells us how genetic influences can explain differences in people)
(T/F) heritability allows us to determine how much a trait is inherited by a child
T (true)
(T/F) homosexuality tends to run in families
F (false - imprinting is an animal phenomena, while human attachments develop via the mere exposure effect)
(T/F) human children can imprint
F (false - humanism focuses on the present)
(T/F) humanism focuses on past memories and relationships
F (false)
(T/F) identical twins always share the same placenta in the womb
T (true)
(T/F) identical twins share the same genes, but not necessarily the same copies of these genes
T (true)
(T/F) if someone loses sight in one eye, they can still determine depth but to lesser accuracy than with two eyes
F (false - the need for comfort was more important than food)
(T/F) in Harlow's study on rhesus monkeys, he observed that the need for food overrode the baby monkeys' need for comfort
F (false - opposite is true)
(T/F) in response to fear, women are more prone to withdrawal symptoms while men are more prone to consulting friends
F (false - instincts are far more complex than reflexes)
(T/F) instincts and reflexes are equivalent
T (true)
(T/F) language affects the way we think
F (false - light enters the eye in waves and is converted into electrical impulses)
(T/F) light enters the eye as an electrical impulse and is converted into light waves to be processed in the brain
F (false - females have a larger corpus callosum)
(T/F) males have a larger corpus callosum than females
T (true)
(T/F) many people stay at stage 4 (authority/social order) of Kohlberg's stages of moral development
F (false - the hippocampus encodes memories)
(T/F) memories are stored in the hippocampus.
F (false - opposite is true)
(T/F) men are better able to read emotional cues than women
T (true)
(T/F) men's sperm count decreases as they age
T (true)
(T/F) motivation may exist without a drive
T (true)
(T/F) negative behaviors can be modeled by children with abusive parents or by those who watch/play violent television/video games.
F (false - nightmares occur in REM sleep and usually result in some recollection)
(T/F) night terrors are synonymous with nightmares
T (true)
(T/F) night terrors usually have no treatment unless the symptoms are related to an anxiety disorder
T (true)
(T/F) once a neurotransmitter binds to a receptor in a post-synaptic neuron, it modifies the shape and function of the receptor
T (true)
(T/F) one's culture defines their emotional gestures
T (true)
(T/F) optimists can alleviate stress better and are therefore healthier
F (false - they change depending on weight changes)
(T/F) our set points are fixed
F (false - one normally goes through at least two of them)
(T/F) people always experience all five stages of grief
F (false)
(T/F) people whose qualities are opposite or vastly different still have a likely chance of being attracted to one another.
F (false - they have an external locus of control)
(T/F) people with depression have a strong internal locus of control
F (false - they actual exhibit better job performance)
(T/F) people with strong emotional intelligence usually exhibit poorer job performance
T (true)
(T/F) people's circadian rhythm changes as they age, and everyone eventually becomes a lark
F (false - phrenology is very unscientific but did lead to later studies on cortical specialization)
(T/F) phrenology has been proven to be a valid form of scientific study.
T (true)
(T/F) polygraph tests do not detect lies, but simply measure physiological responses
T (true)
(T/F) prejudice is a negative attitude held against a certain group.
T (true)
(T/F) psychiatrists are allowed to prescribe medication to their patients
F (false - only psychiatrists can prescribe drugs)
(T/F) psychologists can provide both therapy and prescription drugs
T (true)
(T/F) psychologists today have shifted towards a continuity-based model of developmental study
F (false - this is neuroticism)
(T/F) psychoticism refers to mental distress that doesn't prevent rational thought, and includes most dude anxiety disorders
F (false)
(T/F) reassurance from a doctor that a patient is fine will help relieve episodes of hypochondriasis
T (true)
(T/F) reflexes require no cognition in the brain.
F (false - in many cases this actually increases aggressive behavior)
(T/F) releasing frustration through aggressive acts (ex: hitting a punching bag) always works as a form of catharsis or relief.
T (true)
(T/F) schizophrenia is usually diagnosed around ages 18-25
F (false)
(T/F) sex is a psychological need
F (false)
(T/F) somatoform disorders are the same as factitious disorders
F (false)
(T/F) tasks involving difficulty and complex thinking require more arousal
T (true)
(T/F) teen frontal lobes develop at a slower rate than the limbic system
T (true)
(T/F) the College Board supports Sternberg's triarchic intelligence theory
T (true)
(T/F) the effects of antidepressants take up to four weeks to be felt
T (true)
(T/F) the fattier the myelin sheath, the faster the message passes
F (false - habituation is caused by the reticular formation)
(T/F) the habituation (familiarization) of certain sensations is a result of sensory adaptation
T (true)
(T/F) the nervous system is not fully developed during birth
T (true - system of smell perception is linked to the system of emotion, which explains why we have emotional responses to smells)
(T/F) the network from the nose to the brain is contained within the limbic system.
T (true)
(T/F) the results randomized clinical trials show that those who undergo therapy are more likely to improve than those who don't
F (false - smell is the only sense NOT regulated by the thalamus)
(T/F) the thalamus regulates olfaction (smell)
F (false - those with an EXTERNAL locus of control have low self-efficacy)
(T/F) those with an internal locus of control have low self-efficacy
T (true)
(T/F) those with antisocial personality disorder (psychopaths/sociopaths) have less frontal lobe tissue than a normal brain
T (true)
(T/F) twin studies have proven Eysenck's personality types to be partially hereditary
F (false - opposite is true)
(T/F) vowel phonemes carry more information than consonant phonemes
T (true)
(T/F) we are more likely to blame others' behavior on their personal character.
F (false)
(T/F) we are more likely to blame our failures on our personal characteristics.
F (false - they are born with all the eggs they will ever have)
(T/F) women only begin producing eggs at puberty
T (true)
(T/F) women typically have more emotional intelligence than men
epigenetic principle
Erik Erikson's argument that development is a result of both heredity and environment (nature + nurture)
Bobo Doll experiment
1961 psychological experiment done to test the effect of observational learning on young children modeling violent behavior
Noam Chomsky
American psychologist and linguist who argued that children are born with an innate capacity for developing language
Sigmund Freud
Austrian psychologist who pioneered the psychoanalytic theory
d (CR - conditioned response)
Betty is a subject in an experiment in which the sound of a bell is followed quickly by a puff of air to her eye, causing her to blink. Before long, she blinks as soon as she hears the bell. what is her eye blink when she hears the bell? a. US b. UR c. CS d. CR
Alan Turing
British cryptanalyst during WWII; studied artificial intelligence
Rene Descartes
Enlightenment thinker known for the saying "I think, therefore I am"
John Locke
Enlightenment thinker who coined the term "tabula rasa" (blank slate) to support Aristotle's theory of nurture
Hippocrates
Greek philosopher who proposed that changes in behavior/health were caused by physiological changes instead of divine power
Plato
Greek philosopher who proposed that we are born with all necessary knowledge and that the key to life was unlocking it (nature)
Aristotle
Greek philosopher who proposed that we are born with blank mental slates that are filled with knowledge based on our life experiences (nurture)
personality
an individual's characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling and acting; unique variation on the general evolutionary design for human nature, expressed through traits/cultural situations
linkage analysis
analysis of the DNA of families affected by mood disorders + comparison to unaffected families
c (puberty)
at what stage of life do males begin producing sperm? a. conception b. early childhood c. puberty d. early adulthood
c (6 months)
at which age can babies usually recognize themselves in the mirror? a. 4 months b. 5 months c. 6 months d. 7 months
c (4)
at which age does a child's performance on an intelligence test accurately reflect his or her test performance as an adult? a. 2 b. 3 c. 4 d. 5
b (15-18 months)
at which age will babies begin to touch their noses when they see it? a. 10-12 months b. 15-18 months c. 18-20 months c. 22-24 months
d (7)
at which point do a child's scores on intelligence tests become relatively stable or constant? a. 4 b. 5 c. 6 d. 7
d (formal operational stage)
at which stage of Piaget's four stages of development are teens? a. preoperational stage b. sensorimotor stage c. concrete operational stage d. formal operational stage
secure attachment
attachment bond that results from sensitive, responsive mothers
statistical significance
attained when results aren't up to random chance, confounding variables or the sample population
(x - mean) / (standard deviation)
Z score formula
collectivist
__________________ cultures prioritize group success, interpersonal relationships and shared harmony over individual success; usually found in communist/socialist governments
individualistic
__________________ cultures prioritize individual goals/achievements, intrapersonal relationships, independence, and self-identity over group success; usually found in democratic governments
positive
a ___________ correlation occurs when the two data sets are directly proportional
negative
a ___________ correlation occurs when the two data sets are inversely proportional
collectivist
a ___________________ society values group success
theory of mind
ability to acknowledge differences in mental states (beliefs, desires, intentions, etc.) and read others' mental states; develops in children during their preoperational stage
generalizability
ability to apply repetition of an experiment to larger portions of a population
discrimination (operant conditioning)
ability to discern between different responses and knowing which will be reinforced
emotional intelligence
ability to perceive, understand, manage and use emotions
creativity
ability to produce novel and valuable ideas
selective attention
ability to react to specific stimuli in the presence of many; severely lacking in schizophrenics
catatonia
abnormality of movement and behavior arising from a disturbed mental state (typically schizophrenia), includes immobility, extreme negativism and imitation of others' speech/movements
b (second child)
according to Adler's birth order theories, which child in a family is ambitious, well-adjusted and closest to superiority? a. first child b. second child c. youngest child d. middle child e. only child
c (youngest child)
according to Adler's birth order theories, which child in a family is often spoiled and experiences feelings of inferiority? a. first child b. second child c. youngest child d. middle child e. only child
e (only child)
according to Adler's birth order theories, which child in a family receives excessive attention from parents and has potential to become spoiled or at odds with a parent? a. first child b. second child c. youngest child d. middle child e. only child
a (first child)
according to Adler's birth order theories, which child in a family would feel responsible and protective but inferior to their siblings? a. first child b. second child c. youngest child d. middle child e. only child
working memory (short-term memory)
activated memory that briefly holds a few items, such as someone's phone number
priming
activation of certain associations, thus predisposing one's perception, memory or response
confederate
actor who participates in an experiment alongside the participants; not observed or recorded as they are working with the researcher
assimilation
addition of new information into preexisting schemas
pupil
adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters
population
all of the people that a study can apply to
pessimism
explanatory style in which people perceive events as long-lasting (stable), all-affecting (global) and theirs to blame (internal)
operational definition
explicit (quantifiable) definition of a research variable or procedure
face validity
extent to which a test APPEARS to measure what it's intended to
predictive validity
extent to which a test accurately predicts the behavior it is designed to predict (ex: aptitude test)
construct validity
extent to which a test actually measures what it claims to be measuring (ex: intelligence test - does it actually test intelligence?)
validity
extent to which a test measures or predicts what it's supposed to
content validity
extent to which a test samples the behavior that is of interest (ex: road test, course exam)
reliability
extent to which a test yields consistent results by retesting people to see if the scores correlate
experimental realism
extent to which an experiment can involve a participant and get them to behave in a way that is realistic/meaningful to what you're doing
mundane realism
extent to which the experimental situation or task is something the participants might do in real life
convergence
extent to which the eyes converge inward; determines the distance of an object from the viewer
heritability
extent to which variation among individuals can be attributed to differing genes
confounding variable
external, uncontrolled variable that may arise when two variables are linked together in a way that may skew research (ex: effects of TV-watching on obesity; eating habits aren't considered)
glucose
form of simple sugar that circulates in the bloodstream and provides a major source of energy, mainly for neurons
William James
founder of functionalism
Sigmund Freud
founder of the psychoanalytic perspective
Electra complex
girls' unconscious sexual desire for their fathers; resolved during the phallic stage of psychosexual development
color blindness
happens as a result of a deficiency of the color receptors in the cones, bipolar cells and/or ganglion cells
teratogens
harmful substances that can bypass the placenta and harm the development of the embryo/fetus (ex: alcohol, drugs, viruses)
Heinz dilemma
hypothetical narrative intended to spur discussion on the morality of the actions taken by its protagonist
drive theory
idea that a physiological or biological need creates an a state of arousal that drives the organism to reduce said need (ex: eating to satisfy hunger, drinking to satisfy thirst)
reciprocity
idea that if someone gives you a small "gift" or donation, you will return the favor
arousal theory
idea that we are driven to maintain certain levels of arousal (intellectual/emotional/physical activity)
fundamental attribution error
idea that we attribute others' behavior to their personal disposition and fail to recognize their situation
self-serving bias
idea that we attribute our achievements to our personal disposition and our failures to the situation
cognitive dissonance theory
idea that we shift our attitudes to match our behaviors to cope with cognitive dissonance
minority influence
idea that when one person in a group holds fast to their beliefs, they can influence the opinions of others in the group
T (true)
identical twins have similar weights
recognition
identification of previously-learned information based on cues ("multiple choice question")
tardive dyskinesisa
involuntary movement of facial muscles, tongue and limbs; side effect of neuroleptic drugs
retrospective memory
involves memory of people, events and words encountered in one's past
prospective memory
involves memory of planned actions and intentions to be carried out at an appropriate time
top down processing
information processing guided from higher-level mental processes (perception) that works down to lower-level functions like sensation
bottom-up processing
information processing that begins with sensation and works up to the brain's integration of sensory info (perception)
unconscious mind
information processing that we are unaware of
acquisition (classical conditioning)
initial stage when a neutral stimulus is linked to an unconditioned response and begins to trigger a conditioned response (the "learning")
biological preparedness
innate (evolved) tendency to learn certain kinds of associations relatively quickly/easily
biological preparedness
innate tendency to learn certain kinds of associations relatively easily
subtle prejudice
inner, implicit attitudes that people hold towards a group (in some cases ingrained in society)
cognitive behavioral therapy
integrated therapy that uses behavioral approaches to remedy one's cognition
Stanford-Binet intelligence test
intelligence test developed by Lewis Terman and based on the studies of Alfred Binet, designed to account for cultural factors influencing intelligence
120
intelligence test score necessary to determine creativity
behavioral medicine
interdisciplinary field that applies behavioral/medical knowledge to health and disease
law of effect
law stating that behaviors followed by favorable consequences become more likely, while behaviors followed by unfavorable consequences become less likely
Weber's Law
law stating that for two stimuli to be perceived as different, they must differ by a constant minimum percentage (ratio) rather than a constant amount
discrimination (classical conditioning)
learned ability to distinguish between a conditioned stimulus and other stimuli that do NOT signal the unconditioned stimulus
axon
long, threadlike fiber of a neuron along which impulses are conducted from the cell body to other cells
case study
long-term study of one subject (descriptive)
amnesia
loss of memory
self-interest
main influence behind STAGE 2 of Kohlberg's stages of morality; children only help others if they get something in return
conformity
main influence behind STAGE 3 of Kohlberg's stages of morality; individuals are receptive to others' approval/disapproval and fulfill subscribed roles
social contract
main influence behind STAGE 5 of Kohlberg's stages of morality; characterized by democratic governments that only uphold laws meant to benefit general welfare
universal ethical principles
main influence behind STAGE 6 of Kohlberg's stages of morality; individuals believe in the virtues of democratic ideals but understand their limitations
ventral tegmental area (VTA)
major dopamine pathway which communicates directly to the nucleus accumbens (NA)
womb envy
male jealousy towards females out of a desire to procreate; suggested by Karen Horney as a counterpart to penis envy
congruence
match between one's real and ideal self; leads to self-actualization
glial cell
material of which the myelin sheath is comprised; nurtures, supports and protects neurons
basilar membrane
membrane that bends and stimulates nerve cells nearby to start transduction of sound waves
repressed memories
memories "hidden" in the unconscious mind that, according to Freud, could be revealed through dreams
flashbulb memory
memory characterized by a vivid snapshot of an emotionally-arousing moment in one's life; backed by scientific research but overlaps with Freud's repression theories
cognitive dissonance
mental tension that occurs when our actions become inconsistent with our attitudes
shaping
method of operant conditioning by which successive approximations toward a target behavior are reinforced
algorithm
methodical, logical rule or procedure that guarantees a solution but is usually more time-consuming
confrontational tactics
methods used in cognitive behavioral therapy that are intended to trigger irrational thoughts from patients and thereby work to improve them
median
middle value in a data set
telepathy
mind-to-mind communication
difference threshold (just noticeable difference/JND)
minimum difference between two stimuli, required for detection 50% of the time
absolute threshold
minimum stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus 50% of the time
microexpressions
minor changes/subtleties in facial muscle movement that can indicate that someone is lying; studied by Paul Ekman
androgyny
mixing of masculine and feminine characteristics
method of loci
mnemonic device characterized by the creation of a "memory palace" through which one can mentally "move around" to locate information
peg word
mnemonic device characterized by the linkage of words with numbers to remember the order in which they are placed
chunking
mnemonic device characterized by the organization of information into familiar, manageable groups/units
first word method
mnemonic device characterized by the usage of acronyms representing the first word in a list or sentence (ex: ROYGBIV)
levels of processing model
model that analyzes how long and how well we remember information based on how deeply we process it
imitation (observational learning)
modeling of words and syntax of others' speech
psychodynamic theory
modern application of Freud's psychoanalytic theories
medical model of psychology
modern approach to mental health treatment that includes the diagnosis, treatment and (often) cure of disorders through therapy
iconic memory (photographic)
momentary sensory memory of visual stimuli
dysthymic disorder
mood disorder characterized by lessened symptoms of major depressive disorder that are chronic and longer-lasting
seasonal affective disorder (SAD)
mood disorder characterized by recurring depression that happens during winter months; likely due to an imbalance of melatonin
bipolar disorder
mood disorder in which a person alternates between depression and mania
major depressive disorder
mood disorder in which a person experiences 2+ weeks of significantly depressed moods, feelings of worthlessness, and diminished interest/pleasure in most activities (in the absence of drugs/medical conditions)
feature detectors
nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of a stimulus (ex: shape, angle) and help the development of perceptions
Saturday night paralysis (palsy)
nerve damage caused by the manner in which an intoxicated person passes out
reflex arc
nerve pathway involved in a reflex action; processed in spinal cord
optic nerve
nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain
mirror neurons
neurons in the frontal lobe that fire when performing certain actions (or observing others do so)
mirror neurons
neurons that activate during the performance or observation of an action; defective in autistic children
extraversion (E)
one of Carl Jung's eight personality types, characterized by a tendency to look to the outside world (especially people/social interactions) to fulfill pleasures
judging (J)
one of Carl Jung's eight personality types, characterized by neat, orderly, hardworking and punctual people similar to Freud's anal-retentive personality
taste aversion
occurs when an animal associates the taste of a certain food with symptoms caused by a toxic, spoiled or poisonous food substance
conciliation
occurs when both sides recognize a mutual interest and intent to reduce problems
negative reinforcement (phobias)
occurs when fear-triggering stimuli are avoided, thereby removing anxiety and reinforcing phobic behavior
perception (P)
one of Carl Jung's eight personality types, characterized by spontaneous people who make decisions based on their general mood/feeling
intuition (N)
one of Carl Jung's eight personality types, characterized by those who get their information from intuition rather than practical knowledge
thinking (T)
one of Carl Jung's eight personality types, characterized by those who make decisions based on reasoning, logic and procedures
feeling (F)
one of Carl Jung's eight personality types, characterized by those who make decisions based on their emotions
sensing (S)
one of Carl Jung's eight personality types, characterized by those who obtain information from their senses; typically realistic and simplistic
introversion (I)
one of Carl Jung's eight personality types, characterized by those with a tendency to prefer the world inside themselves, prefer privacy and are averse to social interaction
psychoticism
one of Eysenck's three personality dimensions, characterized by aggressiveness, hostility and ruthlessness
neuroticism
one of Eysenck's three personality dimensions, characterized by instability and tension
extroversion (Eysenck)
one of Eysenck's three personality dimensions, characterized by sociability and attention to one's external environment
analytical intelligence
one of Sternberg's 3 types of intelligence, assessed by intelligence tests to measure academic ability
practical intelligence
one of Sternberg's 3 types of intelligence, characterized by management skills and required for everyday tasks; difficult to quantify
creative intelligence
one of Sternberg's 3 types of intelligence, demonstrated by adapting to novel situations and generating ideas
transience
one of the "7 sins" of memory: decay of memory storage over time
blocking
one of the "7 sins" of memory: inability to retrieve stored information
absentmindedness
one of the "7 sins" of memory: inattention to detail, leading to encoding failure
bias
one of the "7 sins" of memory: influence of current feelings or attitudes on past memories
persistence
one of the "7 sins" of memory: intrusion of unwanted (often emotional/disturbing) memories into our thoughts and formations of new memories
suggestibility
one of the "7 sins" of memory: tendency for a leading question to influence a response and potentially lead to the misinformation effect
expertise
one of the 5 components of creativity: a well-developed base of knowledge
imaginative thinking
one of the 5 components of creativity: ability to see things to in a novel way, recognize patterns and make connections
intrinsic motivation
one of the 5 components of creativity: motivation driven by interest, satisfaction and personal challenge rather than external rewards, results and pressures
electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
biomedical therapy for severe depression in which a brief electric current is sent through the brain of an anesthetized patient
biofeedback
biomedical therapy that involves making patients aware of various physiological functions (ex: brainwaves, muscle tones, sweat, heart rate, etc.) using monitors to alleviate stress, migraines and blood pressure
vagus nerve stimulation
biomedical treatment of chronic depression in which a chest implant stimulates the vagus nerve to send signals to the limbic system
repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS)
biomedical treatment of depression in which a magnetic coil is held close to the skull to emit pulses of magnetic energy to the brain
deep brain stimulation
biomedical treatment of depression which electrodes and a pacemaker are implanted in the cortical space between the frontal lobe and limbic system
fetal alcohol syndrome
birth defects resulting from the consumption of alcohol during pregnancy
human factor psychology
branch of psychology that explores how items and physical environments can be made safe and easy to use
industrial-organizational psychology (IO)
branch of psychology that studies human behavior in the workplace with the intent of improvement
sexology
branch of scientific study developed by Alfred Kinsey, focuses on sexual interests, behavior and function
echoic memory
brief auditory recall (usually ranges towards the last five or six words just said)
iconic memory
brief photographic memory
myoclonic jerk
brief, involuntary twitching of muscles that sometimes occurs during stage 1 of sleep and wakes you up
neuron
building block of body's information system; cell that receives, processes and transmits nerve impulses
universal grammar
building blocks of language shared across all languages (ex: nouns, verbs, etc.)
sleep spindles
bursts of oscillatory brain activity occurring during stage 2 of sleep; indicate that you are entering or exiting REM sleep
c (7)
by which age (critical period) do children need to be exposed to language in order to be able to fully learn it? a. 5 b. 6 c. 7 d. 8
d (9)
by which age (critical) do DEAF children need to learn SIGN language? a. 6 b. 7 c. 8 d. 9
bipolar cells
cells that receive messages from rods and cones and relay the messages to the ganglion cells
ganglion cells
cells that receive messages from the bipolar cells and merge into the optic nerve
hippocampus
center of emotion, memory and the central nervous system
fovea
central spot on the retina on which the image is formed; point of maximum cone concentration and vision sharpness
action potential
change in electrical potential of a membrane that occurs when positively charged ions are carried to the cell membrane alongside neural messages
pinna
channels sound waves to the auditory canal
auditory canal
channels sound waves to the tympanic membrane (eardrum)
secondary trait
characteristic apparent only in certain situations (ex: uncomfortable in confined spaces)
personality traits
characteristic patterns of behavior/dispositions to feel/act (does NOT explain personality formation)
adenosine
chemical compound released in the reticular pathway that induces sleepiness
gustatory sense
chemical sense that, from an evolutionary perspective, enables us to discern between healthy and toxic foods
psychoactive drug
chemical substance that alters perception, mood, consciousness and behavior
neurotransmitter
chemical substance that sends neural messages, released by nerve impulses
narcissistic personality disorder
cluster-B personality disorder characterized by a pervasive need for grandiosity/attention and a lack of empathy
borderline personality disorder
cluster-B personality disorder characterized by extremely binary thinking (no "grey areas") and unstable relationships, identity and self-image
histrionic personality disorder
cluster-B personality disorder characterized by pervasive attention-seeking behavior, including sexual seductiveness and shallow/exaggerated emotions
dependent personality disorder
cluster-C personality disorder characterized by pervasive psychological dependence on other people
obsessive compulsive personality disorder
cluster-C personality disorder characterized by rigid conformity to rules/moral codes and excessive orderliness
avoidant personality disorder
cluster-C personality disorder characterized by social inhibitions, feelings of inadequacy, extreme sensitivity to negative evaluation, and avoidance of social settings
schema
cognitive concept used to organize info; outline/model
schema
cognitive concepts that help organize and interpret information; studied by Jean Piaget
schema
cognitive concepts that help organize/interpret information; develops for familiar faces at around 8 months of age
mental retardation (cognitive disability)
cognitive disability signified by intelligence test scores below 70 as well as difficulties adapting to everyday life
rehearsal
cognitive process in which information is repeated over and over as a means of encoding it
harmful dysfunction
combination of deviance and distress that threatens to impair normal life function
chlorpromazine (thorazine)
common neuroleptic drug that blocks dopamine receptor sites
percentile rank
comparative rank against other scores
retinal disparity
comparison of images between the left and right eye that allows the brain to compute distance
free association
component of psychoanalysis in which a patient relaxes and freely expresses what's on their mind as a means of potentially uncovering unconscious thoughts/memories
dream analysis
component of psychoanalysis in which patients' dreams are studied to separate latent and manifest content
parasympathetic nervous system
component of the autonomic nervous system which inhibits adrenaline release after a fight-or-flight response to return the body to homeostasis
sympathetic nervous system
component of the autonomic nervous system which produces adrenaline in response to stimuli
autonomic nervous system
component of the central nervous system which activates an immediate fight-or-flight response to a stimulus
hypothalamus
component of the limbic system, regulates hunger
schema
concepts that help organize and interpret information (more prominent in adults than children)
stereotype threat
concern felt during a situation in which one has the potential to confirm a stereotype about their own social group
factitious disorder
condition in which a person acts as if they have an illness by deliberately producing, faking or exaggerating symptoms; NOT the same as somatoform disorders
addiction
condition in which the body must have a drug to avoid physical and psychological withdrawal symptoms; results in compulsive drug craving and use against adverse consequences
synesthesia
cross-wiring of senses (ex: sounds evoking taste); occurs in every 1:200 to 1:2000 people and more prominent in females
rationalization
defense mechanism in which one creates false but seemingly credible justifications for their actions -- stating that you got fired because you didn't kiss up to your boss, not because you're a poor worker
denial
defense mechanism in which one claims or believes a distressing truth to be false -- parents refusing to believe their child was drunk
reaction formation
defense mechanism in which one exaggerates a response opposite to their emotions -- i love him because i hate him
repression
defense mechanism in which one pushes uncomfortable thoughts into their unconscious mind
sublimation
defense mechanism in which one redirects "unacceptable" urges to socially acceptable actions/occupations -- becoming a butcher because you like to cut things
displacement
defense mechanism in which one redirects their emotions to a substitute target -- kicking dog instead of mom
intellectualization
defense mechanism in which one takes an objective viewpoint towards emotionally distressing events to repress negative emotions -- focusing on details of funeral instead of sadness/grief
Down's syndrome
disorder that comes from an extra copy of chromosome 21; example of inadvertent mutation
dissociative disorders
disorders in which conscious awareness becomes separated from previous memories, thoughts and feelings
incongruence
disparity between one's real and ideal self
achievement gap
disparity of educational measures between performances of certain student groups based on race, ethnicity, socioeconomic class and/or gender
psychogenic amnesia (dissociative amnesia)
dissociative disorder in which patients partially lose memories of their personal lives; likely caused by psychological stress
sample bias
error in sampling in which some members of the population are less likely to be included than others (unrepresentative sample)
type II error
error in statistical reasoning in which we accept a null hypothesis despite it being false
type I error
error in statistical reasoning in which we reject a null hypothesis despite it being true
placenta
organ in the uterus that transfers nutrients and oxygen from the mother to her offspring, and screens harmful substances from reaching the baby
amygdala
organ linked to the brain's limbic system; controls emotions
thalamus
organ that relays all sensory info except smell to the brain; Cannon and Bard argued that it relays info to both the limbic system and the frontal lobe simultaneously
anxiety hierarchy
organization of anxieties from mildly provoking to highly provoking; used in systematic desensitization
reticular formation
part of the brain that regulates the habituation of senses
anterior cingulate cortex
part of the frontal lobe that facilitates/tracks cognitive, physiological and emotional function; overactive in people with OCD
lateral hypothalamus
part of the hypothalamus that facilitates hunger
ventromedial hypothalamus
part of the hypothalamus that suppresses hunger (regulates satiation)
somatic nervous system
part of the peripheral nervous system that regulates operant conditioning
internal locus of control
perception that one controls his or her own fate
external locus of control
perception that one's fate is controlled by chance and outside forces
relative deprivation
perception that you are worse off relative to those with whom you compare yourself
self concept
perception/feeling about oneself
relative size
perceptual clue in which objects vary in perceived size depending on distance (ex: distant objects are smaller)
linear perspective
perceptual clue in which the relative size of parallel lines appears to change depending on the distance between them; parallel lines closer together appear longer than those far apart
grouping
perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into coherent groups
objectivity
perception and judgment based on factual evidence; no bias or personal opinion involved
subjectivity
perception and judgment based upon personal opinions
interposition
perception of an object as closer than another object if the first object obscures the second
relative light and shadow
perception of brighter objects as closer and dimmer objects as further away
relative clarity
perception of clearer objects as closer and hazier objects as further away
lightness constancy
perception of familiar objects having a constant lightness despite change in illumination
relative motion
perception of faster-moving objects as closer and slower objects as further away; similar to parallax effect
stroboscopic movement
perception of movement created by a rapid series of slightly-varied images (stop-motion)
productive language
period after 4 months of age during which babies are able to produce language
emerging adulthood
period between ages 18-25 in which college-age adults experience personal independence but are still financially dependent on their parents
receptive language
period between infancy and 4 months old in which babies are only able to receive language
critical period
period for attachment to occur between a child and caregiver, from 6 to 24 months of age
puberty
period of sexual maturation during which a person becomes capable of reproducing
parental consent
permission for an experiment granted by the parents of the participant with the knowledge of possible consequences; required if participant(s) are underage
informed consent
permission for an experiment granted by the participant with the knowledge of possible consequences
memory
persistence of learning over time through storage and retrieval of information
supertaster
person with a low gustatory threshold; more common among women than men
type A personality
personality of those who are competitive, hard-driving, impatient, verbally aggressive, anger-prone, and more likely to die of a heart attack
type B personality
personality of those who are easygoing and relaxed
Eysenck Personality Questionnaire
personality questionnaire created by Hans Eysenck, measuring extroversion, neuroticism and psychoticism
Myers-Briggs Personality Inventory
personality questionnaire that attempts to sort people based on Carl Jung's eight personality types
Big 5 test (OCEAN)
personality test created by Paul Costa and Robert McCrae, that measures the five most common trait dimensions
projective tests
personality tests that provide ambiguous stimuli designed to trigger projection of one's inner thoughts; used today to assess the unconscious mind
anal expulsive
personality type in the anal stage of psychosexual development, characterized by carelessness, messiness and a lack of self-control
anal retentive
personality type in the anal stage of psychosexual development, characterized by stubbornness and a desire for order and perfection
oral receptive
personality type in the oral stage of psychosexual development, characterized by oral activity such as eating, drinking, etc.) in order to reduce tension; indicative of a needy and passive personality that is sensitive to rejection
oral aggressive
personality type in the oral stage of psychosexual development, characterized by verbal abuse of others
texture gradient
perception of smaller, more densely-packed groups of objects as further away and larger, loosely-dispersed objects as closer
shape constancy
perception of the form of familiar objects as constant despite change in distance/retinal image
size constancy
perception of the size of familiar objects as constant despite change in distance/retinal image
relative height
perception of vertically-oriented objects as larger than horizontally-oriented objects
collective efficacy
perception that collaborative effort will lead to group success
behavior feedback effect
phenomenon in which acting out emotions can influence your actual emotional state
spillover effect
phenomenon in which an aroused state can be experienced in different types of emotions depending on our interpretation of an event
overjustification effect
phenomenon in which an external reward becomes meaningless/ineffective when overused and doesn't foster motivation
facial feedback effect
phenomenon in which faking emotions (ex: smiling, frowning) can influence your actual emotional state
feel good, do good phenomenon
phenomenon in which feeling better makes you more inclined to help others
placebo effect
phenomenon in which members of a control group claim to experience the effects of the independent variable in an experimental group; can result in experimenter bias
state dependent memory (mood)
phenomenon in which memory retrieval improves when one is in the same mood/state of consciousness as they were when the memory was formed
tip of the tongue phenomenon
phenomenon in which memory retrieval occurs in fragments, resulting in one's inability to fully recall a piece of information despite being aware they know it
imagination inflation
phenomenon in which one believes they have actually experienced a false memory (ex: alien abduction)
mood linkage
phenomenon in which our moods adapt to those around us
sleep paralysis
phenomenon in which people, either when falling asleep or waking up, temporarily experience an inability to move
overjustification effect
phenomenon in which reinforcers/rewards lose their effect or meaning when given too often, thereby reducing the desired behavior
spacing effect
phenomenon in which retention of information improves when rehearsal is distributed over time
social desirability effect
phenomenon in which survey respondents give socially acceptable answers rather than being completely honest
mere exposure effect
phenomenon in which the longer we are exposed to the ideas of parents, friends and others close to us, we will begin to accept said ideas as true
overjustification effect
phenomenon in which the repeated reinforcement of extrinsic rewards diminishes their effectiveness
context effect
phenomenon in which the situation or context we are in can influence our perceptions
Von Restorff effect
phenomenon in which unique or irregular items/information cues that stand out are more likely to be remembered
groupthink
phenomenon that occurs when a group is excited to reach a conclusion and overlooks potential problems in order to maintain group harmony
desensitization
phenomenon that occurs when people become less disturbed or averse to violence after repeatedly watching it on television or video games
mere exposure effect
phenomenon that occurs when the amount of time we spend around somebody directly affects how much we like them or feel attracted to them
retinal proteins
photoreceptors in the retina that are triggered by bright light; exposure to blue light keeps you awake
rods
photoreceptors in the retina that process black and white
cones
photoreceptors in the retina that process color
wording effect
possible effect on participants' survey responses based on the wording or phrasing of questions
hyperpolarization
process by which a neuron's cell body becomes negative after action potential; reverse of depolarization, prevents the neuron from receiving another stimulus
reuptake
process by which leftover neurotransmitters in the synaptic cleft are reabsorbed by the next neuron
sensation
process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive stimuli
repolarization
process by which positive ions are pumped out of a neuron's cell body and the cell returns to resting potential
sensory deprivation
process by which someone is deprived of normal external stimuli such as sight and sound for an extended period of time, especially as an experimental technique
stress
process by which we perceive and respond to certain stressors (stimuli considered threatening/challenging)
individuation
process in which all aspects of one's personality are integrated into an organized whole; represented by the self (archetype)
fixation
process of becoming trapped in one behavior as a result of conflict in any of the psychosexual development stages
habituation
process of becoming used to a stimulus; if fear is habituated, then we are more prone to experiencing pleasure
repression
process of blocking out thoughts, feelings and memories into the unconscious mind
pruning
process of discarding unused neurons/neural connections
retrieval
process of extracting information from stored memory; in most cases, forgetting is the result of retrieval failure
memory trace
process of following the path of memories as they travel between neurons (stronger paths are associated with deeply processed information)
factor analysis
process of narrowing down scientific data to a manageable number of variables
perception
process of organizing and interpreting sensory info, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects or events
perception
process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events
self-actualization
process of reaching one's full potential
progressive relaxation training
process of sequentially relaxing individual muscle groups to achieve complete relaxation; used in systematic desensitization
mainstreaming
process of situating mentally disabled students into regular education programs
evidence-based practice
process of using statistical data from randomized trials to support the effectiveness of therapies (rather than testimonies, alternative therapy, etc.); supported by the APA
depolarization
processes by which a neuron's cell body becomes neutral when its charge is turned positive
parallel processing
processing multiple pieces of information at once (easier and faster)
encoding
processing of information in the memory system; occurs in the hippocampus
deep processing
processing of meanings and implications of information and associations between new memories and preexisting memories
shallow processing
processing of superficial, sensory information such as lines, curves, etc.
serial processing
processing pieces of information one at a time (more complex and time-consuming)
thematic apperception test (TAT)
projective test created by Henry Murray, in which subjects view ambiguous pictures and write stories about them
Rorschach inkblot test
projective test in which subjects look at ten inkblots and describe what they see
sleep debt
prolonged buildup of sleep deprivation
latent learning
property of learning identified by Edward Tolman, in which learning occurs but is not apparent until there is incentive to demonstrate it
insight learning
property of learning identified by Wolfgang Kohler, in which answers can suddenly come to you without any sort of reinforcement
sensory interdependency
property of sensation in that our senses are dependent on one another and do not function independently
heritability
proportion of difference among individuals that we can attribute to genetic factors (NOT environmental/social factors)
confidentiality
protection of participants' identities (including the inability to link the participants' identities to the information provided to the researcher)
myelin sheath
protective layer of fatty tissue that insulates the axon
protein pump
protein that is capable of diffusing materials AGAINST their concentration gradient
channel
protein transporter molecule
acquisition (operant conditioning)
providing a reinforcer to get the subject to acquire the desired behavior (done through shaping)
Karen Horney
psychoanalyst who disputed Freud's ideas of penis envy and female superiority
Carl Jung
psychoanalyst who expanded upon Freudian theories of the unconscious mind and theorized eight different personality types
transfer
psychoanalytic process of communicating earlier emotions to the therapist to work through them
free assocation
psychoanalytic process of saying whatever comes to mind while in a relaxed state
interpretation
psychoanalytic technique of providing insights to underlying feelings/thoughts indicated by certain behaviors; highly subjective
anorexia nervosa
psychological disorder characterized by delusions that you are too fat when you're actually abnormally, dangerously thin from not eating
anxiety disorders
psychological disorders characterized by distressing, persistent anxiety or maladaptive behaviors that reduce anxiety
mood disorders
psychological disorders characterized by emotional extremes
personality disorders
psychological disorders characterized by inflexible and enduring behavior patterns that impair social function
somatoform disorders
psychological disorders in which symptoms take a bodily form without any apparent physical cause
venturesome personality
one of the 5 components of creativity: personality characterized by an interest in new experiences, tolerance for ambiguity and risk, and perseverance through obstacles
creative environment
one of the 5 components of creativity: physical, social or cultural environment characterized by creative activity
neuroticism (big 5)
one of the big 5 trait dimensions, which measures: calm vs. anxious security vs. insecurity self-satisfaction vs. self-pity
openness
one of the big 5 trait dimensions, which measures: imagination vs. practical thinking variety vs. routine independence vs. conformity
conscientiousness
one of the big 5 trait dimensions, which measures: organized vs. disorganized careful vs. careless discipline vs. impulse
extraversion (big 5)
one of the big 5 trait dimensions, which measures: sociable vs. private fun-loving vs. sober affectionate vs. reserved
agreeableness
one of the big 5 trait dimensions, which measures: soft-hearted vs. ruthless trust vs. suspicion helpful vs. uncooperative
temperament
one's natural set of characteristic mental, physical and emotional reactions
locus of control
one's sense of personal control over themselves and their environment
nose
only body part not included in the sensory pathway
egocentrism
only considering things from one's own perspective
withdrawal
onset of symptoms, both mental and physical, that result from the discontinuing the use of an addictive drug
synapse
open space/junction between neurons across which nerve impulses travel to reach the next neuron
genuineness
openness with feels
explanatory style
optimism vs. pessimism
1. oral 2. anal 3. phallic 4. latent 5. genital
order of Freud's psychosexual stages of development (use numerical list)
amygdala
organ in the brain that allows our brains to work over long periods of time
hippocampus
organ in the brain that encodes explicit memories
olfactory bulb
organ in the brain that receives odor molecules entering through the nose
cerebellum
organ in the brain that stores procedural memories
amygdala
organ in the limbic system that processes fear
Broca's area
specialized area on the left side of the frontal lobe responsible for speech articulation; if damaged, speech will be slowed and slurred
Wernicke's area
specialized area within the parietal lobe that is also involved with language; allows for speech comprehension and the formation of comprehensive sentences
receptor
specialized cell or group of nerve endings that responds to sensory stimuli
language
spoken, written or signed words and the ways we combine them to communicate meaning
oval window
spot on the cochlea that moves the cochlear fluid when hit by the stirrup
alarm
stage 1 of general adaptation syndrome: sympathetic nervous system releases adrenaline
resistance
stage 2 of general adaptation syndrome: after prolonged stress, cortisol begins to flow through our body
exhaustion
stage 3 of general adaptation syndrome: if stress continues, our immune system is weakened, making us susceptible to disease
resting potential
stage during which a neuron is at rest
one word stage (holophrase)
stage of productive language in which babies begin to speak with single-word sentences like "mommy"; usually around age 1
two word stage (telegraphic speech)
stage of productive language in which babies speak in two-word sentences like "mommy up", including proper syntactical rules; develops around age 2
15
standard deviation for any modern intelligence test
norm score
standardized test score of a comparison/pretest group used in comparison with the results of other students
mania
state in which a person is overly loud, excited, unintelligible, awake and sexually uninhibited
conscious
state of being aware of one's self and surroundings
a (clients - humanism promotes growth instead of remedy)
subjects of humanistic therapy are considered.... a. clients b. patients
paranoia
subtype of schizophrenia characterized by a preoccupation with delusions/hallucinations
undifferentiated schizophrenia
subtype of schizophrenia characterized by a variety of symptoms that do not meet the criteria for a single form of schizophrenia
disorganization
subtype of schizophrenia characterized by incoherent speech, errant behavior and flat/inappropriate emotion
residual schizophrenia
subtype of schizophrenia only diagnosed in those that have had previous schizophrenic episodes but now exhibit two or more mild symptoms
insight
sudden, often novel realization of a solution without any prior cognition
posthypnotic suggestion
suggestion made during a hypnosis session to be carried out after the subject awakens; often used to help alleviate headaches, asthma, skin disorders, pain and addictions
adaptation level phenomenon
tendency to form judgments relative to a neutral level defined by prior experience (ex: getting a pay raise, becoming adapted to the heightened income and considering it normal, requiring more pay raises to feel happy/excited)
outgroup homogeneity
tendency to inaccurately believe that all members of another group are similar or the same
misinformation effect
tendency to incorporate misleading information into one's memory of an event, leading to the creation of a false memory
confirmation bias
tendency to interpret new evidence as confirmation of one's existing beliefs or theories
confirmation bias
tendency to interpret new evidence as confirmation to our existing beliefs
self-fulfilling prophecy
tendency to let preconceived expectations of others influence how we treat them and thus bring about that behavior
overconfidence
tendency to overestimate the accuracy of our beliefs
overconfidence
tendency to overestimate the accuracy of our beliefs and judgments
perceptual set
tendency to perceive or notice some aspects of sensory info and ignore others based on expectation, experience, context, etc.
social facilitation
tendency to perform better in the presence of others; only works if one is confident and skilled in the task at hand
social impairment
tendency to perform poorly if asked to perform a task that we are not skilled at or confident about
other race effect
tendency to recall faces of one's own race more accurately than those of people of other races
primacy effect
tendency to recall the first item in a list
recency effect
tendency to recall the last item in a list
mood congruency effect
tendency to remember memories/events consistent with one's current mood
generalization (conditioning)
tendency to respond in the same way to different but similar stimuli; can occur with fear, increasing anxiety/phobias
confirmation bias
tendency to search for information that supports our preconceptions while ignoring or distorting contradictory information
functional fixedness
tendency to think of things only in terms of their usual functions without considering other applications
hindsight bias
tendency to view an event as predictable after it has happened ("I knew it all along phenomenon"); also applies to blaming a victim for their situation
social loafing
tendency, when working with a group, to slack off and allow others to complete work for us
tail of the whale
term given to the skew of a distribution graph as a result of outliers
mnemonic devices
techniques used to improve one's ability to remember information (ex: catchy acronyms)
sleep apnea
temporary cessation of breathing during sleep and repeated momentary awakenings; a symptom is often loud snoring
generalization (classical conditioning)
tendency for a conditioned response to be elicited by stimuli that are similar to the conditioned stimulus
bystander effect
tendency for any given bystander to be less likely to give aid if others are present (ex: group setting)
overgeneralization (overregularization)
tendency for infants to extend the application of a grammatical rule to words to which it doesn't apply (ex: I "goed" home); developed by a child's own ability and not through any teaching or modeling
positive transfer
tendency for learning in one situation to aid learning in another situation
retroactive interference
tendency for newly-learned information to affect our ability to recall old information
proactive interference
tendency for old memories to affect the retrieval of new memories; contributes to difficulties in learning new languages
person-situation controversy
tendency for one's behavior to deviate from stable personality traits in certain situations; identified by Walter Mischel
group polarization
tendency for our beliefs to grow stronger when we join a group with similar beliefs; results from group discussion and unity
proactive interference
tendency for previously-learned information to affect subsequent learning
age regression
tendency for someone who is hypnotized to behave like younger versions of themselves as a means of finding or expressing repressed memories -- throwing a temper tantrum
context effect
tendency for the setting in which material was learned to improve one's ability to remember said material
belief perseverance
tendency to adhere to our initial beliefs and ideas even after they've been discredit; inability to accept that we are wrong
mental set
tendency to approach a problem in a particular way, typically one that has proven successful before
mental set
tendency to approach situations in a certain way because that method worked in the past
actor/observer bias
tendency to attribute our own behavior to our situation and others' behavior to their personal disposition
hindsight bias
tendency to believe, after learning an outcome, that one would have foreseen it ("I knew it all along" phenomenon)
confabulation
tendency to combine or substitute memories from events other than the one you're trying to remember
mere exposure effect
tendency to develop a preference/bond to objects/people as a result of familiarity to them; impacts attachment bonds in human children
outgroup bias
tendency to dislike a group that we don't belong to or don't associate with
deindividuation
tendency to engage in behavior uncharacteristic of oneself while in a large group setting; results from loss of self-awareness and individuality
REM rebound
tendency to fall into REM sleep more quickly as a result of prolonged sleep deprivation
ingroup bias
tendency to favor a group that we belong to or associate with
centration
tendency to focus on only one aspect of a situation, problem or aspect; occurs in children during their preoperational stage
marshmallow test
test conducted by Walter Mischel that measures children's conscientiousness, thinking and judging via their capacity for delayed gratification
Turing test
test designed to measure the intelligence of machines
thematic apperception test (TAT)
test that provides you with an ambiguous picture which you are asked to write a story about within a time limit
blood, yellow bile, black bile, phelgm
the "four humors" of the body conceived by Roman physician Galen
functionalism
psychological idea that every feeling, emotion or thought in the mind is associated solely with the idea that each has a function that helps us adapt to our environment
behaviorism
psychological perspective focusing on observable behavior
humanism
psychological perspective founded upon the assumption that humans are inherently good and that our goal is to reach our full potential
structuralism
psychological perspective involving the analysis of the mind's structure, and the basic elements of the conscience such as emotions/sensations
functionalism
psychological perspective involving the understanding of cognitive processes and behaviors
humanism
psychological perspective stating that everyone is working to reach their full potential; assumes that human trains are inherently "good"
social-cultural perspective
psychological perspective that analyzes the influence of society and culture on behavior
cognitive perspective
psychological perspective that attributes gender differences to cognitive understanding (schema) of masculinity and femininity
behavioral perspective
psychological perspective that attributes gender differences to differences in learning based on operant conditioning
biological perspective
psychological perspective that attributes gender differences to heredity
social-cultural perspective
psychological perspective that attributes gender differences to social norms for the type of behavior expected out of each gender
evolutionary perspective
psychological perspective that attributes species survival/reproduction to gender differences
Gestalt psychology
psychological perspective that explains perception in terms of grouping; our brains will always try to make complete images out of incomplete stimuli
psychoanalytic perspective
psychological perspective that identifies differences in gender based on Freud's theories of sexuality and repression -- forgetting being sexually abused
behaviorism
psychological perspective that studies behavior in terms of conditioning/learning rather than cognition
psychoanalytic
psychological perspective/approach conceived by Sigmund Freud; based on the idea that personality, mental illness and motivation come from desires and memories retained unconsciously
evolutionary
psychological perspective/approach derived from evolutionary research by Charles Darwin; theorizes that human behavior is determined by genetic traits that result from natural selection
socio-cultural
psychological perspective/approach that analyzes the effects of different cultures and societies on behavior and perception
cognitive
psychological perspective/approach that focuses on the mental processes that allow us to learn and remember information
hierarchy of needs
psychological pyramid model developed by Abraham Maslow, categorizing needs from physiological to those of self-actualization
Gordon Allport
psychologist who approached personality through genetic traits that lasted a lifetime
Robert Sternberg
psychologist who argued for the triarchic theory of intelligence
Paul Ekman
psychologist who argued that facial expressions are universal and therefore biological (nature) instead of cultural/acquired (nurture)
John Watson
psychologist who coined the term "behaviorism" and proposed that learning occurs through experience; conducted the "Little Albert" experiment
Edward Thorndike
psychologist who conceived the law of effect
Albert Ellis
psychologist who developed cognitive behavioral therapy
Alfred Binet
psychologist who developed the first intelligence test in France to determine a child's mental age
Sigmund Freud
psychologist who developed the psychoanalytic perspective; focused on sexuality and the unconscious mind
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross
psychologist who identified five stages of grief
Walter Mischel
psychologist who identified person-situation controversy and conducted the marshmallow test
Aaron Beck
psychologist who led the development of cognitive therapy
David Rosenhan
psychologist who performed a study testing whether hospitals misdiagnose certain disorders
Robert Rescorla
psychologist who proved the involvement of cognition in learning by discovering that experience with a stimulus increases the predictability of the stimulus
George Miller
psychologist who proved the magical number seven plus or minus two theory
Mary Ainsworth
psychologist who studied attachment bonds in children
Konrad Lorenz
psychologist who studied imprinting in baby birds
BF Skinner
psychologist who studied operant conditioning
Eleanor Gibson
psychologist who studied the innate human properties associated with depth perception
John Garcia
psychologist who studied trace conditioning and taste aversion
variable ratio schedule
reinforcement schedule that reinforces a response only after an UNPREDICTABLE NUMBER of responses
fixed interval schedule
reinforcement schedule that reinforces a responses only after a SPECIFIED TIME has elapsed
accommodation
reorganization of new information into different schemas
replication
repetition of a study in order to ensure that results are true; allows the extension of the results to other groups and situations
sensorineural hearing loss
results from damage to the hair cells in the cochlea (indicated by tinnitus)
conduction hearing loss
results from damage to the tympanic membrane (eardrum) or ossicles
storage
retention of information encoded over time; memories are stored everywhere in the brain
recall
retrieval of previously-learned information without any memory cues ("short answer question")
psychometrics
science of measuring mental capacities and processes using statistical data
neuroscience
scientific study of the nervous system
psychophysics
scientific study of the relationship between stimuli (specified in physical terms) and the sensations/perceptions evoked by these stimuli
Albert Bandura
scientist who conducted the "Bobo Doll" aggression experiment in 1961
William Dement
scientist who first identified that dreaming occurs during REM sleep, and also started the first sleep lab
Michel Jouvet
scientist who pioneered study in paradoxical sleep through the use of cats to analyze levels of brain activity
Solomon Asch
scientist who studied conformity by using a "line test" on a participant and several confederates
T score
score that results from adding or subtracting the standard deviation from the mean depending on the Z score
working memory storage (short term)
second stage of memory storage, in which memories are stored before being potentially encoded
selective inattention
selectively ignoring unpleasant or anxiety-provoking stimuli
individual efficacy
self-efficacy in an individual
Kinsey Scale
sexual orientation measurement system developed by Alfred Kinsey; 0 = exclusively heterosexual, 6 = exclusively homosexual
approach-avoidance conflict
situation involving an option with both good and bad characteristics
multiple approach-avoidance conflict
situation involving several options, each with their pros and cons
avoidance-avoidance conflict
situation involving two negative options
approach-approach conflict
situation involving two positive options
REM behavior disorder
sleep disorder primarily occurring amongst middle-aged men, in which they do not become paralyzed during REM sleep and act out the vivid dreams they experience during REM
hypochondriasis (illness anxiety disorder)
somatoform disorder in which a person interprets normal physical sensations as symptoms of a disease
reinforcer
something that increases the likelihood that a specific behavior or response will occur
fraternal birth order effect
theory that men who have older brothers are somewhat more likely to be gay; doesn't have any scientific backing or explanation
Yerkes-Dodson Law
theory that performance increases with arousal, but only up to a certain point (graph is an inverted parabola/U-curve)
perceived control (locus of control)
theory that stress is worse if you think you have no control over your situation
reciprocal determinism
theory that your behavior can influence how others in your environment cognitively process your behavior and therefore behave towards you
long term memory storage
third stage of memory storage, in which encoded memories are stored and ready to be retrieved
testosterone, alcohol, drugs
three BIOCHEMICAL factors that affect aggression
limbic system, frontal lobe, hypothalamus
three NEURAL factors that affect aggression
proximity, physical attraction, similarity
three main factors that influence attraction
norepinephrine, serotonin, dopamine
three neurotransmitters that are all mono-amine (one NH2 group)
glutamate, GABA, serotonin
three neurotransmitters whose imbalanced concentrations may lead to anxiety
William Masters, Virginia Johnson
two sexologists who discovered the sexual response cycle; hint: their work directly inspired Showtime's TV series Masters of Sex
bipedalism
two-legged animal movement; example of naturally selected mutation
personal psychology
type of IO psychology focusing on employee recruitment, selection, placement, training, appraisal and development; usually interview-based
organizational pscyhology
type of IO psychology focusing on how work environments and management styles influence worker motivation, satisfaction and productivity
retrograde amnesia
type of amnesia characterized by an inability to recall information from BEFORE the event (accident, operation, etc.) that caused the amnesia, but the ability to recall NEW info
anterograde amnesia
type of amnesia characterized by an inability to remember NEW information, but the ability to recall information PRIOR to the event (accident, operation, etc.) that caused the amnesia
fMRI (Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging)
type of brain scan that measures brain activity by using MRI technology to detect changes associated with blood flow; shows both structure and function of the brain
CAT Scan (Computed Tomography Scan)
type of brain scan that shows brain features but not structure; used to determine brain injury
PET Scan (Positron Emission Tomography Scan)
type of brain scan that tags glucose levels to determine the level of activity happening in various parts of the brain; used to find diseases in the body
MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging)
type of brain scan that uses a magnetic field and pulses of radio wave energy to produce pictures of organs and structures inside the body; allows for a very detailed structural image of the brain
higher order conditioning
type of classical conditioning in which a new neutral stimulus is paired with a conditioned stimulus, creating a second (often weaker) conditioned response
counterconditioning
type of classical conditioning in which stimuli that trigger maladaptive behaviors are associated/paired with new behaviors, leading to the extinction of the maladaptive response
delayed conditioning
type of classical conditioning in which the conditioned stimulus is presented immediately before the unconditioned stimulus with brief overlap; Pavlov supported this method
jigsaw classroom
type of classroom in which students from an "expert" group are distributed among the rest of the classroom to share knowledge
trace conditioning
type of conditioning in which the unconditioned stimulus is presented well AFTER the conditioned stimulus with a long-term delay; works to elicit taste aversion
exposure therapy
type of counterconditioning developed by Mary Cover Jones in which patients of anxiety are exposed to triggering stimuli in hopes of extinguishing the maladaptive response
aversive conditioning
type of counterconditioning that repeatedly associates an unpleasant/aversive stimulus with certain maladaptive behaviors until the behavior is extinguished
systematic desensitization
type of exposure therapy developed by Joseph Wolpe that associates a state of peaceful relaxedness with the gradually increasing exposure of anxiety-triggering stimuli
implosion therapy
type of exposure therapy in which a patient is exposed to exaggerated cases of a trigger stimuli
flooding
type of exposure therapy in which a patient is rapidly exposed to triggering stimuli in an attempt to extinguish the maladaptive response
virtual reality exposure therapy
type of exposure therapy used to extinguish frightened responses to situations that are difficult to simulate in a therapy environment (ex: flying)
field independence
type of field intelligence characterized by analytical thinking, organization, autonomy, focus and preference for grade-based progress and STEM education
field dependence
type of field intelligence characterized by broader (global) thinking, poorer organization, better social skills, tendency for distractions, and preference for social science education
representative heuristic
type of heuristic characterized by judging the likelihood of events in terms of how well they match our prototype/stereotype
availability heuristic
type of heuristic characterized by judging the likelihood of events in terms of their availability in memory (if something just happened and is fresh in your mind, you will think of it)
client-centered therapy (patient-centered/person-centered)
type of humanistic therapy developed by Carl Rogers, in which therapists actively listen to their clients and openly accept them
disorganized-disoriented
type of insecure attachment characterized by children who are extremely distressed at their mother's absence but have little engagement with the mother when she is present
anxious-avoidant
type of insecure attachment characterized by children who avoid/ignore their mothers, are indifferent to the absence/presence of their mothers, have unexploratory personalities, and treat strangers/mothers relatively the same
anxious-resistant
type of insecure attachment characterized by stranger anxiety in a mother's presence, extreme distress at a mother's absence, and ambivalence/weak contact with the mother upon her return
crystalized intelligence
type of intelligence characterized by accumulated knowledge and verbal skills (increases with age)
fluid intelligence
type of intelligence characterized by the ability to reason in quick and abstract ways (decreases with age)
achievement test
type of intelligence test designed to assess cumulative learning (ex: AP exam)
aptitude test
type of intelligence test designed to predict future performance (ex: SAT, ACT)
standardized test
type of intelligence test given to a pretested group whose results are compared with those of other students
sports psychology
type of psychology that studies psychological and physiological factors that affect athletic performance
social psychology
type of psychology that studies the effects of social environments and personal interactions on attitudes and behaviors
positive punishment
type of punishment in which behaviors are DECREASED (or stopped) when a negative or aversive stimulus is INTRODUCED
negative punishment
type of punishment in which behaviors are DECREASED (or stopped) when a positive stimulus is removed
negative reinforcement
type of reinforcement in which behaviors INCREASE when a NEGATIVE stimulus is stopped or reduced
positive reinforcement
type of reinforcement in which behaviors are INCREASED by the use of POSITIVE stimuli or rewards
partial reinforcement
type of reinforcement in which the desired response is reinforced only part of the time; results in slower acquisition of the response but greater resistance to extinction
immediate gratification
type of reinforcement in which the reinforcer is given immediately after the desired behavior
delayed gratification
type of reinforcement in which the reinforcer is not given immediately after the desired behavior, but after a period of time (ex: getting paid)
primary reinforcer
type of reinforcer that is a biological necessity (ex: food, water)
conditioned reinforcer (secondary)
type of reinforcer that works through learned associations with primary reinforcers (ex: money, which can buy you food and shelter)
experimental research
type of research that is done to show cause and effect; includes independent and dependent variables
collectivist
type of society that promotes group success and harmony (ex: countries in East Asia)
individualistic
type of society that promotes individual rights and success (ex: democracy)
convergent thinking
type of thinking directed towards finding a single, correct answer (tested in intelligence tests)
divergent thinking
type of thinking directed towards finding broader, "out of the box" solutions (demonstrated through creativity)
CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure)
type of ventilation-based therapy for sleep apnea in which the patient uses a machine to supply the patient with air through the night
Asperger's syndrome
upper range of the autism spectrum, characterized by high performance
dream analysis
use of latent dream content to identify psychological problems; very subjective and unscientific
survey
use of questions to gather information about an individual or population (descriptive)
experiment
use of random subjects and variable manipulation to determine cause and effect
nearsightedness (myopia)
vision problem in which it is easier to see objects that are closer than farther away
farsightedness (hyperopia)
vision problem in which it is easier to see objects that are farther away than closer
foveal vision
vision where clarity (acuity) is highest/sharpest
binocular cues
visual stimuli processed by both eyes
monocular cues
visual stimuli that can be processed by one eye alone
supergo
voice of morality/conscience that focuses on acceptable behavior and strives for perfection; works on the ideal principle (perfection)
delta waves
waves produced during stages 3 and 4 of sleep
theta waves
waves produced when entering stage 1 of sleep
alpha waves
waves produced when you are relaxed
beta waves
waves produced while you are awake and alert
c (OCD)
which of the following anxiety disorders does the psychoanalytic perspective NOT attempt to explain? a. PTSD b. generalized anxiety disorder c. OCD d. panic disorder
a (theory of mind)
which of the following cognitive abilities do autistic children lack? a. theory of mind b. egocentrism c. assimilation d. animism
b (need for sex - sex is anyways not even a psychological need)
which of the following did the TAT test NOT measure? a. need for achievement b. need for sex c. need for affiliation d. need for power
b (Alzheimer's)
which of the following diseases is caused by the deterioration of neurons that produce acetylcholine? a. multiple sclerosis b. Alzheimer's c. Parkinson's d. cancer
c (Parkinson's)
which of the following diseases is caused by the deterioration of neurons that produce dopamine? a. emphysema b. Alzheimer's c. Parkinson's d. schizophrenia
a (IQ)
which of the following does the following formula calculate? (mental age / chronological age) * 100 a. IQ b. creative intelligence c. analytical intelligence d. G factor
b (adrenaline)
which of the following does the sympathetic nervous system release in response to excitatory stimuli? a. glutamate b. adrenaline c. endorphins d. GABA
c (opponent processing theory)
which of the following emotional theories explains psychological/emotional responses to drug use? a. James-Lange theory of emotion b. cognitive appraisal theory c. opponent processing theory d. gate control theory
agoraphobia
fear of inescapable situations; often develops as a coping mechanism for panic attacks
stranger anxiety
fear of unfamiliar people; develops at around 8 months of age
castration anxiety
fear that supposedly develops among boys with an Oedipus complex that their father will cut off their genitalia; resolved during the phallic stage of psychosexual development
stranger anxiety
fear/aversion to unfamiliar people; develops around 8 months of age alongside object permanence
variable
feature of a study that is subject to change
modeling
form of learning in which you learn how to act in a certain situation by observing and mimicking the behavior of others
blindsight
localized area of blindness in part of someone's field of vision
olfactory cortex
portion of the brain that processes olfaction (smell); located near the hippocampus, which is why smells invoke memories and emotional responses
fixed ratio schedule
reinforcement schedule that reinforces a response only after a SPECIFIED NUMBER of responses
insomnia
recurring inability to fall or stay asleep
nucleus accumbens (NA)
region of the brain that is responsible for regulating pleasure
somatosensory cortex
region of the brain that perceives touch; located between the ears
learned helplessness
reinforced lack of an internal locus of control, resulting in one's inability to believe they can help themselves; leads to depression and anxiety disorders
learned helplessness
reinforced sense of hopeless resignation that occurs when the patient learns they cannot avoid/escape repeated, aversive situations; contributes to depression
generalization (operant conditioning)
reinforcement of responses to stimuli similar to the original reinforcer
continuous reinforcement
reinforcement schedule in which the desired response is reinforced every time it occurs
identical twin study
study of identical twins in order to determine the role of genes in the development of certain traits and characteristics
longitudinal study
study of maturation or development through long-term use of the same subject(s)
cross sectional study
study of maturation or development through the examination of different subjects at various ages
parapsychology
study of paranormal phenomena, including ESP and psychokinesis
phrenology
study of physical characteristics of the skull in relation to character and mental abilities
psychopharmacology
study of the effects of drugs on cognition and behavior
serotonin, norepinephrine
two neurotransmitters whose deficit leads to increased hunger
hopelessness scale, anxiety inventory
two personality inventories developed by Aaron Beck that are designed to gauge one's explanatory style/learned helplessness
Abraham Maslow, Carl Rogers
two psychologists who developed the humanistic approach
Philippe Pinel, Dorothy Dix
two reformers that moved mental health treatment away from demonic symbolism and imprisonment to humane treatment
David Hubel, Torsten Wiesel
two scientists who won the Nobel Prize for the discovery of feature detector cells
F (false - do NOT use them with alcohol)
(T/F) antianxiety drugs can be used with alcohol
T (true)
(T/F) antianxiety drugs should be used in combination with psychotherapy
T (true)
(T/F) atypical antipsychotics are also used to treat bipolar disorder
T (true)
(T/F) autism is more likely to affect boys than girls
T (true)
(T/F) behavior can affect attitude.
T (true)
(T/F) aggressive tendencies have been shown to decrease after neutering/castration as a result of reduced testosterone.
T (true)
(T/F) alcoholics and users of over-the-counter sleep medications may not be able to dream
T (true)
(T/F) all intelligence tests are based around the values of white, Christian societies
F (false - they do, and various chimp studies have proven it)
(T/F) animals do not communicate
psychophysiological illness
"mind/body" illness, any stress-related physical illness like hypertension and some headaches
lark
"morning person" who wakes up and goes to bed early
owl
"night person" who goes to bed late and sleeps late
refractory period
"recharge period" immediately following stimulation during which a nerve or muscle is unresponsive to further stimulation
T (true)
(T/F) "gifted" students on the extreme high end of the intelligence spectrum tend to grow up to be well-adjusted social adults
T (true)
(T/F) Neo-Freudians place emphasis on the conscious mind and downplay the influence of sexuality and aggression
F (false - Piaget argued for discontinuous development)
(T/F) Piaget argued for continuity-based development
F (false - Piaget developed a stage-based discontinuous model)
(T/F) Piaget followed a continuous model of development
F (false - it was theorized as Carl Jung as a counterpart to Freud's Oedipus complex)
(T/F) Sigmund Freud theorized the Electra complex
F (false)
(T/F) Spanish speakers are more extroverted while English speakers are more introverted
F (false - the conclusion was the opposite)
(T/F) Stanley Milgram concluded from his experiment that people will refuse to perform actions that go against their morals, even if ordered by an authority figure
F (false)
(T/F) a prejudice is an action.
T (true)
(T/F) a prejudice is an attitude.
F (false - the opposite is true; the absolute threshold of infants is extremely low and increases with age)
(T/F) absolute threshold decreases as you age; you are more sensitive to stimuli as an adult than as a child
T (true)
(T/F) according to Alfred Adler, varying feelings of superiority/inferiority can lead to rivalry between siblings
F (false - they only model behavior they are explicitly rewarded for)
(T/F) according to Skinner's behaviorist approach to gender, children model particular behaviors as long as they're not punished for them
F (false - vice versa is true)
(T/F) adolescents generally see a decline in peer influence and an increase in parental influence
F (false - this actually decreases/inhibits aggression)
(T/F) aggression levels increase when the brain's frontal lobe is damaged.
b (UR - unconditioned response)
Betty is a subject in an experiment in which the sound of a bell is followed quickly by a puff of air to her eye, causing her to blink. Before long, she blinks as soon as she hears the bell. what is her eye blink when the puff of air hits her eye? a. US b. UR c. CS d. CR
c (CS - conditioned stimulus)
Betty is a subject in an experiment in which the sound of a bell is followed quickly by a puff of air to her eye, causing her to blink. Before long, she blinks as soon as she hears the bell. what is the bell? a. US b. UR c. CS d. CR
a (US - unconditioned stimulus)
Betty is a subject in an experiment in which the sound of a bell is followed quickly by a puff of air to her eye, causing her to blink. Before long, she blinks as soon as she hears the bell. what is the puff of air? a. US b. UR c. CS d. CR
psychic apparatus
Freud's structural model of the psyche, comprised of an id, ego and superego; he attributed personality traits to conflicts between the three constructs
psychoanalysis
Freudian method of treating personality disorders, characterized by free association and dream analysis
manifest content
Freudian theory of content within dreams consisting of events from our daily lives; comprise most dreams
latent content
Freudian theory of hidden, underlying meanings within dreams that originate from the unconscious mind
repressed memories
Freudian theory of the presence of early, painful memories that become hidden within the unconscious mind
Oedipus complex
Freudian theory that boys are secretly attracted to their mothers and become jealous of their fathers as a result, and so mimic the behavior of their fathers to attract their mothers' attention
Electra complex
Freudian theory that girls are secretly attracted to their fathers and become jealous of their mothers as a result, and so mimic the behavior of their mothers to attract their fathers' attention
William Stern
German psychologist who developed the intelligence quotient (IQ) formula)
Wilhelm Wundt
German psychologist who opened the first lab dedicated to the study of psychology
Hermann Ebbinghaus
German psychologist whose syllable-based repetition tests proved that the amount of information remembered depends on the amount of time spent learning it
Carol Gilligan
Kohlberg's former research assistant, who criticized his study as only focusing on affluent white males
infantis
Latin for "not speaking"
Alfred Adler
Neo-Freudian psychologist who studied childhood social tensions and theorized the inferiority complex
contiguity model
Pavlov's learning model which demonstrated that the unconditioned stimulus has to follow immediately after the conditioned stimulus for the subject to anticipate it, and that the key to learning the association is the number of times the stimuli are paired
contingency model
Rescorla's learning model which demonstrated that the conditioned stimulus has to be a useful predictor of the unconditioned stimulus, and that conditioning is dependent on the subject's cognitive processing of the event and the pairings between the conditioned and unconditioned stimulus
Ivan Pavlov
Russian psychologist who pioneered classical conditioning
Philip Zimbardo
Stanford professor who conducted the infamous prison experiment in 1971
Stanley Milgram
Yale professor who conducted an infamous experiment regarding compliance in the 1960s
astigmatism
a defect in the eye caused by an irregularly-shaped cornea or lens, which results in distorted images, as light rays are prevented from meeting at a common focus
debriefing
a detailed, accurate overview of an experiment or research process given out to participants
negative
a distribution graph with relatively higher scores is skewed in the ____________ direction
positive
a distribution graph with relatively lower scores is skewed in the ____________ direction
deja vu
a feeling of having already experienced the present situation
central trait
a general/common characteristic; usually 5 to 10 per person (ex: cheerful, shy)
stereotype
a generalized belief about a group; can lead to prejudice
conditioned stimulus (CS)
a neutral stimulus that, after being associated with an unconditioned stimulus, eventually elicits a conditioned response
mediator
a person who attempts to make people involved in a conflict come to an agreement
cardinal trait
a person's defining characteristic
low balling
a persuasion tactic that involves offering someone an appealing "deal" and then disclosing its setbacks after they agree to it
exocytosis
a process by which the contents of a cell vesicle are released to the exterior, through fusion of the vesicle membrane with the cell membrane
dendrite
a short, branched extension of a neuron, along which impulses received from other cells at synapses are transmitted to the cell body
norm
a social rule that is either stated or implied
estrogen
a woman's voice can change based on her ____________ levels.
d (superego)
according to Freud, anxiety occurs when the _____________ isn't controlled a. unconscious b. ego c. id d. superego
c (absolute threshold)
according to the signal detection theory, which of the following is NOT one of the factors that determine sensation and perception a. experience b. fatigue c. absolute threshold d. expectation
gender typing
acquisition of traditional masculine or feminine roles
accommodation
adjustment of the lens to help focus images
ostracism
aggression influenced by rejection or lack of conformity (ex: school shootings, workplace violence)
instrumental aggression
aggression that is committed to satisfy a goal or to somehow provide benefit (ex: football coach)
hostile aggression
aggression that results when a person feels pain, anger or frustration
problem-focused coping
alleviating stress by going to the source and changing the interaction or relationship with the stressor
emotion-focused coping
alleviating stress by ignoring the stressor and dealing with the emotional reaction by seeking support from friends/family
slow wave sleep
alternative name for stages 3 and 4 of sleep
relative luminance
amount of light an object reflects relative to its surroundings
sound compression
amplification of sounds coming from greater distances
individualistic
an _____________________ society values individual success
paradoxical sleep
another name for REM sleep; refers to the high levels of brain activity occurring during REM sleep when the body is paralyzed
soma
another name for the cell body of a neuron
atypical antipsychotics
antipsychotic drugs that target both dopamine and serotonin receptors; used to treat negative symptoms of schizophrenia
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
anxiety disorder characterized by haunting memories, nightmares, social withdrawal, jumpiness and/or insomnia that lingers for 4+ weeks after a traumatic experience
obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD)
anxiety disorder characterized by unwanted, repetitive thoughts and/or actions that impair effective functioning
generalized anxiety disorder
anxiety disorder in which a person is continually tense, apprehensive and in a state of autonomic nervous system arousal
phobia
anxiety disorder marked by a persistent, irrational fear and avoidance of a specific object or situation (ex: spiders, closed spaces)
panic disorder
anxiety disorder marked by unpredictable, minutes-long episodes of intense dread in which a person experiences terror and accompanying chest pain, choking, or other frightening sensations (panic attack)
aggression
any physical or verbal behavior intended to hurt or destroy, whether done reactively out of hostility, or proactively as a calculated means to an end
visual cliff
appearance of a drop in the ground below a glass surface; used to test depth perception in infants
self-fulfilling prophecy
applies to the idea that students who aren't "gifted" will enjoy less success than those who are because they don't have access to advanced educational programs offered to gifted students
persona
archetype representing how we represent ourselves to the world; appears as manifest content in dreams
anima (animus)
archetype representing one's our true self rather than the image we project to others; opposite of prescribed gender roles, latent in dreams
self (archetype)
archetype representing our full self, or the unification between the conscious and unconscious
shadow
archetype representing unconscious desires and repressed urges; appears in dreams as latent content
unconscious
area of the psyche where unknown thoughts and desires reside; plays a crucial role in conscious behavior
optic chiasm
area where the information carried by the optic nerve crosses from the brain's left hemisphere to the right hemisphere
Howard Gardner
argued that humans have eight different types of intelligence of varying strengths
nativist perspective
argument that children are born with an innate capacity for language and learn it at a rate too fast to be explained purely through psychological learning principles
Whorf's hypothesis (linguistic determination)
argument that language determines the way we think
mean
arithmetic average of a distribution of data
unconditional positive regard (acceptance)
attitude of total acceptable towards others
misattribution
attributing information to the wrong source
c (mirror neurons)
autism stems from a defect in one's... a. amygdala b. hippocampus c. mirror neurons d. glutamate production
mean
average of a data set
neurocognitive disorders (organic disorders)
axis-III mental disorders that can be attributed to biological pathology; divided into cognitive, medical and substance-related categories in the DSM-V
histogram
bar graph that maps frequency distribution as well as the measures of central tendency
negative
before action potential, the initial charge of ions in the cell membrane is ____________
maladaptive behavior
behavior that disables one's ability to adapt to new situations (ex: agoraphobia)
abnormal behavior
behavior that is potentially a psychology problem
Albert Bandura
behavioral psychologist who argued that we may learn fears by modeling the behaviors of our parents
Albert Bandura
behavioral psychologist who studied behavior modeling and developed the social-cognitive theory
Martin Seligman
behavioral psychologist who studied learned helplessness in dogs
BF Skinner
behaviorist who argued that language is a cultural and social construct learned via nurture
John Watson
behaviorist who classically conditioned an 11 month old child to fear furry objects
Ivan Pavlov
behaviorist who studied classical conditioning (salivation in dogs)
BF Skinner
behaviorist who trained pigeons to dance and read
a (positive reinforcement)
behaviorists argue that hypochondriasis is a form of a. positive reinforcement b. negative reinforcement c. positive punishment d. negative punishment
self-efficacy
belief in our capability to succeed; reinforced by an internal locus of control
self efficacy
belief in your ability to succeed in a certain situation; defined by Albert Bandura and found in people who enjoy challenges, commit to interesting tasks and persevere through adversity -- more if have strong INTERNAL LOCUS OF CONTROL
animism
belief that everything is living; occurs in children during their preoperational stage
artificialism
belief that everything is manmade; occurs in children during their preoperational stage
just world phenomenon
belief that the world is a good place, and therefore those who do bad get what they deserve
c (2 and 2)
between what stages of sleep does rapid eye movement (REM) sleep occur? a. 2 and 3 b. 2 and 4 c. 2 and 2 d. 3 and 4
set point
biological "weight thermostat" that gauges bodily energy use based on an organism's weight/hunger levels; if you lose weight, you're more hungry, and if you gain weight, you're less hungry
dopamine, glutamate
biological causes of schizophrenia include an excess of ___________ receptors and impaired ____________ activity
maturation
biological growth process
physiological arousal
bodily sympathetic nervous system response
stirrup
bone in the middle ear that knocks onto the cochlea to transmit sound vibrations to the inner ear
Oedipus complex
boys' unconscious sexual desire for their mothers; resolved during the phallic stage of psychosexual development
sensory pathway
brain pathway comprised of sensory organs, the thalamus and part of the cerebral cortex
learning pathway
brain pathway comprised of the sensory organs, thalamus, hippocampus and frontal cortex
limbic pathway
brain pathway that includes the hippocampus, hypothalamus and the amygdala
reward pathway
brain pathway that involves the regulation of pleasure/positive sensations and encourages repetition of a particular behavior
reticular pathway
brain pathway that regulates whether we feel awake or sleepy; includes the brain stem, thalamus and the cerebrum
unconditional positive regard
caring, nonjudgmental attitude towards a client
inferiority complex
childhood perception of physical/social/intellectual inadequacies in oneself
Washoe
chimp who was able to learn 181 different signs to communicate and transferred some of this learning to her child via observation
XX
chromosome pairing in females that results in the production of more estrogen
XY
chromosome pairing in males that results in the production of more testosterone
Y chromosome
chromosome that originates from the father; signals greater testosterone production in males
X chromosome
chromosome that originates from the mother (and, in some occasions, the father)
benzodiazepine (benzos)
class of depressant medication that adds GABA to the bloodstream; prolonged usage can lead to reduced GABA and increased glutamate
flashbulb memories
clear memories of emotionally significant moments in one's past
schizoid personality disorder
cluster-A personality disorder characterized by a lack of interest in social relationships or sharing time with others
paranoid personality disorder
cluster-A personality disorder characterized by irrational suspicions/mistrust of others
antisocial personality disorder (sociopathy/psychopathy)
cluster-B personality disorder characterized by a pervasive disregard for the law and the rights of others
hearing aids
devices that compress soft sounds to relieve hearing loss
ego
conscious psychic energy that mediates between the id and superego; works on the reality principle of satisfying the id's desires in realistic ways
manifest content
content of a dream consisting of real memories and overt subject matter
extrasensory perception (ESP)
controversial idea of perception through means other than known senses (ex: telepathy, clairvoyance)
eugenics
controversial idea proposing that those with higher measures of mental ability are more fit to reproduce than others
transduction
conversion of one form of energy to the other
0.33
correlation coefficient between brain size and intelligence
0.9
correlation coefficient of the Stanford-Binet and Weschler tests
Francis Galton
cousin of Darwin who proposed the concepts of eugenics (selective breeding based on mental ability), nature vs. nurture, psychometrics and survey/correlational research
Franz Anton Mesmer
created the theory of mesmerism (or animal magnetism) believing that he could extract "unhealthy auras" from animals using magnets
circadian rhythm
daily rhythmic device that regulates our biological processes (ex: sleep, eating habits)
normal distribution
data distribution in which the mean, median and mode are all relatively the same, and the graph is a symmetrical bell curve
b (hands)
deaf infants begin to babble with their... a. mouths b. hands c. feet d. heads
functional deafness
deafness to speech in languages outside your native tongue; develops around 10 months of age
extinction (operant conditioning)
decrease/disappearance of a behavior when no reinforcement is provided after it is performed
habituation
decreasing responsiveness to repeated stimulation
projection
defense mechanism in which one attributes uncomfortable feelings about themselves to others -- when you lose an argument and call the other person stupid
Alzheimer's
deficiency in crystallized intelligence as a result of a deterioration of acetylcholine
superiority
defined by Alfred Adler as an ideal combination of altruism, creativity, uniqueness and interest in social welfare
self (humanism)
defined by Carl Rogers as an organized, consistent set of beliefs about ourselves
incentive theory
defines incentive as a positive or negative external stimuli that you gravitate towards (reward/punishment); supported Skinner's studies
instinct theory
defines instincts are unlearned behaviors that have a fixed pattern throughout a species (ex: birds flying south)
Phenylketonuria (PKU)
degradation of the nervous system resulting from infants born without enzymes that process amino acids
opiate
depressant drug containing opium that slows down the nervous system and eventually replaces naturally-produced endorphins that regulate tolerance, dependence, withdrawal and addiction
achievement motivation
desire for significant accomplishment, high standards and mastery; defined by David McClelland
Lev Vygotsky
developmental psychologist who argued for a continuous, nurture-based model of cognitive development
Jean Piaget
developmental psychologist who identified four stages of development and argued for the influence of nature/inherent traits
Lawrence Kohlberg
developmental psychologist who identified three levels/six stages of moral development
Erik Erikson
developmental psychologist who studied psychosocial stages and attachment types
Jean Piaget
developmental psychologist who studied stages of cognition in children
Diana Baumrind
developmental psychologist who studied the effect of different parenting styles on a child's self-esteem/future personality
cochlear implant
device that can be implanted into someone's cochlea to stimulate it and thus enable hearing; only way to treat sensorineural hearing loss
range
difference between the largest and smallest values
Sunday night insomnia
difficulty of sleeping on a Sunday night; results from staying up late during the weekends
sensory adaptation
diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation
extinction
disappearance of a previously learned behavior when the behavior is not reinforced; allows for treatment of phobias and OCD
multiple sclerosis
disease caused by the breakdown of the myelin sheath
visual capture
dominance of vision over other senses in perception
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI)
drugs that block the reabsorption of serotonin
antianxiety drugs (anxiolytics)
drugs used to control anxiety and agitation by depressing the central nervous system
mood stabilizers
drugs used to treat bipolar depression
antidepressants
drugs used to treat depression and anxiety disorders by increasing norepinephrine/serotonin production
antipsychotic drugs (neuroleptics)
drugs used to treat schizophrenia and other severe cognitive disorders
serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRI)
dual-action antidepressants that block the reabsorption of both serotonin and norepinephrine
negative, positive
during resting potential, there is a _____________ charge INSIDE the cell body and a ____________ charge OUTSIDE
d (all of the above)
during what stages of sleep does non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep occur? a. stage 2 b. stage 3 c. stage 1 d. all of the above
c (16-18)
during which age range are personality disorders typically diagnosed? a. 5-10 b. 10-15 c. 16-18 d. 19-21
d (stage 3 and 4)
during which stage of sleep do bedwetting and sleepwalking occur? a. stage 2 b. stage 3 c. stage 4 d. stage 3 and 4
b (REM sleep)
during which stage of sleep do the most vivid dreams occur? a. NREM sleep b. REM sleep c. stage 2 d. stage 4
b (stage 2)
during which stage of sleep do you enter and leave REM sleep? a. stage 1 b. stage 2 c. stage 3 d. stage 4
c (stages 1, 2, 3, or 4)
during which stage of sleep does sleep-talking occur? a. stage 1 b. stages 1, 2, and 3 c. stages 1, 2, 3, or 4 d. stage 4
Beck's cognitive therapy
early form of cognitive therapy that seeks to replace unrealistic and negative thoughts with positive thoughts
bulimia nervosa
eating disorder characterized by recurrent binge eating, followed by compensatory behaviors (ex: purging)
binge eating disorder
eating disorder characterized by significant binge eating followed by guilt/disgust, but without purging, fasting or excessive exercise
hypothesis
educated guess (testable prediction) on the outcome of an experiment
primary appraisal
emotional cognition involving assessment of the potential consequences of a situation
secondary appraisal
emotional cognition which involves deciding how we respond to a stimulus/situation
psychological addiction
emotional or mental (psychological) need for a drug
effortful processing
encoding of information that requires attention and conscious effort
semantic encoding
encoding of meanings/implications/definitions
visual encoding
encoding of pictures/images
acoustic encoding
encoding of sound, especially that of words
pituitary gland
endocrine gland that relays hormonal messages from the hypothalamus
attachment
enduring emotional bond; develops between parents and children at around 8 months of age
sexual orientation
enduring sexual attraction towards members of either one's own sex or the other sex
HM
epilepsy patient who had parts of his temporal lobe, hippocampus and amygdala removed in order to control his seizures; resulted in his ability to remember episodic memories from before his surgery but an inability to produce new long-term memories
sympathetic
epinephrine affects the _________________ nervous system
placebo effect
error in experimentation in which the control group experiences the same effect as the experimental group despite not being exposed to the independent variable (ex: someone given a useless pill starts to report beneficial effects)
experimenter bias
error in experimentation in which the experimenter alters results to support their theories (ex: word choice in surveys)
Hawthorne effect
error in naturalistic observation in which the researcher gets in the way of a participant and alters their behavior
Charles Darwin
evolutionary researcher whose findings influenced the evolutionary perspective
biological preparedness
evolved, inherent fear to dangerous objects/situations (ex: heights, spiders, etc.)
aerobic exercise
exercise that helps boost lung and heart capacity and release repressed emotions
reciprocity norm
expectation that people we help will not harm us and will help us in return for our assistance
penis envy
experienced by girls who are initially attached to their mothers but become drawn to their fathers as they become increasingly aware of their lack of a penis
jet lag
extreme tiredness after long flights across several time zones
change blindness/deafness
failing to notice changes in the environment around you (ex: change of person, change of voice)
inattentional blindness
failing to see visible objects when our attention is directed elsewhere
delusions
false beliefs, often of persecution/grandeur
gist memories
false or distorted memories that are easy to generalize and incorporate into other memories, thus creating more false memories
night terrors
feelings of dread that occur during stage 4 of sleep, resulting in the person waking up wide-eyed and screaming; occur most frequently among children aged 4-12
night terrors
feelings of dread that occur during stage 4 of sleep; typically result in the person waking up wide-eyed and screaming, and occur most often in children 4-12
zygote
fertilized egg; less than half survive beyond two weeks of conception
blood brain barrier
filtering mechanism of the capillaries that carry blood to the brain and spinal cord tissue, blocking the passage of certain substances; made up of glial cells
Daniel M'Naghten
first case of the insanity plea, in which a man who assassinated the British prime minister's assistant was found not guilty
spermarche
first ejaculation; occurs in boys around age 14
menarche
first menstrual period; occurs in girls around age 12.5
sensory memory storage
first stage of memory storage, in which paying attention to sensory information allows it to be stored in short-term memory
babbling stage
first stage of productive language, in which babies spontaneously utter a variety of sounds (goo goo, ga ga)
Margaret Floy Washburn
first woman to receive a PhD in psychology
ventricles
fluid-filled sacs that gradually replace missing brain tissue in schizophrenics
selective attention
focusing of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus
id
force of unconscious energy that strives to satisfy primal (aggressive/sexual) needs; works on the pleasure principle and seeks immediate gratification
light exposure therapy
form of alternative therapy in which depressed patients are exposed to bright light during winter mornings; appears to be effective in treating seasonal affective disorder
rebirthing therapy
form of alternative therapy that engages patients in reenacting the supposed trauma of childbirth - proven to be ineffective
energy therapy
form of alternative therapy that involves the manipulation of "energy fields" - proven to be ineffective
recovery-memory therapy
form of alternative therapy that seeks to uncover repressed memories of child abuse - proven to be ineffective
eye movement desensitization and reprocessing
form of alternative therapy that tracks eye movement while patients imagine traumatic scenarios in order to reprocess repressed memories; appears to be effective in treating anxiety
rational emotive behavioral therapy (REBT)
form of cognitive behavioral therapy developed by Albert Ellis, in which irrational beliefs about certain events are changed to rational beliefs, thus bringing about healthier behavioral consequences
gestalt therapy
form of group therapy developed by Fritz Perls that applies humanistic and psychoanalytic approaches to a group setting and focuses on present circumstances
family therapy
form of group therapy in which families are treated as a whole, with individual behaviors attributed to family influence
milieu therapy
form of group therapy in which patients enter a treatment center whose environment in completely controlled in order to assist patient well-being
sexual response cycle
four-stage sexual cycle consisting of excitement, plateau, orgasm and resolution (+ refractory period for men)
gender stereotypes
generalized schema of how each gender should look and act; cognitive equivalent of gender typing
Turner syndrome
genetic defect in females born with only one X chromosome (XO)
Flynn effect
gradual increase in standardized test scores across the world since the 1930s
forgetting curve
graph developed by Hermann Ebbinghaus illustrating the decline of memory retention over time
scatterplot
graph of plotted points that show the relationship between two sets of data
bruxism
grinding of the teeth that occurs during sleep; very common among women
sleep inertia
groggy sensation resulting from lack of sleep or frequent napping; short memory memory, inability to "snap out of it"
schizophrenia
group of severe disorders characterized by disorganized/delusional thoughts, disturbed perceptions and inappropriate thoughts/actions
experimental group
group of subjects in an experiment that are exposed to the variable under study
control group
group of subjects in an experiment that are not affected by the independent variable; used as a comparison group when results are evaluated
experimental group
group of subjects or variables in an experiment that are affected by the independent variable
control group
group of subjects or variables in an experiment that aren't affected by the independent variable
marijuana (THC)
hallucinogen containing THC, which is fat-soluble and thus long-lasting, and binds to cannbinoid receptors to inhibit neural activity
LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide)
hallucinogen that releases serotonin and blocks its neural reuptake
PCP (phencyclidine)
hallucinogen that releases serotonin, norepinephrine and dopamine but blocks their reuptake
coronary heart disease
heart disease characterized by clogging of the arteries; increased by stress
amplitude
height of a sound wave (larger = louder)
latent content
hidden or underlying meaning of a dream
latent content
hidden psychological meaning of a dream
flashbulb memories
highly detailed and vivid memories/"snapshots" whose strength is proportionate to one's emotional connection with them
estrogen
hormone predominantly secreted in females, responsible for the development of female reproductive organs
insulin
hormone produced by the pancreas; helped move glucose into the bloodstream and liver for storage
cortisol
hormone produced in the adrenal glands that regulates stress
testosterone
hormone responsible for the development of male reproductive organs; also present in females
melatonin
hormone secreted by the pineal gland that regulates the sleep cycle; less = awake
explanatory style
how an individual explains the events and situations that occur around them; can be either positive (optimistic) or negative (pessimistic)
a (inventories/peer reports)
how did Gordon Allport gather his research? a. inventories/peer reports b. longitudinal studies c. neuroscience d. observational studies
b (surveys/interviews)
how do humanists gather their research? a. case studies b. surveys/interviews c. projective tests d. neuroscience
b (25)
how many hours is one circadian rhythm cycle? a. 24 b. 25 c. 26 d. 27
b (imprisoned in asylums)
how were patients exhibiting abnormal behavior trated in ancient times? a. rehabilitated in hospitals b. imprisoned in asylums c. killed on the streets d. kept at home
Abraham Maslow
humanist who created the hierarchy of needs
active listening
humanistic process of listening to and reiterating/reflecting/supporting the thoughts and statements of clients
Carl Rogers
humanistic psychologist who believed that while people inherently have self-actualizing tendencies, their environment can skew their development towards their full potential
Abraham Maslow
humanistic psychologist who created a "hierarchy of needs" that organizes human desires from physiological needs to self-actualization
ghrelin
hunger-arousing hormone produced in the stomach, regulated by circadian rhythm
obestatin
hunger-suppressing hormone produced in the stomach
null hypothesis
hypothesis that states that there is no relationship between the two variables being tested; used to verify that results aren't up to chance
Ames illusion
illusion of "growing"/"shrinking" of people as they move across an oddly-angled room, based on the assumption that all rooms have 90-degree angles
Ponzo illusion
illusion of distant objects appearing larger (ex: lines on the railroad)
Wundt-Jastrow Illusion
illusion of length difference created by two identical objects
phi phenomenon
illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on and off in quick succession (pink dots/green dot)
moon illusion
illusion of the moon looking larger near the horizon due to its size relative to other objects
table illusion
illusion of vertically-oriented objects appearing larger
afterimage
image of opposing colors produced when the original image is gone
optical illusion
image perceived by the brain as something other than what it really is
manifest content
imagery and events comprising a dream; Freud believed that latent content (psychological meaning) was hidden within this
modeling
imitating others' behavior based on observing it
intuition
immediate understanding based on instinctive/automatic feeling or thought
sensory memory
immediate, brief recording of sensory information
intuition
immediate/automatic instincts/thoughts, not always reliable
aphasia
impaired use of language, usually caused by damage to the Broca's or Wernicke's areas
priming
implicit memory effect in which exposure to one stimulus influences one's perception or memory of another stimulus
c (those who were told about the drug)
in Schacter and Singer's epinephrine trial, which of the following was the CONTROL group? a. those who were not told about the drug b. those who experienced no effects c. those who were told about the drug d. those who claimed to experience the drug's effects
d (response to the confederates)
in Schacter and Singer's epinephrine trial, which of the following was the DEPENDENT variable? a. type of drug used b. age of patient c. what the patients were told about the drug d. response to the confederates
a (those who were told they would experience no effects)
in Schacter and Singer's epinephrine trial, which of the following was the EXPERIMENTAL group? a. those who were told they would experience no effects b. those who were not told about the drug c. those who were told about the drug d. those who claimed to experience the drug's effects
c (what the patients were told about the drug)
in Schacter and Singer's epinephrine trial, which of the following was the INDEPENDENT variable? a. type of drug used b. age of patient c. what the patients were told about the drug d. response to the confederates
a (dogs with escapable collars)
in Seligman's learned helplessness experiment, which of the following was the CONTROL group? a. dogs with escapable collars b. dogs with inescapable collars
b (dogs with inescapable collars)
in Seligman's learned helplessness experiment, which of the following was the EXPERIMENTAL group? a. dogs with escapable collars b. dogs with inescapable collars
frontal cortex, limbic system
in the limbic pathway, neural messages are transferred to the _________ __________, which tells us how to feel, then sent back to the _________ ___________ to reinforce emotional learning
infantile amnesia
inability of children under 3 to remember information as a result of an underdeveloped hippocampus and frontal lobe
source amnesia
inability to remember the source of a particular piece of information, while retaining the information itself
fixation
inability to see a problem from a new perspective or mental set
cognitive development
increase in complexity of dreams in relation to cognitive growth
Doppler effect
increase or decrease in sound frequency as the sound and the observer move toward or away from each other
long term potentiation
increased firing rate of neural synapses; provides the basis for learning and memory
Genie
infamous "wild child" who was imprisoned in her home for 12 years and lost the ability to learn or communicate language
display rules
informal norms that define when you can and cannot display emotion (ex: "no crying in baseball")
attention
is necessary for working memory to function
word salad
jumbled ideas that lead to incoherent sentence delivery
insecure attachment
lack of emotional attachment between a child and a caregiver; results in frightened, unexploratory temperaments
American Psychological Association (APA)
largest scientific and professional organization of psychologists in the USA
conditioned response (CR)
learned response to a previously neutral stimulus
retina
light-sensitive inner surface of the eye that contains photoreceptors and neurons that process visual information
savant syndrome
limited mental ability but extraordinary skill in a particular area
frequency distribution
list of all data collected, in order
sound localization
listener's ability to identify the location or origin of a detected sound in terms of direction and distance
100
mean score for any modern intelligence test
Z score
measure of how many standard deviations above or below the mean a raw score is
alternate form method
measure of reliability based on comparison between scores on two different tests on the same material to the same subjects
test-retest reliability
measure of reliability based on comparison between test scores of the same test given at different times
split-half reliability
measure of reliability based on comparison between test scores of two testing groups
dispersion
measure of the extent to which a set of data varies from the mean value
episodic memory
memory of events from one's own life
semantic memory
memory of facts and word definitions
declarative memory (explicit)
memory of facts, data and events that we can consciously recall
procedural memory (implicit)
memory of information we can remember without conscious recall (ex: walking, speaking)
archetypes
memory traces inherited from an ancestral collective unconscious, as theorized by Carl Jung
b (recreational - from an evolutionary perspective, male mates mainly look to pass on genes to the next generation)
men approach sex in a ____________ manner a. relational b. recreational
a (at peak fertility)
men are primarily attracted to women who are... a. at peak fertility b. in their 20s c. in their 30s d. similar in appearance to their mothers
cognition
mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering and communicating information
Down's syndrome
mental disability caused by having duplicates of chromosome 21; usually leads to mental retardation
concepts
mental groupings of similar objects, events, ideas of people
prototype
mental image of a typical example of a category; same as a stereotype
language acquisition device (LAD)
mental or biological means of acquiring language (ex: Broca's area, Wernicke's area)
imagery
mental pictures; powerful aid to processing, especially when combined with semantic encoding
intelligence
mental quality consisting of the ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to new situations; varies between cultures/societies
cognitive map
mental representation of one's physical environment
clozapine
most common atypical antipsychotic
diagnostic and statistical manual (DSM-V)
most commonly used manual of diagnosis/treatment for mental disorders
mode
most frequent value in a data set
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
most widely used personality test for identifying psychological disorders; has 567 true/false questions
extrinsic motivation
motivation driven by an external reward
intrinsic motivation
motivation driven by internal desire/personal interest
affiliation motive
motivation to belong; is considered an evolved trait
diffusion
movement of atoms or molecules from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration
effector
muscle, gland or organ capable of responding to a stimulus (ex: muscle contraction, gland secretion)
mirror image perception
mutual view held by conflicting parties, in which each side sees themselves as good and the other side as bad
temperament
natural disposition to a particular mood
motivation
need or desire that energizes/directs behavior
self-transcendence
need to find a meaning and identity beyond oneself
glutamate
neurotransmitter responsible for long-term potentiation
serotonin
neurotransmitter that increases the ability of synapses to transmit signals
GABA
neurotransmitter whose receptor is a chloride channel
dopamine, acetylcholine, norepinephrine, glutamate
neurotransmitters whose receptors are also sodium channels (excitatory)
frequency
number of wavelengths passing a point in one second (determines pitch of sound)
correlation coefficient
numerical value representing the strength of a correlation
social responsibility norm
obligation to help those in need (ex: elderly, animals, children, etc.)
PT Barnum effect (Forer effect)
observation that individuals will give high accuracy ratings to descriptions of their personality that supposedly are tailored specifically for them, but are in fact vague and general enough to apply to a wide range of people
overt prejudice
obvious negative attitudes that people display towards a group (ex: racial slurs)
testing bias
occurs in intelligence tests as they are largely based around white, middle-class values
cocktail party effect
our ability to only attend to one voice or group of voices among many
real self
our actual, unaltered identity
consciousness
our awareness of ourselves and our environment
ideal self
our perception of others' expectations of us; only matches real self after one has a positive self concept
self reference effect
our tendency to better remember information that pertains to ourselves
serial position effect
our tendency to recall the first and last pieces of information from a list or larger body of info
cornea
outer layer of the eye that protects it and bends light waves to enter the eye
research design
overall strategy used to collect, measure and analyze data in order to address a research problem
association
pairing of stimuli
conflict
perceived incompatibility of actions, goals or ideas
fetal alcohol syndrome
physical and mental defects in infants born to mothers who drank alcohol while pregnant
physical addiction
physical need for a drug, indicated by withdrawal symptoms that occur when the drug is reduced or removed
James Braid
pioneer of hypnosis who based some of his research on the findings of Mesmer
blind spot
point at which the ganglion cells merge into the optic nerve and exit the eye; insensitive to light
threshold
point at which we begin to detect a stimulus
menopause
point at which women stop producing estrogen and thereby lose the ability to reproduce; usually occurs around age 50
neural repair
preservation of neural pathways by dreams
fear
primary emotional response that does not involve cognition (goes straight from thalamus to amygdala)
dual processing
principle that information is often simultaneously processed in separate conscious and unconscious tracks
conservation
principle that quantity/mass remains the same despite a change in shape
P value
probability value of getting results that challenge the original hypothesis; should be less than or equal to 5% in order to maintain statistical significance
shaping
procedure in which reinforcers guide behavior towards closer approximations of a desired behavior
Raymond Cattell
psychologist who used factor analysis to identify 16 personality traits he measured in his 16PF Questionnaire; however, his tests were poorly received by the scientific community for measuring too many dimensions
Albert Bandura
psychologist whose "Bobo Doll" experiment is one of the leading studies in observation learning
George Sperling
psychologist whose tests proved the existence of iconic memory
insanity
psychotic break from reality; sometimes used as a legal defense to prove that the defendant was not capable of willfully committing a crime
mutations
random errors in gene replication that can lead to changes in an animal
variable interval schedule
reinforcement schedule that reinforces a response at UNPREDICTABLE TIME intervals
imprinting
rapid learning that occurs during a brief receptive period soon after birth/hatching, in which animals bonds to the type of animals/objects it meets at birth and begins to pattern its behavior after them
acute schizophrenia (reactive)
rapidly developing schizophrenia, usually with positive symptoms and likely chance of recovery
dissociative identity disorder (DID)
rare dissociative disorder in which a person exhibits two or more distinct and alternative personalities
fugue state (dissociated fugue)
rare psychological disorder in which a person loses memory of their personal identity; characterized by wandering
conversion disorder
rare somatoform disorder in which a person experiences specific and genuine physical symptoms for which there is no physiological basis; conversion of psychological problems into physical problems
basal metabolic rate
rate at which the body exerts energy for basic bodily functions; lower with fat
3/1
ratio of glial cells to neurons
3/2
ratio of sodium to potassium in action potential
self-actualization
realizing your full potential
spontaneous recovery (operant conditioning)
reappearance of an extinguished behavior after a certain time period
spontaneous recovery (classical conditioning)
reappearance of an extinguished conditioned response after a period of time has elapsed
dichotic listening
reception of different messages to either ear; processed via selective attention
naturalistic observation
recording behavior of individuals in their natural environment without interruption (descriptive)
backmasking
recording sounds and messages into an audio track that is meant to be played forwards (used as a test of stimulus detection)
tolerance
reduced effects of a drug as a result of prolonged usage in similar doses; requires the user to take greater doses in order to experience the drug's effects
Neo-Freudians
refers psychodynamic psychologists who incorporate Freudian theories such as the psychic apparatus and unconscious mind into their studies
zone of proximal development (ZDP)
refers to a range of tasks too difficult for a child to learn on their own and thus requiring adult assistance; identified by Vygotsky
deviant
refers to behavior that is different from what is socially acceptable; causes the person distress
ghost child
refers to children born after the death of an earlier child, who may receive increased attention from his or her mother
mental illness
refers to clinical symptoms of any disorder that require psychological treatment
intimacy
refers to close, loving relationships; developed after realization of one's identity
change
refers to gradual changes in personality through interaction with our environments
nature
refers to inherent traits and genetic factors that influence identity (ex: personality, physique)
primary sex characteristics
refers to maturation of reproductive organs
dystonic
refers to negative developmental traits
stability
refers to personality traits that are present during infancy and endure throughout a lifespan
syntonic
refers to positive developmental traits
nurture
refers to the external, environmental factors that affect identity (ex: social relationships, childhood experiences)
secondary sex characteristics
refers to the maturation of non-reproductive sexual characteristics, ex: breasts, hips, deepened voice, etc.
cognition
refers to the reception, processing, storage and usage of information in the brain
correlation
relationship between two variables; refers to the general trends which the variables follow and doesn't prove causation
long term memory
relatively permanent and limitless storehouse of the memory system; allows of retrieval of information
learning
relatively permanent change in organisms' behavior to due experience
homeostasis
relatively stable equilibrium of mental/biological processes; the "normal state"
correlational research
research based on analyzing trends and relationships between variables; no independent/dependent variable, no causation
naturalistic observation
research method in which subjects are observed in their natural environment, uninterrupted by the researcher
survey
research method in which subjects respond to a series of questions
descriptive research
research that describes phenomena without showing cause and effect
Charles Darwin
researcher who pioneered studies on evolution and evolutionary psychology; hypothesized that facial expressions allowed early humans to communicate without the use of language (nonverbal communication)
Harry Harlow
researcher who studied rhesus monkeys separated from their mothers to analyze the role of comfort in social development
unconscious mind
reservoir for repressed, "unacceptable" thoughts, wishes, feelings and memories
compliance
response (submission) made in reaction to a request; adapting actions to someone else's wishes without necessarily believing in them
emotion
response of a whole organism involving physiological arousal, expressive behaviors and conscious experience
reinforcement
rewards given to children when they employ language correctly
iris
ring of muscle that forms the colored portion of the eye around the pupil; controls the size of the pupil opening to adjust for differently-sized light waves entering the eye
semantics
rules by which we derive meaning from morphemes (ex: adding "ed" to the end of some words signifies past tense)
syntax
rules by which we order words into sentences
representative sample
sample size that accurately reflects its population; required for the comparison group in standardized tests
representative sample
sample that represents the rest of its population; data collected on the sample can be used to draw generalizations on the entire population
Kim Peek
savant who became popular after the biographical film Rain Man
personality inventories
self-reporting questionnaires used to determine personality traits; scored objectively, usually by a computer
auditory nerve
sends auditory messages through the thalamus to the auditory cortex
hypnagogic hallucination
sensation of falling, sometimes experienced during stage 1 of sleep
gender identity
sense of being male or female that comes from the role society has assigned us
social identity
sense of self in relation to group membership
identity
sense of self, as defined by Erikson
basic trust
sense that the world is predictable/reliable; develops in children who have a secure attachment to their caregivers
hallucinations
sensory experiences without sensory stimuli (usually auditory)
social script
set of behaviors, actions and/or consequences that serve as instructions on to how to behave in a social setting; usually derived from movies/television or past experiences
gender roles
set of cultural norms that determine expected behaviors for males and females
serotonin, norepinephrine, acetylcholine, glutamate, GABA, epinephrine, dopamine
seven neurotransmitters that comprise the acronym "SNAGGED"
superordinate goal
shared goal that overrides differences between conflicting parties
collective unconscious
shared, inherited reservoir of memory traces from one's ancestors; conceptualized by Carl Jung as an extension of Freud's theories on the unconscious
empathy
sharing/mirroring others' feelings
acuity
sharpness/clarity of vision
quasi-experiment
similar to an experiment, except the data results in a correlation
glucose
simple sugar compound, released more during periods of excitement of stress; stimulates neural activity to increase long term potentiation
heuristic
simple thinking strategy that allows us to make judgments or solve problems, but is usually more error-prone
reflex
simplest form of behavior (ex: sneezing, blinking)
reflexes
simplest form of behavior; exhibited by newborns but lost over time
chronic schizophrenia (process)
slow-developing schizophrenia, usually with negative symptoms and slim chance of recovery
ossicle
small bone found in the middle ear; transmits sounds from the air to the cochlea
sample
smaller group taken from a population
phoneme
smallest distinctive sound unit in language (ex: "bad" vs "bat" [d/t], "pad" vs. "pat" [d/t])
morpheme
smallest unit in language that carries meaning (ex: "pre" (prefix), "ed" (suffix), "I", "a")
ostracism
social exclusion; can lead to suicide and depression
hypnosis
social interaction in which one person "suggests" to the other that certain perceptions, feelings, thoughts and behaviors will spontaneously occur (based on dissociation/split in consciousness)
body dysmorphic disorder (BDD)
somatoform disorder characterized by an obsessive preoccupation with a perceived defect in one's physical appearance
pain disorder
somatoform disorder characterized by chronic pain experienced by a patient that seems to come from psychological stress
factor analysis
statistical procedure used to uncover relationships among multiple variables
inferential statistics
statistics used to draw inferences about an entire population; generalizable
descriptive statistics
statistics used to organize and summarize data about a sample; non-generalizable
nicotine
stimulant drug found in cigarettes that accelerates the nervous system through the release of epinephrine, norepinephrine and dopamine
caffeine
stimulant drug found in coffee that binds to adenosine receptors; withdrawal occurs 50% of the time
cocaine
stimulant drug that causes a major upsurge in the production of dopamine, serotonin and norepinephrine, which depletes the brain's supply of these neurotransmitters and causes a "crash" as the drug loses effect
ecstasy (MDMA)
stimulant/hallucinogen that releases serotonin and dopamine while blocking their reuptake; elicits a feeling of euphoria and increased sensations
neutral stimulus
stimulus that initially produces no response
subliminal message
stimulus that is detected below the absolute threshold (can occur 50% of the time)
unconditioned stimulus (US)
stimulus that naturally and automatically elicits a response without any conditioning
personal unconscious
storehouse of personal memories; believed by Carl Jung to be Freud's definition of the unconscious mind
cortisol
stress-regulating hormone; highly active/constant in children with insecure attachments
scaffold
structure for knowledge gradually attained over the maturation process
Mary Calkins
student of William James; first female president of the APA
G. Stanley Hall
student of William James; founder and first president of the APA
adoption studies
studies that allow researchers to compare the development of children to both their biological and adopted parents
cross-sectional study
study in which multiple researchers test and compare the intelligence scores of people of various ages
double blind procedure
study in which neither the participants nor the experimenters know who is being assigned to the control/experimental group; used in psychopharmacology
longitudinal study
study in which one subject or group is followed and tested over an extended period of time
case study
study of a single case over an extended period of time
adoption study
study of adoptees in order to examine genetic and environmental effects on phenotype
cognitive neuroscience
study of brain activity associated with with cognition (perception, thinking, memory, language)
psychology
study of emotion, cognition and behavior, and their relationship with one another
developmental psychology
study of how an individual grows and changes from birth to death
lobotomy
surgery in which the nerves connecting the frontal lobes to the limbic system are severed; no longer used due to the drastic psychological consequences on one's personality
psychosurgery
surgery that removes/destroys brain tissues to alter behavior; most drastic and least-used form of biomedical therapy
general adaptation syndrome (GAS)
syndrome studied by Hans Selye, during which our bodies go through alarm, resistance and exhaustion in response to stress
methadone
synthetic laboratory variant of opium that has legal uses as a painkiller and treatment for opiate addiction
methamphetamine (crystal meth)
synthetic stimulant drug that increases (and eventually replaces) the production of dopamine
social support system
system of family, friends and pets that provide us with emotional support
grammar
system of rules that enable us to communicate and include semantics and syntax
token economy
system of using coins/tokens as reinforcers of desired behaviors
meta-analysis
systematic procedure for statistically combining the results of multiple studies
door in the face
the ______ ___ ____ ______ phenomenon occurs when you make a large or outrageous request that you know the other person will refuse, but then follow it up with a smaller, more agreeable one
foot in the door
the ______ ___ _____ _______ phenomenon is the tendency for people to comply with larger requests if they agree to a series of smaller, simpler ones beforehand
thalamus, hippocampus
the ___________ determines where info needs to go in order to be perceived; this destination is the ___________________
central
the ____________ route to persuasion involves the use of facts, figures and other information that listeners can process and potentially be persuaded by
peripheral
the _______________ route to persuasion involves invoking instinctive judgments by the listener to change their opinion (ex: appearance, celebrity endorsements)
perceptual adaptation
the ability to adjust to an artificially displaced or inverted field of vision
selective attention
the ability to focus attention on certain stimuli over others; often facilitates hypnosis
precognition
the ability to perceive future events
depth perception
the ability to perceive objects in three dimensions
clairvoyance
the ability to perceive remote events that are outside of one's sensory field
modeling
the act of imitating behavior
ethnocentrism
the basic belief that our culture or group is superior to others
higher
the concentration of neurotransmitters INSIDE an open vesicle is ___________ than the concentration of neurotransmitters on the EXTERIOR
Franz Gall
the creator of phrenology
extinction (classical conditioning)
the diminishing of a conditioned response when the unconditioned stimulus does NOT follow the conditioned stimulus
axon terminal (terminal buttons)
the enlarged ends of dendrites in a neuron, by which neural messages make synaptic contact with other neurons
preconventional morality
the first LEVEL of Kohlberg's stages of morality; involves children under the age of 9 and is self-centered
sensorimotor stage
the first of Piaget's four stages of development, going from birth to two years of sage; children learn to comprehend using their senses and gain control of their motor cortex
formal operational stage
the fourth of Piaget's four stages of development, going from age 12 to adulthood; children develop abstract thinking and systematic reasoning skills
frustration-aggression principle
the idea that frustration creates anger, which could generate aggression
observational learning theory
the idea that one learns through observing
social influence theory
the idea that we are "role playing" depending on our social situation; applies to hypnosis in that the subject's dedication to their role may enable them to ignore distracting stimuli
attribution theory
the idea that we explain someone's behavior by linking it to either the situation or the person's disposition
chameleon effect
the idea that we like to "fit in" instead of stick out; this also involves mimicking others' tone and expressions
scapegoat theory
the idea that we look for someone to blame for societal issues
diffusion of responsibility
the idea that we think someone else will step up and help a situation
normative social influence
the idea that we want to gain approval (or avoid disapproval) from society
social exchange theory
the idea that we weigh the benefits and costs of a relationship and use that as a rationale for performing an altruistic act
informational social influence
the idea that we're unsure how to act in social situations and therefore follow others' behavior based on observing them
contact theory
the idea/theory that contact between groups lowers tension
relearning
the learning of previously-learned material for a second time
parallel processing
the mind's ability to process many aspects of a problem or stimulus simultaneously (ex: vision - color, movement, form, depth)
b (volume)
the number of hair cells stimulated at once determines the __________ of the sound a. frequency b. volume c. distance
conventional morality
the second LEVEL of Kohlberg's stages of morality; involves adolescents/adults and focuses on laws, norms, social rules and helping others
preoperational stage
the second of Piaget's four stages of development, going from two to six/seven years of age; children develop language and cognition skills
psychokinesis
the supposed ability to move objects by mental effort alone
social trap
the tendency for conflicting parties to get caught in destructive behavior whenever they pursue their own interests
post-conventional morality
the third LEVEL of Kohlberg's stages of morality; involves individuals that see themselves as separate from society and view rules as meant for change
concrete operational stage
the third of Piaget's four stages of development, going six/seven to eleven years of age; children develop the ability to understand conservation, analogies and arithmetic
variance, standard deviation
the two measures of dispersion
object permanence
the understanding that objects continue to exist even when they can't be observed, ex: seen, heard, touched, etc. (absent in babies during their sensorimotor stage)
framing
the way a problem or scenario is presented; can alter cognition behind a response (ex: wording effect)
social cognition
the way we gather, use and interpret information about the social aspects of the world around us; impacts our view on ourselves and others
proximity, similarity
two main factors that influence grouping/association of stimuli
motivated forgetting
theorized psychological behavior in which people may forget unwanted/repressed memories; conceived by Sigmund Freud
dissociation theory
theory conceived by Ernst Hilgard, suggesting that hypnosis causes one's conscious mind to split into various levels that operate independent of one another
activation synthesis theory
theory conceived by scientist Allan Hobson that random visual memories of our dreams result from our brains' attempts at organizing and perceiving stimuli
natural selection
theory developed by Charles Darwin that allows us to identify behavior/mental processes that we and other animals have developed and pass on to lead to increased reproduction/survival
cognitive appraisal theory
theory developed by Richard Lazarus, stating that our emotional experience depends on our interpretation (cognition) of our physiological responses to the situation we are in
opponent processing theory
theory developed by Richard Solomon, stating that experiencing a negative emotion suppresses positive emotions (ex: fear suppresses pleasure) - hint: name is shared with a color vision theory
discontinuity
theory of development based on a series of distinct, sequential stages that build upon one another
continuity
theory of development based on gradual, cumulative changes from conception to death
Schacter-Singer theory of emotion
theory of emotion stating that emotional responses are determined by our cognition of an event (event >> physiological response >> cognition >> emotion)
James-Lange theory of emotion
theory of emotion stating that our awareness of physiological responses leads to our conscious experience of emotion (based on functionalism) - stimulus >> response >> emotion
Common-Bard theory of emotion
theory of emotion stating that our conscious experience of emotion accompanies physiological response (stimulus >> response + emotion at the same time)
signal detection theory
theory predicting how and when we detect the presence of a fake stimulus (signal) amidst background information (noise)
diathesis-stress model
theory stating that a genetic predisposition towards a disorder could be triggered/worsened by environmental events
opponent processing theory
theory stating that opposing retinal processes (red/green, yellow/blue, white/black) enable color vision
social cognitive theory
theory stating that pieces of one's knowledge acquisition can be directly related to observing others' social interactions, experiences, etc.
Young-Helmholtz trichromatic theory
theory stating that the retina contains three different color receptors (red, blue, green) which, when stimulated in combination, can produce the perception of any color
magical number seven, plus or minus two
theory stating that we can typically store about seven bits of information in our short term memory at one time
frequency theory
theory stating that we hear different pitches based on the frequency (speed) at which the cochlea vibrates
place theory
theory stating that we hear different pitches because sound waves trigger activity at different spots on the cochlear membrane
theory of mind
theory suggesting our ability to judge someone else's mental state
social-cognitive theory
theory that behavior is influenced by the interaction between personality traits and cognitive interpretation of one's social environment
psychoanalytic approach
therapy conceived by Sigmund Freud that attempts to bring repressed memories into conscious awareness
biomedical approach
therapy involving prescribed medications/medical procedures that directly act on the patient's nervous system
humanistic approach
therapy that aims to boost self-fulfillment by helping increase one's self-awareness and self-acceptance
insight therapy
therapy that aims to improve psychological functioning by increasing client awareness of underlying motives/defenses; applies to both psychoanalysis and humanism
behavioral approach (behaviorism)
therapy that applies principles of learning (conditioning) to eliminate maladaptive behavior
cognitive approach
therapy that involves the introduction of more adaptive forms of thought in order to remedy maladaptive behavior
eclectic approach
therapy that uses techniques from both psychotherapy and biomedical therapy
hypnotherapy
therapy through hypnosis; can be used to possibly enable patients to treat themselves and is often an effective treatment for chronic pain
metacognition
thinking about thinking
suprachiasmatic nucleus
tiny region above the optic nerve that regulates your circadian rhythm
barbiturate
tranquilizer that slows down the nervous system; used as a sedative or sleep medication
lens
transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to help focus images on the retina
psychotherapy
treatment involving psychological techniques, patient-therapist interaction, and no drugs
randomized clinical trials
trials that involve randomly-assigned patients to therapy or no therapy in order to evaluate the effectiveness of psychotherapy
cochlea
tube in the inner ear carrying fluid that stimulates the nerve cells in the basilar membrane
fraternal twins (dizygotic)
twins that develop from separate fertilized eggs and share a fetal environment but are no more similar than ordinary siblings
identical twins (monozygotic)
twins that develop from the same fertilized egg and are genetically identical, sharing the same DNA and chromosomal makeup
Y chromosome, twin studies
two GENETIC factors that affect aggression
thalamus, amygdala
two areas of the brain that are particularly active during schizophrenic hallucinations
alone, guilty
two cases in which altruism works: 1. when __________ 2. when feeling ___________
sodium, potassium
two compounds that make up the positively-charged ions used in action potential
sodium, chloride
two compounds whose channels can open to modify a receptor in a post-synaptic neuron
obedience, punishment
two factors influencing STAGE 1 of Kohlberg's stages of morality; actions are taken based on rewards/punishments
authority, social order
two factors influencing STAGE 4 of Kohlberg's stages of morality; individuals place importance on upholding societal rules
Weschler test (Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale/WAIS)
type of intelligence test measuring overall intelligence, comprehension, perceptual organization, working memory and processing speed, all to help identify learning disabilities
insight learning
type of learning discovered by Wolfgang Kohler, in which one arrives at a solution or realization without any prior cognition
operant conditioning
type of learning in which a behavior is strengthened if followed by a reinforcer
observational learning
type of learning in which behavior is modeled based on observing others' behavior
classical conditioning
type of learning in which one learns to link two or more stimuli (involuntary responses that we learn to coordinate with certain stimuli)
intrinsic motivation
type of motivation driving behaviors done for one's own self-interest; more likely to guarantee success in academics and career choices
extrinsic motivation
type of motivation driving behaviors done for rewards or results; applies to the overjustification effect
interneuron
type of neuron located in the spinal cord and brain; transmits impulses between other neurons
sensory (afferent)
type of neuron that receives neural messages at sensory receptor sites (ex: from touch) and sends messages to the brain in response
motor (efferent)
type of neuron that transmits messages from the brain back to muscles/glands to coordinate a response
inhibitory
type of neurotransmitter that PREVENTS neural firing
excitatory
type of neurotransmitter that PROMOTES neural firing
mono amine
type of neurotransmitter that has only one NH2 group
behavior modification
type of operant conditioning that reinforces desired behaviors and ignores/punishes maladaptive behaviors in order to extinguish them
authoritative
type of parenting style exhibited by parents who are both demanding and responsive, explaining the reasoning for certain rules and encouraging discussion for rules once their children are older
authoritarian
type of parenting style exhibited by parents who impose rules and expect obedience without much leniency
permissive
type of parenting style exhibited by parents who submit to their children's desires, making few demands and using little punishment
figure-ground relationship
type of perceptual grouping in which our brains perceive objects as distinct from their background
institutional power
type of power characterized by organizing others for the advancement of an institution/group
personal power
type of power characterized for directing others for furthering one's sense of superiority
time based prospective memory
type of prospective memory that involves remembering to perform a certain action at a PARTICULAR TIME
event based prospective memory
type of prospective memory that involves remembering to perform a certain action under SPECIFIC CIRCUMSTANCES
human factors psychology
type of psychology that focuses on aiding product design that emphasizes on user-friendliness and ergonomic value
clinical psychology
type of psychology that focuses on diagnosing and testing mental, emotional and behavioral psychology
industrial/organizational psychology
type of psychology that focuses on factors within a workplace environment that motivate employees to increase productivity; often hired by major corporations to place people in positions matching their interests
counseling psychology
type of psychology that focuses on helping people overcome everyday stress, challenges and personal issues (no diagnosis or treatment)
school psychology
type of psychology that focuses on identifying learning disorders or cognitive disabilities that impair student learning
developmental psychology
type of psychology that focuses on physical, cognitive and social changes that humans undergo; studies all stages of life
psychometric psychology
type of psychology that focuses on psychological testing based on statistical procedures; measures tests based on standardization, reliability and validity
educational psychology
type of psychology that focuses on the effects of a learning environment on student learning
biological psychology
type of psychology that focuses on the study of the brain and the nervous system; also known as neuroscience
cognitive psychology
type of psychology that focuses on thoughts, perception, learning, memory and problem solving (and their effects on behavior)
personality psychology
type of psychology that focuses on traits that determine human behavior
fetus
unborn offspring that develops 8-9 weeks into conception and begins development of organs
embryo
unborn offspring that develops about two weeks into conception after the placenta attaches a zygote to the mother's uterine wall
automatic processing
unconscious encoding of information such as time, space, frequency and well-learned information
narcolepsy
uncontrollable sleep attacks in which the person lapses directly into REM sleep
G factor (generalized intelligence)
underlying mental ability measured by an intelligence test; conceived by Charles Spearman
self concept
understanding of oneself; impaired in children deprived of attachment
object permanence
understanding that objects continue to exist even when they cannot be observed (ex: seen, heard, touched etc.); develops around 8 months of age
Freudian slip
unintentional error in speech regarded as revealing unconscious feelings/thoughts
prejudice
unjustifiable and usually negative attitude towards a group
discrimination
unjustifiable negative behavior towards a group
discrimination
unjustified action taken against others based on prejudice
prejudice
unjustified attitude held towards others
unconditioned response (UR)
unlearned, involuntary, naturally occurring response to an unconditioned stimulus
altruism
unselfish regard for the welfare of others
behavior modification
used to teach children a new, desirable behavior by rewarding the desirable behavior and ignoring any undesired behaviors
independent variable
variable in an experiment that is compared or manipulated
independent variable
variable in an experiment that is manipulated
dependent variable
variable in an experiment that is measured
dependent variable
variable in an experiment that is measured; experimental outcome
controlled variable
variable in an experiment that is unchanged
uncontrolled variable
variable that a researcher cannot or did not control
defense mechanisms
various forms of psychological conflict resolution in the latent psychosexual stage of development; developed by the ego to resolve conflict between the id and superego
legally insane
verdict in which the defendant receives psychological treatment and is released when deemed mentally competent
guilty but mentally ill
verdict in which the defendant receives psychological treatment but must also serve jail time and be held responsible for their crime
tympanic membrane (eardrum)
vibrates in response to sound waves
1. denial 2. anger 3. bargaining 4. depression 5. acceptance
what are the five stages of grief (in order - list them in numerical format)?
-3, -2, -1, M, 1, 2, 3
what are the seven Z score values?
exposure therapy, aversive conditioning
what are the two types of counterconditioning?
d (all of the above)
what causes REM rebound? a. sleep deprivation b. alcohol hangovers c. sleep medications d. all of the above
c (stay up as late as you can in your new location)
what do you do if you experience jet lag? a. go to sleep as soon as you arrive at your new location b. take melatonin pills c. stay up as late as you can in your new location d. take naps frequently across the day
b (there are no clearly-defined variables or hypothesis and thus it is not an experiment - the other three choices are ethical concerns, not design flaws)
what is a DESIGN FLAW in Zimbardo's prison experiment? a. the prisoners were subject to psychological torture b. there are no clearly-defined variables or hypothesis and thus it is not an experiment c. the guards were becoming increasingly brutal and violent d. the prisoners were forced into dismal and dirty conditions and denied freedom
d (a & b)
what is an adverse effect of experiencing long term stress? a. shrunken hippocampus b. degraded neural connections c. nightmares d. a & b
a (1, 2, 3, 4, 3, 2, REM, 2, 3, 4...)
what is the correct order of the sleep cycle? a. 1, 2, 3, 4, 3, 2, REM, 2, 3, 4... b. 4, 3, 2, 1, 2, 3, 4, REM, 4, 3, 2... c. REM, 1, 2, 3, 4, REM, 1... d. 2, 3, 4, 3, REM, 2, 1, 2, REM, 4, 3, 2...
d (a & b)
what led to the move from asylums to hospitals in 1900s? a. discovery that syphilis infects the brain b. reform efforts for humane treatment c. improved medical technology d. a & b
b (short-term memories that haven't been encoded are lost)
what may happen to your memory if you experience head trauma or an electroshock? a. previously-encoded memories are lost b. short-term memories that haven't been encoded are lost c. long-term memories are lost d. repressed memories are brought forth
mean, median, mode
what the three measures of central tendency?
b (hospitals were deinstitutionalized)
what was major reform in mental health treatment occurred in the 1950s? a. hospitals replaced asylums b. hospitals were deinstitutionalized c. asylums received better sanitation standards d. medical technologies improved
a (PTSD)
which of the following anxiety disorders does the behavioral perspective NOT attempt to explain? a. PTSD b. phobias c. panic disorder d. OCD
a (hit)
when a signal is present and the individual is able to respond to it, the detection is a a. hit b. miss
b (miss)
when a signal is present but there is no response from the individual, the detection is a a. hit b. miss
b (during the peak of their fertility)
when are women's natural voices most commonly perceived as attractive or "sexy"? a. during sexual intercourse b. during the peak of their fertility c. during their mid-30's d. during pregnancy
correct rejection
when no stimulus is present and the individual does not respond
false alarm
when no stimulus is present but the individual responds as if there was one
blame the victim dynamic
when one concludes that a victim got what they deserved or "had it coming to them"
smaller, bigger
when perceiving motion, objects getting ____________ are "retreating" while objects getting ______________ are "approaching"
conformity
when we adjust or behavior/thinking to match a group standard
dispositional attribution
when we attribute a person's behavior to their inherent characteristics
situational attribution
when we attribute a person's behavior to their situation
c (case studies/interviews)
where did Freud gather most of his research? a. neuroscience b. surveys/questionnaires c. case studies/interviews d. projective tests
c (wrestling)
which if the following is NOT one of the main ways to alleviate stress? a. aerobic exercise b. spirituality/faith c. wrestling d. meditation
d (130)
which intelligence test score marks the threshold above which the "high extreme" end of the spectrum lies? a. 80 b. 100 c. 120 d. 130
b (70)
which intelligence test score marks the threshold below which the "low extreme" end of the spectrum lies? a. 60 b. 70 c. 80 d. 85
b (temporal)
which lobe is the auditory cortex located in? a. parietal b. temporal c. frontal d. occipital
a (axis I)
which of the five axes of clinical questioning assesses whether a clinical syndrome is present? a. axis I b. axis II c. axis III d. axis IV e. axis V
c (axis III)
which of the five axes of clinical questioning assesses whether a general medical condition (ex: diabetes, hypertension) is present? a. axis I b. axis II c. axis III d. axis IV e. axis V
b (axis II)
which of the five axes of clinical questioning assesses whether a personality disorder or cognitive disability is present? a. axis I b. axis II c. axis III d. axis IV e. axis V
d (axis IV)
which of the five axes of clinical questioning assesses whether psychosocial or environmental issues are present? a. axis I b. axis II c. axis III d. axis IV e. axis V
e (axis V)
which of the five axes of clinical questioning provides a global assessment of the patient's function? a. axis I b. axis II c. axis III d. axis IV e. axis V
c (overactive anterior cingulate cortex)
which of the following explanations of anxiety disorders is NOT part of the cognitive perspective? a. negative/irrational/unrealistic thoughts b. maladaptive thoughts c. overactive anterior cingulate cortex d. negative/pessimistic explanatory style
a (anxious-resistant)
which of the following insecure attachment types applies to mothers who are only engaged with their children on their own terms? a. anxious-resistant b. anxious-avoidant c. disorganized-disoriented
b (anxious-avoidant)
which of the following insecure attachment types applies to mothers who do not engage the child? a. anxious-resistant b. anxious-avoidant c. disorganized-disoriented
c (disorganized-disoriented)
which of the following insecure attachment types applies to mothers who have experienced trauma/abuse before or after childbirth? a. anxious-resistant b. anxious-avoidant c. disorganized-disoriented
c (hallucinations)
which of the following is NOT a NEGATIVE symptom of schizophrenia? a. toneless voice b. expressionless face c. hallucinations d. catatonia
a (catatonia)
which of the following is NOT a POSITIVE symptom of schizophrenia? a. catatonia b. hallucinations c. word salad d. inappropriate emotions
d (all of the above are causes of grouping)
which of the following is NOT a cause of grouping? a. proximity b. connectedness c. continuation d. all of the above are causes of grouping
d (the group is at least two people)
which of the following is NOT a condition that increases conformity? a. you feel insecure b. you admire the group's status or members c. the group is at least three people d. the group is at least two people e. you haven't made a prior commitment
c (the person receiving orders is generally resistant to authority)
which of the following is NOT a condition that leads to obedience? a. the person giving orders is in close proximity b. the person giving orders is an authority figure c. the person receiving orders is generally resistant to authority d. the victim is depersonalized and at a distance e. there are no role models for defiance
c (fatigue)
which of the following is NOT a factor that leads to hypnosis? a. authoritative personality b. social influence c. fatigue d. imagination
c (only collectivist)
which of the following is NOT a flaw in the humanistic perspective? a. subjective b. only individualistic c. only collectivist d. does not consider evil
c (birth defects - this is genetic (nature))
which of the following is NOT a possible environmental/nurture factor that leads to obesity? a. sleep loss b. social conformity c. birth defects d. modeling parents' behavior e. reinforcement
d (catatonia)
which of the following is NOT a side effect of SNRI drugs? a. dry mouth b. weight gain c. hypertension d. catatonia
c (personality inventories)
which of the following is NOT a technique used in the psychoanalytic approach? a. hypnosis b. dream analysis c. personality inventories d. projective tests
c (economic)
which of the following is NOT among Gardner's 8 types of intelligence? a. kinesthetic b. interpersonal c. economic d. intrapersonal
d (political)
which of the following is NOT among Gardner's 8 types of intelligence? a. linguistic b. musical c. naturalistic d. political
b (precognitive)
which of the following is NOT among Gardner's 8 types of intelligence? a. logical b. precognitive c. interpersonal d. spatial
d (reflection)
which of the following is NOT among the four most common memory archetypes? a. shadow b. anima c. animus d. reflection
b (anxious-disorganized)
which of the following is NOT among the three types of insecure attachment? a. anxious-resistant b. anxious-disorganized c. anxious-avoidant d. disorganized-disoriented
b (ativan)
which of the following is NOT an SSRI antidepressant? a. prozac b. ativan c. paxil d. zoloft
c (clozapine)
which of the following is NOT an antianxiety drug? a. benzodiazepine b. xanax c. clozapine d. ativan
d (idea of female superiority)
which of the following is NOT an error in Freud's studies? a. subjectivity b. focus on childhood c. idea of female inferiority d. idea of female superiority
c (misinformation in the manual)
which of the following is NOT an issue identified with using the DSM-V? a. potential overdiagnosis b. labels/stigma c. misinformation in the manual d. potential misdiagnosis
d (biting)
which of the following is NOT one of newborns' primary reflexes? a. swallowing b. breathing c. rooting d. biting
d (stranger anxiety in mother's presence)
which of the following is NOT one of the characteristics of a child with secure attachment?> a. distress @ mother's absence b. exploratory personality c. seeking contact with a mother upon her return from an absence d. stranger anxiety in mother's presence
c (greater self-reliance/independence as adults)
which of the following is NOT one of the consequences of attachment deprivation? a. withdrawn/frightened temperament b. higher probability of abuse c. greater self-reliance/independence as adults d. difficulty forming relationships
d (accelerated nervous system)
which of the following is NOT one of the effects of alcohol? a. loosened inhibitions b. suppressed REM sleep c. decelerated nervous system d. accelerated nervous system
c (extrinsic motivation)
which of the following is NOT one of the five components of creativity? a. imaginative thinking b. creative environment/culture c. extrinsic motivation d. intrinsic motivation e. venturesome personality
c (spicy - this is a somatosensation)
which of the following is NOT one of the five tastes? a. bitter b. sweet c. spicy d. salty e. umami
b (sleep helps protect from many diseases)
which of the following is NOT one of the main theories on why we sleep? a. sleep protects us b. sleep helps protect from many diseases c. sleep restores brain tissue d. sleep helps maintain memory
c (fundamental attribution error)
which of the following is NOT one of the problems of trait theory? a. person-situation controversy b. does not address individual changes/differences c. fundamental attribution error d. social desirability effect
c (it only focuses on white women)
which of the following is NOT one of the shortcomings identified in Kohlberg's morality study? a. it only focuses on white males b. it only applies to individualist societies c. it only focuses on white women d. it does not factor in a female perspective
b (they come unhappy and leave happy)
which of the following is NOT part of the way CLIENTS view psychotherapy? a. they enter in a time of crisis and hope to improve on their own b. they come unhappy and leave happy c. they want to believe it's effective d. they speak kindly of their therapists no matter what
c (OCD)
which of the following is NOT treated with aversive conditioning? a. alcoholism b. nail biting c. OCD d. bedwetting
b (crystallized intelligence)
which of the following is NOT typically lost as a result of age? a. immune system strength b. crystallized intelligence c. fluid intelligence d. long-term potentiation of memories
b (anxiolytics)
which of the following is NOT used to treat bipolar disorder? a. mood stabilizers b. anxiolytics c. anticonvulsants d. antipsychotics
d (b & c)
which of the following is a Freudian theory that remains valid in present-day psychodynamic studies? a. Freudian slips b. unconscious mind c. defense mechanisms d. b & c`
d (b & c)
which of the following is a possible treatment for night terrors? a. melatonin b. benzodiazepine c. anti-depressants d. b & c
a (benzodiazepine)
which of the following is a treatment for REM behavior disorder? a. benzodiazepine b. morphine c. melatonin d. medical marijuana
c (nightguards)
which of the following is a treatment for bruxism? a. benzodiazepine b. melatonin c. nightguards d. anti-depressants
d (a & b)
which of the following is a treatment for insomnia? a. therapy b. anti-anxiety medication c. stimulant drugs d. a & b
b (stimulant drugs)
which of the following is a treatment for narcolepsy? a. melatonin b. stimulant drugs c. morphine d. anti-anxiety medication
d (all of the above)
which of the following is a viable treatment to mental illness? a. 2+ social interactions per week b. optimism c. healthy diet d. all of the above
d (all of the above)
which of the following is a viable treatment to mental illness? a. 30 minutes of exercise per day b. 30 minutes of morning light per day c. 7-8 hours average sleep d. all of the above
d (schizophrenia)
which of the following is caused by an excess of dopamine? a. emphysema b. Alzheimer's c. Parkinson's d. schizophrenia
b (frontal lobe)
which of the following is inactive or impaired in people suffering from depression? a. parietal lobe b. frontal lobe c. hypothalamus d. corpus callosum
d (all of the above are stressful events)
which of the following is not one a category of stressful events? a. catastrophes b. daily hassles c. significant life changes d. all of the above are stressful events
b (glucose)
which of the following is secreted into the bloodstream by the liver in response to adrenaline release from the sympathetic nervous system? a. oxygen b. glucose c. epinephrine d. testosterone
d (optic nerve >> thalamus >> visual cortex)
which of the following is the correct order in which information travels from the optic nerve? a. optic nerve >> visual cortex >> thalamus b. thalamus >> visual cortex >> optic nerve c. visual cortex >> thalamus >> optic nerve d. optic nerve >> thalamus >> visual cortex
c (brain stem >> thalamus >> gustatory cortex)
which of the following is the correct path taken by neural impulses from cranial nerve 7? a. brain stem >> gustatory cortex >> thalamus b. gustatory cortex >> brain stem >> thalamus c. brain stem >> thalamus >> gustatory cortex d. thalamus >> gustatory cortex >> brain stem
a (lithium)
which of the following is the most common mood stabilizer? a. lithium b. prozac c. LSD d. paxil
c (encoding)
which of the following is the process of turning short-term memories into long-term memories? a. storage b. recall c. encoding d. attention
d (b & c)
which of the following neurotransmitters can lead to depression and anxiety at low levels? a. GABA b. norepinephrine c. serotonin d. b & c
b (reticular formation)
which of the following organs in the brain regulates the habituation of senses? a. amygdala b. reticular formation c. angular gyrus d. hippocampus
b (permissive)
which of the following parenting styles causes children to become immature and aggressive? a. authoritative b. permissive c. authoritarian
a (authoritative)
which of the following parenting styles causes children to have high self-esteem, self-reliance, social competence and emotional intelligence? a. authoritative b. permissive c. authoritarian
c (authoritarian)
which of the following parenting styles causes children to have lower self-esteem, weak social skills and a conditioned sense of fear? a. authoritative b. permissive c. authoritarian
b (Vygotsky)
which of the following psychologists emphasized on language in their theories on development? a. Piaget b. Vygotsky c. Freud d. Zimbardo
a (clients come unhappy and leave happy)
which of the following summarizes the way CLINICIANS view psychotherapy? a. clients come unhappy and leave happy b. problems may persist with a client c. clients often improve out of confirmation bias d. clients leave therapy wanting to improve themselves
d (fluid operational stage)
which of the following was NOT one of Jean Piaget's stages of development? a. sensorimotor stage b. preoperational stage c. concrete operational stage d. fluid operational stage
b (only middle-class men were used as a sample - the other three options are ethical concerns, not design flaws)
which of the following was a DESIGN FLAW in Milgram's experiment? a. mental distress experienced by participants b. only middle-class men were used as a sample c. participants weren't debriefed on the details of the experiment d. participants were persuaded or ordered to continue their involvement in the experiment
c (participants weren't debriefed on the details of the experiment - the other three options are design flaws, not ethical concerns)
which of the following was an ETHICAL CONCERN in Milgram's experiment? a. only men were chosen as a sample b. only "blue collar" workers that were used to receiving orders were chosen c. participants weren't debriefed on the details of the experiment
b (children who didn't view aggressive adults)
which of the following was the CONTROL group in Bandura's Bobo Doll experiment? a. children who viewed aggressive adults b. children who didn't view aggressive adults
a (children who viewed aggressive adults)
which of the following was the EXPERIMENTAL group in Bandura's Bobo Doll experiment? a. children who viewed aggressive adults b. children who didn't view aggressive adults
a (Nazi war crimes during World War II - the other three events all took place long after Milgram's experiment)
which of the following was the primary influence behind Milgram's experiment? a. Nazi war crimes during World War II b. the Abu Ghraib prison torture scandal in Iraq c. Zimbardo's prison experiment at Stanford d. rumors surrounding the Church of Scientology
frontal cortex
which part of the brain feeds signals back to an activity to encourage more of a behavior?
c (variable ratio)
which reinforcement schedule is the most effective? a. variable interval b. fixed ratio c. variable ratio d. fixed interval
3, 4
which stages of sleep do you lose as the night progresses?
a (glucose, amygdala)
which two biological components of memory ensure the permanence of memories produced during stressful situations? a. glucose, amygdala b. glutamate, amygdala c. serotonin, hippocampus d. thalamus, serotonin
simultaneous, backward
which two conditioning schedules do NOT work?
b (frontal, parietal)
which two lobes of the brain are larger than other areas in brains displaying high intelligence (ex: Einstein)? a. occipital, frontal b. frontal, parietal c. temporal, parietal d. frontal, temporal
norepinephrine, serotonin
which two neurotransmitters are low during depression?
b (hypothalamus, pituitary gland)
which two organs produce cortisol during your body's fight-or-flight response? a. hypothalamus, pineal gland b. hypothalamus, pituitary gland c. hippocampus, pituitary gland d. hippocampus, liver
lymphocytes
white blood cells that fight infections
Kitty Genovese
woman who was raped and murdered in New York City in 1964; bystanders closed their windows instead of helping
b (relational - mainly ties to prolonged nature of pregnancy and subsequent childcare)
women approach sex in a ____________ manner a. recreational b. relational
c (dominant, bold, affluent)
women are primarily attracted to men who are... a. submissive, weak, poor b. submissive, bold, affluent c. dominant, bold, affluent d. dominant, shy, poor