AP Psych EVERYTHING
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
A disorder characterized by restlessness, inattentiveness, and impulsivity
Centration
A preoperational thought pattern involving the inability to take into account more than one factor at a time
Imprinting
A primitive form of learning in which some young animals follow and form an attachment to the first moving object they see and hear
Unstructured interview
An interview format in which the clinician asks spontaneous questions that are based on issues that arise during the interview
Amenorrhea
The absence of menstrual cycles
Haptic perception
The active exploration of the environment by touching and grasping objects with our hands
Conditioned defensive burying
The burial of a source of aversive stimulation by rodents
Discrimination
The capacity to distinguish between similar but distinct stimuli
Comparison level
The cost-benefit ratio that people believe they deserve or could attain in another relationship
Manipulation
The creation of an artificial pattern of variation in a variable in order to determine its causal powers
Extrinsic motivation
The desire to engage in activity to achieve an external consequence, such as a reward
Geropsychology
The field of psychology concerned with the mental health of elderly people
Multicultural psychology
The field of psychology that examines the impact of culture, race, ethnicity, gender, and similar factors on our behaviors and thoughts and focuses on how such factors may influence the origin, nature, and treatment of abnormal behavior
Chemoaffinity hypothesis
The hypothesis that growing axons are attracted to the correct targets by different chemicals released by the target sites
Social exchange
The hypothesis that people remain in relationships only as long as they perceive a favorable ration of costs to benefits
Person-situation controversy
The question of whether behavior is caused more by personality or by situational factors
Reasoning
A mental activity that consists of organizing information or beliefs into a series of steps to reach conclusions
Clinical psychologist
A mental health professional who has earned a doctorate in clinical psychology
Employee assistance program
A mental health program offered by a business to its employees
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
A neuroimaging technique used to visualize internal functioning of the brain or body
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
A neuroimaging technique used to visualize internal structures of the brain or body
Pick's disease
A neurological disease that affects the frontal and temporal lobes, causing a neurocognitive disorder
Paraprofessional
A person without previous professional training who provides services under the supervision of a mental health professional
Outcome expectancies
A person's assumptions about the likely consequences of a future behavior
Self-concept
A person's explicit knowledge of his or her own behaviors, traits, and other personal characteristics
Baseline data
A person's initial response level on a test or scale
Stress response
A person's particular reactions to stress
Strange situation
A behavioral test developed by Mary Ainsworth that is used to determine a child's attachment style
Olfactory bulb
A brain structure located above the nasal cavity beneath the frontal lobes
Reticular formation
A brain structure that regulates sleep, wakefulness, and levels of arousal
Pons
A brain structure that relays information from the cerebellum to the rest of the brain
Encopresis
A disorder characterized by repeated defecating in inappropriate places, such as one's clothing
Gambling disorder
A disorder marked by persistent and recurring gambling behavior, leading to a range of life problems
Naturalistic observation
A research method in which subjects are observed in their natural environment
MAO inhibitor
An antidepressant drug that prevents the action of the enzyme monoamine oxidase
Agoraphobia
An anxiety disorder marked by a fear of being in situations in which escape may be difficult or impossible
Panic disorder
An anxiety disorder marked by recurrent and unpredictable panic attacks
Carousel apparatus
An apparatus used to study the effects of sleep deprivation in laboratory rats
Covert sensitization
A behavioral treatment for eliminating unwanted behavior by pairing the behavior with unpleasant mental images
Diencephalon
A brain area, consisting of the mammillary bodies, thalamus, and hypothalamus, that plays a key role in transforming short-term to long-term memory, among other functions
Ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH)
A brain region that depresses hunger when activated
Lateral hypothalamus (LH)
A brain region that produces hunger when activated
Convulsion
A brain seizure
Overregularization
Applying a grammatical rule too widely and creating incorrect forms
Normal distribution
A bell-shaped curve, describing the spread of a characteristic throughout a population
Diazepam
A benzodiazepine drug, marketed as Valium
Taste-aversion learning
A biological tendency in which an organism learns, after a single experience, to avoid a food with a certain taste, if eating is followed by illness
Shuttle box
A box separated in the middle by a barrier that an animal can jump over in order to escape or avoid shock
Operant chamber
A boxlike apparatus that can be programmed to deliver reinforcers and punishers contingent on an animal's behavior. The operant chamber is often called a "Skinner box."
Ion
A atom or group of atoms that has a positive or negative electrical charge
Histogram
A bar graph depicting a frequency distribution. The height of the bars indicates the frequency of a group of scores
Nicotine
A alkaloid (nitrogen-containing chemical) derived from tobacco or produced in the laboratory
Subintentional death
A death in which the victim plays an indirect, hidden, partial, or unconscious role
Plethysmograph
A device used to measure sexual arousal
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
A disorder characterized by chronic physiological arousal, recurrent unwanted thoughts or images of the trauma, and avoidance of things that call the traumatic event to mind
Internet gaming disorder
A disorder marked by persistent, recurrent, and excessive Internet activity, particularly gaming. Recommended for further study by the DSM study group
Operant conditioning
A form of behavioral learning in which the probability of a response is changed by its consequences-that is, by the stimuli that follow the response
Catatonic excitement
A form of catatonia in which a person moves excitedly, sometimes with wild waving of the arms and legs
Severe intellectual disability
A level of intellectual disability (IQ between 20 and 34) at which individuals require careful supervision and can learn to perform basic work in a structured and sheltered setting
Self-serving bias
People's tendency to take credit for their successes but downplay responsibility for their failures
Mood-congruent memory
A memory process that selectively retrieves memories that are congruent with (match) one's mood
Major neurocognitive disorder
A neurocognitive disorder in which the decline in cognitive functioning is substantial and interferes with the ability to be independent
Tegmentum
A part of the midbrain involved in movement and arousal
Response performance
A research method in which researchers quantify perceptual or cognitive processes in response to a specific stimulus
Partial reinforcement
A type of learning in which behavior is reinforced intermittently
Type I schizophrenia
According to some theorists, a type of schizophrenia dominated by positive symptoms, such as delusions, hallucinations, and certain formal thought disorders
Thanatos
According to the Freudian view, the basic death instinct that functions in opposition to the life instinct
Central traits
According to trait theory, traits that form the basis of personality
Constructional praxis
Ability to motorically produce or manipulate items so that they have a particular spatial relationship
Symbolic representations
Abstract mental representations that do not correspond to the physical features of objects or ideas
Penis envy
According to Freud, the female desire to have a penis-a condition that usually results in their attraction to males
Electra complex
According to Freud, the pattern of desires all girls experience during the phallic stage, in which they develop a sexual attraction to their father
Symbolic loss
According to Freudian theory, the loss of a valued object (for example, a loss of employment) that is unconsciously interpreted as the loss of a loved one. Also called imagined loss
Calcification
Accumulation of calcium; often accompanies transneural degeneration
Disorganized behavior
Acting in strange or unusual ways, including strange movement of limbs, bizarre speech, and inappropriate self-care, such as failing to dress or properly bathe
Experimenter expectancy effect
Actual change in the behavior of the people or nonhuman animals being observed that is due to the expectations of the observer
Behaviorism
An approach that advocates that psychologists restrict themselves to the scientific study of objectively observable behavior
Teratogens
Agents that damage the process of development, such as drugs and viruses
Neuroleptic drugs
An alternative term for conventional antipsychotic drugs, so called because they often produce undesired effects similar to the symptoms of neurological disorders
Rational-emotive behavior therapy (REBT)
Albert Ellis's brand of cognitive therapy, based on the idea that irrational thoughts and behaviors are the cause of mental disorders
Aprosodic
All at one pitch; type of speech deficit observed after damage to anterior regions of the right hemisphere
Dizygotic twins
Also called fraternal twins; twin siblings that result from two separately fertilized eggs and therefore are no more similar genetically than nontwin siblings
Aspartate
An amino acid neurotransmitter that is a constituent of many of the proteins that we eat
Response
An action or physiological change elicited by a stimulus
Working memory
An active processing system that keeps different types of information available for current use
Dynamic Unconscious
An active system encompassing a lifetime of hidden memories, the person's deepest instincts and desires, and the person's inner struggle to control these forces
Cocaine
An addictive stimulant obtained from the coca plant. It is the most powerful natural stimulant known
Anterior cingulate cortex
Anterior portion of the cingulate cortex, located below the frontal lobe along the medial surface. This region is characterized by a primitive cytoarchitecture (three-layered cortex) and is part of the interface between the frontal lobe and the limbic system. The anterior cingulate cortex is implicated in various executive functions, such as response monitoring, error detection, and attention
Empirical investigation
Any approach to research that relies on sensory experience and observation as research data
Cochlear nucleus
Area in the medulla where the auditory nerve synapses
Core
Area of the auditory cortex that receives input from the medial geniculate nucleus; subdivided into areas A1 (primary auditory cortex) and regions inferior to A1, referred to as the rostral and rostrotemporal fields
Association areas
Areas of the cerebral cortex that are composed of neurons that help provide sense and meaning to information registered in the cortex
Subcortical structures
Areas of the forebrain housed under the cerebral cortex near the very center of the brain
Aversion therapy
As a classical conditioning procedure, aversive counterconditioning involves presenting individuals with an attractive stimulus paired with an unpleasant (aversive) stimulation in order to condition revulsion
Monocular depth cues
Aspects of a scene that yield information about depth when viewed with only one eye
Memory misattribution
Assigning a recollection of an idea to the wrong source
Implicit personality theory
Assumptions about personality that are held by people (especially nonpsychologists) to simplify the task of understanding others
Neutralizing
Attempting to eliminate thoughts that one finds unacceptable by thinking or behaving in ways that make up for those thoughts and so put matters right internally
Decision making
Attempting to select the best alternative among several options
Cooperation
Behavior by two or more individuals that leads to mutual benefit
Bottom-up attentional processing
Attention-directing schema in which some aspect of the stimulus itself causes it to be attended to or to receive priority in processing
Explicit attitudes
Attitudes that a person can report
Implicit attitudes
Attitudes that influence a person's feelings and behavior at an unconscious level
Repressive coping
Avoiding situations or thoughts that are reminders of a stressor and maintaining an artificially positive viewpoint
Theory of mind
Awareness that other people base their behaviors on their own beliefs, intentions, and mental states, not on information they have no way of knowing
Antidromic conduction
Axonal conduction opposite to the normal direction; conduction from axon terminals back toward the cell body
Reciprocal altruism
Behavior that benefits another with the expectation that those benefits will be returned in the future
Grossly disorganized behavior
Behavior that is inappropriate for the situation or ineffective in attaining goals, often with specific motor disturbances
Preconventional level
Earliest level of moral development; at this level, self-interest and event outcomes determine what is moral
Exposure treatments
Behavioral treatments in which persons are exposed to the objects or situations they dread
Ideas of reference
Beliefs that unrelated events pertain to oneself in some important way
Developmental stages
Periods of life initiated by significant transitions or changes in physical or psychological functioning
Pheromones
Biochemical odorants emitted by other members of its species that can affect an animal's behavior or physiology
Bipolar cells
Bipolar neurons that form in the middle layer of the retina
Schedules of reinforcement
Programs specifying the frequency and timing of reinforcements
Scapegoating
Blaming an innocent person or a group for one's own troubles
Cerebral hemorrhage
Bleeding in the brain
Secondary emotions
Blends of primary emotions; they include remorse, guilt, submission, and anticipation
Cortical blindness
Blindness caused by damage to the primary visual cortex rather than the eye or optic nerve
Coronary arteries
Blood vessels that surround the heart and are responsible for carrying oxygen to the heart muscle
Antibodies
Bodily chemicals that seek out and destroy foreign invaders such as bacteria and viruses
Somatic markers
Bodily reactions that arise from the emotional evaluation of an action's consequences
Primary sex characteristics
Bodily structures that are directly involved in reproduction
Secondary sex characteristics
Bodily structures that that change dramatically with sexual maturity but that are not directly involved in reproduction
Bilateral
Both sides; two-sided
Closed head injury
Brain damage sustained when the head forcefully contacts another object, but no object penetrates the brain
Cross-modal plasticity
Brain reorganization in which cortex normally devoted to one sensory modality becomes able to respond to information supplied in another modality; may occur when a person loses input from an entire sensory modality
Event-related potentials
Brain waves shown on the EEG in response to stimulation, also known as evoked potentials
Axon collateral
Branches off an axon that can transmit signals to more than one cell
Dendrites
Branchlike extensions of the neuron that detect information from other neurons
Idiographic approaches
Person-centered approaches to studying personality; they focus on individual lives and how various characteristics are integrated into unique persons
Neural pathway
Bundle of nerve cells that follow generally the same route and employ the same neurotransmitter
Gender identity
Personal beliefs about whether one is male or female
Clinical
Pertaining to illness or treatment
Apoptosis
Cell death that is actively induced by genetic programs; programmed cell death
Neuron
Cell specialized to receive and transmit information to other cells in the body-also called nerve cell. Bundles of many neurons are called nerves
Coincidence detectors
Cells in brainstem areas that take into account the different arrival times of a sound at the left and right ears; maximally stimulated when the signals from the right and left ears arrive at the cell simultaneously; codes for spatial location of the sound
Feature detectors
Cells in the cortex that specialize in extracting certain features of a stimulus
Glial cells
Cells that bind the neurons together. Glial cells also provide an insulating covering (the myelin sheath) of the axon for some neurons, which facilitates the electrical impulse
Concept cells
Cells, such as those found in the medial temporal lobe, that respond to ideas or concepts rather than to particulars. Also known as Jennifer Aniston cells
Reappraisal
Changing one's emotional experience by changing the meaning of the emotion-eliciting stimulus
Senile
Characteristic of or associated with old age
Temperaments
Characteristic patterns of emotional reactivity
Components
Characteristic portions of a scalp-recorded electrical waveform that have been linked to certain psychological processes
Narcissistic personality disorder
Characterized by a grandiose sense of self importance, a preoccupation with fantasies of success or power, and a need for constant attention or admiration
Self-monitoring
Clients' observation of their own behavior
Contusions
Closed-head injuries that involve damage to the cerebral circulatory system, which produces internal hemorrhaging
Gender schemas
Cognitive structures that reflect the perceived appropriateness of male and female characteristics and behavior
Complex emotion
Combinations of basic emotions, some of which may be socially or culturally learned, that can be identified as evolved, long-lasting feelings
Affective prosody
Communicates the emotional context or tone of an utterance
Adipsia
Complete cessation of drinking
Aphagia
Complete cessation of eating
Connectionist networks
Computational model composed of interconnected layers of units that exhibit neuron-like behavior
Artificial Concepts
Concepts defined by rules, such as word definitions and mathematical formulas
Full consciousness
Consciousness in which you know and are able to report your mental state
Active placebos
Control drugs that have no therapeutic effect but produce side effects similar to those produced by the drug under evaluation in a clinical trial
Insomnia
Difficulty in falling asleep or staying asleep
Agrammatic aphasia
Difficulty producing and/or understanding the structure of sentences. Agrammatic aphasia is seen in brain-damaged patients who may speak using only content words, leaving out function words such as "the" and "a"
Inappropriate affect
Display of emotions that are unsuited to the situation; a symptom of schizophrenia
Psychosexual stages
Distinct early life stages through which personality is formed as children experience sexual pleasures from specific body areas and caregivers redirect or interfere with those pleasures
Concussion
Disturbance of consciousness following a blow to the head with no cerebral bleeding or obvious structural damage
Binocular depth cues
Cues of depth perception that arise from the fact that people have two eyes
Seasonal affective disorder (SAD)
Depression that involves recurrent depressive episodes in a seasonal pattern
Cortical dementias
Declines in cognitive functioning that are primarily due to progressive, degenerative changes in cortical regions of the brain. Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia are the most common forms of cortical dementia
Unipolar depression
Depression without a history of mania
Cortical magnification factor
Describes the millimeters of cortical surface that are devoted to one degree of angle in the visual world
Psychomotor symptoms
Disturbances in movement sometimes found in certain disorders such as schizophrenia
Syllogistic reasoning
Determining whether a conclusion follows from two statements that are assumed to be true
Coarticulation
Differences in how the vocal muscles produce sounds (most notably vowels) depending on what prcedes or follows them; phenomenon suggestive of motor planning
Acceleration-deceleration injury
Diffuse damage created by a rapid acceleration of the head followed by a deceleration, in which the energy imparted to the brain causes it to move within the skull; main mechanism of damage in closed head injury
Personal constructs
Dimensions people use in making sense of their experiences
Callosal apraxia
Disconnection syndrome that selectively disrupts the ability to perform movements or manipulate objects with the left hand in response to verbal commands; associated with damage to the corpus callosum
Personality types
Discrete categories of people based on personality characteristics
Autoimmune disease
Disease (e.g., multiple sclerosis) that arise when the immune system begins to attack healthy body cells as if they were foreign pathogens
Developmental coordination disorder
Disorder characterized by marked impairment in the development and performance of coordinated motor activities
Muscle dysmorphia
Disorder in which people become obsessed with the incorrect belief that they are not muscular enough
Mood disorders
Disorders affecting one's emotional state, including major depressive disorder and bipolar disorders
Contingent drug tolerance
Drug tolerance that develops as a reaction to the experience of the effects of drugs rather than to drug exposure alone
Psychotropic medications
Drugs that affect mental processes
Hallucinogens
Drugs that cause powerful changes primarily in sensory perception, including strengthening perceptions and producing illusions and hallucinations. Also called a psychedelic drug
Eclectic
Either switching theories to explain different situations or building one's own theory of personality from many perspectives
Nocturnal penile tumescence (NPT)
Erection during sleep
Pseudopsychology
Erroneous assertions or practices set forth as being scientific psychology
Double-blind design
Experimental procedure in which neither the participant nor the experimenter knows whether the participant has received the experimental treatment or a placebo
Alarm reaction
First stage of the GAS, during which the body mobilizes its resources to cope with a stressor
Coup injury
Focal damage at the site of impact
Convolutions
Folds on the surface of the cerebral hemisphere
Tube and intravenous feeding
Forced nourishment sometimes provided to people with anorexia nervosa when their condition becomes life-threatening
Rape
Forced sexual intercourse or another sexual act committed against a nonconsenting person or intercourse with an underage person
Transience
Forgetting what occurs with the passage of time
Replicate
In research this refers to doing a study over to see whether the same results are obtained. As a control for bias, replication is often done by someone other than the researcher who performed the original study
Humors
Four body fluids-blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile-that, according to an ancient theory, control personality by their relative abundance
Therapeutic community
Jones's term for a program of treating mental disorders by making the institutional environment supportive and humane for patients
Mood stabilizing drugs
Psychotropic drugs that help stabilize the moods of people suffering from a bipolar mood disorder. Also known as antibipolar drugs
Chronic headaches
Frequent intense aches in the head or neck that are not caused by another medical disorder
Psychic determinism
Freud's assumption that all our mental and behavioral responses are caused by unconscious traumas, desires, or conflicts
Neurosis
Freud's term for disorders characterized by intense anxiety, attributed to a failure of a person's ego defense mechanisms to cope with unconscious conflicts
Gestalt psychology
From a German word (pronounced gush-TAWLT) that means "whole" or "form" or "configuration". The Gestalt psychologists believed that much of perception is shaped by innate factors built into the brain
Anterior
Front; in front of
Unconditional positive regard
Full, warm acceptance of a person regardless of what they say, think, or feel; a critical component of client-centered therapy
GABA
Gamma-aminobutyric acid; the primary inhibitory neurotransmitter in the nervous system
Fixed-action patterns
Genetically based behaviors, seen across a species, which can be set off by a specific stimulus. The concept of fixed-action patterns has replaced the older notion of instinct
Analogous
Having a similar structure because of convergent evolution (e.g., a bird's wing and a bee's wing are analogous)
Affective
Having an emotional value, either positive or negative; not neutral
Conscious motivation
Having the desire to engage in an activity and being aware of the desire
Self-help support groups
Groups, such as Alcoholics Anonymous, that provide social support and an opportunity for sharing ideas about dealing with common problems. Such groups are typically organized and run by laypersons, rather than professional therapists
Addicts
Habitual drug users who continue to use a drug despite its adverse effects on their health and social life and despite their repeated efforts to stop using it
Audition
Hearing; the sense of sound perception
Essential hypertension
High blood pressure caused by a combination of psychosocial and physiological factors
Coronary heart disease
Illness of the heart caused by a blockage of the coronary arteries
Ambiguous figures
Images that are capable of more than one interpretation. There is no "right" way to see an ambiguous figure
Variability
In a set of numbers, how widely dispersed the values are from each other and from the mean
Secondary traits
In trait theory, preferences and attitudes
Anterograde disorientation
Inability to construct new representations of environments, although patients are still able to navigate successfully around previously learned environments
Shaping
Learning that results from the reinforcement of successive steps to a final desired behavior
Altruistic suicide
Suicide committed by people who intentionally sacrifice their lives for the well-being of society
Concept hierarchies
Levels of concepts, from most general to most specific, in which a more general level includes more specific concepts-as the concept of "animal" includes "dog", "giraffe", and "butterfly"
Backward referral hypothesis
Libet's hypothesis that the awareness of a neural event is delayed approximately 500 milliseconds after the onset of the stimulating event, and this awareness is referred back in time to the onset of the stimulating event
Photoreceptors
Light-sensitive cells (neurons) in the retina that convert light energy to neural impulses. The photoreceptors are as far as light gets into the visual system
Retina
Light-sensitive tissue lining the back of the eyeball
Hypnotic amnesia
Loss of memory produced by hypnotic suggestion
Availability Heuristic
Making a decision based on the answer that most easily comes to mind
Brodmann map
Map (named after its creator) that divides the brain into distinct areas based on similarities in the laminar organization and nature of cells
Need hierarchy
Maslow's arrangement of needs, in which basic survival needs must be met before people can satisfy higher needs
Face validity
Measures whether a test looks like it tests what it is supposed to test
Family resemblance theory
Members of a category have features that appear to be characteristic of category members but may not be possessed by every member
Conspecifics
Members of the same species
Psychophysics
Methods that measure the strength of a stimulus and the observer's sensitivity to that stimulus
Cell adhesion molecules (CAMS)
Molecules on the surface of cells that have the ability to recognize specific molecules on the surface of other cells and bind to them
Second-generation antidepressants
New antidepressant drugs that differ structurally from tricyclics and MAO inhibitors
Cross-cuing
Nonneural communication between hemispheres that have been separated by commissurotomy
Amino acids
Smallest and most basic buiding blocks of proteins; act as the main excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters in the brain
Automatic thoughts
Numerous unpleasant thoughts that help to cause or maintain depression, anxiety, or other forms of psychological dysfunction
Data
Objective observations or measurements
Behavior
Observable actions of human beings and nonhuman animals
Somnambulism (sleepwalking)
Occurs when the person arises and walks around while asleep
Contralateral
On the opposite side
Contention scheduling
One component of a two-component system that influences the choice of behavior; a cognitive system that enables relatively automatic processing, which has been developed over time through learning
Barbiturates
One group of sedative hypnotic drugs that reduce anxiety and help produce sleep
Social role
One of several socially defined patterns of behavior that are expected of persons in a given setting or group
Chemotopic
Organized, like the olfactory bulb, according to a map of various odors
Chunking
Organizing pieces of information into a smaller number of meaningful units (or chunks)-a process that frees up space in working memory
Mind
Our private inner experience of perceptions, thoughts, memories, and feelings
Complementary colors
Pairs of colors that produce white or gray when combined in equal measures; every color has a complementary color
Antagonistic muscles
Pairs of muscles that act in opposition
Color-opponent system
Pairs of visual neurons that work in opposition
Belief bias
People's judgments about whether to accept conclusions depend more on how believable the conclusions are than on whether the arguments are logically valid
Secondary appraisals
Part of the coping process during which people evaluate their response options and choose coping behaviors
Primary appraisals
Part of the coping process that involves making decisions about whether a stimulus is stressful, benign, or irrelevant
Learned helplessness
Pattern of failure to respond to noxious stimuli after an organism learns its responses are ineffective
General adaptation syndrome (GAS)
Pattern of general physical responses that take essentially the same form in responding to any serious chronic stressor
Paraphilias
Patterns in which a person has recurrent and intense sexual urges, fantasies, or behaviors involving nonhuman objects, children, nonconsenting adults, or experiences of suffering or humiliation
Central sensorimotor programs
Patterns of activity that are programmed into the sensorimotor system
Blobs
Peglike, cytochrome oxidase-rich, dual-opponent color columns
Mentally ill chemical abusers (MICAs)
People suffering from both schizophrenia (or another severe psychological disorder) and a substance-related disorder. Also called dual-diagnosis patients
Analytic processing
Perceptual analysis that emphasizes the component parts of an object. Reading is thought to be a prime example of analytic processing in that the recognition of words requires the analysis of at least some of the component letters. Compare holistic processing
Auditory-verbal working memory
Phonological store; memory of the contents of immediately preceding verbal utterances
Cones
Photoreceptors in the retina that are especially sensitive to colors but not to dim light. You may have guessed that cones are cone-shaped
Coronal
Planar view of the brain in which the brain is sliced ear to ear to separate the front from the back
Parallel processing
Processing multiple types of information at the same time
Congenital
Present at birth
Secondary prevention
Prevention interventions that are designed to address disorders quickly, before they become more serious problems
Primary prevention
Prevention interventions that are designed to prevent disorders altogether
Dreams
Products of an altered state of consciousness in which images and fantasies are confused with reality
Variable interval (VI) schedules
Programs by which the time period between reinforcements varies from trial to trial
Birth complications
Problematic biological conditions during birth that can affect the physical and psychological well-being of the child
Attentional set
Process that designates which information is task relevant
Cognitive control
Processes that facilitate information processing. Control operations are thought to help coordinate activity across different neural regions; for example, the representation of a current goal in the prefrontal cortex can help control the retrieval of information in long-term memory. See also executive functions
Prospect theory
Proposes that people choose to take on risk when evaluating potential losses and avoid risk when evaluating potential gains
Tertiary prevention
Prvention interventions that are designed to provide effective treatment for moderate or severe disorders as soon as it is needed so that the disorders do not become long-term problems
State hospitals
Public mental institutions in the United States, run by the individual states
Perceptual set
Readiness to detect a particular stimulus in a given context-as when a person who is afraid interprets an unfamiliar sound in the night as a threat
Theoretical reasoning
Reasoning directed toward arriving at a belief
Type
Refers to especially important dimensions or clusters of traits that are not only central to a person's personality but are found with essentially the same pattern in many people
Set point
Refers to the tendency of the body to maintain a certain level of body fat and body weight
Alpha waves
Regular, 8 to 12 per second, high amplitude EEG waves that typically occur during relaxed wakefulness and just before falling asleep
Blindsight
Residual visual abilities within a field defect in the absence of awareness. Blindsight can be observed when there is damage in the primary visual cortex. The residual function is usually observed with indirect measures such as by prodding the patient to look or point at the location of a stimulus, even if the patient denies having seen the stimulus
Display rules
Rules learned through socialization that dictate which emotions are suitable to given situations
Normal range
Scores falling near the middle of a normal distribution
Stage of resistance
Second stage of the GAS, during which the body adapts to and uses resources to cope with a stressor
Cross-section
Section cut at a right angle to any long, narrow structure of the CNS
Sociopathy
See Antisocial personality disorder
Complex partial seizures
Seizures that are characterized by various complex psychological phenomena and are thought to result from temporal lobe discharges
Attention
Selective process by which the brain chooses specific information for further processing; inherently limited by the amount of information the brain can process at any one time
Afterimages
Sensations that linger after the stimulus is removed. Most visual afterimages are negative afterimages, which appear in reversed colors
Baroreceptors
Sensitive nerves in the blood vessels that are responsible for signaling the brain that blood pressure is becoming too high
Sensory adaptation
Sensitivity to prolonged stimulation tends to decline over time as an organism adapts to current conditions
Stimulus
Sensory input from the environment
Skin senses
Sensory systems for processing touch, warmth, cold, texture, and pain
Copulation
Sexual intercourse
Bisexual
Sexually attracted to members of both sexes
Psychoanalytic theory
Sigmund Freud's approach to understanding human behavior that emphasizes the importance of unconscious mental processes in shaping feelings, thoughts, and behaviors
Neurotic needs
Signs of neurosis in Horney's theory, these 10 needs are normal desires carried to a neurotic extreme
Constituent cognitive processes
Simple cognitive processes that combine to produce complex cognitive processes and that are assumed to be mediated by neural activity in particular areas of the brain
Spinal reflexes
Simple pathways in the nervous system that rapidly generate muscle contractions
Dyssomnias
Sleep-wake disorders, such as insomnia disorder and hypersomnolence disorder, in which the amount, quality, or timing of sleep is disturbed
Parasomnias
Sleep-wake disorders, such as sleepwalking, sleep terrors, and nightmare disorder, characterized by the occurrence of abnormal events during sleep
Bradyphrenia
Slowing of thought processes; part of the cognitive compromise exhibited by individuals with Parkinson's disease
Inferential statistics
Statistical techniques (based on probability theory) used to assess whether the results of a study are reliable or whether they simply might be the result of chance. Inferential statistics are often used to determine whether two or more groups are essentially the same or different
Descriptive statistics
Statistics that summarize the data collected in a study
Anabolic steroids
Steroid drugs that are similar to testosterone and have powerful anabolic (growth-promoting) effects
Amphetamines
Stimulant drugs that are manufactured in the laboratory
Contact comfort
Stimulation and reassurance derived from the physical touch of a caregiver
Cataplexy
Sudden loss of muscle control
Brain lesion
Structural damage to the white or gray matter of the brain. Lesions result from many causes, including tumor, stroke, and degenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease
Caudate nuclei
Structures in the brain, within the region known as the basal ganglia, that help convey sensory information into thoughts and actions
Clinical trials
Studies conducted on human subjects to assess the therapeutic efficacy of an untested drug or other treatment
Prototype
The "best" or "most typical" member of a category
Proximodistal rule
The "inside-to-outside" rule that describes the tendency for motor skills to emerge in sequence from the center to the periphery
Prosocial
Tending to benefit others
Violence and aggression
Terms that refer to behavior that is intended to cause harm
Response inventories
Tests designed to measure a person's responses in one specific area of functioning, such as affect, social skills, or cognitive processes
Cranial nerves
The 12 major nerves originating in the brain; some are responsible for receipt of sensory information and motor control of the head, others are responsible for the neural control of internal organs
Germinal stage
The 2-week period of prenatal development that begins at conception
Blood-oxygen level dependent (BOLD)
The BOLD signal is the change in magnetic resonance signal intensity of hydrogen ion concentration in the brain, which results from changes in local tissue oxygenation state. When neurons become more active, this triggers an increase in the amount of oxygenated blood entering local capillaries in the tissue. This alters the ratio of oxygenated to deoxygenated hemoglobin in the tissue. Because deoxygenated hemoglobin is paramagnetic, it disrupts the local magnetic properties of the tissue, and the MR signal intensity drops. Conversely, when oxygenated blood increases in response to local neuron activity, the MR signal intensity increases and this is known as the BOLD response. The BOLD signal is an indirect measure of neural activity, and is delayed with respect to the measure of neural activity that leads to the BOLD signal, taking about 2-3 seconds to begin, and about 5-6 seconds after the onset of neural activity to peak.
Acuity
The ability to see the details of objects
Sex chromosomes
The X and Y chromosomes that determine our physical sex characteristics
Power
The ability of a measure to detect the concrete conditions specified in the operational definition
Predictive validity
The ability of a test or other assessment tool to predict future characteristics or behaviors
Resiliency
The ability to avoid or recover from the effects of negative circumstances
Mean
The averaged value of all the measurements
Fear
The central nervous system's physiological and emotional response to a serious threat to one's well-being
Anxiety
The central nervous system's physiological and emotional response to a vague sense of threat or danger
Cornea
The clear outer covering of the eye
Zone of proximal development
The difference between what a child can do with help and what the child can do without any help or guidance
Anandamide
The first endogenous endocannabinoid to be discovered and characterized
Crystallized intelligence
The knowledge a person has acquired, plus the ability to access that knowledge
Whole method
The mnemonic strategy of first approaching the material to be learned "as a whole", forming an impression of the overall meaning of the material. The details are later associated with this overall impression
Overjustification
The process by which extrinsic (external) rewards can sometimes displace internal motivation, as when children receive money for playing video games
Basal metabolic rate
The rate at which an individual utilizes energy to maintain bodily processes
Vestibular sense
The sense of body orientation with respect to gravity. The vestibular sense is closely associated with the inner ear and, in fact, is carried to the brain on a branch of the auditory nerve
Prevalence
The total number of cases of a disorder occurring in a population over a specific period of time
Opponent-process theory
Theory of emotion which theorizes that emotions have pairs. When one is triggered, the other is suppressed (for example, when we feel happy, sad is the suppressed emotion)
Out-group
Those outside of the group with which an individual identifies
Caudal
Toward the back (in an animal, toward the tail)
Cerebral commisures
Tracts that connect the left and right cerebral hemispheres
Ritalin
Trade name of methylphenidate, a stimulant drug that is helpful in many cases of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
Critical incident stress debriefing
Training in how to help the victims of disasters or other horrifying events talk about their feelings and reactions to the traumatic incidents.
Biological therapies
Treatment based on medical approaches to illness and disease
Experimental groups
Treatment groups; the participants in a study that receive intervention
Benign tumors
Tumors that are surgically removable with little risk of further growth in the body
Athetosis
Type of hyperkinesia characterized by involuntary writhing contractions and twisting of the body into abnormal positions
Chorea
Type of hyperkinesia that produces uncontrollable, jerking movements such as twitiching and abrupt jerking of the body
Complex cells
Types of striate cortex cells; respond best to certain line orientations and motion in a particular direction
Color blindness
Typically a genetic disorder (although sometimes the result of trauma) that prevents an individual from discriminating certain colors. The most common form is red-green color blindness
Defense mechanism
Unconscious mental strategies that the mind uses to protect itself from distress
Deductive reasoning
Using general rules to draw conclusions about specific instances
Inductive reasoning
Using specific instances to draw conclusions about general rules
Confounding or extraneous variables
Variables that have an unwanted influence on the outcome of an experiment
Deviance
Variance from common patterns of behavior
Natural language mediators
Words associated with new information to be remembered
Meta-worry
Worrying about the fact that one is worrying too much
Contrast X-ray techniques
X-ray techniques that involve the injection into one compartment of the body a substance that absorbs X-rays either less than or more than surrounding tissue
Monoamine oxidase (MAO)
a body chemical that destroys the neurotransmitter norepinephrine
Bottleneck
a stage of processing where not all of the inputs can gain access or pass through
Flashbulb memories
detailed recollections of when and where we heard about shocking events
Learning
experience that results in a relatively permanent change in the state of the learner
Implicit learning
learning that takes place without awareness of the process or the products of information acquisition
Vicarious learning
learning the consequences of an action by watching others be rewarded or punished for performing the action
Stimulus discrimination
learning to respond to one stimulus but not to stimuli that are similar
Compensation
making up for one's real or imagined deficiencies
Cardinal traits
personality components that define people's lives; very few individuals have cardinal traits
Reaction formation
A defense mechanism that involves unconsciously replacing threatening inner wishes and fantasies with an exaggerated version of their opposite
Asomatognosia
A deficiency in the awareness of parts of one's own body that is typically produced by damage to the parietal lobe
Ecstasy (MDMA)
A drug chemically related to amphetamines and hallucinogens, used illicitly for its euphoric and hallucinogenic effects
Down syndrome
A form of intellectual disability caused by an abnormality in the twenty-first chromosome
Serial position effect
A form of interference related to the sequence in which information is presented. Generally, items in the middle of the sequence are less well remembered than items presented first or last
Hallucinosis
A form of intoxication caused by hallucinogens, consisting of perceptual distortions and hallucinations
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
A form of neurocognitive disorder caused by a slow-acting virus that may live in the body for years before the disease unfolds
Delayed ejaculation
A male dysfunction characterized by persistent inability to ejaculate or very delayed ejaculations during sexual activity with a partner
Male hypoactive sexual desire disorder
A male dysfunction marked by a persistent reduction or lack of interest in sex and hence a low level of sexual activity
Generic drug
A marketed drug that is comparable to a trade-name drug in dosage, form, strength, and performance
Inter-rater reliability
A measure of how similarly two different test scorers would score a test
Split-half reliability
A measure of reliability in which a test is split into two parts and an individual's scores on both halves are compared
Statistical significance
A measure of the probablity that a study's findings occurred by chance rather than because of the experimental manipulation
Heritability
A measure of the variability of behavioral traits among individuals that can be accounted for by genetic factors
Central tendency
A measure that represents the typical response or behavior of a group as a whole
Alternative splicing
A mechanism by which the actions of individual genes can be controlled or "edited" so that one gene can produce two or more proteins
Asthma
A medical problem marked by narrowing of the trachea and bronchi, which results in shortness of breath, wheezing, coughing, and a choking sensation
Psychiatry
A medical specialty dealing with the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders
Misattribution
A memory fault that occurs when memories are retrieved but are associated with the wrong time, place, or person
Psychiatric social worker
A mental health specialist who is qualified to conduct psychotherapy upon earning a master's degree or doctorate in social work
Counseling psychology
A mental health specialty similar to clinical psychology that offers its own graduate training program
Creativity
A mental process that produces novel responses that contribute to the solutions of problems
Repression
A mental process that removes unacceptable thoughts and memories from consciousness
Cognitive map
A mental representation of a physical space
Core affect
A mental representation of the sensory input from the body and from the world
Template
A mental representation that can be directly compared to a viewed shape in the retinal image
Concept
A mental representation that groups or categorizes shared features of related objects, events, or other stimuli
Representativeness heuristic
A mental shortcut that involves making a probability judgment by comparing an object or event to a prototype of the object or event
Phenylketonuria (PKU)
A metabolic disorder caused by the body's inability to break down the amino acid phenylalanine, resulting in intellectual disability and other symptoms
Tay-Sachs disease
A metabolic disorder that causes progressive loss of intellectual functioning, vision, and motor functioning, resulting in death
Experimental neurosis
A pattern of erratic behavior resulting from a demanding discrimination learning task, typically one that involves aversive stimuli
Catatonia
A pattern of extreme psychomotor symptoms, found in some forms of schizophrenia, which may include catatonic stupor, rigidity, or posturing
Cocktail party phenomenon
A phenomenon in which people tune in one message even while they filter out others nearby
Additive color mixing
A process of color mixing that occurs when different wavelengths of light interact within the eye's receptors; a psychological process
Subtractive color mixing
A process of color mixing that occurs within the stimulus itself; a physical, not a psychological process
Modeling
A process of learning in which a person acquires responses by observing and imitating others. Also, a therapy approach based on the same principle
Means-ends analysis
A process of searching for the means or steps to reduce differences between the current situation and the desired goal
Long-term potentiation (LTP)
A process where communication across the synapse between neurons strengthens the connection, making further communication easier
Synaptic pruning
A process whereby the synaptic connections in the brain that are frequently used are preserved, and those that are not used are lost
Therapist
A professional clinician who applies a system of therapy to help a person overcome psychological difficulties
Ratio schedule
A program by which reinforcement depends on the number of correct responses
Interval schedule
A program by which reinforcement depends on the time interval elapsed since the last reinforcement
Aftercare
A program of post-hospitalization care and treatment in the community
Day center
A program that offers hospital-like treatment during the day only. Also known as a day hospital
Suicide prevention program
A program that tries to identify people who are at risk of killing themselves and to offer them crisis intervention
Rorschach Inkblot Test
A projective personality test in which individual interpretations of the meaning of a set of unstructured inkblots are analyzed to identify a respondent's inner feelings and interpret his or her personality structure
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
A projective personality test in which respondents reveal underlying motives, concerns, and the way they see the social world through the stories they make up about ambiguous pictures of people
Biological preparedness
A propensity for learning particular kinds of associations over others
Content validity
A property exhibited by a test in which each item is representative of the larger body of knowledge about the subject that the test covers
Test-retest reliability
A property exhibited by a test on which people get about the same scores when they take the test more than once
Criterion validity
A property exhibited by a test that accurately measures performance of the test taker against a specific learning goal
Variable
A property whose value can vary across individuals or over time
Alpha fetoprotein
A protein that is present in the blood of many mammals during the perinatal period and that deactivates circulating estradiol by binding to it
C-reactive protein (CRP)
A protein that spreads throughout the body and causes inflammation and various illnesses and disorders
Free association
A psychodynamic technique in which the patient describes any thought, feeling, or image that comes to mind, even if it seems unimportant
Social-cognitive-behavioral approach
A psychological alternative to the medical model that views psychological disorder through a combination of the social, cognitive, and behavioral perspectives
Retrospective analysis
A psychological autopsy in which clinicians and researchers piece together information about a person's suicide from the person's past
Hypochondriasis
A psychological disorder in which a person is preoccupied with minor symptoms and develops an exaggerated belief that the symptoms signify a life-threatening illness. Now known as illness anxiety disorder
Brightness
A psychological sensation caused by the intensity of light waves
Drive
A psychological state that, by creating arousal, motivates an organism to satisfy a need
Clang
A rhyme used by some people with schizophrenia as a guide to forming thoughts and statements
Sleep debt
A sleep deficiency caused by not getting the amount of sleep that one requires for optimal functioning
Breathing-related sleep disorder
A sleep disorder in which sleep is frequently disrupted by a breathing problem, causing excessive sleepiness or insomnia
Circadian rhythm disorder
A sleep-wake disorder characterized by a mismatch between a person's sleep-wake pattern and the sleep-wake schedule of most other people
Hypersomnolence disorder
A sleep-wake disorder characterized by an extreme need for extra sleep and feelings of excessive sleepiness
Sleep apnea disorder
A sleep-wake disorder characterized by frequent awakenings each night due to periodic deprivation of oxygen to the brain during sleep
Insomnia disorder
A sleep-wake disorder characterized by severe difficulty falling asleep or maintaining sleep at least three nights per week
Parkinson's disease
A slowly progressive neurological disease, marked by tremors and rigidity, that may also cause dementia
Synaptic vesicle
A small "container" holding neurotransmitter molecules that connects to the presynaptic membrane, releasing the neurotransmitter into the synapse
Locus ceruleus
A small area of the brain that seems to be active in the regulation of emotions. Many of its neurons use norepinephrine
Beta-amyloid protein
A small molecule that forms sphere-shaped deposits called senile plaques, linked to aging and Alzheimer's disease
Broca's area
A small portion of the left frontal region of the brain, crucial for the production of language
Participant modeling
A social learning technique in which a therapist demonstrates and encourages a client to imitate a desired behavior
Reward theory of attraction
A social-learning view that says we like the best those who give us maximum rewards at minimum cost
Sick role
A socially recognized set of rights and obligations linked with illness
Carbon monoxide
A soluble gas neurotransmitter
Loudness
A sound's intensity
Mantra
A sound, uttered or thought, used to focus one's attention and to turn away from ordinary thoughts and concerns during meditation
Rush
A spasm of warmth and ecstasy that occurs when certain drugs, such as heroin, are ingested
Group home
A special home where people with disorders or disabilities live and are taught self-help, living, and working skills
Auditory agnosia
A specific inability to link basic auditory information to meaning; inability to recognize the meaning of sounds
Loosening of associations
A speech pattern among some people with schizophrenia in which their thoughts are disorganized or meaningless. Also known as derailment
Sensorimotor stage
A stage of development that begins at birth and lasts through infancy in which infants acquire information about the world by sensing it and moving around within it
Postconventional stage
A stage of moral development at which the morality of an action is determined by a set of general principles that reflect core values
Conventional stage
A stage of moral development in which the morality of an action is primarily determined by they extent to which it conforms to social rules
REM sleep
A stage of sleep characterized by rapid eye movements and a high level of brain activity
Projective techniques
A standard series of ambiguous stimuli designed to elicit unique responses that reveal inner aspects of an individual's personality
Equity
A state of affairs in which the cost-benefit ratios of two partners are roughly equal
Mental incompetence
A state of mental instability that leaves defendants unable to understand the legal charges and proceedings they are facing and unable to prepare an adequate defense with their attorney
Spectator role
A state of mind that some people experience during sex, focusing on their sexual performance to such an extent that their performance and enjoyment are reduced
Burnout
A state of physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion, created by long-term involvement in an emotionally demanding situation and accompanied by lowered performance and motivation
Deindividuation
A state of reduced individuality, reduced self-awareness, and reduced attention to personal standards; this phenomenon may occur when people are part of a group
Mania
A state or episode of euphoria or frenzied activity in which people may have an exaggerated belief that the world is theirs for the taking
State school
A state-supported institution for people with intellectual disability
Algorithm
A well-defined sequence of procedures or rules that guarantees a solution to a problem
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
A well-researched, clinical questionnaire used to assess personality and psychological problems
Arcuate fasciculus
A white matter tract that connects the posterior temporal region with frontal brain regions and is believed to transmit language-related information between the posterior and anterior brain regions
M'Naghten test
A widely used legal test for insanity that holds people to be insane at the time they committed a crime if, because of a mental disorder, they did not know the nature of the act or did not know right from wrong. Also known as the M'Naghten rule
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)
A widely used personality test based on Jungian types
Elaborative rehearsal
A working-memory process in which information is actively reviewed and related to information already in long-term memory
Maintenance rehearsal
A working-memory process in which information is merely repeated or reviewed to keep it from fading while in working memory. Maintenance rehearsal involves no active elaboration
Stress-reduction and problem-solving seminar
A workshop or series of group sessions offered by a business, in which mental health professionals teach employees how to cope with and solve problems and reduce stress
Informed consent
A written agreement to participate in a study made by an adult who has been informed of all the risks that participation may entail
Analytical intelligence
According to Sternberg, the ability measured by most IQ tests; includes the ability to analyze problems and find correct answers
Creative intelligence
According to Sternberg, the form of intelligence that helps people see new relationships among concepts; involves insight and creativity
MRI or magnetic resonance imaging
An imaging technique that relies on cells' responses in a high-intensity magnetic field
PET scanning or positron emission tomography
An imaging technique that relies on the detection of radioactive sugar consumed by active brain cells
Disruptive mood dysregulation disorder
A childhood disorder marked by severe recurrent temper outbursts along with persistent irritable or angry mood
Trisomy
A chromosomal abnormality in which a person has three chromosomes of one kind rather than the usual two
Persistent depressive disorder
A chronic form of unipolar depression marked by ongoing and repeated symptoms of either major or mild depression
Bullying
A chronic social threat that induces subordination stress in members of our species
Butyrophenones
A class of antischizophrenic drugs that bind primarily to D2 receptors
Anti-anxiety drugs (anxiolytics)
A class of psychotropic medications used for the treatment of anxiety. Also called minor tranquilizers
Antidepressants
A class of psychotropic medications used for the treatment of depression
Antipsychotics (neuroleptics)
A class of psychotropic medications used for the treatment of schizophrenia and other disorders that involve psychosis
Amino acid neurotransmitters
A class of small-molecule neurotransmitters, which includes the amino acids glutamate and GABA
Latent learning
A condition in which something is learned but is not manifested as a behavioral change until sometime in the future
Buerger's disease
A condition in which the blood vessels, especially those supplying the legs, are constricted whenever nicotine enters the bloodstream, the ultimate result being gangrene and amputation
Split brain
A condition in which the corpus callosum is surgically cut and the two hemispheres of the brain do not receive information directly from each other
REM rebound
A condition of increased REM sleep caused by REM-sleep deprivation
Relaxation response
A condition of reduced muscle tension, cortical activity, heart rate, breathing rate, and blood pressure
Alcohol myopia
A condition that results when alcohol hampers attention, leading people to respond in simple ways to complex situations
Reward-deficiency syndrome
A condition, suspected to be present in some people, in which the brain's reward center is not readily activated by the usual events in their lives
Avoidance-avoidance conflict
A conflict in which one must choose between options that both have negative consequences
Multiple approach-avoidance conflict
A conflict in which one must choose between options that have both many attractive and many negative aspects
Approach-approach conflict
A conflict in which one must choose between two equally attractive options
Approach-avoidance conflict
A conflict in which there are both appealing and negative aspects to a possible course of action
Congenital adrenal hyperplasia
A congenital deiciency in the release of cortisol from the adrenal cortex, which leads to the excessive release of adrenal androgens
Natural correlation
A correlation observed in the world around us
Convergence
A cue of binocular depth perception; when a person views a nearby object, the eye muscles turn the eyes inward
Norm
A customary standard for behavior that is widely shared by members of a culture
Action-outcome decision
A decision that involves some form of evaluation (not necessarily conscious) of the expected outcomes
Social loafing
A decrease in performance due to the belief that others in the group will do the work
Alogia
A decrease in speech or speech content; a symptom of schizophrenia. Also known as poverty of speech
Regression
A defense mechanism in which the ego deals with internal conflict and perceived threat by reverting to an immature behavior or earlier stage of development
Identification
A defense mechanism that helps deal with feelings of threat and anxiety by enabling us unconsciously to take on the characteristics of another person who seems more powerful or better able to cope. Also unconsciously incorporating the values and feelings of one's parents and fusing them with one's identity
Projection
A defense mechanism that involves attributing one's own threatening feelings, motives, or impulses to another person or group
Sublimation
A defense mechanism that involves channeling unacceptable sexual or aggressive drives into socially acceptable and culturally enhancing activities
Displacement
A defense mechanism that involves shifting unacceptable wishes or drives to a neutral or less-threatening alternative
Rationalization
A defense mechanism that involves supplying a reasonable-sounding explanation for unacceptable feelings and behavior to conceal (mostly from oneself) one's underlying motives or feelings
Kleptomania
An impulse-control disorder characterized by the recurrent failure to resist impulses to steal objects not needed for personal use or monetary value
Monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitors
Antidepressant drugs that lower MAO activity and thus increase the level of norepinephrine activity in the brain
Aggression
Any behavior that involves the intention to harm someone else
Alcohol
Any beverage containing ethyl alcohol, including beer, wine, and liquor
Nonconscious processes
Any brain process that does not involve conscious processing, including both preconscious memories and unconscious processes
Emotional expression
Any observable sign of an emotional state
Psychopathology
Any pattern of emotions, behaviors, or thoughts inappropriate to the situation and leading to personal distress or the inability to achieve important goals. Other terms having essentially the same meaning include mental illness, mental disorder, and psychological disorder
Coping response
Any response an organism makes to avoid, escape from, or minimize an aversive stimulus
Punisher
Any stimulus or event that functions to decrease the likelihood of the behavior that led to it
Reinforcer
Any stimulus or event that functions to increase the likelihood of the behavior that led to it
Psychosocial stages
In Erikson's theory, the developmental stages are defined by eight major challenges that appear successively across the lifespan, which require an individual to rethink his or her goals, and relationship with others
Cytokines
Hormonelike chemicals facilitating communication between brain and immune system. Cause inflammation and fever
Amino acid derivative hormones
Hormones that are synthesized in a few simple steps from amino acids
Surface structure
How a sentence is worded
Binding problem
How features are linked together so that we see unified objects in our visual world rather than free-floating or miscombined features
Pitch
How high or low a sound is
Phenomenology
How things seem to the conscious person
Aprosodia
Impairment or deficits in comprehension of prosody, resulting from brain damage
Generativity
In Erikson's theory, a process of making a commitment beyond oneself to family, work, society, or future generations
Source misattribution
Memory distortion that occurs when people misremember the time, place, person, or circumstances involved with a memory
Cued recall
Memory test in which the person is given prompts to help them remember information that was previously encoded
Explicit memory
Memory that has been processed with attention and can be consciously recalled
Ironic processes of mental control
Mental processes that can produce ironic errors because monitoring for errors can itself produce them
Cognitions
Mental processes, such as thinking, memory, sensation, and perception
Natural concepts
Mental representations of objects and events drawn from our direct experience
Analogical representations
Mental representations that have some of the physical characteristics of objects; they are analogous to objects
Psychoneuroimmunology
Multidisciplinary field that studies the influence of mental states on the immune system
Anti bipolar drugs
Psychotropic drugs that help stabilize the moods of people suffering from a bipolar disorder. Also known as mood stabilizers
Source memory
Recall of when, where, and how information was acquired
Center-surround receptive field
Receptive field structure of retinal ganglion cells and LGN cells; light stimulation in the center (or surround) excites cell firing, whereas light stimulation in the surround (or center) inhibits cell firing; helps to enhance contrast
Olfactory receptor neurons (ORNS)
Receptor cells that initiate the sense of smell
Autoreceptors
Receptors located on the presynaptic neuron that bind the same neurotransmitter as released by that neuron; regulate the responsiveness of cells by working as a negative feedback mechanism
Category-specific deficit
Recognition impairment that is restricted to a certain class of objects. Some rare individuals demonstrate an impairment in their ability to recognize living things, yet exhibit near-normal performance in recognizing nonliving things. Such deficits are useful in the development of models about how perceptual and semantic knowledge is organized in the brain
Cortical visual areas
Regions of the visual cortex that are identified on the basis of their direct retinotopic maps. The areas are specialized to represent certain types of stimulus information, and through their integrated activity they provide the neural basis for visually based behavior
Variable ratio (VR) schedules
Reinforcement programs by which the number of responses required for reinforcement varies from trial to trial
Primary reinforcers
Reinforcers, such as food and sex, which have an innate basis because of their biological value to an organism
Neurological
Relating to the structure or activity of the brain
Reinforcement contingencies
Relationships between a response and the changes in stimulation that follow the response
Objective measures
Relatively direct assessments of personality, usually based on information gathered through self-report questionnaires or observer ratings
Prospective memory
Remembering to do things in the future
Mind-body dualism
Rene Descartes's position that the mind is separate from the body
Ex post facto
Research in which we choose subjects based on a pre-existing condition
Coordinate (metric) spatial relations
Schema that specifies the distance between two locations; may be specialized to the right hemisphere
Categorical spatial relations
Schema that specifies the position of one location relative to another in dichotomous categorical terms; may be specialized to the left hemisphere
Response prevention
See Exposure and response prevention
Tension headache
See Muscle contraction headache
Sodium pentobarbital (Pentothal)
See Sodium amobarbital
Psychopathy
See antisocial personality disorder
Gene
Segment of a chromosome that encodes the directions for the inherited physical and mental characteristics of an organism. Genes are the functional units of a chromosome
Sensation
Simple stimulation of a sense organ
Proactive interference
Situations in which information learned earlier impairs memory for information acquired later
Retroactive interference
Situations in which information learned later impairs memory for information acquired earlier
Bradykinesia
Slowness in the initiation and execution of movements. A prominent symptom in Parkinson's disease
Nodes of Ranvier
Small gaps of exposed axon, between the segments of myelin sheath, where action potentials are transmitted
Rites of passage
Social rituals that mark the transition between developmental stages, especially between childhood and adulthood
Sexual scripts
Socially learned ways of responding in sexual situations
Analogical problem solving
Solving a problem by finding a similar problem with a know solution and applying that solution to the current problem
Mental operations
Solving problems by manipulating images in one's mind
Two-factor theory of intelligence
Spearman's theory suggesting that every task requires a combination of a general ability (which he called g) and skills that are specific to the task (which he called s)
Hair cells
Specialized auditory receptor neurons embedded in the basilar membrane
Computational models
Specific algorithms used in neural networks to stimulate human mental functions; the basic component of most computational models is a "unit," which exhibits behavior like an individual neuron
Operational definitions
Specific descriptions of concepts involving the conditions of a scientific study. Operational definitions are stated in terms of how the concepts are to be measured or what operations are being employed to produce them
Stressors
Specific events or chronic pressures that place demands on a person or threaten the person's well-being
Reflexes
Specific patterns of motor response that are triggered by specific patterns of sensory stimulation
Telegraphic speech
Speech that is devoid of function morphemes and consists mostly of content words
Senile plaques
Sphere-shaped deposits of beta-amyloid protein that form in the spaces between certain brain cells and in certain blood vessels as people age. People with Alzheimer's disease have an excessive number of such plaques
Central fissure
Split or chasm that separates each hemisphere of the brain in an anterior-posterior dimension; sometimes called the Rolandic fissure
Action tremor
Staggered, jerky, and zigzag motion that occurs during the performance of an act, especially as the person zeroes in on the target
Coma
State in which a person is unresponsive to and unaware of the outside world
Deinstitutionalization
The discharge, begun during the 1960s, of large numbers of patients from long-term institutional care so that they might be treated in community programs
Bias
The distorting influences of present knowledge, beliefs, and feelings on recollections of previous experiences
Misinformation effect
The distortion of memory by suggestions or misinformation
Comparative psychology
The division of biopsychology that studies evolution, genetics, and adaptiveness behavior, often by using the comparative approach
Anterolateral system
The division of the somatosensory that ascends in the anterolateral portion of spinal white matter and carries signals related to pain and temperature
Encoding specificity principle
The doctrine that memory is encoded and stored with specific cues related to the context in which it was formed. The more closely the retrieval cues match the form in which the information was encoded, the better it will be remembered.
Alpha male
The dominant male of a colony
Natural selection
The driving force behind evolution, by which the environment "selects" the fittest organisms
Tympanic membrane
The eardrum
Motor development
The emergence of the ability to execute physical action
Cognitive development
The emergence of the ability to think and understand
Nervous system
The entire network of neurons in the body, including the central nervous system, the peripheral nervous system, and their subdivisions
Electromagnetic spectrum
The entire range of electromagnetic energy, including radio waves, x rays, microwaves, and visible light
Convergent evolution
The evolution in unrelated species of similar solutions to the same environmental demands
Self-regulation
The exercise of voluntary control over the self to bring the self into line with preferred standards
Sleep paralysis
The experience of waking up unable to move
Angular gyrus
The gyrus of the posterior cortex at the boundary between the temporal and parietal lobes, which in the left hemisphere is thought to play a role in reading
Deja vu
The haunting sense of having previously seen or experienced a new scene or situation
Endocrine system
The hormone system-the body's chemical messenger system, including the endocrine glands: pituitary, thyroid, parathyroid, adrenals, pancreas, ovaries, and testes
Self-actualization
The humanistic process by which people fulfill their potential for goodness and growth
Gestalt therapy
The humanistic therapy developed by Fritz Perls in which clinicians actively move clients toward self-recognition and self-acceptance by using techniques such as role playing and self-dsicovery exercises
Facial feedback hypothesis
The hypothesis that emotional expressions can cause the emotional experiences they signify
Universality hypothesis
The hypothesis that emotional expressions have the same meaning for everyone
Aromatization hypothesis
The hypothesis that the brain is masculinized by estradiol that is produced from perinatal testosterone in a process called aromatization
Expectancy theory
The idea that alcohol effects can be produced by people's expectations of how alcohol will influence them in a particular situation
Opponent-process theory
The idea that cells in the visual system process colors in complementary pairs, such as red or green or as yellow or blue. The opponent-process theory explains color sensation from the bipolar cells onward in the visual system
Feature integration theory
The idea that focused attention is not required to detect the individual features that comprise a stimulus, but is required to bind those individual features together
Cognitive unconscious
The mental processes that give rise to the person's thoughts, choices, emotions, and behavior even though they are not experienced by the person
Superego
The mental system that reflects the internalization of cultural rules, mainly learned as parents exercise their authority
Absorptive phase
The metabolic phase during which the body is operating on the energy from a recently consumed meal and is storing the excess as body fat, glycogen, and proteins
Cephalic phase
The metabolic phase during which the body prepares for food that is about to be absorbed
Mesmerism
The method employed by Franz Anton Mesmer to treat hysterical disorders; a precursor of hypnotism
Just noticeable difference (JND)
The minimal change in a stimulus that can just barely be detected
Absolute Threshold
The minimum intensity needed to just barely detect a stimulus
Alertness and arousal
The most basic levels or attention; conditions of responsiveness to the outside world
Benzodiazepines
The most common group of anti anxiety drugs, which includes Valium and Xanax
Law of Prägnanz
The most general Gestalt principle, which states that the simplest organization, requiring the least cognitive effort, will emerge as the figure. Prägnanz shares a common root with pregnant, and so it carries the idea of a "fully developed figure". That is, our perceptual system prefers to see fully developed Gestalt, such as a complete circle-as opposed to a broken circle
Anterior commissure
The nerve bundle connecting the left and right cerebral hemispheres and that is located anterior to the corpus callosum
Plasticity
The nervous system's ability to adapt or change as the result of experience. Plasticity may also help the nervous system adapt to physical damage
Choroid plexus
The network of capillaries that protrude into the ventricles from the pia mater and continuosuly produce cerebrospinal fluid
Accommodation
The process by which we create a new schema or drastically alter an existing schema to include new information that otherwise would not fit into the schema
Assimilation
The process by which we place new information into an existing schema
Axon
The process extending away from a neuron down which action potentials travel. The terminals of axons contact other neurons at synapses
Standardization
The process in which a test is administered to a large group of people whose performance then serves as a standard or norm against which any individual's score can be measured
Reciprocal determinism
The process in which cognitions, behaviors, and the environment mutually influence each other
Retrieval
The process of bringing to mind information that has been previously encoded and stored
Organizational encoding
The process of categorizing information according to the relationships among a series of items
Item analysis
The process of examining each question on a test to see how it is related to the objectives being tested
Self-hypnosis
The process of hypnotizing oneself, sometimes for the purpose of forgetting unpleasant events
Rehearsal
The process of keeping information in short-term memory by mentally repeating it
Memory storage
The process of maintaining information in memory over time
Storage
The process of maintaining information in memory over time
Visual imagery encoding
The process of storing new information by converting it into mental pictures
Scientific method
The process of systematically gathering and evaluating information through careful observations to gain an understanding of a phenomenon
Bereavement
The process of working through the grief that one feels when a loved one dies
Reuptake
The process whereby a neurotransmitter is taken back into the presynaptic terminal buttons, thereby stopping its activity
Social cognition
The processes by which people come to understand others
Linguistic relativity hypothesis
The proposal that language shapes the nature of thought
Frequency format hypothesis
The proposal that our minds evolved to notice how frequently things occur, not how likely they are to occur
Altruism
The providing of help when it is needed, without any apparent reward for doing so
Working through
The psychoanalytic process of facing conflicts, reinterpreting feelings, and overcoming one's problems
Ego theory
The psychodynamic theory that emphasizes the ego and considers it an independent force
Self theory
The psychodynamic theory that emphasizes the role of the self---a person's unified personality
Object relations theory
The psychodynamic theory that views the desire for relationships as the key motivating force in human behavior
Clinical view
The psychological perspective emphasizing mental health and mental illness. Psychodynamic and humanistic psychology are variations on the clinical view
Yerkes-Dodson law
The psychological principle that performance increases with arousal up to an optimal point, after which it decreases with increasing arousal
Motivation
The purpose for or psychological cause of an action
Pleasure principle
The pursuit of gratification that characterizes id functioning
Grief
The reaction a person experiences when a loved one is lost
Reality principle
The recognition, characterizing ego functioning, that we cannot always express or satisfy our id impulses
Flashback
The recurrence of LSD-induced sensory and emotional changes, long after the drug has left the body, or, in posttraumatic stress disorder, the reexperiencing of past traumatic events
Non-REM (NREM) sleep
The recurring periods, mainly associated with the deeper stages of sleep, when a sleeper is not showing rapid eye movements
Tolerance
The reduced effectiveness a drug has after repeated use
Hypnotic analgesia
The reduction of pain through hypnosis in people who are susceptible to hypnosis
Belt
The region of the auditory cortex that surrounds (and receives most of its input from) the core; also receives some direct input from the medial geniculate
CA1 subfield
The region of the hippocampus that is commonly damaged by cerebral ischemia
Brain stem
The region of the nervous system that contains groups of motor and sensory nuclei, nuclei of widespread modulatory neurotransmitter systems, and white matter tracts of ascending sensory information and descending motor signals. In general, it regulates reflex activities that are critical for survival (e.g., heart rate and respiration)
Receptive field
The region of the sensory surface that, when stimulated, causes a change in the firing rate of that neuron
Synaptic transmission
The relaying of information across the synapse by means of chemical neurotransmitters
Catharsis
The reliving of past repressed feelings in order to settle internal conflicts and overcome problems
Negative punishment
The removal of a stimulus to decrease the probability of a behavior's recurring
Omission training (negative punishment)
The removal of an appetitive stimulus after a response, leading to a decrease in behavior
Negative reinforcement
The removal of an unpleasant or aversive stimulus, contingent on particular behavior
Bilateral medial temporal lobectomy
The removal of the medial portions of both temporal lobes, including the hippocampus, the amygdala, and the adjacent cortex
Expectancy bias
The researcher allowing his or her expectations to affect the outcome of a study; or, in memory, a tendency to distort recalled events to make them fit one's expectations
Behaviors
The responses an organism makes to its environment
Grammar
The rules of language, specifying how to use words, morphemes, and syntax to produce understandable sentences
Abnormal psychology
The scientific study of abnormal behavior undertaken to describe, predict, explain, and change abnormal patterns of behavior
Psychology
The scientific study of mind and behavior
Biopyschology
The scientific study of the biology of behavior
Subtyping
The tendency for people who are faced with disconfirming evidence to modify their stereotypes rather than abandon them
Spontaneous recovery
The tendency of a learned behavior to recover from extinction after a rest period
Observer drift
The tendency of an observer who is arting subjects in an experiment to change criteria gradually and involuntarily, thus making the data unreliable
Cerebral dominance
The tendency of each brain hemisphere to exert control over different functions, such as language or perception of spatial relationships
Rebound effect of thought suppression
The tendency of thought to return to return to consciousness with greater frequency following suppression
Compliance
The tendency to agree to do things requested by others
Confirmation bias
The tendency to attend to evidence that complements and confirms our beliefs or expectations, while ignoring evidence that does not
Obedience
The tendency to do what powerful people tell us to do
Suggestibility
The tendency to incorporate misleading information from external sources into personal recollections
Correspondence bias
The tendency to make a dispositional attribution even when a person's behavior was caused by the situation
Actor-observer effect
The tendency to make situational attributions for our own behavior while making dispositional attributions for the identical dbehavior of others
Functional fixedness
The tendency to perceive the functions of objects as fixed
Mental set
The tendency to responds to a new problem in the manner used for a previous problem
Self-verification
The tendency to seek evidence to confirm the self concept
Type A behavior pattern
The tendency toward easily aroused hostility, impatience, a sense of time urgency, and competitive achievement strivings
Hindsight bias
The tendency, after learning about an event, to "second guess" or believe that one could have predicted the event in advance
Triarchic theory
The term for Sternberg's theory of intelligence; so called because it combines three main forms of intelligence
Humanistic model
The theoretical perspective that human beings are born with a natural inclination to be friendly, cooperative, and constructive and are driven to self-actualize
Existential model
The theoretical perspective that human beings are born with the total freedom either to face up to one's existence and give meaning to one's life or to shrink from that responsibility
Psychodynamic approach
The theoretical perspective that sees all human functioning as being shaped by dynamic (interacting) psychological forces and explains people's behavior by reference to unconscious internal conflicts
Associationism
The theory that the aggregate of a person's experience determines the course of mental development
"Control of behavior" versus "conscious perception" theory
The theory that the dorsal stream mediates behavioral interactions with objects and the ventral stream mediates conscious perception of objects
Cognitive map theory
The theory that the main function of the hippocampus is to store memories of spatial locations
Need to belong theory
The theory that the need for interpersonal attachments is a fundamental motive that has evolved for adaptive purposes
Collectivism
The view, common in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East, that values group loyalty and pride over individual distinction
Individualism
The view, common in the Euro-American world, which places a high value on individual achievement and distinction
Visual cortex
The visual processing areas of the cortex in the occipital and temporal lobes
Completion
The visual system's automatic use of information obtained from receptors around the blind spot, or scotoma, to create a perception of the missing portion of the retinal image
Cytoarchitectonics
The way in which cells differ between brain regions
Extinction (in classical conditioning)
The weakening of a conditioned response in the absence of an unconditioned stimulus
Weight set point
The weight level that a person is predisposed to maintain, controlled in part by the hypothalamus
Caffeine
The world's most widely used stimulant, most often consumed in coffee
Transduction
What takes place when many sensors in the body convert physical signals from the environment into encoded neural signals sent to the central nervous system
Group polarization
When individuals in a group have similar, though not identical, views, their opinions become more extreme
Change blindness
When people fail to detect changes to the visual details of a scene
Framing effects
When people give different answers to the same problem depending on how the problem is phrased (or framed)
Conjunction fallacy
When people think that two events are more likely to occur together than either individual event
Reactivity
When the knowledge that one is being observed alters the behavior being observed
Action-outcome
When there is a causal relationship between the action and the reward
Lymphocytes
White blood cells that produce antibodies that fight infection
Commissure
White matter tracts that cross from the left to the right side, or vice versa, of the CNS
Hypertension
Chronic high blood pressure
Brodmann Area 25
A brain structure whose abnormal activity has been linked to depression
Absolute refractory period
A brief period (typically 1 to 2 milliseconds) after the initiation of an action potential during which it is impossible to elicit another action potential in the same neuron
Tyramine
A cehmical that, if allowed to accumulate, can raise blood pressure dangerously. It is found in many common foods and is broken down by MAO
Personality trait
A characteristic; a dispositional tendency to act in a certain way over time and across circumstances
Hormone
A chemical messenger used by the endocrine system. Many hormones also serve as neurotransmitters
Neologism
A made-up word that has meaning only to the person using it
Psychoactive drug
A chemical that influences consciousness or behavior by altering the brain's chemical messenger system
Meta-analysis
A "study of studies" that combines the findings of multiple studies to arrive at a conclusion
Exposure and response prevention
A behavioral treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder that exposes a client to anxiety-arousing thoughts or situations and then prevents the client from performing their compulsive acts. Also called exposure and ritual prevention
Alprazolam
A benzodiazepine drug shown to be effective in the treatment of anxiety disorders. Marketed as Xanax
Code of Ethics
A body of principles and rules for ethical behavior, designed to guide decisions and actions by members of a profession
Amygdala
A brain structure that serves a vital role in our learning to associate things with emotional responses and in processing emotional information
Suicidal behavior disorder
A classification being studied for possible inclusion in a future revision of DSM-5, in which individuals have tried to commit suicide within the last two years
Script
A cluster of knowledge about sequences of events and actions expected to occur in particular settings
Fetal alcohol syndrome
A cluster of problems in a child, including low birth weight, irregularities in the hands and face, and intellectual deficits, caused by excessive alcohol intake by the mother during pregnancy
Syndrome
A cluster of symptoms that usually occur together
Intoxication
A cluster of undesirable behavioral or psychological changes, such as slurred speech or mood changes, that may develop during or shortly after the ingestion of a substance
Rescorla-Wagner model
A cognitive model of classical conditioning; it states that the strength of the CS-US association is determined by the extent to which the unconditioned stimulus is unexpected or surprising
Self-instruction training
A cognitive treatment developed by Donald Meichenbaum that teaches people to use coping self-statements at times of stress or discomfort. Also called stress inoculation training
Information-processing model
A cognitive understanding of memory, emphasizing how information is changed when it is encoded, stored, and retrieved
Assertiveness training
A cognitive-behavioral approach to increasing assertive behavior that is socially desirable
Relapse-prevention training
A cognitive-behavioral approach to treating alcohol use disorder (and applied to certain other disorders) in which clients are taught to keep track of their drinking behavior, apply coping strategies in situations that typically trigger excessive drinking, and plan ahead for risky situations and reactions
Acceptance and commitment therapy
A cognitive-behavioral therapy that teaches clients to accept and be mindful of their dysfunctional thoughts or worries
Basal ganglia
A collection of five subcortical nuclei: the caudate, putamen, globus pallidus, subthalamic nucleus, and substantia nigra. The basal ganglia are involved in motor control and learning. Reciprocal neuronal loops project from cortical areas to the basal ganglia and back to the cortex. Two prominent basal ganglia disorders are Parkinson's disease and Huntington's disease
Group
A collection of people who have something in common that distinguishes them from others
Language acquisition device (LAD)
A collection of processes that facilitate language learning
Institutional Review Board (IRB)
A committee at each institution where research is conducted to review every experiment for ethics and methodology
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC)
A committee at each institution where research is conducted to review every experiment involving animals for ethics and methodology
Premenstrual syndrome (PMS)
A common and normal cluster of psychological and physical discomforts that proceed menses
Cleaning compulsion
A common compulsion in which people feel compelled to keep cleaning themselves, their clothing, and their homes
Derailment
A common thinking disturbance in schizophrenia, involving rapid shifts from one topic of conversation to another. Also called loose associations
Daydreaming
A common, and quite normal, variation of consciousness in which attention shifts to memories, expectations, desires, or fantasies and away from the immediate situation
Risperidone
A commonly prescribed atypical antipsychotic drug
Clozapine
A commonly prescribed atypical antipsychotic drug. Does not produce Parkinsonian side effects and does not have a high affinity for D2 receptors
Case manager
A community therapist who offers a full range of services for people with schizophrenia or other severe disorders, including therapy, advice, medication, guidance, and protection of patients' rights
Culture
A complex blend of language, beliefs, customs, values, and traditions developed by a group of people and shared with others in the same environment
Immune system
A complex response system that protects the body from bacteria, viruses, and other foreign substances
Anoxia
A complication of birth in which the baby is deprived of oxygen
Checking compulsion
A compulsion in which people feel compelled to check the same things over and over
Positron emission tomography (PET)
A computer-produced motion picture showing rates of metabolism throughout the brain
CT scanning or computerized tomography
A computerized imaging technique that uses X rays passed through the brain at various angles and then combined into an image
Melancholia
A condition described by early Greek and Roman philosophers and physicians as consisting of unshakable sadness. Today it is known as depression
Addiction
A condition in which a person continues to use a drug, or engage in a behavior, despite its adverse effects-often despite repeated attempts to discontinue using the drug. Addiction may be based on physical or psychological dependence
Arteriosclerosis
A condition in which blood vessels are blocked by the accumulation of fat deposits on their walls
Anterograde amnesia
A condition in which people lose the ability to form new memories
Lycanthropy
A condition in which persons believe themselves to be possessed by wolves or other animals
Osmotic thirst
A drop in intracellular fluid levels
Amnesia
A deficit in long-term memory, resulting from disease, brain injury, or psychological trauma, in which the individual loses the ability to retrieve vast quantities of information from long-term memory
Alzheimer's disease
A degenerative brain disease usually noticed first by its debilitating effects on memory
Endogenous depression
A depression that appears to be developing without external reasons
Reactive depression
A depression that appears to be triggered by clear events. Also known as exogenous depression
Binocular disparity
A depth cue; because of the distance between a person's eyes, each eye receives a slightly different retinal image
Psychological dependence
A desire to obtain or use a drug, even though there is no physical dependence
Compulsive ritual
A detailed, often elaborate, set of actions that a person often feels compelled to perform, always in an identical manner
Diagnosis
A determination that a person's problems reflect a particular disorder
Autism spectrum disorder
A developmental disorder marked by extreme unresponsiveness to others, severe communication deficits, and highly repetitive and rigid behaviors, interests, and activities
Specific learning disorder
A developmental disorder marked by impairments in cognitive skills such as reading, writing, arithmetic, or mathematical skills
Test
A device for gathering information about a few aspects of a person's psychological functioning from which broader information about the person can be inferred
Electroencephalograph (EEG)
A device for recording brain waves, typically by electrodes placed on the scalp
Measure
A device that can detect the condition to which an operational definition refers
Electromyograph (EMG)
A device that measures muscle contractions under the surface of a person's skin
Polygraph
A device that records or graphs many ("poly") measures of physical arousal, such as heart rate, breathing, perspiration, and blood pressure. A polygraph is often called a "lie detector" even though it is really an arousal detector
Brain-machine interface
A device that uses the interpretation of neuronal signals to perform desired operations with a mechanical device outside the body. For instance, signals recorded from neurons or EEG can be used to move a prosthetic arm
Diathesis-stress model
A diagnostic model that proposes that a disorder may develop when an underlying vulnerability is coupled with a precipitating event
Cafeteria diet
A diet offered to experimental animals that is composed of a wide variety of palatable foods
Major depressive disorder
A disorder characterized by a severely depressed mood that lasts 2 weeks or more and is accompanied by feelings of worthlessness and lack of pleasure, lethargy, and sleep and appetite disturbances
Sexual aversion disorder
A disorder characterized by an aversion to and an avoidance of genital sexual interplay
Schizophrenia
A disorder characterized by the profound disruption of basic psychological processes; a distorted perception of reality; altered or blunted emotion; and disturbances in thought, motivation, and behavior
Delusional disorder
A disorder consisting of persistent, nonbizarre delusions that are not part of a schizophrenic disorder
Balint's syndrome
A disorder following bilateral occipitoparietal stroke, characterized by difficulty in perceiving visual objects. Patients with this disorder can correctly identify objects but have difficulty relating objects to one another. They tend to focus attention on one object to the exclusion of others when the objects are presented simultaneously
Conduct disorder
A disorder in which a child repeatedly violates the basic rights of others and displays aggression, characterized by symptoms such as physical cruelty to people or animals, the deliberate destruction of other people's property, and the commission of various crimes
Factitious disorder
A disorder in which a person feigns or induces symptoms, typically for the purpose of assuming the role of a sick person
Obsessive-compulsive disorder
A disorder in which a person has recurrent and unwanted thoughts and/or a need to perform repetitive and rigid actions
Gender dysphoria
A disorder in which a person persistently feels clinically significant distress or impairment due to their assigned gender and strongly wishes to be a member of another gender
Paraphilic disorder
A disorder in which a person's paraphilia causes great distress, interferes with social or occupational activities, or places the person or others at risk of harm---either currently or in the past
Obstructive sleep apnea
A disorder in which a person, while asleep, stops breathing because his or her throat closes; the conditioning results in frequent awakenings during the night
Schizophreniform disorder
A disorder in which all of the key features of schizophrenia are present but last only between one and six months
Conversion disorder
A disorder in which bodily symptoms affect voluntary motor and sensory functions, but the symptoms are inconsistent with known medical diseases
Oppositional defiant disorder
A disorder in which children are repeatedly argumentative and defiant, angry and irritable, and, in some cases, vindictive
Acute stress disorder
A disorder in which fear and related symptoms are experienced soon after a traumatic event and last less than a month
B-cell
A lymphocyte that produces antibodies
Body dysmorphic disorder
A disorder in which individuals become preoccupied with the belief that they have certain defects or flaws in their physical appearance. The preceived defects or flaws are imagined or greatly exaggerated
Illness anxiety disorder
A disorder in which people are chronically anxious about and preoccupied with the notion that they have or are developing a serious medical illness, despite the absence of somatic symptoms. Previously known as hypochondriasis
Somatic symptom disorder
A disorder in which people become excessively distressed, concerned, and anxious about bodily symptoms that they are experiencing, and their lives are greatly and disproportionately disrupted by the symptoms
Hoarding disorder
A disorder in which people feel compelled to save items and experience significant distress if they try to discard them, resulting in an excessive accumulation of items and possessions
Trichotillomania
A disorder in which people repeatedly pull hair out of their scalp, eyebrows, eyelashes, or other parts of their body. Also called hair-pulling disorder
Excoriation disorder
A disorder in which persons repeatedly pick at their skin, resulting in significant sores or wounds. Also called skin-picking disorder
Hysterical disorder
A disorder in which physical functioning is changed or lost, without an apparent physical cause
Schizoaffective disorder
A disorder in which symptoms of both schizophrenia and a mood disorder are prominent
Psychosis
A disorder involving profound disturbances in perception, rational thinking, or affect
Hypoactive sexual desire disorder
A disorder marked by a lack of interest in sex
Sexual dysfunction
A disorder marked by a persistent inability to function normally in some area of the human sexual response cycle
Neurocognitive disorder
A disorder marked by a significant decline in at least one area of cognitive functioning
Separation anxiety disorder
A disorder marked by excessive anxiety, even panic, whenever the individual is separated from home, a parent, or another attachment figure
Binge eating disorder
A disorder marked by frequent binges but no extreme compensatory behaviors
Bulimia nervosa
A disorder marked by frequent eating binges that are followed by forced vomiting or other extreme compensatory behaviors to avoid gaining weight. Also known as binge-purge syndrome
Cretinism
A disorder marked by intellectual deficiencies and physical abnormalities; caused by low levels of iodine in the mother's diet during pregnancy
Intellectual disability (ID)
A disorder marked by intellectual functioning and adaptive behavior that are well below average. Previously called mental retardation
Cyclothymic disorder
A disorder marked by neumerous periods of hypomanic symptoms and mild depressive symptoms
Generalized anxiety disorder
A disorder marked by persistent and excessive feelings of anxiety and worry about numerous events and activities
Enuresis
A disorder marked by repeated bedwetting or wetting of one's clothes
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder
A disorder marked by repeated experiences of significant depression and related symptoms during the week before menstruation
Tarantism
A disorder occurring throughout Europe between 900 and 1800 A.D. in which people would suddenly start to jump around, dance, and go into convulsions. Also known as St. Vitus's dance
Narcolepsy
A disorder of REM sleep, involving sleep-onset REM periods and sudden daytime REM-sleep attacks usually accompanied by cataplexy
Iatrogenic illness
A disorder or symptom that occurs as a result of a medical or psychotherapeutic treatment
Social phobia
A disorder that involves an irrational fear of being publicly humiliated or embarrassed
Nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI)
A disorder that is being studied for possible inclusion in a future edition of the DSM-5, characterized by persons intentionally injuring themselves on five or more occasions over a 1-year period, without the intent of killing themselves
Depersonalization-derealization disorder
A dissociative disorder marked by the presence of persistent and recurrent episodes of depersonalization, derealization, or both
Brain region
A distinct area of the brain formed by a large group of neurons
Self-consciousness
A distinct level of consciousness in which the person's attention is drawn to the self as an object
Formal thought disorder
A disturbance in the production and organization of thought
Contralateral neglect
A disturbance of the patient's ability to respond to visual, auditory, and somatosensory stimuli on the side of the body opposite to a site of brain damage, usually the left side of the body following damage to the right parietal lobe
Reward center
A dopamine-rich pathway in the brain that produces feelings of pleasure when activated
Delirium tremens (DTs)
A dramatic withdrawal reaction experienced by some people with alcohol use disorder. It consists of confusion, clouded consciousness, and terrifying visual hallucinations
Manifest content
A dream's apparent topic or superficial meaning
Latent content
A dream's true underlying meaning
Volumetric thirst
A drop in extracellular fluid levels
Antabuse (disulfiram)
A drug that causes intense nausea, vomiting, increased heart rate, and dizziness when taken with alcohol. It is often taken by people who are trying to refrain from drinking alcohol
Tranquilizer
A drug that reduces anxiety
L-dopa
A drug used in the treatment of Parkinson's disease, a disease in which dopamine is low
Sodium amobarbital (Amytal)
A drug used to put people into a near-sleep state during which some can better recall forgotten events
Sildenafil
A drug used to treat erectile disorder that helps increase blood flow to the penis during sexual activity. Marketed as Viagra
Erectile disorder
A dysfunction in which a man persistently fails to to attain or maintain an erection during sexual activity
Premature ejaculation
A dysfunction in which a man persistently reaches orgasm and ejaculates within one minute of beginning sexual activity with a partner and before he wishes to. Also called early or rapid ejaculation
Female orgasmic disorder
A dysfunction in which a woman persistently fails to reach orgasm, has very low intensity orgasms, or has very delayed orgasms
Clinical interview
A face-to-face encounter, in which clinicians ask questions of clients, weigh their responses and reactions, and learn about them and their psychological problems
Munchausen syndrome by proxy
A factitious disorder in which parents make up or produce physical illnesses in their children
Inattentional blindness
A failure to perceive objects that are not the focus of attention
Blocking
A failure to retrieve information that is available in memory even though you are trying to produce it
Hallucination
A false perceptual experience that has a compelling sense of being real despite the absence of external stimulation
Hypothesis
A falsifiable prediction made by a theory
Enmeshed family pattern
A family system in which family members are overinvolved with each other's affairs and overconcerned about each other's welfare
Heuristic
A fast and efficient strategy that may facilitate decision making but does not guarantee that a solution
Echoic memory
A fast-decaying store of auditory information
Iconic memory
A fast-decaying store of visual information
Anchoring bias
A faulty heuristic caused by basing (anchoring) an estimate on a completely unrelated quantity
False recognition
A feeling of familiarity about something that hasn't been encountered before
Inferiority complex
A feeling of inferiority that is largely unconscious, with its roots in childhood
Female sexual interest/arousal disorder
A female dysfunction marked by a persistent reduction or lack of interest in sex and low sexual activity, as well as, in some cases, limited excitement and few sexual sensations during sexual activity
Zygote
A fertilized egg that contains chromosomes from both a sperm and an egg
Behavioral medicine
A field that combines psychological and physical interventions to treat or prevent medical problems
Cannula
A fine, hollow tube that is implanted in the body for the purpose of introducing or extracting substances
Antigen
A foreign invader of the body, such as a bacterium or virus
Apperceptive agnosia
A form of agnosia associated with deficits in the operation of higher-level perceptual analyses. A patient with apperceptive agnosia may recognize an object when seen from a typical viewpoint. However, if the orientation is unsual, or the object is occluded by shadows, recognition deteriorates.
Associative agnosia
A form of agnosia in which the patient has difficulty linking perceptual representations with long-term knowledge of the percepts. For example, the patient may be able to identify that two pictures are of the same object, yet fail to demonstrate an understanding of what the object is used for or where it is likely to be found
Conduction aphasia
A form of aphasia that is considered a disconnection syndrome. Conduction aphasia may occur when the arcuate fasciculus, the pathway from Wernicke's area to Broca's area, is damaged, thereby disconnecting the posterior and anterior language areas
Token economy
A form of behavior therapy in which clients are given "tokens" for desired behaviors, which they can later trade for rewards
Classical conditioning
A form of behavioral learning in which a previously neutral stimulus acquires the power to elicit the same innate reflex produced by another stimulus
Observational learning
A form of cognitive learning in which new responses are acquired after watching others' behavior and the consequences of their behavior
Insight learning
A form of cognitive learning, originally described by the Gestalt psychologists, in which problem solving occurs by means of a sudden reorganization of perceptions
Asch effect
A form of conformity in which a group majority influences individual judgments
Psychological debriefing
A form of crisis intervention in which victims are helped to talk about their feelings and reactions to traumatic incidents. Also called critical incident stress debriefing
Unilateral electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
A form of electroconvulsive therapy in which electrodes are attached to the head so that electrical currents pass through only one side of the brain
Relational psychoanalytic therapy
A form of psychodynamic therapy that considers therapists to be active participants in the formation of patients' feelings and reactions and therefore calls for therapists to disclose their own experiences and feelings in discussions with patients
Emotion
A four-part process that involves physiological arousal, subjective feelings, cognitive interpretation, and behavioral expression-all of which interact, rather than occurring in a linear sequence. Emotions help organisms deal with important events
Sunk-cost fallacy
A framing effect in which people make decisions about a current situation based on what they have previously invested in the situation
Dominant gene
A gene that is expressed in the offspring whenever it is present
Recessive gene
A gene that is expressed only when it is matched with a similar gene from another parent
g factor
A general ability, proposed by Spearman, as the main factor underlying all intelligent mental activity
Habituation
A general process in which repeated or prolonged exposure to a stimulus results in a gradual reduction in response
Therapy
A general term for any treatment process; in psychology and psychiatry, therapy refers to a variety of psychological and biomedical techniques aimed at dealing with mental disorders or coping with problems of living
Nomothetic understanding
A general understanding of the nature, causes, and treatments of abnormal psychological functioning in the form of laws or principles
Corpuscle
A globular mass of cells that are part of the somatosensory system
Absorption spectrum
A graph of the ability of a substance to absorb light of different wavelengths
Forgetting curve
A graph plotting the amount of retention and forgetting over time for a certain batch of material, such as a list of nonsense syllables. The typical forgetting curve is steep at first, becoming flatter as time goes on
Scatterplot
A graphical depiction of the relationship between two variables
Frequency distribution
A graphical representation of the measurements arranged by the number of times each measurement was made
Phenothiazines
A group of antihistamine drugs that became the first group of effective antipsychotic medications
Neurodevelopmental disorders
A group of disabilities---including ADHD, autism spectrum disorder, and intellectual disability---in the functioning of the brain that emerge at birth or during very early childhood and affect an individual's behavior, memory, concentration, and/or ability to learn
Obsessive-compulsive-related disorders
A group of disorders in which obsessive-like concerns drive people to repeatedly and excessively perform specific patterns of behavior that greatly disrupt their lives
Dissociative disorders
A group of disorders in which some parts of one's memory or identity seem to be dissociated, or separated, from other parts of one's memory or identity
Limbic system
A group of forebrain structures including the hypothalamus, the amygdala, and the hippocampus, which are involved in motivation, emotion, learning, and memory
Corticosteroids
A group of hormones, including cortisol, released by the adrenal glands at times of stress
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)
A group of second-generation antidepressant drugs that increase serotonin activity specifically, without affecting other neurotransmitters
Codon
A group of three consecutive nucleotide bases on a DNA or messenger RNA strand; each codon specifies the particular amino acid that is to be added to an amino acid chain during protein synthesis
Social norms
A group's expectations regarding what is appropriate and acceptable for its members' attitudes and behaviors
Auditory hallucination
A hallucination in which a person hears sounds or voices that are not actually present
LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide)
A hallucinogenic drug derived from ergot alkaloids
Muscle contraction headache
A headache caused by the narrowing of muscles surrounding the skull. Also known as tension headache
Bottom-up processing
A hierarchical model of pattern recognition in which data are relayed from one level of mental processing to the next, always moving to higher levels of processing
Top-down processing
A hierarchical model of pattern recognition in which information at higher levels of mental processing can also influence lower, "earlier" levels in the processing hierarchy
Morphine
A highly addictive substance derived from opium that is particularly effective in relieving pain
Opium
A highly addictive substance made from the sap of the opium poppy seed
Cognitive dissonance
A highly motivating state in which people have conflicting cognitions, especially when their voluntary actions conflict with their attitudes
Gestalt psychology
A historical school of psychology that sought to understand how the brain works by studying perception and perceptual learning. Gestalt psychologists believed that percepts consist of meaningful wholes (in German, Gestalts)
Cortisol
A hormone released by the adrenal glands when a person is under stress
Melatonin
A hormone released by the pineal gland when a person's surroundings are dark
Oxytocin
A hormone that is important for mothers in bonding to newborns and may encourage affiliation during social stress
Milieu therapy
A humanistic approach to institutional treatment based on the premise that institutions can help patients recover by creating a climate that promotes self-respect, individual responsible behavior, and meaningful activity
Client-centered therapy
A humanistic approach to treatment developed by Carl Rogers, emphasizing an individual's tendency for healthy psychological growth through self-actualization
Theory
A hypothetical explanation of a natural phenomenon
Prevention
A key feature of community mental health programs that seek to prevent or minimize psychological disorders
Experiment
A kind of research in which the researcher controls all the conditions and directly manipulates the conditions, including the independent variable
Methadone
A laboratory-made opioid-like drug
Poverty of content
A lack of meaning in spite of high emotion that is found in the speech of some people with schizophrenia
Aphasia
A language deficit following brain damage or disease
Malpractice suit
A lawsuit charging a therapist with improper conduct or decision making in the course of treatment
Mentally disordered sex offender
A legal category that some states apply to certain people who are repeatedly found guilty of sex crimes
Guilty with diminished capacity
A legal defense argument that states that because of limitations posed by mental dysfunctioning, a defendant could not have intended to commit a particular crime and thus should be convicted of a lesser crime
Civil commitment
A legal process by which a person can be forced to undergo mental health treatment
Criminal commitment
A legal process by which people accused of a crime are instead judged mentally unstable and sent to a mental health facility for treatment
Insanity
A legal term, not a psychological or psychiatric one, referring to a person who is unable, because of a mental disorder or defect, to conform his or her behavior to the law
American Law Institute test
A legal test for insanity that holds people to be insane at the time of committing a crime if, because of a mental disorder, they did not know right from wrong or could not resist an uncontrollable impulse to act
Durham test
A legal test for insanity that holds people to be insane at the time they committed a crime if their act was the result of a mental disorder or defect
Irresistible impulse test
A legal test for insanity that holds people to be insane at the time they committed a crime if they were driven to do so by an uncontrollable "fit of passion"
Aspiration
A lesion technique in which tissue is drawn off by suction through the fine tip of a glass tube
Ulcer
A lesion that forms in the wall of the stomach or of the duodenum
Anesthesia
A lessening or loss of sensation of touch or pain
Profound intellectual disability
A level of intellectual disability (IQ below 20) at which people need a very structured environment with close supervision
Moderate intellectual disability
A level of intellectual disability (IQ between 35 and 49) at which people can learn to care for themselves and can benefit from vocational training
Mild intellectual disability
A level of intellectual disability (IQ between 50 and 75) at which people can benefit from education and can support themselves as adults
Control-question technique
A lie-detection interrogation method in which the polygrapher compares the physiological responses to target questions with responses to control questions
Agranulocytosis
A life-threatening drop in white blood cells. This condition is sometimes produced by the atypical antipsychotic drug clozapine
Hypothalamus
A limbic structure that serves as the brain's blood-testing laboratory, constantly monitoring the blood to determine the condition of the body. The hypothalamus is vital in the regulation of body temperature, hunger, thirst, and sexual behavior
Classification system
A list of disorders, along with descriptions of symptoms and guidelines for making appropriate diagnoses
Fear hierarchy
A list of objects or situations that frighten a person, starting with those that are slightly feared and ending with those that are feared greatly; used in systematic desensitization
Timbre
A listener's experience of sound quality or resonance that derives from the sound wave's complexity (combination of pure tones)
Blind spot
A location in the visual field that produces no sensation on the retina because the corresponding area of the retina contains neither rods nor cones and therefore has no mechanism to sense light
DNA
A long, complex molecule that encodes genetic characteristics. DNA is an abbreviation for deoxyribonucleic acid
Generalized amnesia
A loss of memory for events that occurred over a limited period of time as well as for certain events that occurred prior to that period
Depression
A low, sad state marked by significant levels of sadness, lack of energy, low aelf-worth, guilt, or related symptoms
Minimal consciousness
A low-level kind of sensory awareness and responsiveness that occurs when the mind inputs sensations and may output behavior
Helper T-cell
A lymphocyte that identifies foreign invaders and then both multiplies and triggers the production of other kinds of immune cells
Augmentative communication system
A method for enhancing the communication skills of people with autism spectrum disorder, intellectual developmental disorder, or cerebral palsy by teaching them to point to pictures, symbols, letters, or words on a communication board or computer
Analog observation
A method for observing behavior in which people are observed in artificial settings such as clinicians' offices or laboratories
Case method
A method of gathering scientific knowledge by studying a single individual
Psychological profile
A method of suspect identification that seeks to predict an unknown criminal's psychological, emotional, and personality characteristics based on the individual's pattern of criminal behavior and on research into the psychological characteristics of people who have committed similar crimes
Basal forebrain
A midline area of the forebrain, which is located just in front of and above the hypothalamus and is the brain's main source of acetylcholine
Method of loci
A mnemonic technique that involves associating items on a list with a sequence of familiar physical locations
Guided participation
A modeling technique in which a client systematically observes and imitates the therapist while the therapist confronts feared items
Double depression
A moderately depressed mood that persists for at least 2 years and is punctuated by periods of major depression
Dopamine
A monoamine neurotransmitter involved in motivation, reward, and motor control over voluntary movement
Epinephrine
A monoamine neurotransmitter responsible for bursts of energy after an event that is exciting or threatening
Intrinsic motivation
A motivation to take actions that are themselves rewarding
Ataxia
A movement disorder associated with lesions or atrophy of the cerebellum. Ataxic movements are clumsy and erratic, even though muscle strength is normal
Empirically supported treatment
A movement in the clinical field that seeks to identify which therapies have received clear research support for each disorder, to develop corresponding treatment guidelines, and to spread such information to clinicians. Also known as evidence-based treatment
Cerebral dialysis
A mrhtod for recording changes in brain chemistry in behaving animals in which a fine tube with a short semipermeable section is implanted in the brain, and extracellular neurochemicals are continuously drawn off for analysis
Motor cortex
A narrow vertical strip of cortex in the frontal lobes, lying just in front of the central fissure; controls voluntary movement
National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI)
A nationwide grassroots organization that provides support, education, advocacy, and research for people with severe mental disorders and their families
Ergot alkaloid
A naturally occurring compound from which LSD is derived
Semantic memory
A network of associated facts and concepts that make up our general knowledge of the world
Disaster Response Network (DRN)
A network of thousands of volunteer mental health professionals who mobilize to provide free emergency psychological services at disaster sites throughout North America
Central pattern generator
A neural network limited to the spinal cord that produces patterned motor outputs without descending commands from the cerebral cortex or sensory feedback
Brainbow
A neuroanatomical technique that involves inserting various mutations of the green fluorescent protein gene into neural tissue so that different neurons fluoresce in different colors
Apraxia
A neurological syndrome characterized by loss of skilled or purposeful movement that cannot be attributed to weakness or an inability to innervate the muscles. Apraxia results from lesions of the cerebral cortex, usually in the left hemisphere
Agnosia
A neurological syndrome in which disturbances of perceptual recognition cannot be attributed to impairments in basic sensory processes. Agnosia can be restricted to a single modality, such as vision or audition
Alexia
A neurological syndrome in which the ability to read is disrupted. Alexia is frequently referred to as acquired alexia to indicate that it results from a neurological disturbance such as a stroke, usually including the occipitoparietal region of the left hemisphere. Developmental dyslexia, in contrast, refers to problems in reading that are apparent during childhood development. The phrases are commonly used to indicate that reading is abnormal, either from neurological disturbance or as part of development
Bipolar neuron
A neuron with two processes extending from its cell body
Bender Visual-Motor Gestalt Test
A neuropsychological test in which a subject is asked to copy a set of nine simple designs and later reproduce the signs from memory
Substance P
A neurotransmitter involved in pain perception
Neuromodulator
A neurotransmitter that helps modify or regulate the effect of other neurotransmitters
Norepinephrine
A neurotransmitter that influences mood and arousal. Its abnormal activity is linked to panic disorder and depression
Serotonin
A neurotransmitter that is involved in the regulation of sleep and wakefulness, eating, and aggressive behavior. Its abnormal activity is linked to depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and eating disorders
Restructuring
A new way of thinking about a problem that aids its solution
Moral treatment
A nineteenth-century approach to treating people with mental dysfunction that emphasized moral guidance and humane and respectful treatment
Computed axial tomography (CT scan)
A noninvasive neuroimaging method that provides images of internal structures such as the brain. CT is an advanced version of the conventional X-ray. Whereas conventional X-rays compress three dimensional objects into two dimensions, CT allows for the reconstruction of three-dimensional space from compressed two-dimensional images through computer algorithms
Phrenology
A now defunct theory that specific mental abilities and characteristics, ranging from memory to the capacity for happiness, are localized in specific regions of the brain
Central nucleus of the amygdala
A nucleus of the amygdala that is thought to control defensive behavior
Arcuate nucleus
A nucleus of the hypothalamus that contains high concentrations of both leptin receptors and insulin receptors
Correlation coefficient
A number between -1 and +1 expressing the degree of relationship between two variables
Intelligence quotient (IQ)
A numerical score on an intelligence test, originally computed by dividing the person's mental age by chronological age and multiplying by 100
Colony-intruder paradigm
A paradigm for the study of aggressive and defensive behaviors in male rats; a small male intruder rat is placed in an established colony in order to study the aggressive responses of the colony's alpha male and the defensive responses of the intruder
Fetishistic disorder
A paraphilic disorder consisting of recurrent and intense sexual urges, fantasies, or behaviors that involve the use of nonliving objects or nongenital parts, often to the exclusion of all other stimuli, accompanied by significant distress or impairment
Transvestic disorder
A paraphilic disorder consisting of repeated and intense sexual urges, fantasies, or behaviors that involve dressing in clothes of the opposite sex, accompanied by clinically significant distress or impairment. Also known as transvestism or cross-dressing
Voyeuristic disorder
A paraphilic disorder in which a person has repeated and intense sexual desires to observe unsuspecting people in secret as they undress or to spy on couples having intercourse, and either acts on these urges with nonconsenting individuals or experiences clinically significant distress or impairment
Pedophilic disorder
A paraphilic disorder in which a person has repeated and intense sexual urges or fantasies about watching, touching, or engaging in sexual acts with children, and either acts on these urges or experiences clinically significanat distress or impairment
Sexual sadism disorder
A paraphilic disorder in which a person has repeated and intense sexual urges or fantasies that involve inflicting suffering on others, and either acts on these urges with nonconsenting individuals or experiences clinically significant distress or impairment
Frotteuristic disorder
A paraphilic disorder in which a person has repeated and intense sexual urges or fantasies that involve touching and rubbing against a nonconsenting person, and either acts on these urges with nonconsenting individuals or experiences clinically significant distress or impairment
Sexual masochism disorder
A paraphilic disorder in which a person has repeated and intense sexual urges, fantasies, or behaviors that involve being humiliated, beaten, bound, or otherwise made to suffer, accompanied by clinically significant distress or impairment
Exhibitionistic disorder
A paraphilic disorder in which persons have repeated sexually arousing urges or fantasies about exposing their genitals to others, and either act on these urges with nonconsenting individuals or experience clinically significant distress or impairment
Nightmare disorder
A parasomnia characterized by chronic distressful, frightening dreams
Sleep terror disorder
A parasomnia in which a person awakens suddenly during the first third of sleep, screaming out in extreme fear and agitation
Sleepwalking disorder
A parasomnia in which people repeatedly leave their beds and walk around without being conscious of the episode or remembering it later
Axon hillock
A part of the cell body of a neuron where the membrane potentials are summated before being transmitted down the axon
Tectum
A part of the midbrain that orients an organism in the environment
Response set
A particular way of responding to questions or statements on a test, such as always selecting "true", regardless of the actual question
Nicotine patch
A patch attached to the skin like a Band-Aid, with nicotine content that is absorbed through the skin, that supposedly eases the withdrawal reaction brought on by quitting cigarette smoking
Aneurysm
A pathological balloon-like dilation that forms in the wall of a blood vessel at a point where the elasticity of the vessel wall is defective
Hypomanic pattern
A pattern in which a person displays symptoms of mania, but the symptoms are less severe and cause less impairment than those of a manic episode
School phobia
A pattern in which children fear going to school and often stay home for a long period of time. Also called school refusal
Binge drinking
A pattern of alcohol consumption in which a person consumes five or more drinks on a single occasion
Type B behavior pattern
A pattern of behavior characterized by noncompetitive, relaxed, easygoing, and accommodating behavior
Alcohol use disorder
A pattern of behavior in which a person repeatedly abuses or depends on alcohol. Also known as alcoholism
Sound wave
A pattern of changes in air pressure during a period of time; it produces the percept of sound
Anaclitic depression
A pattern of depressed behavior found among very young children that is caused by separation from one's mother
Substance use disorder
A pattern of maladaptive behaviors and reactions brought about by repeated use of a substance, sometimes inclusing tolerance for the substance and withdrawal reactions
Expressed emotion
A pattern of negative actions by a client's family members; the pattern includes critical comments, hostility directed toward the client by family members, and emotional overinvolvement
Dysthymia
A pattern of persistent depressive disorder that is chronic but less severe and less disabling than repeated episodes of major depression
Withdrawal
A pattern of uncomfortable or painful physical symptoms and cravings experienced by the user when the level of drug is decreased or the drug is eliminated
Orgasm
A peaking of sexual pleasure, consisting of rhytmic muscle contractions in the pelvic region, during which a man's semen is ejaculated and the outer third of a woman's vaginal wall contracts
Cholecystokinin (CCK)
A peptide that is relased by the gastrointestinal tract and is thought to function as a satiety signal
Illusory conjunction
A perceptual mistake where features from multiple objects are incorrectly combined
Color constancy
A perceptual phenomenon in which the subjective experience of an object's color remains constant despite changes in the lighting conditions
Perceptual constancy
A perceptual principle stating that even as aspects of sensory signals change, perception remains consistent
Critical period
A period during development in which a particular experience must occur for it to influence the course of subsequent development
Phobia
A persistent and unreasonable fear of a particular object, activity, or situation
Obsession
A persistent thought, idea, impulse, or image that is experienced repeatedly, feels intrusive, and causes anxiety
Savant
A person of low intelligence who has an extraordinary ability
Prodigy
A person of normal intelligence who has an extraordinary ability
Death initiator
A person who attempts suicide believing that the process of death is already under way and that they are simply quickening the process
Death ignorer
A person who attempts suicide without recognizing the finality of death
Death seeker
A person who clearly intends to end their life at the time of a suicide attempt
Eccentric
A person who deviates from conventional norms in odd, irregular, or even bizarre ways, but is not displaying a psychological disorder
Active listener
A person who gives the speaker feedback in such forms as nodding, paraphrasing, maintaining an expression that shows interest, and asking questions for clarification
Death darer
A person who is ambivalent about the wish to die even as they attempt suicide
Outpatient
A person who receives a diagnosis or treatment in a clinic, hospital, or therapist's office but is not hospitalized overnight
Locus of control
A person's tendency to perceive the control of rewards as internal to the self or external in the environment
Dependent personality disorder
A personality disorder characterized by a pattern of clinging, and obedience, fear of separation, and an ongoing need to be taken care of
Avoidant personality disorder
A personality disorder characterized by consistent discomfort and restraint in social situations, overwhelming feelings of inadequacy, and extreme sensitivity to negative evaluation
Schizotypal personality disorder
A personality disorder characterized by extreme discomfort in close relationships, odd forms of thinking and perceiving, and behavioral eccentricities
Borderline personality disorder
A personality disorder characterized by repeated instability in interpersonal relationships, self-image, and mood, and by impulsive behavior
Personality disorder-trait specified (PDTS)
A personality disorder currently undergoing study for possible inclusion in a future revision of DSM-5. Individuals would receive this diagnosis if they display significant impairment in functioning as a result of one or more very problematic traits
Schizoid personality disorder
A personality disorder in which a person persistently avoids social relationships and shows little emotional expression
Histrionic personality disorder
A personality disorder in which an individual displays a pattern of excessive emotionality and attention seeking. Once called hysterical personality disorder
Antisocial personality disorder (APD)
A personality disorder marked by a lack of empathy and remorse
Paranoid personality disorder
A personality disorder marked by a pattern of extreme distrust and suspiciousness of others
Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
A personality disorder marked by such an intense focus on orderliness, perfectionism, and control that the person loses felxibility, openness, and efficiency
Hopelessness
A pessimistic belief that one's present circumstances, problems, or mood will not change
Countertransference
A phenomenon in psychotherapy in which the therapists' own feelings, history, and values subtly influence the way they interpret a client's problems
Fixation
A phenomenon in which a person's pleasure-seeking drives become psychologically stuck, or arrested, at a particular psychosexual stage
Attentional blink
A phenomenon often observed during rapid serial presentation of visual stimuli, in which a second salient target that is presented between 140-150 ms after the first one goes undetected
Persuasion
A phenomenon that occurs when a person's attitudes or beliefs are influenced by a communication from another person
Informational influence
A phenomenon that occurs when a person's behavior provides information about what is good or right
Normative influence
A phenomenon that occurs when another person's behavior provides information about what is appropriate
Perceptual confirmation
A phenomenon that occurs when observers perceive what they expect to perceive
Chlorpromazine
A phenothiazine drug commonly used for treating schizophrenia. Marketed as Thorazine.
Eugenics
A philosophy and political movement that encouraged biologically superior people to interbreed and sought to discourage biologically inferior people from having offspring
Stream of consciousness
A phrase coined by William James to describe each person's continuous series of ever-changing thoughts
Blood-brain barrier (BBB)
A physical barrier formed by the end feet of astrocytes between the blood vessels in the brain and the tissue of the brain. The BBB limits which materials in the blood can gain acces to neurons in the nervous system
Symptom
A physical or psychological sign of a disorder
Psychiatrist
A physician who in addition to medical school has completed three to four years of residency training in the treatment of abnormal mental functioning
Residential treatment center
A place where people formerly addicted to drugs live, work, and socialize in a drug-free environment. Also called a therapeutic community
Reward
A pleasurable stimulus given to an organism that encourages specific behavior.
Area V1
A portion of the occipital lobe that contains the primary visual cortex
Area A1
A portion of the temporal lobe that contains the primary auditory cortex
Prejudice
A positive or negative evaluation of another person based on their group membership
Well-being
A positive state that includes striving for optimal health and life satisfaction
Methamphetamine
A powerful amphetamine drug that has experienced a surge in popularity in recent years, posing major health and law enforcement problems
Crack
A powerful, ready-to-smoke, freebase cocaine
Amniocentesis
A prenatal procedure used to test the amniotic fluid that surrounds the fetus for the possibility of birth defects
Animistic thinking
A preoperational mode of thought in which inanimate objects are imagined to have life and mental processes
Frustration-aggression hypothesis
A principle stating that animals aggress only when their goals are thwarted
Directionality problem
A problem encountered in correlational studies; the researchers find a relationship between two variables, but they cannot determine which variable may have caused the changes in the other variable
Self-selection
A problem that occurs when anything about a person determines whether he or she will be included in the experimental or control group
Orgasmic reorientation
A procedure for treating certain paraphilias by teaching clients to respond to new, more appropriate sources of sexual stimulation
Systematic desensitization
A procedure in which a client relaxes all the muscles of his or her body while imagining being in increasingly frightening situations
Hypnotism
A procedure that places people in a trancelike mental state during which they become extremely suggestible
Random assignment
A procedure that uses a random event to assign people to the experimental or control group
Psychological autopsy
A procedure used to analyze information about a deceased person, for example, in order to determine whether the person's death was a suicide
Biological challenge test
A procedure used to produce panic in participants or clients by having them exercise vigorously or perform some other potentially panic-inducing task in the presence of a researcher or therapist
Extinction (in operant conditioning)
A process by which a response that has been learned is weakened by the absence or removal of reinforcement
Random presentation
A process by which chance alone determines the order in which the stimulus is presented
Interaction
A process by which forces work together or influence each other-as in the interaction between the forces of heredity and environment
Diffusion chain
A process by which individuals initially learn a behavior by observing another individual perform that behavior, and then serve as a model from which other individuals learn the behavior
Retrieval-induced forgetting
A process by which retrieving an item from long-term memory impairs subsequent recall of related items
Physical dependence
A process by which the body adjusts to, and comes to need, a drug for its everyday functioning
Generalization
A process in which the CR is observed even though the CS is slightly different from the original one used during acquisition
Survey
A quasi-experimental method in which questions are asked to subjects. When designing a survey, the researcher has to be careful that the questions are not skewed or biased toward a particular answer
Cerebral vascular incident
A rapid loss of brain function due to a compromise in the blood supply to the brain secondary to arterial occlusion or hemorrhage
Delirium
A rapidly developing, acute disturbance in attention and orientation that makes it very difficult to concentrate and think in a clear and organized manner
Body mass index (BMI)
A ratio of body weight to height, used to measure obesity
Positive psychology
A recent movement within psychology, focusing on desirable aspects of human functioning, as opposed to an emphasis on psychopathology
Atropine
A receptor blocker that exerts an antagonistic effects at muscarinic receptors
NMDA receptor
A receptor site on the hippocampus that influences the flow of information between neurons by controlling the initiation of long-term potentiation
Area MT
A region in the visual cortex containing cells that are highly responsive to motion. Area MT is part of the dorsal pathway, thought to play a role not only in motion perception but also in representing spatial information
Area V4
A region in the visual cortex containing cells that are thought to process color information
Orbitofrontal cortex
A region of the brain in which impulses involving excretion, sexuality, violence, and other primitive activities normally arise
Temporal lobe
A region of the cerebral cortex responsible for hearing and language. Also plays a role in converting short-term memory to long-term memory
Frontal lobe
A region of the cerebral cortex that has specialized areas for movement, abstract thinking, planning, memory, and judgment
Parietal lobe
A region of the cerebral cortex whose functions include processing information about touch
Correlation
A relationship between variables, in which changes in one variable are reflected in changes in the other variable-as in the correlation between a child's age and height
Second-generation antipsychotic drugs
A relatively new group of antipsychotic drugs whose biological action is different from that of the conventional antipsychotic drugs. Also known as atypical antipsychotic drugs
Atypical antipsychotic drugs
A relatively new group of antipsychotic drugs whose biological action is different from that of the conventional antipsychotic drugs. Also known as second generation antipsychotic drugs
Neuroscience
A relatively new interdisciplinary field devoted to understanding how the brain creates thoughts, feelings, motives, consciousness, memories, and other mental processes
Evolutionary psychology
A relatively new specialty in psychology that sees behavior and mental processes in terms of their genetic adaptations for survival and reproduction
Trait
A relatively stable disposition to behave in a particular and consistent way
Codeine
A relatively weak psychoactive ingredient of opium
Resistance
A reluctance to cooperate with treatment for fear of confronting unpleasant unconscious material
Compulsion
A repetitive and rigid behavior or mental act that persons feel driven to perform in order to prevent or reduce anxiety
Genetic linkage study
A research approach in which extended families with high rates of a disorder over several generations are observed in order to determine whether the disorder closely follows the distribution pattern of other family traits
Mixed design
A research design in which a correlational method is mixed with an experimental method. Also known as quasi-experiment
Family pedigree study
A research design in which investigators determine how many and which relatives of a person with a disorder have the same disorder
Cohort-sequential study
A research method in which a cross section of the population is chosen and then each cohort is followed for a short period of time
Single-subject experimental design
A research method in which a single participant is observed and measured both before and after the manipulation of an independent variable
Analogue experiment
A research method in which the experimenter produces abnormal-like behavior in laboratory participants and then conducts experiments on the participants
Observational techniques
A research method of careful and systematic assessment and coding of overt behavior
Descriptive studies
A research method that involves observing and noting the behavior of people or other animals to provide a systematic and objective analysis of the behavior
Halfway house
A residence for people with schizophrenia or other severe problems, often staffed by paraprofessionals. Also known as a group home or crisis house
Placebo effect
A response to a placebo, caused by subjects' belief that they are taking real drugs
Harm reduction approach
A response to high-risk behaviors that focuses on reducing the harm such behaviors have on people's lives
Recognition
A retrieval method in which one must identify present stimuli as having been previously presented
Recall
A retrieval method in which one must reproduce previously presented information
Representative sample
A sample obtained in such a way that it reflects the distribution of important variables in the larger population in which the researchers are interested-variables such as age, income level, ethnicity, and geographic distribution
Research
A scientific process that involves the systematic and careful collection of data
Achromatopsia
A selective disorder of color perception resulting from a lesion or lesions of the central nervous system, typically in the ventral pathway of the visual cortex. In achromatopsia, the deficit in color perception is disproportionately greater than that associated with form perception. Colors, if perceived at all, tend to be muted
Akinetopsia
A selective disorder or motion perception resulting from a lesion or lesions of the central nervous system. Patients with akinetopsia fail to perceive stimulus movement, created bu either a moving object or their own motion, in a smooth manner. In severe cases, the patient may only infer motion by noting that the position of objects in the environment has changed over time, as if the patient were constructing dynamics through a series of successive snapshots
Alcoholics Anonymous
A self-help organization that provides support and guidance for people with alcoholism
Suicide
A self-inflicted death in which the person acts intentionally, directly, and consciously
Transgender experience
A sense that one's actual gender identity is different from the gender category to which one was born physically or that it lies outside the usual male versus female categories
Self-report
A series of answers to a questionnaire that asks people to indicate the extent to which sets of statements or adjectives accurately describe their own behavior or mental state
Battery
A series of tests, each of which measures a specific skill area
Serial murderers
A series of two or more killings carried out separately by the same individual(s) over a period of time---usually a month or more
Model
A set of assumptions and concepts that help scientists explain and interpret observations. Also called a paradigm
Internal working model of relationships
A set of beliefs about the self, primary caregiver, and the relationship between them
Mental status exam
A set of interview questions and observations designed to reveal the degree and nature of a client's psychological functioning
Somatic nervous system
A set of nerves that conveys information into and out of the central nervous system
Parasympathetic nervous system
A set of nerves that helps the body return to a normal resting state
Sympathetic nervous system
A set of nerves that prepares the body for action in threatening situations
Hardiness
A set of positive attitudes and reactions in response to stress
Morphological rules
A set of rules that indicate how morphemes can be combined to form words
Phonological rules
A set of rules that indicate how phonemes can be combined to produce speech sounds
Syntactical rules
A set of rules that indicate how words can be combined to form phrases and sentences
Specific phobia
A severe and persistent fear of a specific object or situation (does not include agoraphobia and social anxiety disorder)
Social anxiety disorder
A severe and persistent fear of social or performance situations in which embarrassment may occur
Disorganized speech
A severe disruption of verbal communication in which ideas shift rapidly and incoherently from one to another unrelated topic
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
A severe, potentially fatal reaction to antipsychotic drugs, marked by muscle rigidity, fever, altered consciousness, and autonomic dysfunction
Adrenogenital syndrome
A sexual development disorder in which high levels of adrenal androgens, resulting from congenital adrenal hyperplasia, masculinize the bodies of genetic females
Genito-pelvic pain/penetration disorder
A sexual dysfunction characterized by significant physical discomfort during intercourse
Mutual interdependence
A shared sense that individuals or groups need each other in order to achieve common goals
Corollary discharge
A signal to visual areas about upcoming eye movements, sent by motor-planning regions of the brain
Lithium carbonate
A simple chemical compound that is highly effective in dampening the extreme mood swings of bipolar disorder
Placebo therapy
A simulated treatment that the participant in an experiment believes to be genuine
Behavioral paradigm
A single set of procedures developed for the investigation of a particular behavioral phenomenon
ABAB design
A single-subject experimental design in which behavior is measured during a baseline period, after a treatment has been applied, after baseline conditions have been reintroduced, and after the treatment has been reintroduced. Also called a reversal design
Reversal design
A single-subject experimental design in which behavior is measured to provide a baseline (A), then again after the treatment has been applied (B), then again after the conditions during baseline have been reintroduced (A), and then once again after the treatment is reintroduced (B). Also known as ABAB design
Traumatic stressor
A situation that threatens one's physical safety, arousing feelings of fear, horror, or helplessness
Heritability coefficient
A statistic (commonly denoted as h²) that describes the proportion of the difference between people's scores that can be explained by differences in their genes
Ratio IQ
A statistic obtained by dividing a person's mental age by the person's physical age and then multiplying the quotient by 100
Deviation IQ
A statistic obtained by dividing a person's test score by the average test score of people in the same age group and then multiplying the quotient by 100
Standard deviation
A statistic that describes the average difference between the measurements in a frequency distribution and the mean of that distribution
Concordance
A statistical measure of the frequency with which family members (often both members of a pair of twins) have the same particular characteristic
Negative correlation
A statistical relationship in which the value of one variable increases while the other variable decreases
Positive correlation
A statistical relationship in which the values of two variables increase together or decrease together
Factor analysis
A statistical technique that explains a large number of correlations in terms of a small number of underlying factors
Methylphenidate
A stimulant drug, known better by the trade name Ritalin, commonly used to treat ADHD
Positive reinforcement
A stimulus presented after a response and increasing the probability of that response happening again
Door-in-the-face technique
A strategy that uses reciprocating concessions to influence behavior
Overlearning
A strategy whereby the learner continues to study and rehearse the material after it has been initially brought to mastery
Somatosensory cortex
A strip of the parietal lobe lying just behind the central fissure. The somatosensory cortex is involved with sensations of touch
Attachment
A strong emotional connection that persists over time and across circumstances
Hippocampus
A structure critical for creating new memories and integrating them into a network of knowledge so that they can be stored indefinitely in other parts of the cerebral cortex
Basilar membrane
A structure in the inner ear that undulates when vibrations from the ossicles reach the cochlear fluid. Hair receptor cells are embedded in this membrane
Empirical approach
A study conducted via careful observation and scientifically based research
Balanced placebo design
A study design in which behavior is observed following the presence or absence of an actual stimulus and also following the presence or absence of a placebo stimulus
Cross-sectional study
A study in which a representative cross section of the population is tested or surveyed at one specific time
Epidemiological study
A study that measures the incidence and prevalence of a disorder in a given population
Thalamus
A subcortical structure that relays and filters information from the senses (except smell) and transmits the information to the cerebral cortex
Episodic memory
A subdivision of declarative memory that stores memory for personal events, or "episodes"
Social psychology
A subfield of psychology that studies the causes and consequences of interpersonal behavior
Narcotic antagonist
A substance that attaches to opioid receptors in the brain and, in turn, blocks the effects of opioids
Chronobiotic
A substance that influences the timing of internal biological rhythms
Parasuicide
A suicide attempt that does not result in death
Sheltered workshop
A supervised workplace for people who are not yet ready for competitive jobs
Penile prosthesis
A surgical implant consisting of a semirigid rod that produces an artificial erection
Phalloplasty
A surgical procedure designed to create a functional penis
Adjustable gastric band procedure
A surgical procedure for treating extreme obesity in which an adjustable band is implanted around the stomach to reduce the flow of food
Sex-change surgery
A surgical procedure that changes a person's sex organs, features, and, in turn, sexual identity. Also known as sexual reassignment surgery
Catatonic stupor
A symptom associated with schizophrenia in which a person becomes almost totally unresponsive to the environment, remaining motionless and silent for long stretches of time
Echolalia
A symptom of autism spectrum disorder or schizophrenia in which a person responds to statements by repeating the other person's words
Blunted affect
A symptom of schizophrenia in which a person shows less emotion than most people
Flat affect
A symptom of schizophrenia in which the person shows almost no emotions at all
Avolition
A symptom of schizophrenia marked by apathy and an inability to start or complete a course of action
Genetic dysphasia
A syndrome characterized by an inability to learn the grammatical structure of language despite having otherwise normal intelligence
Amphetamine psychosis
A syndrome characterized by psychotic symptoms brought on by high doses of amphetamines. Similar to cocaine psychosis
Peer review system
A system by which clinicians paid by insurance companies may periodically review a patient's progress and recommend the continuation or termination of insurance benefits
Complex system
A system composed of many interconnected parts, such that when the parts self-organize into a single system, the resulting system exhibits one or more properties not obvious from the properties of the individual parts
Language
A system for communicating with others using signals that are combined according to rules of grammar and to convey meaning
Life change units (LCUs)
A system for measuring the stress associated with various life events
Managed care program
A system of health care coverage in which the insurance company largely controls the nature, scope, and cost of medical or psychological services
Psychodynamic therapy
A system of therapy whose goals are to help clients uncover past traumatic events and the inner conflicts that have resulted from them, settle those conflicts, and resume personal development
Treatment
A systematic procedure designed to help change abnormal behavior into more normal behavior. Also called therapy
Dichotic listening
A task in which people wearing headphones hear different messages presented to each ear
Random sampling
A technique for choosing participants that ensures that every member of a population has an equal chance of being included in the sample
Freebase
A technique for ingesting cocaine in which the pure cocaine basic alkaloid is chemically separated from processed cocaine, vaporized by heat from a flame, and inhaled through a pipe
Relaxation therapy
A technique for reducing tension by consciously relaxing muscles of the body
Foot-in-the-door technique
A technique that involves a small request followed by larger request
Matched pairs
A technique whereby each participant is identical to one other participant in terms of a third variable
Distributed learning
A technique whereby the learner spaces learning sessions over time, rather than trying to learn the material all in one study period
Matched samples
A technique whereby the participants in two groups are identical in terms of a third variable
Romantic love
A temporary and highly emotional condition based on infatuation and sexual desire
Acute stress
A temporary pattern of stressor-activated arousal with a distinct onset and limited duration
Anxiety Sensitivity
A tendency to focus on one's bodily sensations, assess them illogically, and interpret them as harmful
Hysteria
A term once used to describe what are now known as conversion disorder, somatization disorder, and pain disorder associated with psychological factors
Affect
A term referring to emotion or mood
Interpreter
A term specific to the left hemisphere; refers to the left hemisphere's attempts to make sense of actions and ongoing events
Multiple intelligences
A term used to refer to Gardner's theory, which proposes that there are seven (or more) forms of intelligence
Intelligence test
A test designed to measure a person's intellectual ability
Personality inventory
A test designed to measure broad personality characteristics, consisting of statements about behaviors, beliefs, and feelings that people evaluate as either characteristic or uncharacteristic of them
Chimeric figures test
A test of visual completion in split-brain subjects that uses pictures composed of the left and right halves of two different faces
Conditioned place-prefernce paradigm
A test that assesses a laboratory animal's preference for environments in which it has previously experienced drug effects
Neurophysiological test
A test that detects brain impairment by measuring a person's cognitive, perceptual, and motor performances
Neurological test
A test that directly meausres brain structure or activity
Integrity test
A test that is designed to measure whether the test taker is generally honest or dishonest
Psychophysiological test
A test that measures physical responses (such as heart rate and muscle tension) as possible indicators of psychological problems
Behavioral model
A theoretical perspective that emphasizes behavior and the ways in which it is learned
Sociocultural model
A theoretical perspective that emphasizes the effects of society, culture, and social and family groups on individual behavior
Cognitive model
A theoretical perspective that emphasizes the process and content of thinking as causes of psychological problems
Expectancy-value theory
A theory in social psychology that people decide whether to pursue a relationship by weighing the potential value of the relationship against their expectation of success in establishing the relationship
Activation-synthesis theory
A theory of dreaming; this theory proposes that the brain tries to make sense of random brain activity that occurs during sleep by synthesizing the activity with stored memories
Elaboration likelihood model
A theory of how persuasive messages lead to attitude changes
Exemplar model
A way of thinking about concepts: All members of a category are examples (exemplars); together they form the concept and determine the category membership
Triangular theory of love
A theory that describes various kinds of love in terms of three components: passion (erotic attraction), intimacy (sharing feelings and confidences), and commitment (dedication to putting this relationship first in one's life)
Multidimensional risk perspective
A theory that identifies several kinds of risk factors that are thought to combine to help cause a disorder. The more factors present, the greater the risk of developing the disorder
Sexual strategies theory
A theory that maintains that women and men have evolved distinct mating strategies because they faced different adaptive problems over the course of human history. The strategies used by each sex maximize the probability of passing along their genes to future generations
Double-bind hypothesis
A theory that some parents repeatedly communicate pairs of messages that are mutually contradictory, helping to produce schizophrenia in their children
Family systems theory
A theory that views the family as a system of interacting parts whose interactions exhibit consistent patterns and unstated rules
Two-factor theory
A theory which asserts that emotions are inferences about the causes of physiological arousal
James-Lange theory
A theory which asserts that stimuli trigger activity in the autonomic nervous system, which in turn produces emotional experience in the brain
Individual therapy
A therapeutic approach in which a therapist sees a client alone for sessions that last from 15 minutes to 2 hours
Psychoanalysis
A therapeutic approach that focuses on bringing unconscious material into conscious awareness to better understand psychological disorders
Cognitive restructuring
A therapeutic approach that teaches clients to question the automatic beliefs, assumptions, and predictions that often lead to negative emotions and to replace negative thinking with more realistic and positive beliefs
Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT)
A therapy approach developed by psychologist Marsha Linehan to treat people with borederline personality disorder and other psychological disorders, consisting of cognitive-behavioral techniques in combination with various emotion regulation, mindfulness, humanistic, and other techniques
Social skills training
A therapy approach that helps people learn or improve social skills and assertiveness through role playing and rehearsing of desired behaviors
Cognitive therapy
A therapy developed by Aaron Beck that helps people identify and change the maladaptive assumptions and ways of thinking that help cause their psychological disorder
Group therapy
A therapy format in which a group of people with similar problems meet together with a therapist to work on those problems
Family therapy
A therapy format in which the therapist meets with all members of a family and helps them to change in therapeutic ways
Couple therapy
A therapy format in which the therapist works with two people who share a long-term relationship
Role play
A therapy technique in which clients are instructed to act out roles assigned to them by the therapist
Existential therapy
A therapy that encourages clients to accept responsibility for their lives and to live with greater meaning and value
Stress inoculation training (SIT)
A therapy that helps people cope with stressful situations by developing positive ways to think about the situation
Phototherapy
A therapy that involves repeated exposure to bright light
Olfactory epithelium
A thin layer of tissue, within the nasal cavity, that contains the receptors for smell
Eardrum
A thin membrane that marks the beginning of the middle ear, sound waves cause it to vibrate
Subliminal perception
A thought or behavior that is influenced by stimuli that a person cannot consciously report perceiving
Five-factor theory
A trait perspective suggesting that personality is composed of five fundamental personality dimensions: openness to experience, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism
Conversion therapy
A treatment approach that attempts to change the sexual orientation of a person from homosexual or bisexual to heterosexual. Also called reparative therapy
Crisis intervention
A treatment approach that tries to help people in a psychological crisis view that situation more accurately, make better decisions, act more constructively, and overcome the crisis.
Flooding
A treatment for phobias in which clients are exposed repeatedly and intensively to a feared object and made to see that it is actually harmless
Light therapy
A treatment for seasonal affective disorder in which patients are exposed to extra light for several hours. Also called phototherapy.
Sensate focus
A treatment for sexual disorders that instructs couples to take the focus away from orgasm or intercourse and instead spend time concentrating on the pleasure achieved by such acts as kissing, hugging, and mutual massage. Also known as nondemand pleasuring.
Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT)
A treatment for unipolar depression that is based on the belief that clarifying and changing one's interpersonal problems will help lead to recovery
Hypnotic therapy
A treatment in which the patient undergoes hypnosis and is then guided to recall forgotten events or perform other therapeutic activities
Deep brain stimulation (DBS)
A treatment procedure for depression in which a pacemaker powers electrodes that have been implanted in Brodmann Area 25, thus stimulating that brain area
Vagus nerve stimulation
A treatment procedure for depression in which an implanted pulse generator sends regular electrical signals to a person's vagus nerve; the nerve, in turn, stimulates the brain
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)
A treatment that involves placing a powerful pulsed magnet over a person's scalp, which alters neuronal activity in the brain. Used to treat depression
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
A treatment used primarily for depression and involving the application of electric current to the head, producing a generalized seizure. Sometimes called "shock treatment"
Supportive nursing care
A treatment, used to help those with anorexia nervosa in particular, in which trained nurses conduct a day-to-day hospital program
Source amnesia
A type of amnesia that occurs when a person shows memory for an event but cannot remember where he or she encountered the information
Binge-eating/purging-type anorexia nervosa
A type of anorexia nervosa in which people have eating binges but still lose excessive weight by forcing themselves to vomit after meals or by abusing laxatives or diuretics
Restricting-type anorexia nervosa
A type of anorexia nervosa in which people reduce their weight by severely restricting their food intake
Anomia
A type of aphasia in which the person has difficulty generating the words used to label things in the world
Bipolar I disorder
A type of bipolar disorder marked by full manic and major depressive episodes
Bipolar II disorder
A type of bipolar disorder marked by mild manic (hypomanic) and major depressive episodes
Problem-focused coping
A type of coping in which people take direct steps to confront or minimize a stressor
Emotion-focused coping
A type of coping in which people try to prevent having an emotional response to a stressor
Participant observation
A type of descriptive study in which the researcher is actively involved in the situation
Absence seizure
A type of generalized seizure whose primary behavioral symptom is a disruption of consciousness associated with a cessation of ongoing behavior, a vacant look, and sometimes fluttering eyelids
Asylum
A type of institution that first became popular in the sixteenth century to provide care for persons with mental disorders.
Mindfulness meditation
A type of meditation in which people are mindful (just notice) the various thoughts, emotions, sensations, and other private experiences that pass through their minds and bodies
Cryptomnesia
A type of misattribution that occurs when a person thinks he or she has come up with a new idea, yet has only retrieved a stored idea and failed to attribute the idea to its proper source
Schizophrenogenic mother
A type of mother---supposedly cold, domineering, and uninterested in the needs of her children---who was once thought to cause schizophrenia in her child
Continuous reinforcement
A type of reinforcement schedule by which all correct responses are reinforced
Correlational study
A type of research that is mainly statistical in nature. Correlational studies determine the relationship (or correlation) between two variables
Amacrine cells
A type of retinal neurons whose specialized function is lateral communication
Dyslexia
A type of specific learning disorder in which people show a marked impairment in the ability to recognize words and to comprehend what they read
Long-term memory
A type of storage that holds information for hours, days, weeks, or years
Short-term memory
A type of storage that holds nonsensory information for more than a few seconds but less than a minute
Sensory memory
A type of storage that holds sensory information for a few seconds or less
Longitudinal study
A type of study in which one group of subjects is followed and observed (or examined, surveyed etc.) for an extended period of time (years)
Behavior therapy
A type of therapy that assumes that disordered behavior is learned and that symptom relief is achieved through changing overt maladaptive behaviors into more constructive behaviors
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy
A type of therapy that teaches clients to be mindful of (just notice and accept) their dysfunctional thoughts or worries
Meme
A unit of knowledge transmitted within a culture
Debriefing
A verbal description of the true nature and purpose of a study
Guilty but mentally ill
A verdict stating that defendants are guilty of committing a crime but are also suffering from a mental illness that should be treated during their imprisonment
Not guilty by reason of insanity (NGRI)
A verdict stating that defendants are not guilty of committing a crime because they were insane at the time of the crime
Migraine headache
A very severe headache that occurs on one side of the head, often preceded by warning sensations and sometimes accompanied by dizziness, nausea, or vomiting
Brain graph
A visual model of the connections within some parts of the nervous system
Aura
A warning sensation that may precede a migraine headache
Defining attribute model
A way of thinking about concepts: A category s characterized by a list of features that determine if an object is a member of the category
Conditions of worth
According to client-centered theorists, the internal standards by which a person judges their lovability and acceptability, determined by the standards to which the person was held as a child
Illogical thinking
According to cognitive theories, illogical ways of thinking that may lead to self-defeating conclusions and psychological problems
Existential anxiety
According to existential theorists, a universal fear of the limits and responsibilities of one's existence
Ego defense mechanisms
According to psychoanalytic theory, strategies developed by the ego to control unacceptable id impulses and to avoid and reduce the anxiety they arouse
Transference
According to psychodynamic theorists, the redirection toward the psychotherapist of feelings associated with important figures in a patient's life, now or in the past
Self-statements
According to some cognitive theorists, statements about oneself, sometimes counterproductive, that come to mind during stressful situations
Type II schizophrenia
According to some theorists, a type of schizophrenia dominated by negative symptoms, such as flat affect, poverty of speech, and avolition
Color
Also called hue. Color is not a property of things in the external world. Rather, it is a psychological sensation created in the brain from information obtained by the eyes from the wavelengths of visible light
Cerebellum
Also known as "little cerebrum." A large, highly convoluted (infolded) structure located dorsal to the brainstem at the level of the pons. The cerebellum maintains (directly or indirectly) interconnectivity with widespread cortical, subcortical, brainstem, and spinal cord structures, and plays a role in various aspects of coordination ranging from locomotion to skilled, volitional movement. Especially important in the coordination of muscle movement timing, the planning of movements, and the learning of motor skills
Corticospinal tract (CST)
Also pyramidal tract. A bundle of axons that originate in the cortex and terminate monosynaptically on alpha motor neurons and spinal interneurons in the spinal cord. Many of these fibers originate in the primary motor cortex, although some come from secondary motor areas. The corticospinal tract is important for the control of voluntary movements
Korsakoff's syndrome
An alcohol-related disorder marked by extreme confusion, memory impairment, and other neurological symptoms
Hypnosis
An altered state of consciousness characterized by suggestibility and the feeling that one's actions are occurring involuntarily
Trephination
An ancient operation in which a stone instrument was used to cut away a circular section of the skull, perhaps to treat abnormal behavior
Disulfiram (Antabuse)
An antagonist drug used in treating alcohol abuse or dependence
Tricyclic
An antidepressant drug such as imipramine that has three rings in its molecular structure
Social cognitive approach
An approach that views personality in terms of how the person thinks about the situations encountered in daily life and behaves in response to them
Special education
An approach to educating children with intellectual disability in which they are grouped together and given a separate, specifically designed education
Behavioral neuroscience
An approach to psychology that links psychological processes to activities in the nervous system and other bodily processes
Social therapy
An approach to therapy in which the therapist makes practical advice and life adjustment a central focus of treatment for schizophrenia. Therapy also focuses on problem solving, decision making, development of social skills, and management of medications. Also known as personal therapy
Person-centered therapy
An approach to therapy that assumes all individuals have a tendency toward growth and that this growth can be facilitated by acceptance and genuine reactions by the therapist
Play therapy
An approach to treating childhood disorders that helps children express their conflicts and feelings indirectly by drawing, playing with toys, and making up stories
Stress-management program
An approach to treating generalized anxiety disorder and other anxiety disorders that teaches clients techniques for reducing and controlling stress
Methadone maintenance program
An approach to treating heroin-centered substance abuse in which clients are given legally and medically supervised doses of a substitute drug, methadone
Drug maintenance therapy
An approach to treating substance dependence in which clients are given legally and medically supervised doses of the drug on which they are dependent or a substitute drug
Hindbrain
An area of the brain that coordinates information coming into and out of the spinal cord
Fovea
An area of the retina where vision is the clearest and there are no rods at all
Private psychotherapy
An arrangement in which a person directly pays a therapist for counseling services
Validity
An attribute of a psychological test that actually measures what it is being used to measure; a property exhibited by a test that measures what it purports to measure
Aripiprazole
An atypical antipsychotic drug whose brand name is Abilify
Olanzapine
An atypical antipsychotic drug whose brand name is Zyprexa
Conditioned taste aversion
An avoidance response developed by animals to the taste of food whose consumption has been followed by illness
Anorexia nervosa
An eating disorder characterized by an excessive fear of becoming fat and thus a refusal to eat
Community mental health movement
An effort to deinstitutionalize mental patients and to provide therapy from outpatient clinics. Proponents of community mental health envisioned that recovering patients could live with their families, in foster homes, or in group homes
Rapprochement movement
An effort to identify a set of common strategies that run through the work of all effective therapists
Denial
An ego defense mechanism in which a person fails to acknowledge unacceptable thoughts, feelings, or actions
Undoing
An ego defense mechanism in which a person unconsciously cancels out an unacceptable desire or act by performing another act
Fantasy
An ego defense mechanism in which a person uses imaginary events to satisfy unacceptable impulses
Isolation
An ego defense mechanism in which people unconsciously isolate and disown undesirable and unwanted thoughts, experiencing them as foreign intrusions
Basic emotion
An emotion with unique characteristics, carved by evolution, and reflected through facial expressions
Basic anxiety
An emotion, proposed by Karen Horney that gives a sense of uncertainty and loneliness in a hostile world and can lead to maladjustment
Fight-or-flight response
An emotional and physiological reaction to an emergency that increases readiness for action
Belief
An enduring piece of knowledge an object or event
Personality disorder
An enduring, rigid pattern of inner experience and outward behavior that repeatedly impairs a person's sense of self, emotional experiences, goals, capacity for empathy, and/or capacity for intimacy
Priming
An enhanced ability to think of a stimulus, such as a word or object, as a result of recent exposure to the stimulus
Cytochrome oxidase
An enzyme present in particularly high concentrations in the mitochondria of dual-opponent color cells of the visual cortex
Alcohol dehydrogenase
An enzyme that breaks down alcohol in the stomach before it enters the blood
Acetylcholinesterase
An enzyme that divides the neurotransmitter acetylcholine into its two constituent parts, choline and acetate
Aromatase
An enzyme that promotes the conversion of testosterone to estradiol
Postpartum depression
An episode of depression experienced by some new mothers that begins within four weeks after giving birth
Hypomanic episode
An episode of mania in which the symptoms cause relatively little impairment
Postpartum psychosis
An episode of psychosis experienced by a small percentage of new mothers that begins within days or weeks after giving birth
Binge
An episode of uncontrollable eating during which a person ingests a very large quantity of food
Arbitrary inference
An error in logic in which a person draws negative conclusions on the basis of little or even contrary evidence
Eidetic imagery
An especially clear and persistent form of memory that is quite rare; sometimes wrongly called "photographic memory"
Appraisal
An evaluation of the emotion-relevant aspects of a stimulus
Groupthink
An excessive tendency to seek concurrence among group members
Companionate love
An experience involving affection, trust, and concern for a partner's well-being
Passionate love
An experience involving feelings of euphoria, intimacy, and intense sexual attraction
Quasi-experiment
An experiment in which investigators make use of control and experimental groups that already exist in the world at large. Also called a mixed design
Natural experiment
An experiment in which nature, rather than an experimenter, manipulates an independent variable
Blind design
An experiment in which participants do not know whether they are in the experimental or the control condition
Block design experiment
An experiment in which the recorded neural activity is integrated over a "block" of time during which the participant is either presented a stimulus or performs a task. The recorded activity pattern is then compared to other blocks that have been recorded while doing the same task or stimulus, a different task or stimulus, or nothing at all
Between-subjects design
An experimental design in which a different group of subjects is tested under each condition
Confederate
An experimenter's accomplice, who helps create a particular impression in a study while pretending to be just another subject
Gate-control theory
An explanation for pain control that proposes we have a neural "gate" that can, under some circumstances, block incoming pain signals
Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR)
An exposure treatment in which clients move their eyes in a rhythmic manner from side to side while flooding their minds with images of objects and situations they ordinarily avoid
Medulla
An extension of the spinal cord into the skull that coordinates heart rate, circulation, and respiration
Munchausen syndrome
An extreme and long-term form of factitious disorder in which a person produces symptoms, gains admission to a hospital, and receives treatment
Angiography
An imaging method used to evaluate the circulatory systems in the brain
Intermittent explosive disorder
An impulse-control disorder in which people periodically fail to resist aggressive impulses and commit serious assaults on others or destroy property
Conduction deafness
An inability to hear resulting from damage to structures of the middle or inner ear
Nerve deafness
An inability to hear that is linked to a deficit in the body's ability to transmit impulses from the cochlea to the brain, usually involving the auditory nerve or higher auditory processing centers
Localized amnesia
An inability to recall any of the events that occurred over a limited period of time
Continuous amnesia
An inability to recall newly occurring events as well as certain past events
Selective amnesia
An inability to recall some of the events that occurred over a limited period of time
Astereognosia
An inability to recognize objects by touch that is not attributable to a simple sensory deficit or to general intellectual impairment
Predisposition
An inborn or acquired vulnerability for developing certain symptoms or disorders
Social facilitation
An increase in an individual's performance because of being in a group
Sensitization
An increase in behavioral response after exposure to a threatening stimulus
Subject
An individual chosen to participate in a study. Also called a participant
Cognitive appraisal theory
An individual makes a conscious decision as to how one should feel about an event after it has occurred
Personality
An individual's characteristic style of behaving, thinking, and acting
Social reality
An individual's subjective interpretation of other people and of relationships with them
Placebo
An inert substance or procedure that has been applied with the expectation that a healing response will be produced
Huntington's disease
An inherited disease characterized by progressive problems in cognition, emotion, and movement, which results in neurocognitive disorder
Electrooculograph (EOG)
An instrument that measures eye movements
Myelin sheath
An insulating layer of fatty material on the axons of neurons
Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA)
An intensive treatment for autism, based on operant conditioning
Psychotherapy
An interaction between a therapist and someone suffering from a psychological problem, with the goal of providing support or relief from the problem
Cognitive neuroscience
An interdisciplinary field emphasizing brain activity as information processing; involves cognitive psychology, neurology, biology, computer science, linguistics, and specialists from other fields who are interested in the connection between mental processes and the brain
Motive
An internal mechanism that selects and directs behavior. The term motive is often used in the narrower sense of a motivational process that is learned, rather than biologically based (as are drives)
Sociometer
An internal monitor of social acceptance or rejection
Cerebral ischemia
An interruption of the blood supply to an area of the brain; a common cause of medial-temporal lobe amnesia
Structured interview
An interview format in which the clinician asks prepared questions
Cirrhosis
An irreversible condition, often caused by excessive drinking, in which the liver becomes scarred and begins to change in anatomy and functioning
General paresis
An irreversible medical disorder whose symptoms include psychological abnormalities, such as delusions of grandeur; caused by syphilis
Operant
An observable, voluntary behavior that an organism emits to "operate" on, or have an effect on, the environment
Signal detection theory
An observation that the response to a stimulus depends both on a person's sensitivity to the stimulus in the presence of noise and on a person's response criterion
Contingency management
An operant conditioning approach to changing behavior by altering the consequences, especially rewards and punishments, of behavior
Intermittent reinforcement
An operant conditioning principle in which only some of the responses made are followed by reinforcement
Fixed ratio schedule (FR)
An operant conditioning principle in which reinforcement is delivered after a specific number of responses have been made
Fixed interval schedule (FI)
An operant conditioning principle in which reinforcements are presented at fixed time periods, provided that the appropriate response is made
Metabolism
An organism's chemical and physical breakdown of food and the process of converting it into energy. Also, an organism's biochemical transformation of various substances, as when the liver breaks down alcohol into acetylaldehyde
Genotype
An organism's genetic makeup
Phenotype
An organism's observable physical characteristics
Idiographic understanding
An understanding of the behavior of a particular individual
Bipolar disorder
An unstable emotional condition characterized by cycles of abnormal, persistent high mood (mania) and low mood (depression)
Chordates
Animals with dorsal nerve cords
Neutral stimulus
Any stimulus that produces no conditioned response prior to learning. When it is brought into a conditioning experiment, the researchers will call it a conditioned stimulus (CS). The assumption is that some conditioning occurs after even one pairing of the CS and UCS
Drug
Any substance, other than food, that affects the body or mind
Stereotype threat
Apprehension about confirming negative stereotypes related to one's group
Gender-sensitive therapies
Approaches geared to the pressures of being a woman in Western society. Also called feminist therapies
Culture-sensitive therapies
Approaches that are designed to address the unique issues that faced by members of minority groups
Allocentric reference frame
Category of reference frames that specify an object's location in relation to other objects, independent of one's own location
Secondary messengers
Chemical changes within a neuron just after the neuron receives a neurotransmitter message and just before it responds
Neurotransmitters
Chemical messengers that relay neural messages across the synapse. Many neurotransmitters are also hormones
Botox
Botulinum toxin, which blocks release of acetylcholine at neuromuscular junctions and is used cosmetically to treat wrinkles
Selective social interaction
Choosing to restrict the number of one's social contacts to those who are the most gratifying
Autosomal chromosomes
Chromosomes that come in matched pairs in mammals, all of the chromosomes except the sex chromosomes are autosomal
Free-floating anxiety
Chronic and persistent feelings of anxiety that are not clearly attached to a specific, identifiable threat
Reflection of feeling
Carl Rogers's technique of paraphrasing the clients' words, attempting to capture the emotional tone expressed
Fully functioning person
Carl Rogers's term for a healthy, self-actualizing individual, who has a self-concept that is both positive and congruent with reality
Callosal relay model
Concept that information received by the hemisphere less adept at a given task is transferred to the opposite hemisphere; this callosal transfer degrades the information and leads to poorer performance than if the information were received by the hemisphere more suited to the task
Contextual fear conditioning
Conditioning in which a fear response is evoked by the context or environment in which an aversive stimulus had previously been presented
Second-order conditioning
Conditioning where the US is a stimulus that acquired its ability to produce learning from an earlier procedure in which it was used as a CS
Controls
Constraints that an experimenter places on the experiment to ensure that each subject has the exact same conditions
Chronic stress
Continuous stressful arousal persisting over time
Ejaculation
Contraction of the muscles at the base of the penis that cause sperm to be ejected
Visual hallucinations
Hallucinations in which a person may either experience vague visual perceptions, perhaps of colors or clouds, or have distinct visions of people, objects, or scenes that are not there
Unconscious motivation
Having a desire to engage in an activity but being consciously unaware of the desire. Freud's psychoanalytic theory emphasized placed great emphasis on unconscious motivation
Narcotics or opiates
Highly addictive drugs derived from opium that relieve pain
Practical reasoning
Figuring out what to do, or reasoning directed toward action. Sometimes called "street smarts"
Reframing
Finding a new or creative way to think about a stressor that reduces its threat
Problem solving
Finding a way around an obstacle to reach a goal
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
Fluid found between neurons and their bony encasements; similar in composition to blood plasma
Countercoup (contrecoup) injury
Focal damage to the brain in a location opposite to an external impact (e.g., impact on front of head, but countercoup injury in posterior region). Countercoup injuries occur because the external impact causes the brain to move within the skull
Altered states of consciousness
Forms of experience that depart from the normal subjective experience of the world and the mind
Alpha suppression
Decrease in the amount of alpha activity, used as an indicator of the degree of brain activation
Night terrors
Deep sleep episodes that seem to produce terror, although any terrifying mental experience (such as a dream) is usually forgotten upon awakening. Night terrors occur mainly in children
Amyloid plaques
Deposits consisting of aluminum silicate and amyloid peptides (a buildup or conglomeration of proteins), often including tau protein and apolipoprotein E; implicated in the genetic aspects of Alzheimer's disease and believed to cause vascular damage and neuronal cell loss
Inverted U function
Describes the relationship between arousal and performance. Both low and high levels of arousal produce lower performance than moderate levels of arousal
Covert desensitization
Desensitization that focuses on imagining confrontations with the frightening objects or situations while in a state of relaxation
In vivo desensitization
Desensitization that makes use of actual objects or situations, as opposed to imagined ones
Lateralization of emotion
Different influences of the two brain hemispheres on various emotions. The left hemisphere apparently influences positive emotions, and the right hemisphere influences negative emotions
Constructional apraxia
Disorder in which the spatial relations of items cannot be correctly manipulated; generally observed after right hemisphere lesion and often associated with spatial processing difficulties and hemineglect
Adjustment disorders
Disorders characterized by clinical symptoms such as depressed mood or anxiety in response to significant stressors
Communication disorders
Disorders characterized by marked impairment in language/and or speech
Phobic disorders
Disorders characterized by marked, persistent, and excessive fear and avoidance of specific objects, activities, or situations
Psychophysiological disorders
Disorders in which biological, psychological, and sociocultural factors interact to cause or worsen a physical illness. Also known as psychological factors affecting other medical conditions
Agonists
Drugs that enhance the actions of neurotransmitters
Antagonists
Drugs that inhibit the actions of neurotransmitters
Analgesics
Drugs that reduce pain
Sedative-hypnotic drugs
Drugs used in low doses to help calm people and in higher doses to help people sleep. Also called anxiolytic drugs
Negative symptoms
Emotional and social withdrawal; apathy; poverty of speech; and other indications of the absence or insufficiency of normal behavior, motivation, and emotion
Primary emotions
Emotions that are evolutionarily adaptive, shared across cultures, and associated with specific physical states; they include anger, fear, sadness, disgust, happiness, and possibly surprise and contempt
Illusions
Errors of perception, memory, or judgment in which subjective experience differs from objective reality
Biopsychosocial theories
Explanations that attribute the cause of abnormality to an interaction of genetic, biological, developmental, emotional, behavioral, cognitive, social, and societal influences
Situational attributions
Explanations that refer to external events, such as the weather, luck, accidents, or other people's actions
Personal attributions
Explanations that refer to people's internal characteristics, such as abilities, traits, moods, or efforts
Long-term care
Extended personal and medical support provided to elderly and other persons who may be impaired. It may range from partial support in a supervised apartment to intensive care at a nursing home
Retrieval cue
External information that helps bring stored information to mind
Incentives
External objects or external goals, rather than internal drives, which motivate behavior
Tardive dyskinesia
Extrapyramidal effects that appear in some patients after they have taken convention antipsychotic drugs for an extended time
Etiology
Factors that affect the development of a disorder
Referred pain
Feeling of pain when sensory information from internal and external areas converges on the same nerve cells in the spinal cord
Tend-and-befriend response
Females' tendency to protect and care for their offspring and form social alliances rather than flee of fight in response to a threat
Oedipus complex
In Freudian theory, the pattern of desires emerging during the phallic stage in which boys become attracted to their mother as a sexual object and to see their father as a rival they would like to push aside
Hierarchy of needs
In Maslow's theory, the notion that needs occur in priority order, with biological needs as the most basic
Need for achievement (n Ach)
In Murray and McClelland's theory, a mental state that produces a psychological motive to excel or to reach some goal
Egocentrism
In Piaget's theory, the self-centered inability to realize that there are other viewpoints besides one's own
Sensation seekers
In Zuckerman's theory, individuals who have a biological need for higher stimulation levels than do other people
Dependent variable
In an experiment, the variable that is affected by the manipulation of the independent variable
Unconscious
In classic Freudian theory, the psychic domain of which the individual is not aware but that houses memories, desires, and feelings that would be threatening if brought to consciousness. Many modern cognitive psychologists view the unconscious in less sinister terms, merely as a collection of mental processing information or working at odds with consciousness
Conditioned stimulus (CS)
In classical conditioning, a previously neutral stimulus that comes to elicit the conditioned response. Customarily, in a conditioning experiment, the neutral stimulus is called a conditioned stimulus when it is first paired with an
Conditioned response (CR)
In classical conditioning, a response elicited by a previously neutral stimulus that has become associated with the unconditioned stimulus
Unconditioned response (UR)
In classical conditioning, the response elicited by an unconditioned stimulus without prior learning
Unconditioned stimulus (US)
In classical conditioning, the stimulus that elicits an unconditioned response
Need
In drive theory, a need is a biological imbalance (such as dehydration) that threatens survival, if the need is left unmet. Biological needs are believed to produce drives
Adaptations
In evolutionary theory, the physical characteristics, skills, or abilities that increase the chances of reproduction or survival and are therefore likely to be passed along to future generations
Embryo
In humans, the name for the developing organism during the first eight weeks after conception
Neonatal period
In humans, the neonatal (newborn) period extends through the first month after birth
Synergistic effect
In pharmacology, an increase of effects that occurs when more than one substance is acting on the body at the same time
Secondary gain
In psychodynamic theory, the gain people achieve when their somatic symptoms elicit kindness from others or provide an excuse for avoiding unpleasant activities
Primary gain
In psychodynamic theory, the gain people achieve when their somatic symptoms keep their internal conflicts out of awareness
Assessment
In psychology, examination of a person's mental state to diagnose possible psychological disorders
Anhedonia
Inability to find any pleasure in life; a characteristic of depression
Akinesia
Inability to initiate spontaneous movement
Preconscious memories
Information that is not currently in consciousness but can be recalled to consciousness voluntarily or after something calls attention to them
Aptitudes
Innate potentialities (as contrasted with abilities acquired by learning)
Malingering
Intentionally faking an illness to achieve some external gains, such as financial compensation or military deferment
Collective unconscious
Jung's addition to the unconscious, involving a reservoir for instinctive "memories", including the archetypes, which exist in all people
Terminal buttons
Knoblike structures that branch out from an axon
Cingulate gyri
Large gyri located on the medial surfaces of the frontal lobes, just superior to the corpus callosum
Astrocytes
Large, star-shaped glial cells that play a role in the passage of chemicals from the blood into CNS neurons and perform several other functions that are not yet well understood
Betz cells
Largely pyramidal neurons of the primary motor cortex that synapse directly on motor neurons in the lower regions of the spinal cord
Sexually violent predator laws
Laws passed by the federal government and many states that call for certain sex offenders who have been convicted of sex crimes and have served their sentence in prison to be removed from prison before their release and committed involuntarily to a mental hospital for treatment if a court judges them likely to engage in further acts of sexual violence due to a mental or personality abnormality
Neo-Freudians
Literally "new Freudians"; refers to theorists who broke with Freud but whose theories retain a psychodynamic aspect, especially a focus on motivation as the source of energy for the personality
Crossed aphasia
Loss of speech ability resulting from a right hemisphere lesion in a right-hander
Agraphia
Loss of the ability to write, as a consequence of brain damage
Reconsolidation
Memories can become vulnerable to disruption when they are recalled, requiring them to become consolidated again
Thinking
The mental manipulation of representations of information
Caloric stimulation
Neglect-reducing technique in which water at least 7 degrees celsius colder than body temperature is introduced into the ear canal, thereby inducing motion in the semicircular canals of the vestibular system and drawing attention to the neglected field or side of the body
Afferent nerves
Nerves that carry sensory signals to the central nervous system; sensory nerves
Brain circuits
Networks of brain structures that work together, triggering each other into action with the help of neurotransmitters
Mild neurocognitive disorder
Neurocognitive disorder in which the decline in cognitive functioning is modest and does not interfere with the ability to be independent
Neuroimaging techniques
Neurological tests that provide images of brain structure or activity, such as CT scans, PET scans, and MRIs. Also called brain scans
Mirror neurons
Neurons that are activated when one observes another individual engage in an action and when one performs the action that was observed
Motor neurons
Neurons that carry signals from the spinal cord to the muscles to produce movement
Interneurons
Neurons that connect sensory neurons, motor neurons, or other interneurons
Sensory neurons
Neurons that receive information from the external world and convey this information to the brain via the spinal cord
Endorphins
Neurotransmitters involved in natural pain reduction and reward
Giftedness
Often conceived as representing the upper 2% of the IQ range, commencing about 30 points above average (at about 130 IQ points)
Mental retardation
Often conceived of as representing the lower 2% of the IQ range, commencing about 30 points below average (below about 70 points). More sophisticated definitions also take into account an individual's level of social functioning and other abilities
Brain-gut peptides
One of the five classes of neuropeptide transmitters, consists of those first discovered in the gut
Heroin
One of the most addictive substances derived from opium
Asperger's disorder
One of the patterns found in autism spectrum disorder, in which a person displays profound social impairment yet maintains a relatively high level of cognitive functioning and language skills
Encoding
One of the three basic tasks of memory, involving the modification of information to fit the preferred format for the memory system
Cerebral hemisphere
One of two physically separated halves of the cortex
Sexual orientation
One's erotic attraction toward members of the same sex (a homosexual orientation), the opposite sex (heterosexual orientation), or both sexes (a bisexual orientation)
Opioid
Opium or any of the drugs derived from opium, including morphine, heroin, and codeine
Binocular rivalry
Oscillation of conscious perception that occurs when different stimuli are presented simultaneously to the left eye and right eye
Receptors
Parts of the cell membrane that receive the neurotransmitter and initiate or prevent a new electric signal
Attitudes
People's evaluations of objects, events, or ideas
Attributions
People's explanations for why events or actions occur
Panic attacks
Periodic, short bouts of panic that occur suddenly, reach a peak within minutes, and gradually pass
Rods
Photoreceptors that become active under low-light conditions for night vision
Arousal
Physiological activation (such as increased brain activity) or increased autonomic responses (such as increased heart rate, sweating, or muscle tension)
Circadian rhythms
Physiological patterns that repeat approximately every 24 hours, such as the sleep-wakefulness cycle
Conditioned compensatory responses
Physiological responses opposite to the effects of a drug that are thought to be elicited by stimuli that are regularly associated with experiencing the drug effects
Significant difference
Psychologists accept a difference between the groups as "real", or significant, when the probability that it might be due to an atypical sample drawn by chance is less than 5 in 100 (indicated by the notation p ˂.05)
Experimental psychologists
Psychologists who do research on basic psychological processes-as contrasted with applied psychologists; also called research psychologists
Applied psychologists
Psychologists who use the knowledge developed by experimental psychologists to solve human problems
Teachers of psychology
Psychologists whose primary job is teaching, typically in high schools, colleges, and universities
Lobotomy
Psychosurgery in which a surgeon cuts the connections between the brain's frontal lobes and the lower centers of the brain
Insight therapies
Psychotherapies in which the therapist helps patients/clients understand (and gain insight into) their problems
Talk therapies
Psychotherapies that focus on communicating and verbalizing emotions and motives to understand their problems
Brief psychotic disorder
Psychotic symptoms that appear very suddenly after a very stressful event or a period of emotional turmoil and last anywhere from a few hours to a month
Conditioned reinforcers or secondary reinforcers
Stimuli, such as money or tokens, that acquire their reinforcing power by a learned association with primary reinforcers
Delusions
Strange false beliefs firmly held despite evidence to the contrary
Cannabis
Substance produced from the varieties of the hemp plant, Cannabis sativa. It causes a mixture of hallucinogenic, depressant, and stimulant effects
Psychedelic drugs
Substances such as LSD that cause profounf perceptual changes. Also called hallucinogenic drugs
Stimulants
Substances that excite the central nervous system, heightening arousal and activity levels
Depressants
Substances that slow the activity of the central nervous system and in sufficient dosages cause a reduction of tension and inhibitions
Anomic suicide
Suicide committed by individuals whose social environment fails to provide stability, thus leaving them without a sense of belonging
Egoistic suicide
Suicide committed by people over whom society has little or no control, people who are not concerned with the norms or rules of society
Cingulotomy
Surgical creation of bilateral lesions in the anterior cingulate
Psychosurgery
Surgical destruction of specific brain areas
Adrenalectomy
Surgical removal of the adrenal glands
Commissurotomy
Surgical severing of the cerebral commissures
Neuroticism
Susceptibility to neurotic problems
Cogwheel rigidity
Symptoms of Parkinson's disease that causes limbs to move in specific, rigid steps, rather than moving smoothly; occurs because of increased muscle tone in the extensor and flexor muscles
Positive symptoms
Symptoms of schizophrenia that are marked by excesses in functioning, such as delusions, hallucinations, and disorganized speech or behavior
Parkinsonian symptoms
Symptoms similar to those found in Parkinson's disease. Patients with schizophrenia who take conventional antipsychotic medications may display one or more of these symptoms
Detoxification
Systematic and medically supervised withdrawal from a drug
Observer bias
Systematic errors in observation that occur because of an observer's expectations
Critical thinking
Systematically evaluating information to reach reasonable conclusions
Chaotic systems
Systems that are highly sensitive to initial conditions. Although their future behavior is determined by their initial conditions, approximate determinations of these initial conditions cannot be used to approximate the future condition
Mnemonics
Techniques for improving memory, especially by making connections between new material and information already in long-term memory
Subjective tests
Tests in which individuals are given an ambiguous figure or an open-ended situation and asked to describe what they see or finish a story
Objective tests
Tests that can be scored easily by machine, such as multiple-choice tests and selective response tests
Pituitary gland
The "master gland" of the body's hormone-producing system, which releases hormones that direct the functions of many other glands in the body
Cephalocaudal rule
The "top-to-bottom" rule that describes the tendency for motor skills to emerge in sequence from the head to the feet
Libido
The Freudian concept of psychic energy that drives individuals to experience sensual pleasure
Analysis of transference
The Freudian technique of analyzing and interpreting the patient's relationship with the therapist, based on the assumption that this relationship mirrors unresolved conflicts in the patient's past
Closure
The Gestalt principle that identifies the tendency to fill in gaps in figures and to see incomplete figures as complete
Law of continuity
The Gestalt principle that we prefer perceptions of connected and continuous figures to disjointed and disconnected ones
Law of proximity
The Gestalt principle that we tend to group similar objects together in our perceptions
Law of common fate
The Gestalt principle that we tend to group similar objects together that share a common motion or destination
Laws of perceptual grouping
The Gestalt principles of similarity, proximity, continuity, and common fate. These "laws" suggest how our brains prefer to group stimulus elements together to form a percept (Gestalt)
Introversion
The Jungian dimension that focuses on inner experiences-one's own thoughts and feelings-making the introvert less outgoing and sociable than the extravert; a personality descriptor indicating the quiet and reserved nature of some individuals
Extraversion
The Jungian personality dimension involving turning one's attention outward, toward others; a personality descriptor indicating the "outgoing" nature of some individuals
Social influence
The ability to control another person's behavior
Covert attention
The ability to direct attention without overt alterations or changes in sensory receptors---for example, attending to a conversation without turning the eyes and head toward the speakers
Intelligence
The ability to direct one's thinking, adapt to one's circumstances, and learn from one's experiences
Mental representation
The ability to form internal images of objects and events
Affective flexibility
The ability to process the relevance of various emotional stimuli depending on one's current goals and motivation
Fluid intelligence
The ability to see abstract relationships and draw logical inferences
Memory
The ability to store and retrieve information over time
Emotional intelligence
The ability to understand and control emotional responses
Action Potential
The active or regenerative electrical signal that is required for synaptic communication. Action potentials are propagated along the axon and result in the reslease of neurotransmitter from the terminal buttons
Cerebral specialization
The adaptation of the activity in a particular brain region to subserve a given cognitive function or behavior
Androstenedione
The adrenal androgen that triggers the growth of pubic and axillary hair in human females
Social support
The aid gained through interacting with others
Aggregation
The alignment of cells within different areas of the embryo during development to form various structures
Reaction time
The amount of time taken to respond to a specific stimulus
Structuralism
The analysis of the basic elements that constitute the mind
Archetypes
The ancient memory images in the collective unconscious. Archetypes appear and reappear in art, literature, and folktales around the world
Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
The anterior pituitary hormone that triggers the release of gonadal and adrenal hormones from the adrenal cortices
Positive punishment
The application of an aversive stimulus after a response
Statistical analysis
The application of principles of probability to the findings of a study in order to learn how likely it is that the findings have occurred by chance
Fundamental attribution error (FAE)
The assumption that another person's behavior, especially clumsy, inappropriate, or otherwise undesirable behavior, is the result of a flaw in the personality, rather than in the situation; the tendency to emphasize internal causes and ignore external pressures. The FAE is more common in individualistic cultures than in collective cultures
Secure attachment
The attachment style for a majority of infants; the infant is confident enough to play in an unfamiliar environment as long as the caregiver is present and is readily comforted by the caregiver during times of distress
Insecure attachment
The attachment style for a minority of infants; the infant may exhibit insecure attachment through various behaviors, such as avoiding contact with the caregiver, or by alternating between approach and avoidance behaviors
Mental control
The attempt to change conscious states of mind
Mental age
The average age at which normal individuals achieve a particular score
Corpus callosum
The band of nerve cells that connects the two cerebral hemispheres
Demonology
The belief that abnormal behavior results from supernatural causes such as evil spirits
Self-efficacy
The belief that one can master and perform needed behaviors whenever necessary
Delusions of control
The belief that one's impulses, feelings, thoughts, or actions are being controlled by other people
Aggregate field theory
The belief that the whole brain participates in behavior
Delusions of reference
The beliefs that attach special and personal meaning to the actions of others or to various events and objects
Delusions of grandeur
The beliefs that one is a great inventor, historical figure, or other specially empowered person
Delusions of persecution
The beliefs that one is being plotted or discriminated against, spied on, slandered, threatened, attacked, or deliberately victimized
Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis
The biological system responsible for the stress response
Puberty
The bodily changes associated with sexual maturity
Autonomic Nervous System (ANS)
The body system that regulates heart rate, breathing, and glandular secretions and may become activated during emotional arousal, initiating a "fight-or-flight" behavioral response to a stimulus. It has two subdivisions, the sympathetic and parasympathetic branches
Central nervous system
The brain and the spinal cord
Behavioral approach system (BAS)
The brain system involved in the pursuit of incentives or rewards
Behavioral inhibition system (BIS)
The brain system that is sensitive to punishment and therefore inhibits behavior that might lead to danger or pain
Auditory nerve
The branch of cranial nerve VIII that carries auditory signals from the hair cells in the basilar membrane
Conformity
The tendency for people to adopt behaviors, attitudes, and opinions of other members of a group
Forensic psychology
The branch of psychology concerned with interactions between psychological practice and research and the judicial system. Also related to the field of forensic psychiatry
Cognitive psychology
The branch of psychology that studies how the mind internally represents the external world and performs the mental computations required for all aspects of thinking. Cognitive psychologists study the vast set of mental operations associated with such things as perception, attention, memory, language, and problem solving
Optic nerve
The bundle of neurons that carries visual information from the retina to the brain
Memory bias
The changing of memories over time so that they become consistent with current beliefs or attitudes
Internal validity
The characteristic of an experiment that establishes the causal relationship between variables
Gender roles
The characteristics associated with males and females because of cultural influences or learning
Ethyl alcohol
The chemical compound in all alcoholic beverages that is rapidly absorbed into the blood and immediately begins to affect the person's functioning
Aromatization
The chemical process by which testosterone is converted to estradiol
Anxiety disorder
The class of mental disorder in which anxiety is the predominant feature
Androgens
The class of steroid hormones that includes testosterone
Rational choice theory
The classical view that we make decisions by determining how likely something is to happen, judging the value of the outcome, and then multiplying the two
International Classification of Diseases (ICD)
The classification system for medical and mental disorders that is used by the World Health Organization
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)
The classification system for mental disorders developed by the American Psychiatric Association
Comorbidity
The co-occurrence of two or more disorders in a single individual
Temporal code
The cochlea registers low frequencies via the firing rate of action potentials entering the auditory nerve
Declarative memory
The cognitive information retrieved from explicit memory; knowledge that can be declared
Iris
The colored muscular circle on the surface of the eye; it changes shape to let in more or less light
Social context
The combination of (a) people, (b) the activities and interactions among people, (c) the setting in which the behavior occurs, and (d) the expectations and social norms governing behavior in that setting
Anosognosia
The common failure of neuropsychological patients to recognize their own symptoms
Self-consistency bias
The commonly held idea that we are more consistent in our attitudes, opinions, and beliefs than we actually are
Population
The complete collection of participants who might possibly be measured
Premack principle
The concept, developed by David Premack, that a more-preferred activity can be used to reinforce a less-preferred activity
Medical model
The conceptualization of psychological disorders as diseases that, like physical diseases, have biological causes, defined symptoms, and possible cures
Thought suppression
The conscious avoidance of a thought
Ego
The conscious, rational part of the personality charged with keeping peace between the superego and id
Reinforcement
The consequences of a behavior that determine whether it will be more likely that the behavior will occur again
Acoustic encoding
The conversion of information, especially semantic information, to sound patterns in working memory
Adrenal medulla
The core of each adrenal gland, which releases epinephrine and norepinephrine in response to stressors
Cingulate cortex
The cortes of the cingulate gyri, which are located on the medial surfaces of the frontal lobes, just superior to the corpus callosum
Occipital lobes
The cortical regions at the back of the brain, housing the visual cortex
Cannon-Bard theory
The counterproposal that an emotional feeling and an internal physiological response occur at the same time: one is not the cause of the other. Both were believed to be the result of cognitive appraisal of the situation
Central sulcus
The deep fold or fissure between the frontal and parietal cortex that separates the primary motor cortex from the primary somatosensory cortex
Anterograde degeneration
The degeneration of the distal segment of a cut axon
External validity
The degree to which the findings of an experiment can be generalized outside the laboratory
Concurrent validity
The degree to which the measures gathered from one assessment tool agree with the meausres gathered from other assessment techniques
Androgenic insensitivity syndrome
The developmental disorder of genetic males in which a mutation to the androgen receptor gene renders the androgen receptor defective and causes the development of a female body
Resting potential
The difference in electric charge between the inside and outside of a neuron's cell membrane
Self-fulfilling prophecy
The tendency for people to cause what they expect to see
Before-and-after design
The experimental design used to demonstrate contingent drug tolerance; the experimental group receives the drug before each of a series of behavioral tests and the control group receives the drug after each test
Levels-of-processing theory
The explanation for the fact that information that is more thoroughly connected to meaningful items in long-term memory (more "deeply" processed) will be remembered better
Stimulus generalization
The extension of a learned response to stimuli that are similar to the conditioned stimulus
Accuracy
The extent to which an experimental measure is free from error
Self-esteem
The extent to which an individual likes, values, and accepts the self
Ciliary muscles
The eye muscles that control the shape of the lenses
Nonverbal behavior
The facial expressions, gestures, mannerisms, and movements by which one communicates with others
Third-variable problem
The fact that a causal relationship between two variables cannot be inferred from the naturally occurring correlation between them because of the ever-present possibility of third-variable correlation
Coolidge effect
The fact that a copulating male who becomes incapable of continuing to copulate with one sex partner can often recommence copulating with a new sex partner
Fast mapping
The fact that children can map a word onto an underlying concept after only a single exposure
Intermittent-reinforcement effect
The fact that operant behaviors that are maintained under intermittent-reinforcement schedules resist extinction better than those maintained under continuous reinforcement
Third-variable correlation
The fact that two variables are correlated only because each is causally related to a third variable
Bystander intervention effect
The failure to offer help by those who observe someone in need
Posthypnotic amnesia
The failure to retrieve memories following hypnotic suggestions to forget
Performance anxiety
The fear of performing inadequately and a related tension experienced during sex
Fusion
The final merging of two or more subpersonalities in multiple personality disorder
Genital stage
The final psychosexual stage, a time for the coming together of the mature adult personality with a capacity to love, work, and relate to others in a mutually satisfying and reciprocal manner
Oral stage
The first psychosexual stage, in which experience centers on the pleasures and frustrations associated with the mouth, sucking, and being fed
Brain wave
The fluctuations of electrical potential that are produced by neurons in the brain
Cohesiveness
The force that pulls group members together and keeps them as a unit
Myelination
The formation of a fatty sheath around the axons of neurons
Cerebral ventricles
The four CSF-filled internal chambers of the brain: the two lateral ventricles, the third ventricle, and the fourth ventricle
Sexual response cycle
The four-stage sequence of arousal, plateau, orgasm, and resolution occurring in both men and women
Resolution phase
The fourth phase of the sexual response cycle, characterized by relaxation and a decline in arousal follwoing orgasm
Latency stage
The fourth psychosexual stage, in which the primary focus is on the further development of intellectual, creative, interpersonal, and athletic skills
Prefrontal cortex
The frontmost portion of the frontal lobes, especially prominent in humans; important for attention, working memory, decision making, appropriate social behavior, and personality
Columnar organization
The functional organization of the neocortex in vertical columns; the cells in each column form a mini-circuit that performs a single function
Problem of other minds
The fundamental difficulty we have in perceiving the consciousness of others
Synaptic cleft
The gap between the axon of a "sending" neuron and the dendrites of a "receiving" neuron; it contains extracellular fluid
Rosenthal effect
The general finding that the results of any experiement often conform to the expectations of the experimenter
Trait anxiety
The general level of anxiety that a person brings to the various events in their life
Procedural memory
The gradual acquisition of skills as a result of practice or "knowing how" to do things
Acquisition
The gradual formation of an association between the conditioned and unconditioned stimuli
Evolution
The gradual process of biological change that occurs in a species as it adapts to its environment
Partial reinforcement extinction effect
The greater persistence of behavior under partial reinforcement than under continuous reinforcement
Depressive disorders
The group of disorders marked by unipolar depression
Control group
The group of people who are not treated in the particular way that the experimental group is treated in an experiment
In-group
The group with which an individual identifies
Collateral sprouting
The growth of axon branches from mature neurons, usually to postsynaptic sites abandoned by adjacent axons that have degenerated
Helplessness theory
The idea that individuals who are prone to depression are automatically attribute negative experiences to causes that are internal (i.e., their own fault), stable (i.e., unlikely to change), and global (i.e., widespread)
Transfer-appropriate processing
The idea that memory is likely to transfer from one situation to another when the encoding context of the situations match
Buffering hypothesis
The idea that other people can provide direct emotional support in helping individuals cope with stressful events
Preparedness theory
The idea that people are instinctively predisposed toward certain fears
Cognitive reserve
The idea that people with greater mental capacity can sustain more damage to the brain before exhibiting symptoms
Dopamine hypothesis
The idea that schizophrenia involves an excess of dopamine activity
Computer metaphor
The idea that the brain is an information-processing organ that operates in some ways, like a computer
Place code
The idea that the cochlea encodes different frequencies at different locations along the basilar membrane
Antibody-mediated immunity
The immune reaction by which B cells destroy invading microorganisms
Cell-mediated immunity
The immune reaction by which T-cells destroy invading microorganisms
TOT phenomenon
The inability to recall a word, while knowing that it is in memory. People often describe this frustrating experience as having the word "on the tip of the tongue"
Visual-form agnosia
The inability to recognize objects by sight
Infantile amnesia
The inability to remember events from early childhood
Retrograde amnesia
The inability to retrieve information that was acquired before a particular date, usually the date of injury or operation
Anosmia
The inability to smell
Ageusia
The inability to taste
Irreversibility
The inability, in the preoperational child, to think through a series of events or mental operations and then mentally reverse the steps
Basic irrational assumptions
The inaccurate and inappropriate beliefs held by people with various psychological problems, according to Albert Ellis
Discrimination
The inappropriate and unjustified treatment of people as a result of prejudice
Absentmindedness
The inattentive or shallow encoding of events
Appetizer effect
The increase in hunger that is produced by the consumption of small amounts of palatable food
Implicit memory
The influence of past experiences on later behavior, even without an effort to remember them or an awareness of the recollection
Rap group
The initial term for group therapy sessions among veterans, in which members meet to talk about and explore problems in an atmosphere of mutual support
Contrast enhancement
The intensification of the perception of edges
Persistence
The intrusive recollection of events that we wish we could forget
Mind/body problem
The issue of how the mind is related to the brain and body
Synapse
The junction or region between the axon of one neuron and the dendrites or cell body of another
Weber's law
The just noticeable difference of a stimulus is a constant proportion despite variations in intensity
Object permanence
The knowledge that objects exist independently of one's own actions or awareness
Cerebral cortex
The layered sheet of neurons that overlies the forebrain. The cerebral cortex consists of neuronal subdivisions (areas) interconnected with other cortical areas, subcortical structures, and the cerebellum and spinal cortex.
Marijuana
The leaves and buds of the hemp plant
Right to refuse treatment
The legal right of patients to refuse certain forms of treatment
Right to treatment
The legal right of patients, particularly those who are involuntarily committed, to receive adequate treatment
Nature-nurture issue
The long-standing discussion over the relative importance of nature (heredity) and nurture (environment) in their influence on behavior and mental processes
Fechner's Law
The magnitude of a stimulus can be estimated by the formula S=k log R, where S=sensation, R=stimulus, and k=a constant that differs for each sensory modality (sight, touch, temperature, etc.)
Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)
The main active ingredient of cannabis
Gonads
The main endocrine glands involved in sexual behavior: in males, the testes; in females, the ovaries
Deep structure
The meaning of a sentence
Percept
The meaningful product of perception-often an image that has been associated with concepts, memories of events, emotions, and motives
Arachnoid membrane
The meninx that is located between the dura mater and the pia mater and has the appearance of a gauze like spiderweb
Access consciousness
The mental experiences of which we are aware and have the ability to report on without the capacity to report on how the content was built up by all the neurons, neurotransmitters, and so forth, in the nervous system
Alpha motor neurons
The neurons that terminate on muscle fibers, causing contractions that produce movements. Alpha motor neurons originate in the spinal cord and exit through the ventral root of the cord
Acetylcholine (ACh)
The neurotransmitter responsible for motor control at the junction between nerves and muscles; also involved in mental processes such as learning, memory, sleeping, and dreaming
DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition)
The newest addition of the DSM, published in 2013
Child abuse
The nonaccidental use of excessive physical or psychological force by an adult on a child, often aimed at hurting or destroying the child
Hedonic principle
The notion that all people are motivated to experience pleasure and avoid pain
Similarity principle
The notion that people are attracted to those who are most similar to themselves
Principle of proximity
The notion that people at work will make more friends among those who are nearby-with whom they have the most contact
Instinct theory
The now-outmoded view that certain behaviors are completely determined by innate factors. The instinct theory was flawed because it overlooked the effects of learning and because it employed instincts merely as labels, rather than as explanations for behavior
Frequency
The number of cycles completed by a wave in a given amount of time, usually a second
Incidence
The number of new cases of a disorder occurring in a population over a specific period of time
Chronological age (CA)
The number of years since an individual's birth
Dissociative identity disorder (DID)
The occurrence of two or more distinct identities in the same individual
Broca's aphasia
The oldest and perhaps best-studied form of aphasia, characterized by speech difficulties in the absence of severe comprehension problems. However, Broca's aphasics may also suffer from problems in fully comprehending grammatically complex sentences.
Placenta
The organ interface between the embryo or fetus and the mother. The placenta separates the bloodstreams, but it allows the exchange of nutrients and waste products
Taste buds
The organ of taste transduction
Perception
The organization, identification, and interpretation of a sensation in order to form a mental representation
Adrenal cortex
The outer layer of the adrenal glands, which relases glucocorticoids in response to stressors, as well as steroid hormones in small amounts
Soma
The part of a cell (such as a neuron) containing the nucleus, which includes the chromosomes. Also called the cell body
Figure
The part of a pattern that commands attention. The figure stands out against the ground
Ground
The part of a pattern that does not command attention; the background
Id
The part of the mind containing the drives present at birth; it is the source of our bodily needs, wants, desires, and impulses, particularly our sexual and aggressive drives
Peripheral nervous system (PNS)
The part of the nervous system that connects the central nervous system to the body's organs and muscles
Cell body
The part of the neuron that coordinates information-processing tasks and keeps the cell alive. Contains the nucleus and other cellular apparatus responsible for manufacturing the proteins and enzymes that sustain cell functioning
Anterior pituitary
The part of the pituitary that releases tropic hormones
Sample
The partial collection of people drawn from a population
Trichromatic color representation
The pattern of responding across the three types of cones that provides a unique code for each color
Social distance
The perceived difference of similarity between oneself and another person
Apparent Motion
The perception of movement as a result of alternating signals appearing in rapid succession in different locations
Synesthesia
The perceptual experience of one sense that is evoked by another sense
Prodromal phase
The period during which the symptoms of schizophrenia are not yet prominent, but the person has begun to deteriorate from previous levels of functioning
Adolescence
The period of development that begins with the onset of sexual maturity (about 11 to 14 years of age) and lasts until adulthood (about 18 to 21 years of age)
Fetal stage
The period of prenatal development that lasts from the ninth week until birth
Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep
The period of the sleep cycle during which the eyes move quickly back and forth, indicating that the person is dreaming
Premorbid
The period prior to the onset of a disorder
Perseveration
The persistent repetition of words and statements
Proband
The person who is the focus of a genetic study
Continuity view
The perspective that development is gradual and continuous-as opposed to the discontinuous (stage) view
Discontinuity view
The perspective that development proceeds in an uneven (discontinuous) fashion-as opposed to the continuity view
Desire phase
The phase of the sexual response cycle consisting of an urge to have sex, sexual fantasies, and sexual attraction
Orgasm phase
The phase of the sexual response cycle during which a person's sexual pleasure peaks and sexual tension is released as muscles in the pelvic region contract rhythmically
Excitement phase
The phase of the sexual response cycle marked by changes in the pelvic region, general physical arousal, and increases in heart rate, muscle tension, blood pressure, and rate of breathing
Cartesian dualism
The philosophical position of Rene Descartes, who argued that the universe is composed of two elements; physical matter and the human mind
Philosophical empiricism
The philosophical view that all knowledge is acquired through experience
Nativism
The philosophical view that certain kinds of knowledge are innate or inborn
Stress
The physical and psychological response to external or internal stressors
Engram
The physical changes in the brain associated with a memory. It is also known as the memory trace.
Amplitude
The physical strength of a wave. This is usually measured from peak (top) to valley (bottom) on a graph of the wave
Mainstreaming
The placement of children with intellectual disability in regular school classes. Also known as inclusion
High
The pleasant feeling of relaxation and euphoria that follows the rush from certain recreational drugs
Bregma
The point on the surface of the skull where two of the major sutures intersect, commonly used as a reference point in stereotaxic surgery of rodents
Cerebrum
The portion of the brain that sits on the brainstem; in general, it plays a role in complex adaptive processes (e.g., learning, perception, and motivation)
Meditation
The practice of intentional contemplation
Exorcism
The practice, common in early societies, of treating abnormality by coaxing evil spirits to leave the person's body
Matching hypothesis
The prediction that most people will find friends and mates that are perceived to be about their same level of attractiveness
Mortality-salience hypothesis
The prediction that people who are reminded of their own mortality will work to reinforce their cultural worldviews
Corticosterone
The predominant glucocorticoid in humans
Coexistence
The presence of more than one neurotransmitter in the same neuron
Sex offender statute
The presumption by some state legislatures that people who are repeatedly found guilty of certain sex crimes have a mental disorder and should be categorized as "mentally disordered sex offenders." Such laws have been changed or abolished by many states over the past two decades
Glutamate
The primary excitatory neurotransmitter in the nervous system
Estrogen
The primary female sex hormone
Cochlea
The primary organ of hearing; a coiled tube in the inner ear, where sound waves are transduced into neural messages
Testosterone
The principal male sex hormone
Parens patriae
The principle by which the state can make decisions to promote the individual's best interests and protect them from self-harm or neglect
Law of effect
The principle that behaviors that are followed by a "satisfying state of affairs" tend to be repeated and those that produce an "unpleasant state of affairs" are less likely to be repeated
Confidentiality
The principle that certain professionals will not divulge the information they obtain from a client
Normalization
The principle that institutions and community residences should provide people with intellectual disability types of living conditions and opportunities that are similar to those enjoyed by the rest of society
Duty to protect
The principle that therapists must break confidentiality in order to protect a person who may be the intended victim of a client
Health maintenance
The principle that young adults should act to promote their physical and mental health to best prepare for the aging process. Also called wellness.
All-or-none principle
The principle whereby a neuron fires with the same potency each time, although frequency can vary; a neuron either fires or not-it cannot partially fire
Heuristic persuasion
The process by which attitudes or beliefs are changed by appeals to habit or emotion
Systematic persuasion
The process by which attitudes or beliefs are changed by appeals to reason
Kin selection
The process by which evolution selects for individuals who cooperate with their relatives
Consolidation
The process by which memory representations become stronger over time. Consolidation is believed to include changes in the brain system participating in the storage of information
Stereotyping
The process by which people draw inferences about others based on their knowledge of the categories to which others belong
Consciousness
The process by which the brain creates a model of internal and external experience
Accommodation
The process by which the eye maintains a clear image on the retina
Maturation
The process by which the genetic program manifests itself over time
In-group favoritism
The tendency for people to evaluate favorably and privilege members of the in-group more than members of the out-group
Anal stage
The second psychosexual stage, which is dominated by the pleasures and frustrations associated with the anus, retention and expulsion of feces and urine, and toilet training
Kinesthetic sense
The sense of body position and movement of body parts relative to each other
Olfaction
The sense of smell
Gustation
The sense of taste-from the same root word as "gusto"-also called the gustatory sense
Somatoform disorders
The set of psychological disorders in which the person displays physical symptoms not fully explained by a general medical condition
Cocontraction
The simultaneous contraction of antagonistic muscles
Central canal
The small CSF-filled channel that runs the length of the spinal cord
Pupil
The small opening in the eye; it lets in light waves
Difference threshold
The smallest amount by which a stimulus can be changed and the difference be detected half the time
Morphemes
The smallest meaningful units of language
Phoneme
The smallest unit of sound that is recognizable as speech rather than random noise
Adulthood
The stage of development that begins around 18 to 21 years of age and ends at death
Formal operational stage
The stage of development that begins around age 11 and lasts through adulthood, in which children can solve nonphysical problems
Childhood
The stage of development that begins at about 18 to 24 months and lasts until adolescence
Peoperational stage
The stage of development that begins at about 2 years and ends at about 6 years, in which children have a preliminary understanding of the physical world
Infancy
The stage of development that begins at birth and lasts between 18 and 24 months
Human sexual response cycle
The stages of physiological arousal during sexual activity
Comparative approach
The study of biological processes by comparing different species---usually from the evolutionary perspective
Physiology
The study of biological processes, especially in the human body
Developmental psychology
The study of changes, over the life span, in physiology, cognition, emotion, and social behavior
Psychopharmacology
The study of drug effects on psychological states and symptoms
Cultural psychology
The study of how cultures reflect and shape the psychological processes of their members
Social psychology
The study of the causes and consequences of sociality
Functionalism
The study of the purpose mental processes serve in enabling people to adapt to their environment
Clinical psychology
The study, assessment, treatment, and prevention of abnormal behavior
Health psychology
The subfield of psychology concerned with ways psychological factors influence the causes and treatment of physical illnesses and the maintenance of health
Introspection
The subjective observation of one's own experiences
Primary personality
The subpersonality that appears more often than others in individuals with dissociative identity disorder
Dissociative fugue
The sudden loss of memory for one's personal history, accompanied by an abrupt departure from home and the assumption of a new identity
Dissociative amnesia
The sudden loss of memory for significant personal information
Cheese effect
The surges in blood pressure that occur when individuals taking MAO inhibitors consume tyramine-rich foods, such as cheese
Protection and advocacy system
The system by which lawyers and advocates who work for patients may investigate the patients' treatment and protect their rights
Multiaxial system
The system used in the DSM-IV-TR; it calls for assessment along five axes that describe important mental health factors
Autoradiography
The technique of photographically developing brain slices that have been exposed to a radioactively labeled substance such as 2-DG so that regions of high uptake are visible
Emergency commitment
The temporary commitment to a mental hospital of a patient who is behaving in a bizarre or violent way
Cryogenic blockade
The temporary elimination of neural activity in an area of the brain by cooling the area with a cryophobe
Reliability
The tendency for a measure to produce the same measurement whenever it is used to measure the same thing
Homeostasis
The tendency for a system to take action to keep itself in a certain state
Diffusion of responsibility
The tendency for individuals to feel diminished responsibility for their actions when they are surrounded by others who are acting the same way
State-dependent retrieval
The tendency for information to be better recalled when the person is in the same state during encoding and retrieval
Drug tolerance
The tendency for larger doses of a drug to be required over time to achieve the same effect
Mere exposure effect
The tendency for liking to increase with the frequency of exposure
Component theory
The theory that the relative amount of activity produced in three different classes of cones by light determines its perceived color (also called trichromatic theory)
Concrete operational stage
The third of Piaget's stages, when a child understands conservation but still is incapable of abstract thought
Phallic stage
The third psychosexual stage, during which experience is dominated by the pleasure, conflict, and frustration associated with the phallic-genital region as well as powerful incestuous feelings of love, hate, jealousy, and conflict
Cognitive triad
The three forms of negative thinking that the theorist Aaron Beck theorizes lead people to feel depressed. The triad consists of a negative view of one's experiences, oneself, and the future
Catecholamines
The three monoamine neurotransmitters that are synthesized from the amino acid tyrosine: dopamine, epinephrine, and norepinephrine
Refractory period
The time following an action potential during which a new action potential cannot be initiated
Visible spectrum
The tiny part of the electromagnetic spectrum to which our eyes are sensitive. The visible spectrum of other creatures may be slightly different from our own
Prozac
The trade name for fluoxetine, a second-generation antidepressant
Valium
The trade name of diazepam, an antianxiety drug
Big Five
The traits, of the five-factor model: conscientiousness, agreeableness, neuroticism, openness to experience, and extraversion
Alleles
The two genes that control the same trait
Subpersonalities
The two or more distinct personalities found in individuals suffering with dissociative identity disorder. Also known as alternate personalities
Chemical senses
The two senses that depend on environmental molecules for stimulation: taste and smell
Conservation
The understanding that the physical properties of an object or substance do not change when appearances change but nothing is added or taken away
Confabulation
The unintended false recollection of episodic memories
Norm of reciprocity
The unwritten rule that people should benefit those who have benefited them
Biofeedback
The use of an external monitoring device to obtain information about a bodily function and possibly gain control over that function
Torture
The use of brutal, degrading, and disorienting strategies to reduce victims to a state of utter helplessness
Emotion regulation
The use of cognitive and behavioral strategies to influence one's emotional experience
Cybertherapy
The use of computer technology, such as Skype or avatars, to provide therapy
Cyberbullying
The use of e-mail, texting, chat rooms, cell phones, or other digital devices to harass, threaten, or intimidate people
Cosmetic neurology
The use of neural intervention to improve cognition in healthy people
Behavior modification
The use of operant-conditioning techniques to eliminate unwanted behaviors and replace them with desirable ones
Drug therapy
The use of psychotropic drugs to reduce the symptoms of psychological disorders
Converging operations
The use of several research approaches to solve a single problem
Polysubstance abuse
The use of two or more substances at the same time
Terrorism
The use of violent, unpredictable acts by a small group against a larger group for political, economic, or religious goals
Range
The value of the largest measurement in a frequency distribution minus the value of the smallest measurement
Mode
The value of the most frequently observed measurement
Median
The value that is "in the middle"-i.e., greater than or equal to half the measurements
Independent variable
The variable that is manipulated in an experiment
Situation anxiety
The various levels of anxiety produced in a person by different situations. Also called state anxiety
Somatogenic perspective
The view that abnormal psychological functioning has physical causes
Dynamic systems theory
The view that development is a self-organizing process, where new forms of behavior emerge through consistent interactions between a biological being and his or her cultural and environmental contexts
Multicultural perspective
The view that each culture within a larger society has a particular set of values and beliefs, as well as special external pressures, that help account for the behavior and functioning of its members. Also called culturally diverse persepctive
Situationism
The view that environmental conditions influence people's behavior as much or more than their personal dispositions do
Nativist theory
The view that language development is best explained as an innate, biological capacity
Learning-based inference
The view that perception is primarily shaped by learning (or experience), rather than by innate factors
Psychogenic perspective
The view that the chief causes of abnormal functioning are psychological
Central executive
Theoretical construct in working memory; performs the mental work of (1) controlling slave subsystems that mediate the storage process and (2) forming strategies for using the information the subsystems contain
Schemas
Theories about or models of the way the world works
Adaptation theories of sleep
Theories of sleep based on the premise that sleep evolved to protect organisms from predation and accidents and to conserve their energy, rather than to fulfill some particular physiological need
Interactionists
Theorists who believe that behavior is determined jointly by situations and underlying dispositions
Approach-withdrawal model
Theory based on basic and rudimentary actions that organisms take in responding adaptively to the environment. Proposes that the left frontal region houses a system involved in approach behaviors and associated with (mostly positive) emotions that accompany approach behaviors; the right frontal region is posited to house a system involved in withdrawal behaviors and associated with (mostly negative) emotions that accompany withdrawal behaviors
Crowding hypothesis
Theory regarding the phenomenon of later-emerging deficits following brain damage early in life; posits that the intact brain takes on too many functions (by picking up the load of the damaged areas) to allow normal or optimal development of all functions
Activating-orienting model
Theory suggesting that an attentional set or bias can contribute to perceptual assymetries. This model hypothesizes that engaging in a particular type of process causes greater activation in the hemisphere best suited to the task. The increased activity is thought to result in an attentional bias to the side of space contralateral to the more active hemisphere; thus, perceptual information on that side of space is more salient, allowing it to become processed better
Psychological therapies
Therapies based on psychological principles (rather than the biomedical approach); often called psychotherapy
Neo-Freudian psychodynamic therapies
Therapies for mental disorder that were developed by psychodynamic theorists who embraced some of Freud's ideas but disagreed with others
Cognitive-behavioral therapies
Therapy approaches that seek to help clients change both counterproductive behaviors and dysfunctional ways of thinking
Compensatory rehabilitation
Therapy for brain-damaged patients that aims to provide alternative strategies to achieve a particular goal
Stage of exhaustion
Third stage of the GAS, during which the body depletes its resources to cope with a stressor
Demand characteristics
Those aspects of an observational setting that cause people to behave as they think they should
Shared environment
Those environmental factors that are experienced by all relevant members of a household
Nonshared environment
Those environmental factors that are not experienced by all relevant members of a household
Cognitive behavior
Thoughts and beliefs, many of which remain private
Chromosome
Tightly coiled threadlike structure along which the genes are organized, like beads on a necklace. Chromosomes consist primarily of DNA
Sensitive periods
Time periods when specific skills develop most easily
Conditioned drug tolerance
Tolerance effects that are maximally expressed only when a drug is administered in the situation in which it has previously been administered
Cross-tolerance
Tolerance that a person develops for a substance as a result of regularly using another substance similar to it.
Humanistic therapies
Treatment techniques based on the assumption that people have a tendency for positive growth and self-actualization, which may be blocked by an unhealthy environment that can include negative self-evaluation and criticism of others
Identical twins aka monozygotic twins
Twins who develop from the splitting of a single egg that was fertilized by a single sperm
Fraternal twins aka dizygotic twins
Twins who develop from two different eggs that were fertilized by two different sperm
Neurofibrillary tangles
Twisted protein fibers that form within brain cells as people age. People with Alzheimer's disease have an excessive number of such tangles
Cingulate motor areas
Two small areas of secondary motor cortex located on the medial surfaces of the frontal lobes
Extrapyramidal effects
Unwanted movements, such as severe shaking, bizarre looking grimaces, twisting of the body, and extreme restlessness, sometimes produced by conventional antipsychotic drugs
Dichotomous thinking
Viewing problems and solutions in rigid "either/or" terms
Rational coping
facing a stressor and working to overcome it
Incest
sexual relations between close relatives
Prenatal period
the development period before birth
Biological model
the theoretical perspective that points to biological processes as the key to human behavior