GRE Psychology

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overregularization

"I runned to the car" is an example of?

Endorphins

"morphine within"—natural, opiate-like neuropeptide linked to pain control and to pleasure

purpose of myelin sheath

(1) Surround and protect nerve fibers from each other (2) speed of impulse

differences between graded potentials and action potentials

(1) graded potential are NOT all or nothing (weak or strong) (2) graded potentials lose voltage as they travel along dendrite and action potentials do NOT

what does signal detection theory measure?

(1) how well the stimulus is sensed and (2) response bias

techniques to research neuropsychology

(1) lesions and ablations (2) stereotaxic instrument (3) electrical simulation and recording of neurons [EEG] (4) noninvasive imaging and recording techniques [CAT and PET scans]

Weber's Law Equation

(change in I) / I = k referred to as just noticeable difference (JND)

Method of savings formula

(no of trials for original learning)-(no of trials for relearning)/(no of trials for original learning) x 100 (for percentage =

z score formula

(x-mean)/standard deviation

Gender labeling stage

*1st stage (2-3 yo) of Kohlberg's gender stages where children achieve gender identity and can label others gender*

gender stability stage

*2nd stage (3-4 yo) of Kohlberg's gender stages where children can predict they will continue being their gender as an adult but superficial understanding*

gender consistency stage

*3rd stage (4-7 yo) of Kohlberg's gender stages where children understand the permanency of gender (regardless of clothes or behavior)*

exposure therapy

*A classical conditioning based behavioral treatment for phobias* -involves prolonged exposure to a feared stimulus, thereby providing maximal opportunity for the conditioned fear response to be extinguished -forcing client to directly experience the feared object to show no negative effect

Cerebellum

*A large structure at the top of hindbrain that controls fine motor skills (posture, balance, coordination) -damage to cerebellum causes slurred speech, clumsiness, and loss of balance

additive color mixture

*A mixture of lights*. If light A and light B are both reflected from a surface to the eye, in the perception of color the effects of those two lights add together.

fixed ratio, variable ratio, fixed interval, variable interval

4 types of schedules of partial reinforcement

How many chromosomes do humans have?

46 (23 pairs)

sweet, bitter, sour, salty, umami

5 fundamental taste qualities

oral, anal, phallic, latency, genital

5 stages of psychosexual development

test conceptualization, test construction, test tryout, item analysis, test revision

5 stages of test development

siblings and fraternal twins have what percent of genes in common with each other?

50%

Children have an average of what percent of their genes in common with each parent?

50% (addresses the heritability of traits)

Kohlberg's stages of moral development

6 identifiable developmental stages of moral reasoning which form the basis of ethical behavior 1. pre-conventional morality phase a. obedience and punishment stage b. instrumental relativist stage 2. conventional morality phase a. good girl, nice boy stage b. law and order orientation stage 3. post-conventional morality phase a. social contract orientation stage b. universal ethical principles stage

percentage of scores within 1 SD in a normal distribution

68%

Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences

7 defined intelligences: linguistic ability, logical-mathematical ability, spatial ability, musical ability, bodily-kinesthic ability, interpersonal ability, and intrapersonal ability -Western cultures value first 2 over the others and they determine IQ score

moving toward

*Horney's strategy for connecting with others as a way of dealing with basic anxiety* -obtain good will of people who provide security

moving against

*Horney's strategy for seeking control and power over people as a way of coping* -fighting for the upper hand results in aggressive personality

Thurstone

7 primary mental abilities (i.e verbal comprehension, number ability, perceptual speed, general reasoning) -critic of Spearman

how long is a complete cycle of sleep

90 minutes

percentage of scores within 2 SD in a normal distribution

96%

amnestic disorder

A cognitive disorder marked by severe impairment in memory due to effects of substance use or a medical condition.

androgen insensitivity syndrome

A condition caused by a congenital lack of functioning androgen receptors -in a person with XY sex chromosomes, causes the development of a female with testes but no internal sex organs

Cross-Sectional

A developmental psychologist is interested in conducting a study on children's gender perceptions. The psychologist recruits children who are 5, 8, and 10. Which research design is this?

Stereoscope

A device that gives the impression of depth to a flat picture by presenting each eye a separate but slightly different picture

Parkinson's disease

A disorder of the central nervous system that affects movement, often including tremors.

Large, large

A distribution with high variability would have ___ variance and ____ standard deviation

small, small

A distribution with low variability would have ___ variance and ____ standard deviation

L-dopa

A drug for Parkinson's disease & tardive dyskinesia that increases dopamine levels in the brain

Antabuse

A drug that, when combined with alcohol, causes violent nausea; it is used to control a person's drinking.

variable

A factor that can change in an experiment

stratified random sampling

A form of probability sampling: a random sampling technique in which the researcher identifies particular demographic categories of interest and then randomly selects individuals within each category. -assures that each subgroup of the population is randomly sampled in proportion to its size

diathesis-stress model

A framework explaining the causes of mental disorders as an interaction between biological causal factors (a predisposition toward developing a specific mental disorder) and psychological causal factors (excessive stress).

Genie

A girl who was captive with no social contact for 14 years and when she was found, she had missed the critical period where she could have learned language so she could not speak and was extremely socially disabled.

Population

A group of individuals that belong to the same species and live in the same area -> group to which the researcher wishes to generalize her results

limbic system

A group of interconnected structures (including the hypothalamus, the amygdala, and septal nuclei) that are crucial for emotion, motivation, and many aspects of learning and memory.

Progesterone

A hormone produced by the ovaries to prepare uterus for implantation of fertilized egg

Adrenaline

A hormone released into the bloodstream in response to physical or mental stress

Tay-Sachs disease

A human genetic disease caused by a recessive allele that leads to the accumulation of hexosaminidase A. symptoms may resemble psychological disorders

rhodopsin

A light-sensitive pigment found in the rod cells that is formed by retinal (vitamin A) and opsin (protein).

Amygdala

A limbic system structure involved in defensive and aggressive behaviors

best-fitting straight line

A line drawn through a correlation studies scatter plot. Pos line = pos relation. Neg line = neg relation. Flat line = no relation.

serial learning

A list of items is learned and repeated according to their sequence of occurrence within the list

semipermeable membrane

A membrane that allows small ions to pass through and blocks passage of others (cell membrane)

Counterbalancing

A method of controlling for order effects in a repeated measure design by either including all orders of treatment or by randomly determining the order for each subject example: half of subject do high protein first, other half do low protein first

Introspection

A method of self-observation in which participants report their thoughts and feelings

linear perspective

A monocular cue for perceiving depth: the more parallel lines seem to converge, the greater their perceived distance.

Reactance

A motive to protect or restore one's sense of freedom. Reactance arises when someone threatens our freedom of action. *if you try too hard to persuade someone of something, they will choose the opposite of your position*

extrapyramidal system

A motor system that includes the basal ganglia: relays motor information and body position from basal ganglia to brain and spinal cord -makes our movements smooth and posture steady

Discrete motor task

A motor task that is divided into different parts that do not facilitate the recall of each other;harder to learn than continuous motor tasks. (ie. setting up the chessboard)

continuous motor task

A motor task that, once started, continues naturally; easier to learn than discrete motor tasks. (i.e. Bike riding)

Hippocampus

A neural center involved in learning and memory, STM => LTM

Dopamine

A neurotransmitter associated with movement, posture, and the brain's pleasure and reward system.

Deindividualization

*loss of self-awareness and personal identity (conform to roles)* What Zimbardo believed was to blame for behavior in the Stanford Prison Experiment

Hindbrain

*manages vital functioning necessary for survival (balance, motor coordination, breathing, digestion, sleeping, waking)* -located where brain meets spinal cord

secondary circular reactions

*manipulation is focused on something outside the body* example: a child will purposefully pick up a toy in order to put it in his or her mouth.

persona archetype

*mask that is adopted by a person in response to the demands of social convention* -originates from social interactions where a social role served a useful purpose

social contract orientation stage

*moral rules are seen as convention to ensure the greater good* -part of post conventional morality phase

law-and-order orientation stage

*morality defined by the rules of authority* -part of conventional morality phase

cerebral cortex

*most recent development of the human brain: outer covering of the cerebral hemispheres* -language processing, problem solving, impulse control, long-term planning, etc.

Arnold Gesell

*nativism: development occurs as a biological process, regardless of practice or training* -against behaviorism

Carl Jung

*neo-Freudian who created concept of "collective unconscious" and wrote books on dream interpretation* -libido was psychic energy in general, not just psychosexual

Erik Erikson

*neo-Freudian, humanistic ego psychologist who developed 8 psychosocial stages of development reworked to cover life span* -showed how even negative events could have positive effects on personality

Autism Spectrum Disorders

*neurological disorders that appears in childhood (age 3) and are marked by significant deficiencies in communication and social interaction, by rigidly fixated interests and repetitive behaviors, & over-sensitivity to sensory stimuli* -often persists into adulthood and many cannot have an autonomous life

cell body (soma)

*neuron's energy center* -Largest part of a typical neuron: contains the nucleus and much of the cytoplasm

Acetylcohline (ACh)

*neurotransmitter found in central and peripheral nervous systems* -in CNS: linked to Alzheimers (loss of acetylcohline in neurons connected to hippocampus)

"good girl, nice boy" orientation stage

*one seeks approval of others* -part of conventional morality phase

cerebral cortex

*outer surface of the brain made of neural cells* the body's ultimate control and information-processing center -split into lobes -newest brain area to evolve

authoritative parenting style

*parenting style characterized by emotional warmth, high standards for behavior, explanation and consistent enforcement of rules, and inclusion of children in decision making* -results in socially & academically component

authoritarian parenting style

*parenting style in which parent is rigid and overly strict, showing little warmth to the child* -results in difficulty in school & peer relations

permissive parenting style

*parenting style that allows freedom, lax parenting that doesn't set limits or enforce rules constantly* -difficulties in school & peer relations

ego ideal

*part of the superego that contains the standards for good, moral behavior* example: whatever parents commend goes into the conscience

Group Decision Making (Irving Janis)

*studied ways group decisions go awry because of group thinking: tendency of decision-making groups to strive for consensus by not considering discordant information*

pons

*structures that lie above the medulla oblongata and connects brain parts to spine and cerebellum* *controls muscle coordination, balance, and posture*

social anxiety disorder

term for an anxiety disorder involving the extreme and irrational fear of being embarrassed, judged, or scrutinized by others in social situations

diathesis

term for biological predisposition

Type A

term for competitive and compulsive personality

Androgyny

term for displaying both traditional masculine and feminine psychological characteristics

Type B

term for easygoing, relaxed personality

specific phobias

term for fear of specific objects or specific situations or events

sham rage

term for incredible rage easily provoked when the cerebral cortex is removed

Blunted expression

term for severe reduction in the intensity of affect expression

pragmatics

term for the appropriate use of language in different contexts (inflections)

Alexia

term for the inability to read

agraphia

term for the inability to write

errors of growth

term for the misuse of grammar characterized by universal application of a rule, regardless of exceptions -seen in children during language development. (I runned instead of I ran) -evidence that language is not imitation/reinforcement but internalized set of rules

nAch

term for the motivation to pursue success and avoid failure

internal loci of control

term for the perception that we control our own fate: Rotter

Syntax

term for the rules for combining words into grammatically sensible sentences in a given language

libido (sex drive)

term for what Freud believed was present at birth

double-bind hypothesis of schizophrenia

theory of schizophrenia which argues that faulty, contradictory communication patterns within the family as a child is the cause

traveling wave theory

theory that sound waves move in the cochlea from its base to its apex along the basilar membrane; the crest of the wave resonates at a particular point on the basilar membrane, resulting in the perception of a specific pitch

Birth Order Theory

theory that states that a person's rank within their family can have an effect on their personality and intelligence; Adler

catecholamine theory of depression

theory that too much norepinephrine and serotonin in the synapse leads to mania, while too little leads to depression

behavior therapy

therapy that applies learning principles to the elimination of unwanted behaviors

cognitive-behavioral therapy

therapy that combines cognitive therapy (changing self-defeating thinking) with behavior therapy (changing behavior)

step 1 of natural selection

there are genetic differences between members of a species

stage theory of memory

there are several memory systems that have a different function: memories enter the systems in a specific order -sensory memory, short-term memory, long-term memory

Chomsky's nativist theory on language development

there is a innate, biologically based mechanism for language acquisition: LAD (language acquisition device)

*ectomorphy* body type

thin, fragile, and lightly muscled

metacognition

thinking about thinking

spurious variable

third outside factor that influences both correlated variables

clear-cut attachment phase

third phase in development of attachment occurring at 6 months of age characterized by intensified dependence on the primary caregiver (seeking out and responding specifically to mother)

action potential spike

third step of an action potential firing

Human Nervous System

this system is made up of the central nervous system and peripheral nervous system

Chromosomes

threadlike structures made of DNA molecules and proteins that contain the genes

Sternberg's Triarchic Theory of Intelligence

three aspects of intelligence: componential (performance on tests), experiential (creativity), and contextual (street smarts/business sense)

semicircular canals

three canals within the inner ear that contain specialized receptor cells that generate nerve impulses with body movement (balance)

Meninges

three layers of connective tissue in which the brain and spinal cord are wrapped

ADHD, autism, tourettes

three main neurodevelopmental disorders

reference, persecution, and grandeur

three main types of delusions

benzodiazepines, barbiturates, alcohol

three main types of sedative-hypnotics (depressants)

hindbrain, midbrain, forebrain

three major divisions of the brain

arousal, alertness, and attention

three things the reticular formation controls

Ossicles

three tiny bones in the middle ear (smallest in the body)

insecure/avoidant (type A), secure (Type B), insecure/resistant (Type C)

three types of attachment by Ainsworth

simple, complex, and hypercomplex

three types of cells in the cortex that are max sensitive to certain features of stimuli

sensory, motor, and interneurons

three types of neurons

limen

threshold of stimulus perceived

escape learning

through operant conditioning, this is the process of a behavior removing something undesirable (i.e. fasten seatbelt buzzer)

Serial-anticipation learning

to memorize list, recall one item at a time by anticipating

1000Hz

tones higher than this cannot be used in the frequency theory

Prosody

tones, inflections, accents and other aspects of pronunciation that carry meaning

schizoid, narcisstic, borderline, and antisocial

top 4 personality disorders in DSM-V

Phenotype

total collection of expressed traits that constitute the individual's physical observable characteristics -identical phenotypes can have different genotypes (BRBR, BRbl)

Genotype

total genetic makeup of an organism -identical genotypes can produce different phenotypes due to variations in the environment (plants)

escape conditioning

training of an organism to remove or terminate an unpleasant stimulus

central traits

traits that are major characteristics and can be easily inferred (honesty, fatalism) -everyone has them

secondary traits

traits that are more personal preferences/attitudes and limited in occurrence -everyone has them

Benzodiazepines

tranquilizer based drugs that lower anxiety and reduce stress (Valium)

Two theories of color vision

trichromatic theory and opponent process theory

3 basic types of research

true experiments, quasi-experiments, and correlational studies

ratio scale of measurement

true zero point example: temperature

linguistic and logical math

two abilities within the theory of multiple intelligences that are valued by western culture most

Alternate-form method

two different versions of a test on the same content is given to the same test takers at different times then compared

estrogen and progesterone

two female sex hormones that the ovaries produce

cerebral hemispheres

two halves of the cerebral cortex, each of which serve distinct yet highly integrated functions

Hubel and Wiesel

two men that recorded single electrical activity in visual cortexes of cats while presenting them with visual stimuli on a screen

Hubel and Wiesel

two men who studied feature detection in visual cortex and discovered simple (orientation/boundaries of objects), complex (movement), and hypercomplex cells (shape)

pinna, auditory canal

two parts of the outer ear

inferior colliculi and superior colliculi

two parts of the tectum

auditory cortex and Wernicke's area

two parts of the temperal lobe

Darley and Latane

two people who proposed that there were two factors that could lead to not helping: social influence and diffusion of responsibility

hypothalamus and anterior pituitary gland

two structures that initiate, maintain, and halt primary & secondary sex development

sympathetic nervous system and parasympathetic nervous system

two subdivisions of the autonomic nervous system

aptitude and achievement

two types of ability tests

beta and alpha

two types of awake brain waves

taste & smell

two types of chemical senses (receptors must have contact with stimulus molecules)

depression and mania

two types of disorders implicated by norepinephrine

procedural and declarative memory

two types of long term memory

Schachter and Singer

two-factor theory of emotion

reflexive behavior

type of behavior that interneurons are linked to

polarized neuron

type of neuron that has more negative ions inside than outside (resting stage)

Authoritative

type of parenting that Baumrind found to be most effective in producing socially and academically competent children

graded potentials

type of potentials that postsynaptic potentials are classified as because the voltage varies and they are not subject to the all or nothing law

chemical process

type of process in neural conduction between neurons (at synapse)

electrical process

type of process in neural conduction within a neuron

convergent thinking

type of thinking used to find the one solution to a problem; math; JP Guilford

divergent thinking

type of thinking used when more than one possibility exists in a situation; most commonly associated with creative thinking; playing chess

cause of schizophrenia

unclear

dog food

unconditioned stimulus in Pavlov's experiment

find percentile for normal distribution using z score (positive)

z score +1= 50% +34%= 85% look at text

find percentile for normal distribution using z score (negative)

z score -1= 50%-34%= 16% look at text

maintenance rehearsal

A system for remembering involving repeating information to oneself without attempting to find meaning in it (keep information in short-term memory)

social desirability bias

A tendency to give socially approved answers to questions about oneself.

feature detection theory

A theory of visual perception that proposes that certain cells fire for individual and specific features of a visual stimulus such as shape, color, line, movements, etc.

Theory of Reasoned Action

A theory suggesting that the decision to engage in a particular behavior is the result of a rational process in which behavioral options are considered, consequences or outcomes of each are evaluated, and a decision is reached to act or not to act.; decision is then reflected in behavioral intentions, which strongly influence overt behavior; Fishbein & Aizen

Bekesy's traveling wave theory

High-frequency sounds maximally vibrate basilar membrane near beginning of cochlea close to oval window, and low frequences maximally vibrate near apex of cochlea

round dance

Honeybee dance in a circular motion; indicates that food is very nearby; von Frisch

Gonadotropins

Hormones produced by the pituitary gland that signal the gonads to control the production of reproductive hormones and gametes.

communicator, communication, and situation: which model?

Hovland's model of persuasion components

Perception of form

How we abstract perceptual objects (like a book) out of everything appearing on our retinaq

Trait theories of personality

Characteristic patterns of behaviour or conscious motives. Assumed that most traits exist in all people to a certain degree and that we can measure the degree to which a trait exists in a person Thousands of words to describe traits.

pragmatic errors

Children make these errors when they know two objects are conceptually different but do not yet have a name for one of the objects and intentionally substitute a semantically related word

telegraphic

Children's earliest sentences are considered ______ because they frequently omit many words or word endings

Broca's area

Controls language expression/production - an area of the frontal lobe, usually in the left hemisphere, that directs the muscle movements involved in speech. -found in the dominant (usually left) hemisphere

Visual Pathway to the Brain

Cornea-iris-pupil-lens-retina-optic nerve-optic chiasm -lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus-occipital lobe-visual cortex (superior colliculus) MEMORIZE

levels of processing theory

Craik and Lockhart:the theory of memory that emphasizes the degree to which new material is mentally analyzed -physical, acoustical, semantic

Mischel

Critic of trait theories of personality

primary prevention

Efforts to correct the conditions that foster mental illness and establish the conditions that foster mental health. -stop mental illness before it occurs

Erikson

Ego psychologist whose psychosocial stages of development encompass entire lifespan

Archetypes

Emotional symbols that are common to all people and have been formed since the beginning of time

Bekesy

Empirical studies led to traveling wave theory of pitch perception which, at least partially, supported Helmholtz's place-resonance theory

Locke

English empiricist philosopher who believed that all knowledge is derived from sensory experience; tabula rasa

Sherrington

English physiologist who first inferred the existence of synaptic communication between neurons

Sherrington

English physiologist who first inferred the existence of synaptic communication between neurons; neuromodulation

Skinner on personality

Environment determines personality. If we change the environment, we change behavior, and therefore change personality.

Oligodendrocytes

Form myelin sheath in CNS

Maccoby and Jacklin

Found support for gender differences in verbal ability

Maccoby and Jacklin

Found support for gender differences in verbal ability: girls have better verbal abilities

Freud, Anna

Founder of ego psychology

pressure, pain, warmth, cold

Four tactile(touch) sensations of humans

Broca

French anatomist who identified the part of the brain primarily associated with producing spoken language

Broca

French anatomist who identified the part of the brain primarily associated with producing spoken language (Brocas area)

Rousseau

French philosopher who suggested that development could unfold without help from society

Philippe Pinel

French physician who worked to reform the treatment of people with mental disorder in asylums

first comprehensive theory of personality

Freud's theory of personality

wish fulfillment

Freudian belief that many dreams express unconscious desires

benzodiazepines and barbituates enhance action of what neurotransmitter?

GABA

anxiety disorders

GAD, SAD, phobias, panic

Huntington's disease

Genetic disorder that causes progressive deterioration of brain cells. caused by a dominant allele. symptoms do not appear until about the age of 30.

Wernicke

German neurologist who identified the part of the brain primarily associated with understanding spoken language

Wernicke

German neurologist who identified the part of the brain primarily associated with understanding spoken language (Wernicke's area)

Herman Ebbinghaus

German psychologist who pioneered the experimental study of memory, and is known for his discovery of the forgetting curve and the spacing effect. He was also the first person to describe the learning curve.

Immanuel Kant

Greatest German philosopher of Enlightenment-separated science and morality into separate branches of knowledge-science could describe nature, it could not provide a guide for morality. Wrote Critique of Pure Reason

Garcia Experiment

Group 1: sweet water + shock Group 2: sweet water + nausea Group 3: bright-noisy water + shock Group 4: bright-noisy water+ nausea *conditioning only in groups 2 and 3 because of preparedness theory*

which color vision theory is true?

Helmhotz trichromatic: 3 cones (red, blue, and green sensitive) in the retina

ipsilaterally

Hemispheres communicate on the same side of the body (smell)

unconditioned response

In classical conditioning, the unlearned, naturally occurring response to the unconditioned stimulus (US), such as salivation when food is in the mouth.

Counter-transference

In psychoanalysis, it occurs when the therapist experiences emotions towards the patient

receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve

In studies of signal detection, the graphical plot of the hit rate as a function of the false-alarm rate. If these are the same, points fall on the diagonal, indicating that the observer cannot tell the difference between the presence and absence of the signal. As the observer's sensitivity increases, the curve bows upward toward the upper left corner. That point represents a perfect ability to distinguish signal from noise (100% hits, 0% false alarms).

What does increased dissonance lead to?

Increased pressure to decrease dissonance.

positive reinforcement

Increasing desired behaviors by presenting positive stimuli (reward) -example: give dog a biscuit every time he comes to your call, will come to your call more often

Cerletti and Bini

Italian physicians who came up with ECT in 1938 by creating seizures in patients by passing electric currents through their brains (electroshocks)

Chomsky

Linguist who suggested that children have an innate capacity for language acquisition

John Watson and classical conditioning experiment

Little Albert: 11- mo child who learned to associate a loud noise with a rat -> became scared of rat and similar objects

Gender schematic processing theory

Martin and Halverson's theory (building off of Kholberg) that once children label their gender they tend to focus on behaviors typical to that gender.

Saccades

Rapid voluntary movements of the eyes seen in information processing while reading

Psychoanalysis

Sigmund Freud's therapeutic technique. Freud believed the patient's free associations, resistances, dreams, and transferences - and the therapist's interpretations of them - released previously repressed feelings, allowing the patient to gain self-insight.

transformational rule

Simple rules for changing a sequence into another form (e.g., statement into question)

Emmert's law

Size-distance invariance of retinal afterimages: the perceived size of an afterimage is proportional to the distance of the surface on which it's projected

terminal buttons

Small knobs at the end of axons that secrete neurotransmitters

Percentile

Specific point in a normal distribution of data that has a given percentage of cases below it. -percentile tells you the percentage of scores that fall at or below that score

Generation-recognition model

Model that proposes that recall tasks tap the same basic process of accessing information in memory as recognition tasks, but recall tasks also requires an additional processing step.

When do most sleep disorders occur?

NREM sleep

Garcia effect

Named after researcher John Garcia, it is basically food aversion that occurs when people attribute illness to a particular food.

Epinephrine

Neurotransmitter secreted by the adrenal medulla in response to stress that increases sugar output in the liver and increases heart rate (also known as adrenaline) -fight or flight

universal grammar

Noam Chomsky's theory that all the world's languages share a similar underlying structure; telegram language is an example

Where does depolarization occur?

Nodes of Ranvier (Action potentials skip from node to node)

OCD Disorders include

OCD, body dysmorphic, hoarding, trichotillomania, and excoriation

Kernberg

Object relations theorist

Mahler

Object relations theorist

Winnicott

Object relations theorist

Sybil

One of the most famous cases of dissociative identity disorder. This woman claimed to have 16 distinct personalities. The cause of this disorder were believed to be abuse by the mother.

George Berkeley

Only perceptions exist, 'to be is to be perceived'. He developed cues to distance perception.

Freud, Sigmund

Originator of psychodynamic approach to personality -developed psychoanalysis

Erikson

Outlined eight stages of psychosocial development covering the entire lifespan

Piaget

Outlined four stages of cognitive development

recessive genetic disorders

PKU, cystic fibrosis, sickle cell anemia, and Tay Sachs are caused by which type of disorders

5 different types of tactile receptors

Pacinian corpuscles (deep pressure), Meissner corpuscles (touch), Merkel discs (pain), Ruffini endings (stretch), free nerve endings (pain and temp)

Parkinson's and dopamine

Parkinson's associated with loss of dopaminergic neurons in basal ganglia -disruptions of dopamine transmission -> tremors and jerky movements

medulla oblongata

Part of the brainstem/hindbrain that controls vital life-sustaining functions such as heartbeat, breathing, blood pressure, and digestion.

object permanence

Peek a boo is a child's game that centers on the development of what?

Barnum effect

People have the tendency to see themselves in vague, stock descriptions of personality given to them -pseudo validation

Maslow

Phenomenological personality theorist known for developing a hierarchy of needs and for the concept of self-actualization

Lewin

Phenomenological personality theorist who developed field theory

Deviation quotients

Stanford-Binet: A deviation IQ score that tells us how far away a person's score is from the average score for that person's particular age group.

binocular depth cue

Stereopsis because it requires two eyes

ratio IQ

Stern: mental age/physical age x 100 -IQ decreases with age

J.J. Gibson

Studied Texture Gradients

Bowlby

Studied attachment in human children

Loftus

Studied eyewitness memory and concluded that our memories can be altered by presenting new information or by asking misleading questions

Lorenz

Studied imprinting in birds

Rotter

Studied locus of control

Ebbinghaus

Studied memory using nonsense syllables and the method of savings -developed the forgetting curve

McClelland

Studied need for achievement (N-Ach)

Milner

Studied severe anterograde amnesia in H.M.

Milner

Studied severe anterograde amnesia in H.M., a patient whose hippocampus and temporal lobes were removed surgically to control epilepsy

Tryon

Studied the genetic basis of maze-running ability in rats

Baumrind

Studied the relationship between parental style and discipline

Eric Kandel

Studied the sea slug Aplysia's simple neural network: that learning and memory (habituation) is evidenced by changes in synapses and neural pathways and behavioral changes.

H-Y antigen

Substance that appears to trigger the transformation of gonads into testes within the first few weeks of prenatal development; absence = female

Gilligan

Suggested that males and females have different orientations toward morality

McClelland and Rumelhart

Suggested that the brain processes information using parallel distributed processing (PDP)

Schwann cells

Supporting cells of the peripheral nervous system responsible for the formation of myelin.

Victor Frankl

Survived a concentration camp and wrote a mans search for meaning -believed mental illness was maladjustment to a meaningless life

all or nothing law

The principle that either a neuron is sufficiently stimulated and an action potential occurs or a neuron is not sufficiently stimulated and an action potential does not occur

Ethology

The scientific study of how animals behave, particularly in natural environments.

nondominant hemisphere

The side of the brain associated with sensitivity to the emotional tone of language, intuition, creativity, music, and spatial processing -in most individuals, the right hemisphere.

postsynaptic membrane

The specialized membrane on the surface of the cell's dendrite that receives information by responding to neurotransmitter from a presynaptic neuron's terminal button.

Stage 2

The stage of sleep that is considered light sleeping with sleep spindles (alpha waves) -less aware of surroundings, body temperature drops, breathing and heart rate regular -K complexes appear and theta waves

comparison stimulus

The stimulus that changes until it is recognizably different from the standard stimulus.

instinctual drift

The tendency for an animal to drift back from a learned operant response to an innate, instinctual response to an object. (dogs who learn to play piano will stop)

ingroup/outgroup bias

The tendency to have more negative attitudes towards outgroup members than towards ingroup member; basis for prejudice

Zeigarnik effect

The tendency to recall uncompleted tasks better than completed ones.

orienting reflex

The tendency to turn toward an object that has touched you

visual cortex

The visual processing areas of cortex in the occipital and temporal lobes.

Stimulus Seeking

These individuals have a great need for arousal

cochlear fluid

Thick, incompressible, potassium-rich fluid that fills cochlea.

Theory of Signal Detection

This Theory suggests that subjects detect a stimuli not only because they can but also because they want to; Developed by J.A. Swet

middle child

This child has a pacemaker; may grow to be more competitive, rebellious and consistent in attempting to be best; may struggle with figuring out their place in the family and, later, in the world; eager for parental praise and thus tend to develop gifts in the arts or academia in order to accomplish this goal; also may be the most flexible and diplomatic members of the family.

Harlow

Used monkeys and "surrogate mothers" to study the role of contact comfort in bond formation

Luchins

Used the water-jar problem to study the effect of mental sets on problem solving

interest testing

Used to assess an individual's interest in different lines of work. -Strong-Campbell Interest Inventory

nominal scale of measurement

Used when data can be organized into categories of a defined property but the categories cannot be rank ordered. example: Democrat v Republican, girl v boy

reinforcement scheulde with most rapid response rate

VR schedule (very rapid= variable ratio)

reinforcement schedule most resistant to extinction

VR schedule (very resistant= variable ratio)

Cross-validation

Verifying the results obtained from a validation study by administering a test or test battery to a different sample (drawn from the same population)

filter theory of attention

Views attention as a bottleneck through which info passes, enables us to pay attention to more important stimuli and ignore others

Wechsler's 3 IQ tests

WPPSI, WISC, and WAIS

Conformity

What did Sherif study with the auto kinetic effect?

counter conditioning

a behavior therapy procedure that conditions new responses (relaxation) to stimuli (phobia) that trigger unwanted behaviors (anxiety): based on classical conditioning

illness anxiety disorder

a disorder in which a person interprets normal physical sensations as symptoms of a disease; hypochondria

rooting reflex

a baby's tendency, when touched on the cheek, to turn toward the touch, open the mouth, and search for the nipple

psychotic disorder

a disorder in which a person loses contact with reality, experiencing irrational ideas and distorted perceptions (schizophrenia)

if an outcome is due to chance/error, what do we do to the null hypothesis?

accept the null and reject the research hypotheses

inclusive fitness

an explanation for altruism that focuses on the adaptive benefit of transmitting genes, such as through kin selection, rather than focusing on individual survival: altruism not problematic

single-blind experiment

an experiment in which the participants are unaware of which participants received the treatment but the experimenter is aware

type I error

an experimenter who incorrectly rejects the null hypothesis commits a _____________

phi phenomenon (stroboscopic movement)

an illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on and off in quick succession they are perceived as one moving light

fMRI

an imaging scan that measures oxygen flow in different areas of the brain

anterograde amnesia

an inability to form new long-term memories

retrograde amnesia

an inability to retrieve information from one's past

Sensitization

an increase in behavioral response to the environment after exposure to a stimulus

Personality

an individual's characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting

language acquisition device (LAD)

an innate mechanism or process that facilitates the learning of language

primary reinforcement

an innately reinforcing stimulus, such as one that satisfies a biological need (ie: food & water)

proactive forgetting

an old memory interferes with remembering a new memory

dementia praecox

an older term for schizophrenia, believed then to be an incurable and progressive deterioration of mental functioning beginning in adolescence

shaping/differential reinforcement

an operant conditioning procedure in which reinforcers guide little behaviors toward the overall desired behavior and extinguish unwanted behaviors example: to train dog to fetch slippers, you reward when they look at it then only reward when they walk towards it, then only reward when they touch it etc.

self archetype

an unconscious image of the center of the self, representing unity, wholeness, completion, and balance -symbolized as a mandala (magic circle) and harmony

Displacement

defense mechanism that shifts sexual or aggressive impulses toward a more acceptable or less threatening object or person, as when redirecting anger toward a safer outlet

negative z scores fall _____ the mean and positive z scores fall _____ the mean

below, above

3 and 20

best age range for learning

four characteristic EEG patterns

beta, alpha, theta, and delta waves (BAT-D)

F ratio formula

between-group variance estimate/within-group variance estimate

openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, neuroticism

big 5 superfactors in order

if the distance is constant: the bigger the object, the _____ the visual angle and retinal size

bigger

depersonalization disorder

dissociative disorder in which individuals feel detached and disconnected from themselves, their bodies, and their surroundings

Parkinson's disease

damage of the basal ganglia can create this

anterograde amnesia

damage to the hippocampus results in this

aphagia

damage to the lateral hypothalamus can cause this lack of hunger

hyperaphagia

damage to the ventromedial hypothalamus can cause this excessive eating (obesity)

bottom-up processing

data driven information processing: object perception that responds directly to the components of incoming stimulus and sums up components to arrive at whole pattern

nominal data

data of categories only. Data cannot be arranged in an ordering scheme. (Gender, Race, Religion)

Holophrasic Speech

early speech stage in which a child uses one word (holophrases) to convey a whole sentence (ie. Me -- give it to me)

syntactic error

error where someone substitutes a word that is the same part of speech as the target word. (through for into); Understanding of meaning but not of phonics.

two types of negative reinforcement

escape learning and avoidance learning

availability heuristic

estimating the likelihood of events based on their availability in memory: if instances come readily to mind (perhaps because of their vividness), we presume such events are common

Ovaries

estrogen stimulates female sex characteristics -progesterone prepares uterus for implantation of embryo

2 types of long term memory

declarative and procedural

Habituation

decreasing responsiveness with repeated stimulation

Tinbergen

ethologist who introduced experimental methods into field situations

phylogeny

evolutionary development

opium, heroin, and morphine

examples of narcotics

ADHD hyperactivity

excessive motor activity ie: running around, excessive fidgeting, tapping or talking

Delusions

false beliefs, often of persecution or grandeur, that are maintained despite being proven wrong that may accompany psychotic disorders

delusions of persecution

false, persistent beliefs that one is being pursued by other people, discriminated/plotted against, threatened

3 types of research to determine degree of genetic influence on individual differences:

family studies, twin studies, and adoption studies

Kitty Genovese

famous example of the bystander effect; on March 13th, 1964 a stalker stabbed and raped her, fled, then came back and did it again. No one helped her even though 38 people witnessed it. -not bad people, just bystander effect

E.O. Wilson

father of biodiversity and sociobiology: behavior is due to complex and dynamic interplay between genetics and environment

independence, choice, and self-restraint

favorable outcome of Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt

productivity & caring

favorable outcome of Generativity vs. Stagnation

competence

favorable outcome of Industry vs. Inferiority

purpose, initiating activities, enjoy accomplishment

favorable outcome of Initiative vs. Guilt

love, commitment, intimacy

favorable outcome of Intimacy vs. Isolation

uniqueness & loyalty

favorable outcome of identity vs. role confusion

wisdom & integrity (acceptance and assurance)

favorable outcome of integrity v. despair

trust environment and themselves

favorable outcome of trust v. mistrust

acrophobia

fear of heights

the four F's of hypothalamus functioning

feeding, fighting, fleeing, and sexual functioning

Follicles stimulating hormone (FSH)

female hormone produced by pituitary gland that causes *ovarian follicles* to begin to develop

anima archetype

feminine aspects of the male psyche

separation anxiety phase

fifth stage in development of attachment at 2yo when child reacts to mother's absence with strong protest

neurotransmitters

fires when the action potential reaches the terminal buttons

Binet-Simon test

first intelligence test: assess the intelligence of schoolchildren to ascertain intellectually disabled

resting potential (polarization)

first step of an action potential firing

cornea, pupil, iris, lens, retina

five main structures of the eye

Cattell

fluid and crystallized intelligence

Brenda Milner

followed the case of HM, who had his hippocampus removed

inhibition theory

forgetting is due to the activities that have taken place between original learning and the later attempted recall -two types: retroactive and proactive

decay theory

forgetting: if the information in long-term memory is not used or rehearsed, it will eventually be forgotten WRONG

Libido energy

form of energy by which the life instincts perform their work

Normal Triplett

found social facilitation in one of social psychology's first experiments on cyclists doing better when paced with others rather than riding alone

Pavlov

founder of classical conditioning

Hall

founder of developmental psychology

William James

founder of functionalism: studied how humans use perception to function in our environment

Franz Joseph Gall

founder of phrenology

Gustav Fechner

founder of psychophysics, formulated Weber's law -mathematical expression of JND

reciprocal attachment phase

fourth stage in development of attachment occurring at 9-12 months of age characterized by increased bonding & stranger anxiety

hyperpolarization

fourth step of an action potential firing

Where in the eye is visual acuity the best?

fovea

Two types of dissonance

free choice and forced compliance

Rogers' humanistic psychology

free will plays the greatest role in which of the psychologies?

four brain lobes

frontal, parietal, occipital, temporal (FTOP)

John Dewey

functionalist believed that psychology should focus on the study of the organism as a whole as it functioned to adapt to the environment

What forms the optic nerve?

ganglion cells

Kohlberg's gender stages

gender labeling, gender stability, gender consistency

Spearman's g

general intelligence

Individualism

giving priority to one's own goals over group goals and defining one's identity in terms of personal attributes rather than group identifications

Collectivism

giving priority to the goals of one's group (often one's extended family or work group) and defining one's identity accordingly

during what stage is a stronger stimulation needed to reach threshold potential?

hyperpolarization

anterior pituitary gland is controlled by which brain area?

hypothalamus

endocrine system shares many characteristics with which brain area?

hypothalamus

dual code hypothesis

hypothesis that claims that items will be better remembered if they are encoded both visually and semantically; Allan Paivio

Value Hypothesis

hypothesis that states risky shift occurs in situations in which riskiness is culturally valued (risk in business ventures)

primary process

id's response to frustration: obtain satisfaction now, not later example: if someone's hungry and food isn't available -> memory of image might alleviate the frustration

mean, median, and mode of normal distribution are ____

identical

trait theory's approaches to personality

idiographic and nomothetic

what do significance tests help us determine?

if a difference in two groups are due to change/error or a real difference (presented in probability)

increase

if a drug is an agonist, does it increase or decrease synaptic transmission release

time-out procedure

if you remove the patient from the reinforcing situation before he receives reinforcement for his behavior, the behavior will not be reinforced and will cease.

Tachtiscope

instrument used in cognitive/memory experiments; presents image to subject for fraction of a second (tap-image-scope=few seconds of image instrument)

most important function of glial cells

insulate axons with protective myelin sheath

Humanism and Personality

intellectual movement of emphasizing internal processes over overt behavior

Raymond Cattell

intelligence: fluid & crystal intelligence -personality testing: 16 Personality Factors (16PF personality test)

ANOVAs tell us what about two or more IVs

interaction example: a high protein breakfast is good for a spelling test if you are female but not male

synergistic effect

interaction of two or more medicines that results in a greater effect than when the medicines are taken alone

Overshadowing

interference with the conditioning of a stimulus because of the simultaneous presence of another stimulus that is easier to condition

assimilation

interpreting our new information in terms of our existing schematas

in humans, the amount of cortex devoted to association areas is larger or smaller than projectiong areas?

larger (smaller in animals)

Dahlstrom

linked Type A personality to heart disease and other health problems

abnormally enlarged ventricles

linked to schizophrenia - social withdrawal, flat affect, catatonia

savings

long term memory measurement of how much info stays in the LTM by assessing how long it takes to learning something the second time as opposed to the first time

disorganized thought

loosening of association, exhibited as speech in which ideas shift from one subject to another so you can't follow train of thought

amnesia

loss of memory

the more decibels, the ____ the sound

louder

electrical simulation of temporal lobe

memories of past events (hippocampus in temporal lobe)

Screen memory

memories that serve as representations of important childhood experiences

4 basic types of measurement scales

nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio

Nodes of Ranvier

non-myelinated gaps in the myelin sheath to which voltage-gated sodium channels are confined.

relational aggression

nonphysical acts, such as insults or social rejection, aimed at harming the social connection between the victim and other people; seen most in young adolescent girls

notion of distinctiveness

notion that refers to how unique the behavior is to the particular situation.

notion of consistency

notion that refers to occurrence of behavior across time

notion of consensus

notion that refers to the occurrence of behavior across different people (can be high or low)

inferential statistics

numerical data that allow one to generalize- to infer from sample data the probability of something being true of a population

Bobo doll experiment

nursery school students observed an adult play aggressively (yelling & hitting) with an inflatable clown (Bobo); when children were later allowed to play with the Bobo, those children who witnesses the Bobo doll performed the same aggressive actions and improvised new ways of playing aggressively

Type theory

originally dominated personality theory (Hippocrates), many placed into type categories based on physical appearance

fluid intelligence

our ability to reason speedily and abstractly (analogies): tends to decrease during late adulthood

crystallized intelligence

our accumulated knowledge and verbal skills: tends to increase with age

Whorfian hypothesis/Linguistic relativity hypothesis

our perception of reality is determined by the content of language: language affects the way we think and not the other way around example: the Eskimo language has a wide variety of names for different types of snow so they think about all the different types of snow

Proprioception

our sense of body position (vestibular and kinesthetic senses)

Freud

outlined five stages pf psychosexual development -stressed the importance of Oedipal conflict in psychosexual development

sodium is usually ____ the cell and potassium is usually ____ the cell

outside, inside

Step 3 of Natural Selection

over time, more and more members will have the genetic variation that increases chances of reproduction/survival

public conformity

overt behavior consistent with social norms that are not privately accepted

phantom limb pain

pain in a limb (or extremity) that has been amputated

Sternberg's componential intelligence

performance on tests

acquisition

period during which an organism is learning the association of the stimuli

low self esteem

person who use external loci & attributes their failures to bad luck: Rotter

Major Jungian archetypes

persona, anima, animus, shadow, self

striate cortex

primary visual cortex (striped)

Sir Frederic Bartlett

prior knowledge and expectations influence recall

2 basic types of inhibition

proactive and retroactive

Beta

probability of making a type II error

random selection

procedure that ensures every person in a population has an equal chance of being chosen to participate

Kelly's views on psychotherapy

process of insight where the person acquires new constructs to predict troublesome events -> person able to direct new constructs into already existing constructs

binding

process of neurotransmitters at the presynaptic membrane attaching themselves to receptor sites on the postsynaptic membrane -communication occurs

vicarious reinforcement

process where the observer sees the model rewarded, making the observer more likely to imitate the model's behavior

adrenal medulla gland

produces adrenaline (epinephrine), increases heart rate, fight or flight

Rotter Incomplete Sentence Blank (RISB)

projective test that is similar to a word association test in which a person completes sentences in order to reveal their unconscious desires, fears, and struggles

Gardner

proposed a theory of multiple intelligences that divides intelligence into seven different types, all of which are equally important -traditional IQ tests measure only 2 of the 7 types

Broadbent

proposed filter theory of attention

Melzack and Wall

proposed gate theory of pain

Helmholtz and Young

proposed the place-resonance theory of pitch perception

lateral inhibition

term for when adjacent retinal cells inhibit one another: sharpens and highlights borders between light and dark areas -explanation for simultaneous brightness contrast

pitch perception

term for when different tones excite different areas of the basilar membrane and primary auditory cortex

3 best methods to test reliability

test-retest method, alternate-form method, and split-half reliability

cross validation

testing the same criterion validity of a test on a second sample, after validity is demonstrated with the first sample

Testes

testosterone produces male sex characteristics AND relevant to sexual arousal

projective tests

tests designed to reveal inner aspects of individuals' personalities by analysis of their responses to a standard series of ambiguous stimuli

if sign stimulus is removed halfway...

the FAP still is completed fully

two-factor theory (shachter-singer)

the Schachter-Singer theory that to experience emotion one must be physically aroused and cognitively label the arousal -individual's appraisal of the situation determines the interpretation of the arousal (to an emotion)

Empathy

the ability to understand and share the feelings of another *strong influence on helping behavior*

experiential intelligence

the ability to use knowledge and experiences in new and creative ways

Visual Constancies

the accurate perception of objects as stable or unchanged despite changes in the sensory patterns they produce

self-disclosure

the act of revealing intimate aspects of oneself to others

supplication

the action of asking or begging for something earnestly or humbly

defensive pessimism

the adaptive value of anticipating problems and harnessing one's anxiety to motivate effective action

pupil

the adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters -contracts in bright light, expands in dim light to let more light in

response latency

the amount of time it takes to respond to a stimulus, such as an attitude question

Intensity

the amplitude or height of the air-pressure wave: measured in decibels

psychodynamic perspective (Freud)

the approach based on the view that behavior is motivated by unconscious inner forces over which the individual has little control

five different ways to make a light look like its moving

real motion, apparent motion (phi phenomenon), induced motion, autokinetic effect, and motion aftereffect (waterfall illusion)

recognition

realizing that a certain stimulus event is one you have seen or heard before

if an outcome is NOT due to chance/error, what do we do to the null hypothesis?

reject the null and accept the research hypotheses

Lorenz and ethology

rejected studying animals in lab -> observed animals in natural environment

Type 1 error

rejecting a true null hypothesis: false positive

color perception

related to the wavelength of the light entering the eye

Neuropeptides (neuromodulators)

relatively slow, long lasting brain chemicals that regulate the activity of neurons

mean

the arithmetic average of a distribution, obtained by adding the scores and then dividing by the number of scores

psychic determinism

the assumption that all psychological events have a cause; Freud

predictive validity

the extent to which a score on a scale or test predicts scores on some criterion measure (SAT->GPA)

Validity

the extent to which a test measures or predicts what it is supposed to

Reliability

the extent to which a test yields consistent results, as assessed by the consistency of scores on two halves of the test, on alternate forms of the test, or on retesting

concurrent validity

the extent to which two measures of the same trait or ability agree example: written driving test and a road test

Gesell

Believed that development was due primarily to maturation

two main types of thresholds

absolute and difference

hypercomplex cell responses give information about

abstract concepts like object shape

operational schemata

abstract representations of cognition

autonomic nervous systems regulation is ...

automatic

Thomas Hobbes

believed that people are born selfish and need a strong central authority

delusions of grandeur

believing that one is a very powerful or important person

association

bell ring became paired/associated with food

Introversion

orientation toward the inner, subjective world

how is nominal data summarized?

ratios or proportions (percentage)

how do all sensory receptors work?

react to physical external energy

3 research methods of cognition

reaction time, brain imaging, and eye movements

agoraphobia

term for an abnormal fear of open or public places

incidental learning

Learning without trying to learn, and often without awareness that learning is occurring.

subtractive color mixture

*A mixture of pigments*. If pigments A and B mix, some of the light shining on the surface will be subtracted by A, and some by B. Only the remainder contributes to the perception of color.

major depressive disorder

*A mood disorder in which a person experiences, in the absence of drugs or a medical condition, two or more weeks (one major depressive episode) of significantly depressed moods, feelings of worthlessness, and diminished interest or pleasure in most activities.* -appetite disturbance, weight, sleep, no energy, worthlessness or guilt, no concentration, thoughts of death/suicide -must cause significant distress or impairment -15% of people with this disorder die of suicide

Fechner's Law

*A principle describing the relationship between stimulus and resulting sensation* -magnitude of subjective sensation increases proportionally to the logarithm of the stimulus intensity.

British empiricist school of thought

*A school of thought that believes that all knowledge is gained through experience since we are born with a as a blank slate(tabula rasa)* - Members: John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, George Berkeley, David Hume, James Mill, and John Stuart Mill.

midbrain (mesencephalon)

*A small part of the brain above the pons that is associated with involuntary reflex responses to visual or auditory stimuli*

Axon

*A threadlike extension of a neuron that carries nerve impulses away from the cell body* -communication route of the nerve cell -cannot regenerate

Sigmund Freud

*Austrian physician whose work focused on the unconscious causes of behavior, personality formation, and emotional growth* -founded psychoanalysis.

Maslow on personality

*Behavior motivated by biological and psychological needs.* Needs are universal and arranged in hierarchy.

dendrites

*Branchlike parts of a neuron that are specialized to receive information from other neurons via postsynaptic receptors* -can regenerate -branch off of cell body -external stimulation of dendrites causes neuron to fire (generate electrical impulse)

collective unconscious

*Carl Jung's concept of a shared, inherited reservoir of memory traces from our species' history* -contains images of common experiences like having a mother and a father

unconditional positive regard

*Carl Rodgers: term for an attitude of total acceptance toward another person & used in therapy

Hovland's Model of Persuasion

*Communication of persuasion has three components: communicator, communication, and situation* -The communicator produces a communication (argument) to persuade others and the situation is the surroundings of the communication. -More perceived credible (trustworthy or expert) communicator has more persuasive impact

Jerome Kagan

*Conducted longitudinal studies on temperament (infancy to adolescence) and concluded in-born temperament is strong predictor of adult behavior*

Repression

*Defense mechanism by which anxiety-provoking thoughts and feelings are forced to the unconscious and forgotten* example: abused child later has no recollection of the events but has trouble forming relationships

Konrad Lorenz and imprinting

*Ethologist that famously demonstrated the power of instincts when he was able to get young birds to imprint on him* -found all imprinting takes place during certain sensitive periods

Paul Broca

*Examined the behavioral deficits of people with brain damage.* -first person to demonstrate that specific functional impairments could be linked with specific brain lesions/his work led him to conclude that aphasia can have an organic basis -Broca's area in the brain is due to his discovery that a certain man who was unable to talk was that way because of a lesion on the left side of his brain, now known as Broca's area.

Bennington College Study (Theodore Newcomb)

*Experiment that studied the influence of group norms in a small, female only, liberal college: individuals did conform to group norms* -The student's parents were conservative. But the students became liberal with time and stayed that way 20 years after. Those who didn't marry liberal men changed back to old beliefs

anal stage

*Freud's 2nd stage of psychosexual development, from 1-3* -gratification: elimination and retention of poop -libidinal energy: anus -anal fixation: excessive orderliness or sloppiness as an adult

oral stage

*Freud's first stage of psyhosexual development, from birth to about age 1* -gratification: biting, sucking, putting things in mouth -libidinal energy: the mouth -oral fixation: excessive dependency as an adult

genital stage

*Freud's last stage of psychosexual development, from the onset of puberty through adulthood* -the sexual conflicts of childhood resurface (at puberty) and are often resolved during adolescence) -if all stages were successfully resolved, healthy heterosexual relationship occurs.

Phallic(Oedipal) Stage

*Freud's third stage of psychosexual development from ages 3-5* -resolution of the oedipal conflict or electra conflict

psychodynamic perspective

*Freud: existence of unconscious internal states that motivate behaviors and determine personality*

Rhesus Monkey Experiments

*Harlow: experiment with a food surrogate mother (wire w/ feeding nipple) and a blanket surrogate mother (no food) that found that blanket surrogate mother was preferred so contact comfort was more essential in bonding* *Harlow: wire mother monkeys were less socially adept than cloth mother monkeys, monkeys raised in total isolation were severely dysfunctional but could be brought into society by other monkeys (therapist monkeys) -but monkeys in isolation too long couldn't be integrated, sexually inept and overly aggressive

basic anxiety

*Horney's primary concept based on the child's important early perception of self* -sense of helplessness and insecurity

moving away

*Horney's strategy for avoiding people as a way of coping with ones basic anxiety toward them* -withdrawal results in detached personality

Heinz Dilemma

*Kohlberg: determines the moral level of someone (hypothetical moral dilemmas)* -A woman is dying and needs an expensive medication. Husband (Heinz) cannot afford the medication, should he steal it or should she die?

need for achievement trait

*McClelland: The extent to which an individual has a strong desire to perform challenging tasks well and to meet personal standards for excellence -set realistic goals and ideal situations to reach goals

Important object relations theorists

*Melanie Klein, D. W. Winnicott, Margaret Mahler,* and *Otto Kernberg*

Attitude change occurs when behavior come from ______ pressure.

*Minimum* pressure.

Carol Gilligan's critique of Kohlberg's theory

*Presented feminist critique of Kolhberg's moral development theory* -believed men and women have different perspectives on moral issues and Kohlberg's dilemmas were only presented to men -women's moral sense guided by relationships, caring, compassion, and social responsibilities

Titchener

*Structuralism*, used introspection to reveal the structure of the human mind, trained individuals to report elements of their experiences -Wundt trained psychologist

Harry Harlow

*Studied attachment in monkeys with artificial mothers and found early bonding between parent and child is important to emotional behavior*

Overjustification Effect

*The effect of promising a reward for doing what one already likes to do. The person may now see the reward, rather than the genuine interest, as the motivation for performing the task and may stop liking it* example: pay someone who likes washing dishes to do it -> attribute liking washing dishes to money and not the genuine interest -> so stops liking washing the dishes.

Social Comparison Theory

*The idea that we learn about our own abilities and attitudes by comparing ourselves to other people* 3 principles: 1. people prefer to evaluate themselves by objective, non social means but when not possible -> compare to others 2. the less similar to the person, the less we compare 3. when a discrepancy exists, we change one's position to be more in line with the group *need for self-evaluation -> need to affiliate*

Stage 1

*The stage of sleep between wakefulness and sleep, muscle twitches, and hypnagogic hallucinations* -high amplitude theta waves -slower frequencies and irregular waveforms

Stage 3

*The stage of sleep where deeper sleep begins to occur* slower EEG -steeper spindles and low freq, high voltage delta waves -muscles relax, bp and breathing drop

Stage 4

*The stage of sleep where deepest sleep occurs* -slowest EEGs, steepest spindles, relaxed muscles -decreased respiration and heart rates

Centration

*The tendency to focus on just one feature of a problem, neglecting other important aspects.* -example: a child may complain that there is little ice cream left in a big bowl. The child will be satisfied if the ice cream is transferred to a little bowl, even though nothing is added, because he only considers how full the bowl appears to be

Consistency Theories

*Theoretical perspectives from social psychology that hold that people prefer consistency between attitudes and behaviors, and will change or resist changing attitudes based upon this preference. Inconsistencies are stimuli/irritants.* example: someone hates smoking --> falls in love with a smoker --> person may try to resolve it and change attitude towards smoking

slow to warm up temperament

*Thomas and Chess: term for the temperament of infant based in moodiness, inactivity, and initially withdrawn in new situations but soon able to adapt*

Difficult infant temperament

*Thomas and Chess: term for the temperament of infant based in negative mood, irregular body functions, and withdrawn in new situations*

Easy infant temperament

*Thomas and Chess: term for the temperament of infant based in positive mood, regular body functions, and easy adaptation to new situations*

zone of promixal development

*Vygotsky: skills and abilities that are not fully developed but in process of development* example: child takes cog. test and then takes cog. test with adult guidance= difference between two scores is zone of proximal development

The Strange Situation

*a behavioral test developed by Mary Ainsworth that is used to determine a child's attachment style* -the mother brings the child into an unfamiliar room with many toys -> then child is free to explore toys -> then stranger comes in room and eventually talks to mom and plays with infant -> then mother leaves and stranger keeps playing -> then mother returns and stranger leaves -> then infant alone in room -> then stranger back in room with infant -> then mother returns and stranger leaves the room

delusions of reference

*a delusion in which events, objects, or other persons in ones immediate environment are seen as directed at the person* -usually thought to be talking about the person

bipolar II disorder

*a disorder characterized by alternating periods of extremely depressed and mildly elevated moods (hypomania)* *no psychotic features

bipolar I disorder

*a disorder characterized by extremely elevated moods during manic episodes and, frequently, depressive episodes that impairs behavior* *can include psychotic features

Phenylketonuria (PKU)

*a genetic disorder that causes degeneration of the nervous system* -when the enzyme needed to digest phenylalanine is lacking -infants tested and treated with strict diet

free association

*a method of exploring the unconscious in which the person relaxes and says whatever comes to mind* -used by Freud to reconstruct original conflict

reticular formation

*a neural structure in the brainstem that keeps our cortex awake and alert* -if disconnected from cortex, the person sleeps too much

Tourette's Disorder

*a neuro-developmental tic disorder featuring multiple dysfunctional motor and vocal tics* -tics are sudden, recurrent, and stereotyped -lifelong but remissive -4-5 out of 10,000

ADHD

*a neurological disorder characterized by developmentally atypical inattention and/or impulsivity/hyperactivity* -more males than females -usually gone by adulthood but some persist

Social Exchange Theory

*a person weighs rewards & costs of interactions* -the more the rewards outweigh the costs, the greater the attraction

temperament

*a person's individual characteristics (differences or pattern of responding to the environment* -seen as central aspect of personality -somewhat heritable, stable over time, and pervasive across situations

Schizophrenia

*a psychological disorder characterized by delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, and/or diminished, inappropriate emotional expression*

single cell recording

*a technique by which the firing rate and pattern of a single receptor cell can be measured in response to varying sensory input* -place a microelectrode in the cortex to record single nerve fibers

DSM-5

*a widely used system for classifying psychological disorders* -doesn't go by theories like (neurosis), goes by atheoretical descriptions of symptoms of disorders

negative symptoms of schizophrenia

*absence of appropriate behaviors* -flat affect, blunted emotional expression

self-actualization

*according to Maslow, the term for ultimate psychological need that arises after basic physical and psychological needs are met and self-esteem is achieved* - the motivation to fulfill one's potential

symptom substitution

*according to psychoanalysts, the appearance of one overt symptom to replace another that has been eliminated by treatment because underlying cause wasn't addressed* -behaviorists against this

positive symptoms of schizophrenia

*added to normal behavior* -psychotic (delusions and hallucinations), and disorganized (disorganized speech and disorganized/catatonic behavior)

Agnosia

*affects perceptual recognition*

what strategy do healthy people use to overcome basic anxiety?

*all three* -neurotic children focus on one rigidly and exclusively

Gain-Loss Principle / Aronson and Linder

*an evaluation that changes will have more of an impact than an evaluation that remains constant* - We will like someone more if their liking for us has increased than someone who has consistently liked us. -We will dislike a person more whose liking for us has decreased than someone who has consistently disliked us.

Behaviorist theories of personality

*argue behavior is learned as people interact with their environment BEHAVIOR AND PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT* -the reinforcement contingencies to which one is exposed creates one's personality -therefore, by changing people's environments, behaviorists believe we can alter their personalities

adoption studies

*assess hereditary influence by examining the resemblance between adopted children and both their biological and their adoptive parents* -adopted children's IQ is more similar to their biological parent's than their adopted SO IQ is heritable

Situational Attribution

*attributing behavior of others to the environment (threats, $$, social norms, peer pressure)* example: he did it because of the money

Dispostional Attribution

*attributing the features (beliefs, attitudes, personality) of a person to their behavior* example: he did it because he's mean

Dollard and Miller on personality

*behaviorist theorists-combined psychoanalytic concepts with behavioral framework* -personality: conflicting motives and tendencies

Karen Horney

*believes neurotic personality governed by one of ten needs directed toward making life and interactions bearable -primary concept: basic anxiety*

Vygostsky's theory of cognitive development

*child's internalization of culture (rules, symbols, language) drives cognitive development*

Carl Rodgers personality theory

*client-centered therapy (nondirective therapy* -people control their own behavior and have the power to make choices, and take positive action -unconditional positive regard

Edward Tolman (Learning)

*concept of cognitive maps: rats formed cognitive maps of various mazes and used these to adopt alternative routes

Cognitive Dissonance Theory (Festinger)

*consistency theory that the conflict or inconsistency between internal attitudes and external behaviors which may result in a change of attitude.* the greater the pressure to comply, the less the attitude changes. attitude change occurs when behavior comes from minimum pressure -major influence in social psychology

Two-Sided Messages

*contains arguments for and against a position* -often used for persuasion since such seems to be "balanced" communication. (News reporting)

Transduction

*conversion of one form of energy into another*: second step in sensory information processing -physical energy to neural impulse

Prisoner's Dilemma

*cooperation vs. competition* -a particular "game" between two captured prisoners that illustrates why cooperation is difficult to maintain even when it is mutually beneficial; betray other prisoner or stay silent? -we don't trust the other and want the best outcome

relative size

*cue for depth perception: as an objects gets farther away, its image on the retina gets smaller -can compare size of two things on the retina and determine which is closer based on knowledge of actual size

Suppression

*defense mechanism by which a deliberate, conscious form of forgetting occurs* example: a woman deliberately pushes away her worries of losing touch with school friends after graduation

Projection

*defense mechanism by which people disguise their own threatening impulses by attributing them to others and accusing others of unacceptable feelings* example: someone who wants to cheat might accuse their partner of cheating

Sublimination

*defense mechanism by which people re-channel their unacceptable impulses into socially approved activities* example: a person with extreme anger might take up kickboxing to vent frustration

reaction formation

*defense mechanism by which the ego unconsciously switches unacceptable impulses into their opposites. Thus, people may express feelings that are the opposite of their anxiety-arousing unconscious feelings* example: a young boy who hates his brother may turn his feelings into affection

Regression

*defense mechanism in which an individual faced with anxiety retreats to a more infantile psychosexual stage, where some psychic energy remains fixated* example: after his parents divorce, child might start wetting the bed again

Rationalization

*defense mechanism that offers self-justifying explanations in place of the real, more threatening, unconscious reasons for one's actions* example: you dont get the job and think "I didnt want it anyway" to avoid feelings of rejection

sedative-hypnotic drugs

*depressants: drugs that slow down the functioning of the CNS* -low dose: reduce anxiety and cause calmness, medium dose: sleepiness, sedation, and high dose: anesthesia or coma -synergistic: additive in effect (alcohol and barbituates)

Lewin's Leadership Study

*determine effects of different leadership styles: autocratic, democratic, and laissez-faire* -autocratic: more hostile, aggressive, dependent kids but did the most work -democratic: more satisfied, cohesive, motivated, and interested kids -laissez-faire: least efficient, organized, satisfied kids

limbic system

*developed after the brainstem: associated with emotion and memory (aggression, fear, pleasure, pain)

John Bowlby

*developed phases of attachment* -Identified the characteristics of a child's attachment to his/her caregiver and the phases that a child experiences when separated from the caregiver by studying kids raised in institutions/foster care

Mary Ainsworth

*developmental psychologist who compared effects of maternal separation in Ugandan infants* -devised patterns of attachment -"The Strange Situation": observation of parent/child attachment

James Stoner Experiment (1968)

*dilemma of aborting baby to save mother's life were presented to couples and showed a shift in group decisions towards caution* -opposite of risky shift SO content of the dilemma can determine shift direction

general paresis

*disease caused by syphilis that leads to paralysis, insanity, and eventually death* -discovery of this disease helped establish a connection between biological diseases and mental disorders

Free-Choice Dissonance

*dissonance where a person decides between several desirable outcomes* example: Scott likes Debra and Sally --> he chooses Sally and dumps Debra --> creates dissonance from cognition of likely Debra but having to dump her -post-decisional dissonance

Forced-Compliance Dissonance

*dissonance where a person is forced into behaving in an inconsistent manner from their beliefs because of anticipated reward or punishment* example: reward-ice cream -> force- you can have ice cream if you eat kale -> dissonance- forced into behavior (eating kale) at odds with attitude (hates kale) for reward (ice cream)

Sleeper Effect

*effect where persuasive impact from a low credibility source may increase later while communication from high credibility source may decrease* -can increase credibility by arguing against one's self-interest (past criminals who argue against crime)

Obedience Experiment (Stanley Milgram)

*electric shock experiment:* demonstrated that blind obedience to authority and pressure to conform could override moral conscience; 2/3 of subjects complied fully up to 450 (max) volts; when two confederates defied experimenter, 90% of subjects also disobeyed ethical problems: deception during the experiment and psychological harm

Doll Preference Study (Clark & Clark)

*ethnic self concept experiment:* study that showed both race children both race dolls; both races majorly chose white doll -may have had influence on race of experimenter and society at the time

frontal lobe

*executive function: cerebral lobe that controls speech, reasoning, and problem solving* -prefrontal lobe, motor cortex, and Brocas area

Robbers Cave Experiment (Muzafer-Sherif)

*experiment which showed that even arbitrary group distinctions (camp teams) can cause and reduce hositlities between teams, thus demonstrating in-group/out-group biases* -cooperative activities between teams brought them together, while competition increased hostility

reticular formation

*extends from the hindbrain into the midbrain and composed of a number of interconnected nuclei* *regulates Arousal, Alertness, and Attention (sleeping and waking)*

Hallucinations

*false sensory experiences, such as seeing something in the absence of an external visual stimulus* -can be any and all senses

G. Stanley Hall

*father of developmental psychology* -opened first psychology lab in the US, first psychologist to do research on children, and he founded and became the first president of the APA

universal ethics principles phase

*final phase in developing morality, morality based on universal ethics* -part of post conventional morality phase

Humanistic/Existential

*finding meaning in one's life in own choices* - mental disorders are problems of alienation, depersonalization, loneliness, and lack of meaningful existence

Pierre Flourens

*first person to study the functions of the major sections of the brain* -extirpation/ablation (parts of brain are removed and behavioral consequences observed): concluded that different brain regions have specific functions

Hermann von Helmholtz

*first to measure the speed of a nerve impulse and credited with the transition of psychology into a field of the natural sciences*

thinking, feeling, sensing, intuiting

4 psychological functions (jung) -usually, one of the four functions is more differentiated than the other three

ventricles

*fluid-filled cavities in the middle of the brain that link up with spinal canal that goes down spinal cord* -ventricles and spinal canal filled with cerebrospinal fluid

Alfred Adler's Psychodynamic Theory

*focused on immediate social imperatives of family and society (social variables) and their effects on unconscious factors* -originator of concept of inferiority complex

Max Wertheimer

*founder of Gestalt psychology: experience of phi phenomenon is more than sum of its parts

Charles Darwin

*functionalist school of thought: studying the mind as it functioned to help individual adapt to environment* -individual differences in abilities like hearing, seeing, & problem solving

Down Syndrome

*genetic anomaly of an extra 21st chromosome that causes intellectual disability of varying levels* -older age of biological parents is a factor

Stanley Schachter's Research

*greater anxiety leads to greater desire to affiliate* BUT anxious people prefer company of other anxious people SO the perceived similarity other other anxious people is a factor in affiliation *both anxiety and tendency to compare self to others play a role in determining when/who we afiilliate with*

Diana Baumrind

*her theory of parenting styles had three main types (permissive, authoritative, & authoritarian)*

Narcotics (opiates)

*highly addictive drugs derived from opium that relieve pain* -bind to opiate receptors that normally bind to endorphins -mimic effects of natural painkillers

Piaget's idea about language and thought

*how we use language depends on what cognitive stage we are in* -development of thought that directed development of language

Kurt Lewin's Field Theory

*humanistic approach that personality is dynamic and constantly changing* -can be divided up into ever-changing "systems" that function in an integrated fashion under optimal conditions but are diffused when person is under anxiety or tension

lateral hypothalamus

*hunger center (tells you when to eat and drink): lesions lead to aphagia (lacking hunger)* (LH= lacking hunger)

pleasure principle

*id functions to immediately discharge any energy buildup (relieve tension)*

Freud's Model of Personality

*id, ego, superego* -structural dynamic model

Johannes Muller

*identified the law of specific nerve energies* -each sensory nerve is excited by only one kind of energy -brain interprets any stimulation of that nerve as being that kind of energy

Egocentrism

*in Piaget's theory, the preoperational child's difficulty taking another's point of view* example: a preschool child might sympathize with his or her father and try to comfort him by offering a favorite toy or stuffed animal, reasoning that what helps the child feel better will also comfort the adult

preoperational stage

*in Piaget's theory, the stage (from about 2 to 6 or 7 years of age) during which a child learns to use language but does not yet comprehend the mental operations of concrete logic* -beginning of representational thought -centration, egocentrism -NO conservation

sensorimotor stage

*in Piaget's theory, the stage (from birth to about 2 years of age) during which infants know the world mostly in terms of their sensory impressions and motor activities* -primary circular reactions, secondary circular reactions, object permanence

formal operational stage

*in Piaget's theory, the stage of cognitive development (age 12) during which people begin to think logically about abstract concepts* example: form hypotheses and make deductions

concrete operational stage

*in Piaget's theory, the stage of cognitive development (from about 6 or 7 to 11 years of age) during which children gain the mental operations that enable them to think logically about concrete events* -conservation is mastered

Transference

*in psychoanalysis, the patient's unconscious transfer to the therapist emotions linked with other relationships (such as love or hatred for a parent)* -therapist can recreate patient's experiences to understand the relationship example: the therapist may be viewed as an all-knowing guru, an ideal lover, the master of a person's fate, a fierce opponent, and so on

Sir Charles Sherrington

*inferred the existence of synapses* -thought it was an electrical process but it is a chemical process

instinct

*innate psychological representation (wish) of a bodily (biological) excitation (need)

conscience

*inner feeling or voice viewed as acting as a guide to the rightness or wrongness of one's behavior.* example: whatever parents disapprove of goes into the conscience

Sir Francis Galton

*interested in individual differences: measured sensory abilities of nearly 10k people*

Lewis Terman IQ study

*large-scale longitudinal study looking at children with high IQ v general population for similarities and differences*

Leadership Communication Effects

*leaders engage in more communication* -if you artificially increase amount a person speaks, it increases their perceived leadership status

semantics

*learning of word meanings* example: child learns certain combos of phonemes represent certain objects and certain words refer to entire categories

Asch Conformity Experiment

*length of lines experiment:* experimented how people would rather conform than state their own individual answer even though they know the group's answer is wrong (even without explicit pressure)

Eros

*life instinct, which drives people towards survival (hunger, thirst, and sex)*

Thomas and Chess temperament study

*longitudinal study to examine temperament* -three categories of infant emotional and behavioral style: easy, slow to warm up, and difficult

Empathy-Altruism model

*people who put themselves in the shoes of a victim and imagining how the victim feel will experience empathic concern that evokes an altruistic motivation for helping* experiment: subjects witness person receiving shocks -> given choice to help or not help and leave (easy escape) or asked to stay (hard-escape) -> then given questionnaire on distress and empathy -> then were told distressed person had childhood trauma and they could take their place ->easy escape reported more distress and tended to leave and reported more empathy and more likely to help

Spatial Proximity in Attraction

*people will generally develop greater liking for someone closer than farther and even small differences have an effect* -proximity may increase the intensity of the initial interactions

Peripheral route persuasion

*persuasion that occurs when non-interested people do not clearly understand an argument and can be influenced by incidental cues, such as a speaker's attractiveness, location, etc.* -strength of argument doesn't matter

Belief Perseverance Phenomenon

*phenomenon where there's a tendency to stick to our initial beliefs when you presented an explanation even when then proven false* example: told chocolate causes acne and asked to explain it (fat clogs pores) -> will continue to believe chocolate causes acne even if its proven false

Cones

*photoreceptor that function best in color vision, fine detail, in bright light* -allow us to see chromatic and achromatic colors

rods

*photoreceptor that works best in reduced light and only perceives achromatic colors* -low sensitivity to detail and no color -most numerous in the human eye

germinal period

*prenatal development stage in the first two weeks of prenatal development after conception when the fertilized egg travels down the fallopian tube and is implanted into the uterine wall* -characterized by rapid cell division and the beginning of cell differentiation.

septal nuclei

*primary pleasure center of the brain* -also inhibits aggression

reality principle

*principle by which the ego functions: postpones the pleasure principle until actual object to satisfy need is available* -works with reality and id's pleasure principle -cannot be independent of id

Stanford Prison Experiment (Zimbardo)

*prison simulation: study conducted to investigate the effects of becoming a prisoner or prison guard and role playing* -led to deindividuation: loss of self-awareness and of personal identity (conformed to roles)

neurodevelopmental disorders

*psychopathologies due to various forms of damage to the nervous system arising before adulthood* -learning and communication disorders

Diffusion of Responsibility

*reduction in sense of responsibility often felt by individuals in a group; may be responsible for the bystander effect* -the more people present, the less likelihood that any individual will offer help

Hypothalamus and homeostasis

*regulate metabolism, temperature, and water balance* -when homeostasis is imbalanced, hypothalamus signals the body to correct it

case study (clinical method)

*research study of one individual in one environment in great detail* -more detailed look at the development of one particular child

Id

*reservoir of unconscious psychic energy present at birth that strives to satisfy basic sexual and aggressive drives* -functions in primary process -pleasure principle -wish fulfillment

Fear response

*response first evoked with any sudden change in stimuli* -then 1 year = separation anxiety, stranger anxiety -1 year+ = sudden absence of specific individual or presence of someone/something harmful

reception

*response to physical stimuli*: first step in all sensory information processing

social smiling

*response where newborn infants gaze at their parents and smile at them, signaling positive participation in the relationship* -beginning in the 2nd month, one of the earliest social and communicative signals -at first any face will elicit a smile, then at 5 months only familiar

ventromedial hypothalamus

*satiety center, provides signals to stop eating: lesions lead to hyperphagia (very hungry)* (VH= very hungry)

Klinefelter Syndrome

*sex chromosome abnormality: a disorder related to an extra X chromosome (XXY) causing sterile and intellectual disability

Turner's Syndrome

*sex chromosome abnormality: a disorder that occurs in females with only 1 X chromosome (X) causing short fingers and weird shaped mouths

anterior hypothalamus

*sexual behavior: lesions lead to inhibition of sexual activity (asexuality) -stimulation leads to increased sexual activity (A= Asexuality)

Seligman - Learned Helplessness Dog Study

*shocked dogs with high walls -> learned they couldn't reach over walls -> replaced high walls with low walls -> dogs learned to be "helpless" and didn't try to jump over* -depression, learned helplessness, external locus of control

Piaget's pendulum experiment

*showed formal operational stage*: kids could hold all variable but one (length of string, push force, height etc) to methodologically find out what determined the frequency of the swing

Hypnosis

*state of consciousness in which the person is especially susceptible to suggestion* -used by Freud to release repressed thoughts from unconscious

Post-Decisional Dissonance

*state of psychological dissonance that often occurs after making an important decision* example: choose between 2 things you want --> pick one --> dissonance from liking the one thing but not buying it

basal ganglia

*structure in the forebrain that help to control large, voluntary muscle movements* -coordinates muscle movement information from cortex and relays to brain and spinal cord -degeneration can lead to Parkson's and Huntington's, schizophrenia

Conformity Study (Muzafer Sherif)

*study which used the autokinetic effect to study conformity in which he evaluated the concept of norm formation* experiment: - had subjects alone in a dark room estimate the amount of movement of a point of light. -then, he brought the subjects together and had them, as a group, estimate the amount of movement. -The subject's solitary estimates changed so that the group agreed on the amount of movement. - individuals conformed to the group- their judgements converged on some group norm.

prefrontal lobotomies

*surgical disconnection of the prefrontal cortex from the rest of the brain* -was used to treat schizophrenia but introduction of antipsychotics stopped lobotomies and electroshock

mother's uterus environment

*temperature and chemical balance controlled and constant, fetus attached to uterine wall and placenta by umbilical cord, placenta gives nutrients from maternal blood*

Belief in a Just World (MJ Lerner)

*tendency to believe in a just world: good things happen to good people, bad things happen to bad people* -increases likelihood of victim blaming

Halo Effect

*tendency to draw a general impression about an individual on the basis of a single characteristic* example: I like Jill, so Jill must be a good writer. -explains why people are often inaccurate in evaluations of people they like or dislike

transformational grammar

*term for grammar with syntactic transformations: changes in word order that differ with meaning* -Chomsky: we acquire this early so must be innate

superego

*term for the part of the personality that acts as a moral center* -strives for perfection and the ideal -2 subsystems: conscience and ego-ideal

babbling

*term for the stage of language development at 4 months when an infant spontaneously utters nonsense sounds: precursor to language* -Lenneberg, Rebelsky, and Nichols found children babble at highest frequency at 9-12 months. also found deaf children cease babbling soon after it begins -Petitto found deaf children babble in sign language if taught

reaction time (mental chronometry)

*the amount of time taken to respond to a specific stimulus* -provides insight into organization of cognitive processes

object permanence

*the awareness that things continue to exist even when not perceived*

endocrine system

*the body's "slow" (travels through blood stream) chemical communication system* -glands secrete hormones into the bloodstream

shadow archetype

*the dark side of the personality* -the archetype that contains primitive animal instincts

sympathetic nervous system

*the division of the autonomic nervous system that arouses the body, mobilizing its energy in stressful situations* -fight or flight/adrenaline -lie detector tests rely on the SNS

parasympathetic nervous system

*the division of the autonomic nervous system that calms the body, conserving its energy (resting and digesting)* -manages digestion -neurotransmitter: acetylcholine

somatic nervous system

*the division of the peripheral nervous system that controls the body's skeletal muscles (sensory and motor neurons)*

Bystander Intervention Effect (Darley & Latane)

*the effect that occurs when there's a failure to offer help by those who observe someone in need when others are present* hypothesis: social influence and diffusion of responsibility

Social Influence

*the effect that the words, actions, or mere presence of other people have on our thoughts, feelings, attitudes, or behavior* experiment: in an emergency, subject first defined the situation, had the presence of others (social influence) and did not respond b/c they didn't think it was a fire if others didn't respond.

defense mechanisms

*the ego's protective methods of reducing anxiety by unconsciously distorting reality* -2 common characteristics: (1) deny, falsify, and distort reality and (2) operate unconsciously

latency stage

*the fourth psychosexual stage from ages 6 until puberty* -primary focus is on the further development of intellectual, creative, interpersonal, and athletic skills -libido largely sublimated

Equity Theory

*the idea that people are happiest with relationships in which the rewards and costs experienced by both parties are roughly equal* -we also consider costs and rewards of the other

ego

*the largely conscious, "executive" part of personality that mediates among the demands of the id, superego, and reality* -The ego operates on the reality principle -functions through the secondary process

anterior pituitary gland

*the master: the part of the pituitary gland whose secretions are controlled by the hypothalamic hormones*

difference threshold

*the minimum difference between two stimuli required for detection of difference 50% of the time* -compared in ratio

GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)

*the most abundant inhibitory neurotransmitter: plays role in stabilizing neural activity* -causes hyper polarization in the postsynaptic membrane

Testosterone

*the most important of the male sex hormones* -both males and females have it, but the additional testosterone in males stimulates the growth of the male sex organs in the fetus and the development of the male sex characteristics during puberty

autonomic nervous system (ANS)

*the part of the peripheral nervous system that AUTOMATICALLY regulates involuntary functions of organs and glands (heartbeat, respiration, digestion, and glandular secretions, regulate body temp)* -active in fight or flight -has two subdivisions (sympathetic nervous system and parasympathetic nervous system)

Social Facilitation Effect (Zajonc)

*the presence of others leads to increases arousal and enhances dominant responses (response most likely to be performed in the situation)* -If the required response is easy or well learned, performance is enhanced. If the required response is novel or not well learned, performance suffers.

conservation

*the principle that properties such as mass, volume, and number remain the same despite changes in the forms of objects* example: kids shown 2 identical beakers with same amount of colored liquid -> then 1 beaker poured into thinner beaker that may look higher -> conservation shows it is still the same amount of liquid

object relations theory

*the psychodynamic theory that views the desire for relationships as the key motivating force in human behavior* -object is symbolic representation of a young child's personality

primary circular reactions

*the repetition of actions that first occurred by chance and that focus on the infant's own body* example: sucking indiscriminately when hungry

Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)

*the sensory and motor neurons that connect the central nervous system (CNS) to the rest of the body* -subdivided into somatic and autonomic nervous systems

Fundamental Attribution Error

*the tendency for observers, when analyzing another's behavior, to underestimate the impact of the situation and to overestimate the impact of personal disposition (general bias)* -opposite for self

what determines color of an object?

*the wavelength of light it reflects*, the rest are absorbed

Erik Erikson development

*theorist known for his 8-stage theory of Psychosocial Development* -development is a sequence of life crises -each crisis has a favorable or unfavorable possible outcome -emphasizes emotional development and interactions with social environment

Noam Chomsky

*theorist who believed that humans have an inborn or "native" propensity to develop language* -transformational grammar and LAD

Jean Piaget

*theorist who believed that there were qualitative differences between adult & childhood thought. Also believed that cognitive growth is a continuous process that begins at birth & proceeds through 4 stages. * -founded the development of schemata

Lawrence Kohlberg

*theory of moral development in children in 3 phases with 2 stages* -made use of moral dilemmas in assessment

signal detection theory

*theory regarding how stimuli are detected under different conditions* -non sensory factors influence what the subject perceives like experience, expectations etc.

Reinforcement Theory

*theory that positive and negative reinforcers motivate a person to behave in certain ways* later challenged by social learning theorists

behavior therapy

*therapy that applies learning principles to the elimination of unwanted behaviors* -abnormal behavior is learned -> faulty coping patterns maintained with reinforcement

Attribution Theory (Fritz Heider)

*there is a tendency to infer causes of other's behaviors* dispositional or situational causes

cell membrane

*thin layer of fatty molecules that separate inside and outside of the neuron

Julian Rotter

*trait theorist (internal and external locus of control)*

Herman Witkin

*trait theorist who classified people according to their field dependence*

David McClelland and trait

*trait theorist: came up with "the need for achievement (N-Ach)*

idiographic approach

*trait theory: approach to personality that focuses on case studies* -Allport thought this was the best approach

nomothetic approach

*trait theory: approach to personality that focuses on groups of individuals* -Allport thought this was the wrong approach

functional autonomy

*trait theory: term for when behavior continues despite satisfaction of the drive that originally created the behavior* example: a hunter may initially hunt for food but may keep hunting once they have enough food

Gordon Allport

*trait theory:* Three basic traits: cardinal, central, secondary

cardinal traits

*traits around which a person organizes his or her life* example:Mother Teresa's cardinal trait was self-sacrifice -not everyone has cardinal traits

personal unconscious and collective unconscious

*two parts of the unconscious mind*

tricyclic antidepressants

*type of antidepressants used to treat severe depression by facilitating tranmission of norepineephrine or serotonin* -tricyclic chemical structure -MAO inhibitors: inhibit MAO, increase norepinephrine and serotonin

Ebbinghaus experiment

*used nonsense syllables to study memory on himself* -used method of savings to see if he still remembered the list he was trying to memorize

maze running study (Tyron)

*very specific behaviors can have a genetic basis* -study that found that there was a slight correlation between running the same maze and passing it down to offspring -learning ability had a genetic basis (maze-bright rats breeding with maze-bright rats passed down the specific maze skills)

Reciprocity Hypothesis

*we tend to like people who indicate that they like us, dislike those who indicate they don't like us* -take into account the other's evaluation of us

instrumental relativist stage

*when a person only acts in self interest "you scratch my back and ill scratch yours"* -part of pre-conventional morality stage

punishment and obedience stage

*when a person only acts to avoid punishment* -part of pre-conventional morality stage

Depolarization

*when a stimulus has been significant enough to raise membrane potential to threshold potential (-50 mV)* -actual firing of the neuron

Self-Perception Theory (Bem)

*when attitudes are weak or ambiguous, you observe your own behavior and attribute attitude to yourself* example: i must like bread because i eat it a lot. $20 subject: i said experiment was fun b/c of $20 $1 subject: i said experiment was fun because it must have been (looks at behavior and attributes liking experiment to himself)

Festinger and Carlsmith (1959) Study

- Participants did a boring task, then were asked to tell next participant it was fun for $1 or $20 - Results: $1 participants reported enjoying task more than $20 participants - Explanation: $20 participants could attribute behavior (saying it was fun) to the $20 they received, but $1 isn't enough to justify the dissonant behavior. So, $1 participants instead changed their attitudes about the task to reduce dissonance and rated the task higher. *Exemplifies the *minimal justification effect*

association areas

- integrates inputs from diverse brain regions example: multiple inputs needed to do a complex puzzle, plan ahead for future, or reach a difficult decision (prefrontal lobe)

hypothalamus and emotions in high arousal states

-*fight or flight response* -*rage and fighting* seen in cats: cats without cerebral cortex but left with hypothalamus showed random rage (so cortex inhibits this rage) -cats without hypothalamus and cortex showed no ability to defend themselves (could not coordinate and organize emotional responses)

basic signal detection experiment

-2 experimenter- controlled situations (stimulus is there or not) -noise trial or signal trial -four possible outcomes in trial: hit (signal and accurate perception), miss (signal and no perception), false alarm (no signal and perception), and correct negative (no signal and no perception)

Peter Wolff and Crying

-3 cry patterns: basic (hunger), angry, and pain -all adults react to infant pain cries -infants learn that caregiver will respond to crying -infants will cry when person leaves room and stop when they return

action potential spike

-After reaching threshold, membrane allows sodium into cell -Sodium rushes in, and makes cell very positive for a brief time -cell membrane produces a rapid electrical pulse -then potassium ions leave the cell and the membrane's original negative charge is restored -cell is repolarized

difference between Freud, Jung, and Adler?

-Freud: behavior is motivated by inborn instincts -Jung: a person's conduct is governed by inborn archetypes -Adler: people are primarily motivated by striving for superiority

visual pathways in the brain

-Nerve impulses travel from each eye along the optic nerves and meet at the optic chiasm -Here, half of the nerves from each side cross and resume to the back of the brain -The left side of the brain receives half of the left optic nerve and half of the right optic nerve -The same goes for the right side

Ellis's rational-emotive therapy (RET)

-Point out irrational assumptions -challenge these irrational beliefs -change them to more rational ones

pituitary gland

-The endocrine system's "master" gland -regulates growth and controls other endocrine glands by triggering hormone release

posterior pituitary gland

-gland also known as the neurohypophysis - made up of nervous tissue/neurons and stores and secretes oxytocin & ADH -controlled by action potentials from the hypothalamus

chemical transmission at the synapse

-action potential reaches terminal buttons -triggers release of neurotransmitters -flood into synapse -can be received by receptors (dendrites) of other neuron, washed away, or drawn back into terminal buttons via reuptake

Hovland and Weiss (1952) source credibility experiment

-articles on controversial topics presented to subjects, either written by perceived expert or discredible source *trustworthy sources changed attitudes of subjects right after the experiment* but sleeper effect persuasive impact of low-credible sources increased over time while impact of credible sources decreased

ADHD impulsivity

-blurting out answers -inability to wait their turn -interrupting or intruding on others

dominant, recessive

-both parents contribute a gene for each trait -DOMINANT: if both parents contribute a dominate allele, or if one contributes a dominate allele and the other recessive, the dominant allele will be expressed. -RECESSIVE: if both parents contribute a recessive allele, the recessive allele will be expressed. example: eye color (BROWN v blue)

learned taste aversion

-can occur after only 1 trial -can occur even if consequence is 24 hours later

newborns and visual perception

-cannot discern fine details but can follow an object/light with their eyes -can perceive color, simple figures, contrast, see in dim light

how dark adaptation works

-go into dark environment and hard to see -rhodopsin (photopigment in rod) is bleached from light -regenerates and you begin to see better in dark

animal studies and visual perception

-experience plays important role in developing vision, sensitive periods

Theories of Gender Development

-gender differences in personality, social behavior, and cognitive abilities -sociobiologists see differences in evolutionary perspective -social learning theorists emphasize social environment and modeling behavior -cognitive development theorists stress cognition kids have about gender

Illumination vs. Brightness

-illumination: physical, objective measurement of amount of light on a surface -brightness: subjective impression of the intensity of a light stimulus

sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational, formal operational

4 stages of cognitive development (Piaget)

fight or flight response

-increases in heart rate, blood sugar levels, and respiration -decrease digestive processes -dilated pupils -adrenaline

visual field and what side of brain

-information in left visual field is processed in right hemisphere -information in right visual field is processed in left hemisphere

How does the trichromatic theory explain color vision?

-light enters eye, hits retina, then the three color receptor cones are simulated -ratio of activity between these cones determine color -all colors can be made from mixture of these three primary colors

Tinbergen's sign stimulus experiment

-male stickeback (fish) are agressive to each other -the red belly (sign stimulus) of the fish triggered the attack -also a releaser since one fish to another

temporal fibers vs. nasal fibers

-nasal fibers: go to opposite side of brain (nasal fiber from left eye goes to right side of brain) -temporal fibers: go to same side of brain (temporal fiber from left eye goes to left side of brain)

Freud's view on development

-the libido (sex drive) is present at birth, and the drive to reduce libido tension is the underlying dynamic force that accounts for development

pros and cons of 3 research methods: (parental reports, naturalistic observations, and lab observations)

-parental reports: biased but parents are well aware of infant in wide range of situations -naturalistic: time consuming but more objective -lab observations: artificial situations but controlled conditions

H.M and hippocampus

-patient whose amygdala and hippocampus were removed to cure seizures -drastic loss of memory (anterograde amnesia)

Need Complementarity Hypothesis

-people seek and are more satisfied with marital partners who are the opposite of themselves (dom/sub, introvert/extrovert) *opposites attract*

primary vs. secondary sex characteristics

-primary: at birth (sex organs, gonads, genitalia) -secondary: breasts, wide hips, facial hair, deeper voices

pathway of neurons

-receptors in foot detect pain -pain signal transmitted by sensory neurons to the spinal cord -sensory neurons connect with interneurons in spinal cord and replay pain impulses to brain -reflex arc sends information from interneurons in the spinal cord to the motor neurons to move your foot -interneurons still send information to brain but spinal cord is closer to foot

phonology, semantics, syntax, pragmatics

4 components of language

sensory preconditioning

-stage 1: 2 neutral stimuli (light flash and bell) -stage 2: bell (CS) and food (UCS) -stage 3: light flash elicits salivation even though never directly paired

second-order conditioning

-stage 1: classical conditioning CS then UCS (bell ring and food) -stage 2: new UCS then CS (flash of light and bell) -dog will learn to salivate to just the light

blocking experiment

-stage 1: rats heard a hiss (CS) then got a shock (UCS) -stage 2: hiss and light presented at same time then shock -now two CS: hiss and light BUT rat did not fear light alone BECAUSE they ignored the light when the hiss was presented -CS must provide useful, nonredundant information

image of stimulus and left/right side of retina

-stimulus on right side of each eye's field forms left half of each eye's retina -stimulus on left side of each eye's field form right half of each eye's retina

major schools of psychology

-structuralism -functionalism -behaviorism -Gestalt psychology -cognitive psychology -psychoanalysis -systems psychology -humanism

Schacter-Singer Experiment

-subjects injected with adrenaline to increase physiological arousal -half told vitamin, half told adrenaline -then went into a room with a playful person -those on vitamin reported euphoria, those on adrenaline reported nothing *once the physiological arousal was induces, subjects labeled emotions based on situation*

cell body, dendrites, axon, terminal buttons

4 components of neurons

Step 2 of Natural Selection

-variations that increase chance of reproduction/survival will be passed down to next generation

Thorazine/chlorpromazine, phenothiazine, haloperidol, and lithium carbonate

4 main antipsychotics

A test with zero reliability has how much validity?

0

a test with perfect reliability has how much validity?

0-100%: not dependent on validity

if the mean scores are the same for each group, what is the F ratio?

1

rooting, moro, babinski, grasping

4 neonatal reflexes

zygote, germinal, embryonic, fetal

4 stages of prenatal development

2 types of ability tests

1. aptitude tests 2. achievement tests

3 levels in levels of processing theory

1. physical (visual focusing on appearance, size, shape) 2. acoustical (sound combinations of words) 3. semantic (meaning of the word)

level of effort in 3 levels in levels of processing theory

1. physical- little effort 2. acoustical- more effort 3. semantic- most effort

Piaget's stages of cognitive development

1. sensorimotor 2. preoperational 3. concrete operational 4. formal operational

difference between personality inventories and projective tests

1. stimuli in projective tests are ambiguous and 2. projective tests do not limit the possible responses to stimuli (more an interpretation than an answer)

Identical twins have what percent of genes in common with each other?

100%

percentage of scores within 3 SD in a normal distribution

100%

how many classifications in DSM-5?

18

Dorothea Dix

19th century american advocate of asylum reform

deny, falsify, and distort reality AND operate unconsciously

2 common characteristics of defense mechanisms

preferential-looking technique

2 objects presented together, longer time looking at different one = perceived differences in objects in infants -the object they look at the longest is preferred (usually prefer complex and socially relevant stimuli and patterns rather than uniform surfaces)

tympanic membrane (eardrum) and ossicles

2 parts of the middle ear

Eysenck

2 personality dimensions; extravert/intravert & emotional stability/instability.

conscience and ego-ideal

2 subsystems of the superego

amphetamines and antidepressants

2 types of behavioral stimulant drugs

image on our retina is what dimension?

2-D

how long will information stay in short-term memory without rehearsal?

20 seconds

Which chromosomes are the sex chromosomes?

23

Socrates, Plato, Aristotle

3 Greek philosophers who studied psychology

crying, social smiling, fear response

3 early social and emotional behaviors in infants

consensus, consistency, distinctiveness

3 notions of Kelley's covariation model

inner, middle, outer

3 parts of the ear

prefrontal lobe, broca's area, and motor cortex

3 parts of the frontal lobe

parental reports, naturalistic observations, and lab observations

3 research methods to measure temperament

moving toward, moving against, moving away

3 stages to overcome basic anxiety

septai nuclei, amygdala, and hippocampus

3 structures in the limbic system

cardinal, central, and secondary

3 terms in trait theory of personality

binding, remaining, reuptake

3 things that can happen to neurotransmitters within the synapse

hammer (malleus), anvil (incus), stirrup (stapes)

3 tiny bones in the middle ear (ossicles)

epinephrine, norepinephrine, dopamine

3 types of catecholamines

touch, pressure, pain, temperature

4 things that the somatosensory cortex controls

psychedelic drugs

A category of psychoactive drugs that create sensory and perceptual distortions, alter mood, and affect thinking.

Hawthorne effect

A change in a subject's behavior caused simply by the awareness of being studied -solved by control group design

delayed conditioning

A classical conditioning procedure in which the conditioned stimulus precedes the unconditioned stimulus and remains present until after the unconditioned stimulus is presented so that the two stimuli occur together.

trace conditioning

A classical conditioning procedure in which the conditioned stimulus precedes the unconditioned stimulus but is removed before the unconditioned stimulus is presented so that the two stimuli do not occur together.

Norepinephrine (noradrenaline)

A neurotransmitter involved in arousal (alertness, wakefulness), as well as in learning and mood regulation -depression and mania: too much (mania) and too little (depression)

Serotonin

A neurotransmitter that affects hunger, sleep, arousal, and mood -plays role in depression and mania -loosely classified as a monoamine

relative refractory period

A period after firing when a neuron is returning to its normal polarized state and will fire again only if the incoming message is much stronger than usual: after action potential

depressive episode

A period of at least two weeks in which there is a prominent and persistent depressed mood or lack of interest and at least four other depressive symptoms.

Cognitive physiological theory of emotion

A person who drank coffee before a comedy set and then laughed more at the comedy set because of increased physiological arousal would describe which theory?

Emil Kraepelin

A pioneer of diagnostic categorization in mental health who was one of the first to assign formal labels to particular clusters of symptoms

Reuptake

A process in which neurotransmitters are drawn back into the vesicles of the terminal buttons

luteinizing hormone (LH)

A protein hormone secreted by the anterior pituitary that stimulates *ovulation* in females and androgen production in males.

dissociative identity disorder

A rare dissociative disorder in which a person exhibits two or more distinct and alternating personalities. Also called multiple personality disorder.

conversion disorder

A rare somatoform disorder in which a person experiences very specific genuine physical symptoms for which no physiological basis can be found. (used to be hysteria)

Dorothea Dix

A reformer and pioneer in the movement to treat the insane as mentally ill, beginning in the 1820's, she was responsible for improving conditions in jails, poorhouses and insane asylums throughout the U.S. and Canada.

Gestalt Laws of Organization

A series of principles that describe how we organize bits and pieces of information into meaningful wholes

Estrogen

A sex hormone, secreted in greater amounts by females than by males, that release the egg

heuristic

A shortcut to problem solving also known as a rule of thumb.

tardive dyskinesia

A side effect of long-term use of traditional antipsychotic drugs causing the person to have uncontrollable facial tics, grimaces, and other involuntary movements of the lips, jaw, and tongue.

Chi-square test

A significance test used to determine if two frequencies or proportions are equal: use categorical data (nominal)

sodium-potassium pump

A special transport protein in the plasma membrane that transports Na+ out of the cell and K- into the cell against their concentration gradients to maintain resting potential for nerve impulse

significance test

A statistical technique used in inferential statistics to test the probability of an observed hypothesis in reference to other possible hypotheses (null hypothesis)

simultaneous brightness contrast

A stimulus appears brighter when surrounded by a darker stimulus

unconditioned stimulus

A stimulus that evokes an unconditioned response without previous conditioning; dog food

basilar membrane

A structure that runs the length of the cochlea in the inner ear and holds the auditory receptors, called hair cells.

monoamine theory of depression

A theory that holds that too much norepinephrine and serotonin leads to mania, while too little leads to depression. It is also sometimes called the catecholamine theory of depression.

one

A tone that occurs ____ second(s) after a letter vanishes from a display would enhance memory of the letters since they would still be in sensory memory

control group design

A type of experiment in which, at its simplest, subjects are randomly assigned to either an experimental (or treatment) group or a control group -subjects assigned to the experimental group are exposed to a certain manipulation or treatment, while those assigned to the control group are not.

kinetic depth effect

A type of motion parallax where the object is in motion, not the observer. It gives us cues about the relative depth of parts of the object.

moon illusion

A visual illusion involving the misperception that the moon is larger when it is on the horizon than when it is directly overhead (inappropriate size constancy scaling)

ANOVA

ANalysis Of VAriance - btwn means of 3 or more groups

Extirpation

Ablation: term for intentional lesioning or removal of brain regions

Fictional Finalism

According to Adler, self-selected, imagined life goal that motivates an individual toward the future rather than past experiences

Congruence

According to Carl Rogers , the goal of therapy is to achieve _____

Maladaptive cognitions

According to Cognitive Psychology, these types of cognitions lead to abnormal behavior or disturbed affect; Beck

D

According to the Inoculation Theory, a person's belief can be inoculated against a persuasive attack by: A. providing arguments to support that initial belief prior to the attack B. providing arguments to support the initial belief subsequent to the attack C. warning the individual that there will be an attack D. anticipating the attacker's arguments and discrediting those arguments E. refuting the persuasive attack subsequent to its presentation

Paivio's dual code hypothesis

According to this theory, information can be stored (or encoded) in two ways: visually and verbally. Abstract information tends to be encoded verbally, whereas concrete information tends to be encoded visually (i.e., as an image) and verbally.

How can dissonance be reduced? Be able to provide examples.

Adding consonant elements (stop smoking low tar cigs, criticize negative reports on smoking) and changing dissonant elements (convince self the enjoyment is worth the risk)

Scaffolding

Adjusting the support offered during a teaching session to fit the child's current level of performance; mother helping a lot at first and then little by little diminishing the help

ruling-dominant type

Adler personality type; choleric; high in activity but low in social contribution, dominant

Avoiding type

Adler personality type; melancholic; low in activity and low in social contribution, withdrawn

getting-leaning type

Adler personality type; phlegmatic; low in activity and high in social contribution, dependent

socially useful type

Adler personality type; sanguine; people with a great deal of social interest and activity

inferiority complex

Adler's conception of a basic feeling of inadequacy and incompleteness stemming from childhood experiences

Anton Mesmer

Believed that the healing of physical ailments came from manipulation of people's bodily fluids. His technique of mesmerism was used with hypnotism.

after image effect

After viewing one of the opposing colors for a while, then looking away, the other color can be seen -red/green, blue/yellow, black/white

controversial status youth

Aggressive kids who are either highly liked or intensely disliked by their peers; who are most likely to become engaged in antisocial behavior

loss of acetylcholine in hippocampus

Alzheimers

Ebonics

American black English regarded as a language in its own right rather than as a dialect of standard English; William Labov

Allele

An alternative form of a gene that controls whether a trait will be dominate or recessive.

EEG (electroencephalogram)

An amplified recording of the waves of electrical activity that sweep across the brain's surface. These waves are measured by electrodes placed on the scalp.

panic disorder

An anxiety disorder marked by unpredictable minutes-long episodes of intense dread in which a person experiences terror and accompanying chest pain, choking, or other frightening sensations.

Broca's aphasia

An aphasia associated with the impairment in producing understandable speech -lesions in Broca's area

empirical criterion-keying

An approach to test development that emphasizes the selection of items that discriminate between normal individuals and members of different diagnostic groups, regardless of whether the items appear theoretically relevant to the diagnoses of interest. Hathaway and McKinley

parallel distributed processing

An approach to understanding object recognition in which various elements of the object are thought to be simultaneously analyzed by a number of widely distributed, but connected, neural units in the brain.

anorexia nervosa

An eating disorder characterized by an obstinate and willful refusal to eat, a distorted body image, and an intense fear of being fat -females may have amenorrhea (the cessation of menstruation) -90% females -10% cases end in death (starvation, suicide, or electrolyte imbalance)

semantic error

An error in a program that makes it do something other than what the programmer intended.

quasi-experiment (mixed-design)

An experiment in which investigators make use of control and experimental groups that already exist in the world at large: -IV manipulated -subjects not randomly assigned

Sequential cohort studies

An experimental method used in developmental psychology to study groups of subjects at different ages, repeatedly over time.

sign stimulus

An external sensory cue that triggers a fixed action pattern by an animal. -usually FAP triggered by 1 stimulus

induced motion

An illusion of movement occurring when everything around the spot of light is moved

Ponzo illusion

An illusion of size in which two objects of equal size that are positioned between two converging lines appear to be different in size. Also called the railroad track illusion.

biological clock

An innate mechanism in living organisms that controls the internal rhythms to keep the animal in sync with the environment

RIASEC model

An interest framework summarized by six different personality types including realistic, investigative, artistic, social, enterprising, and conventional.

biological constraints on learning

Any limitations on an organism's capacity to learn that are caused by the inherited sensory, response, or cognitive capabilities of members of a given species.

projection areas

Areas in which the brain tissue seems to form a "map" of sensory information.

No correlational relationship

As values of X increase, values of Y change randomly

Domain-referenced testing

Assessment results are interpreted in terms of a relevant and clearly defined set of related tasks (called a domain) *tests what the test taker knows and can do*

Sheldon

Attempted to relate somatotype (body type) to personality type

multimode theory of attention

Attention is flexible and can change how much processing can happen depending on needs of task; Johnson & Heinz

social learning theory

Bandura: the theory that we learn social behavior by observing and imitating (modeling) and by being rewarded or punished (vicarious reinforcement)

Kelly

Based personality theory on the notion of "individual as scientist"

Helping Behavior

Behavior that intentionally helps or benefits another person (but may be motivated by selfishness or ego)

species-specific behavior

Behavior that is typically engaged in by all members of a species under certain environmental circumstances. Very close to what others call instinctive behavior.

Skinner

Behaviorism

B.F. Skinner

Behaviorist that developed the theory of operant conditioning by training pigeons and rats -positive and negative reinforcement, punishment, and extinction

Dollard and Miller

Behaviorist theorists who attempted to study psychoanalytic concepts within a behaviorist framework -also known for their work on approach-avoidance conflicts

Ethnocentrism

Belief in the superiority of one's nation or ethnic group.

William McDougall and E.H. Ross

Both published the first textbooks in social psychology.

Preattachment, Attachment in the making, Clear-cut attachment, Reciprocal attachment, separation anxiety, independence

Bowlby's phases of attachment

Locke

British philosopher who suggested that infants had no predetermined tendencies, that they were blank slates (tabulas rasa) to be written on by experience

Timing in Classical Conditioning

CS must be before and close together to UCS (forward conditioning)

Penfield

Canadian neurosurgeon who used electrodes and electrical stimulation techniques to "map" out different parts of the brain during surgery

aptitude

Capacity for learning; natural ability

Organ of Corti

Center part of the cochlea on the basilar membrane, containing hair cells (receptors for hearing), canals, and membranes

factitious disorder

Condition where a person creates physical complaints through fabrication or self-infliction in order to assume the sick role; long history of dramatic complaints about faked medical conditions

Kagan

Conducted landmark longitudinal study to examine developmental trajectories of children's temperament

natural selection

Darwin: A natural process resulting in the evolution of organisms best adapted to the environment. -different members of species have some variations that make them more suitable for survival -> gets passed down to next generation

Howard Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences

Defines intelligence as "the capacity to solve problems or fashion products that are valued in one or more cultural settings." 8 intelligences, everyone has all 8, but in different proportions. You can strengthen your weaker areas.

Delusion of thought insertion

Delusion that thoughts are being implanted in a person's mind by other persons or forces

Delusion of thought broadcasting

Delusions that a person's thoughts can be heard by others, as though being broadcast over the air

Olds and Milner

Demonstrated existence of pleasure center in the brain using "self-stimulation" studies in rats

Kandel

Demonstrated that simple learning behavior in sea snails (aplysia) is associated with changes in neurotransmission

Stevens

Developed Stevens' power law as an alternative to Fechner's law

Helmholtz

Developed Young-Helmholtz trichromatic theory of color vision and developed place-resonance theory of pitch perception

Berkeley

Developed a list of depth cues that help us to perceive depth

Gibson, E. and Walk

Developed the visual cliff apparatus, which is used to study the development of depth perception

Kohler

Developed theory of isomorphism

Guilford

Devised divergent thinking test to measure creativity

Ainsworth

Devised the "strange situation" to study attachment

Collins and Loftus

Devised the spreading activation model of semantic memory

elimination disorders

Difficulty managing the elimination of bodily wastes (i.e. nocturnal enuresis)

Chomsky

Distinguished between the surface structure and deep structure of a sentence and studied transformational rules that could be used to transform one sentence into another

Nature vs. Nurture

Do genes (nature) or environmental factors (nurture) contribute more to a person's being or behavior? -generally recognized that there is a dynamic interaction between environment and genetics for development

Anxiolytics

Drugs that alleviate the symptoms of anxiety by increasing GABA; Valium, Xanax

recording brain wave activity during sleep

EEG

Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt

Erikson's 2nd conflict from 1-3 in which a toddler learns to exercise will and to do things independently

Initiative vs. Guilt

Erikson's 3rd conflict from 3-6 in which the child finds independence in planning, playing, and other activities

Industry vs. Inferiority

Erikson's 4th conflict between 6-puberty when the child learns to be productive and competent

identity vs. role confusion

Erikson's 5th conflict in teen years in which teenagers and young adults search for and become their true selves (physiological revolution)

Intimacy vs. Isolation

Erikson's 6th conflict in young adulthood in which individuals form deeply personal relationships, marry, begin families

Generativity vs. Stagnation

Erikson's 7th conflict of social development in which middle-aged people begin to devote themselves more to fulfilling one's potential and doing public service

integrity v. despair

Erikson's 8th conflict where the older adult is reflecting at the end of life

Trust v. Mistrust

Erikson's first conflict from birth to 1 during which infants develop a sense of trust or mistrust, largely depending on how well their needs are met by their caregivers

von Frisch

Ethologist who studied communication in honeybees: able to communicate the direction and distance of food source by special dances

Von Frisch

Ethologist who studied communication in honeybees; communicate through a dance

Bobo Doll Experiment (Bandura)

Experiment where nursery school students observed an adult play aggressively (yelling & hitting) with an inflatable clown (Bobo); when children were later allowed to play with the Bobo, those children who witnessed the Bobo doll performed the same aggressive actions and improvised new ways of playing aggressively

Stroop Effect

Explains the decreased speed of naming the color of ink used to print words when the color of ink and the word itself are of different colors (ie yellow printed in blue ink)

flooding therapy

Exposure to fear but start with most frightening fear first

Cognitive

Eye movements, gaze durations, latency, and semantic recognition are all measures used by ______ psychologists

Verplank (1950's)

Feedback (approval) from others changes course of conversation *reinforcement theory: social approval influences behavior*

lateral, ventromedial, anterior

Hypothalamus subdivisions

Rene Descartes

I think therefore I am; mind-body problem

F ratio

In ANOVA, the ratio of the mean square between groups to the mean square within groups

life space

In Kurt Lewin's theory, all the internal and external forces that act on an individual (valence, vector, barrier)

experimental group

In an experiment, the group that is exposed to the treatment, that is, to one version of the independent variable.

fixed action pattern

In animal behavior, a sequence of unlearned, innate acts that is essentially unchangeable and, once initiated, usually carried to completion. (i.e. courtship ritual) -more complex than Pavlovian response (salivating)

Sperry and Gazzaniga

Investigated functional differences between left and right cerebral hemispheres using "split-brain" (severed corpus callosum) studies in epileptic patients

Sperry and Gazzaniga

Investigated functional differences between left and right cerebral hemispheres using "split-brain" studies

Bartlett

Investigated the role of schemata in memory: concluded that memory is largely a reconstructive process

Poggendorf Illusion

Is a geometrical-optical illusion that involves the misperception of the position of one segment of a transverse line that has been interrupted by the contour of an intervening structure

extroversion and introversion

Jung: two major orientations of personality

shyness

Kagan stated that young children with strong physiological reactions to new situations are more likely than others to display ____ during social situations

L-dopa vs dopamine

L-dopa can pass the blood-brain barrier to increase production of dopamine in brain -orally ingested dopamine cannot get past blood brain barrier

paired-associate learning

Learning procedure in which items to be recalled are learned in pairs. During recall, one member of the pair is presented and the other is to be recalled; behaviorists

Analogy of Inoculation - McGuire

McGuire's analogy that people can be psychologically inoculated against the "attack" of persuasive communications by first exposing them to a weakened attack.

Inoculation Theory

McGuire; people's beliefs are vulnerable if they have never faced challenge

semantics

Meaning of words and sentences

face validity

Measures whether a test looks like it tests what it is supposed to test.

gate theory of pain

Melzack and Wall: *proposes that there is a special "gating" mechanism that can turn pain signals on or off, affecting whether or not we perceive pain* -located in spinal cord, can preferentially forward signals from other modalities (pressure, temp)

Stimulus-overload theory

Milgram; explains why urbanities are less prosocial than country people; they do not need any more interaction

Terman

Performed longitudinal study on gifted children

Type theories of personality

Personality types can be categorized eg. four humors, somatotypes, Type A/B, Myer-Briggs

basic (hunger), angry, pain

Peter Wolff's three patterns of crying

Rogers

Phenomenological personality theorist

Cannon

Physiologist who studied the autonomic nervous system, including "fight or flight" reactions -investigated homeostasis and with Bard, proposed the Cannon-Bard theory of emotions

Refuted Counterarguments

Presenting arguments against cultural truisms then refuting these arguments. Motivates people to practice defending their beliefs

S.S. Stevens

Proposed the power law and that Fechner's law was incorrect

Wever and Bray

Proposed volley theory of pitch perception in response to a criticism of the frequency theory of pitch perception

Neil Miller

Proved experimentally that abnormal behavior can be learned

Exemplification

Providing examples in service of a point; (i.e. in a job interview Kathy tells her prospective employer that she once found a bag of money and returned it even though she desperately needed the money fo rent)

Adler

Psychodynamic theorist best known for the concept of inferiority complex

Horney

Psychodynamic theorist who suggested there were three ways to relate to others: moving toward, moving against, and moving away from

George Sperling

Psychologist associated with early research into the capacity of sensory memory: partial report procedure

Elisabeth Kubler-Ross

Psychologist who theorized the terminally ill progress through stages of coping: Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, Acceptance

Swets

Refined ROC curves in signal detection theory

Babinski reflex

Reflex in which a newborn fans out the toes when the sole of the foot is touched

Pinel

Reformed French asylums in late 18th century

reinforcement contingencies

Relationships between a response and the changes in stimulation that follow the response; based on BF Skinner's principles

Spreading of Alternatives

Relative worth of alternatives is spread apart--> alternatives are seen as more different (the one we chose as better, the one we rejected as worse) after we choose compared to before

Monocular depth cues

Require one eye (all depth cues except stereopsis)

contingency explanation of classical conditioning

Rescorla: classical conditioning will occur based on how good of a signal CS is for the UCS

Autoshaping

Responding in the absence of a relationship with reinforcement (ie pecking)

Endomorph

Round and heavy body type; pleasure seeking, social behavior

A.R. Luria

Russian neurologist who studied how brain damage leads to impairment in sensory, motor, and language functions

Luria

Russian neurologist who studied how brain damage leads to impairment in sensory, motor, and language functions

neologism

Term for a new word or expression

copulation

Term for sexual intercourse

Idiographic

Term for the approach to personality theory that focus on individual case studies

Nomothetic

Term for the approach to personality theory that focuses on groups and societal norms

gestation

Term for the period in which an unborn offspring is within its mother

dymyelination

Term for what results in slower nerve conduction Times

courting

Term that refers to behaviors intended to result in coupling

Estrus

Term used by comparative psychologists to refer to the period of time in which a female is sexually receptive

Chi square

Testing method (analysis) used any time you are placing groups or individuals into different categories or groups

Gregory Mendel

The 19th century monk who studied pea plants and through experiments, unlocked the key to understanding the foundation of heredity (the gene) *MENDEL DISCOVERED THAT GENES EXIST*

Thomas Szasz

The Myth of Mental Illness: argues that abnormal behavior usually involves a deviation from social norms rather than an illness

Applied Psychology

The branch of psychology concerned with everyday, practical problems

Premack Principle

The concept, developed by David Premack, that a more-preferred activity can be used to reinforce a less-preferred activity -example: parents say child can play after they finish homework

Osmoregulation

The control of water balance in the body by osmoreceptors in the hypothalamus

thanatos

The death instinct, reflected in aggressive, destructive, and self-destructive actions; the least accepted of Freud's ideas in current psychoanalytic theory

content validity

The degree to which the content of a test is representative of the domain it's supposed to cover

normal distribution (bell curve)

The distribution characterized by the smooth, bell shaped curve: 68% of scores fall within 1 SD of the mean while 96% of the scores fall within 2 SDs of the mean, and 4% fall beyond 2 SD

secondary process

The ego process of rationally seeking an object to satisfy a desire.

independent variable

The experimental factor that is manipulated: the variable whose effect is being studied.

When the pressure is greatest, will the attitude change more or less?

The great the pressure to comply the *less* the attitude changes.

private speech

The internal dialogue that occurs when children talk to themselves either silently or out loud; Vygotsky

Forebrain (diencephalon)

The largest and most complicated region of the brain above the midbrain associated with *complex perceptual, cognitive, and behavioral processes* -emotion and memory, greatest influence on behavior -divided into two cerebral hemispheres -contains thalamus and hypothalamus

participant attrition

The loss of participants that occurs during the course of a research study conducted over time; can be a threat to internal validity; also known as participant mortality.

dependent variable

The measurable effect, outcome, or response in which the research is interested: variable expected to change

absolute refractory period

The minimum length of time after an action potential during which another action potential cannot begin: same time as depolarization

semantic feature-comparison model

The model, proposed by Smith, Shoben and Rips suggests that concepts are represented by sets of features, some of which are required for that concept, and some of which are typical of that concept. features of a college (required): has faculty, offers degrees features (typical): has fraternities

Wechsler test

The most widely used IQ test. It contains a verbal section and a performance section, which each test different things. However, both scores are combined to form a single IQ score.

Hyperpolarization

The movement of the membrane potential of a cell away from rest potential in a more negative direction (-90mv) -overshoots negative direction

true experiment

The only research strategy that can determine that something causes something else: involves randomly assigning people to different treatments and then looking at the outcome -IV manipulated

Neocortex

The outermost part of the cerebral cortex, making up 80 percent of the cortex in the human brain

selection limit

The point at which no further improvement can be obtained by artificial selection.

youngest child

This child is dependent and selfish due to always being taken care of by family members; may also possess positive traits of confidence, ability to have fun and comfort at entertaining others.

first born child

This child is prone to perfectionism and need for affirmation; tends to become intellectual, conscientious and dominant in social settings. Adler attributes this to the child losing the parents' undivided attention and compensating throughout life by working to get it back. In addition, this child may be expected to set an example and be given responsibility for younger siblings.

Semantic Dissimilarity

This feature of how LTM is coded makes it more difficult to learn or retrieve items. If learning a list and the items on the list are similar in their meanings (i.e. all items are professions), it is harder to recall correctly which items were on the list.

Acoustic Dissimilarity

This feature of how STM is coded uses auditory coding, it is easier to remember things are dissimilar in how they sound.

Statistical distribution

This is a mathematical function that describes the probability of a random quantity taking on certain values.

Luchins water-jar problem

This is a task used to study problem-solving. It's results demonstrated how people have a tendency to repeat solutions that worked in previous situations, even if a more efficient way is available (this is called a mental set).

only child

This type of child may have a hard time when they are told no, and school may be a difficult transition as they are not the sole focus of the teacher. On a positive note, Adler believed that, compared to others their age, these children tend to be more mature, feel more comfortable around adults and even do better in intellectual and creative pursuits.

law of effect

Thorndike: if a response is followed by an annoying consequence, the animal will be less likely to emit the same response in the future

Cognitive Maps

Tolman: mental representation of a place or environment

Allport

Trait theorist known for the concept of functional autonomy -also distinguished between idiographic and nomothetic approaches to personality

Cattell

Trait theorist who used factor analysis to study personality

Ames Room

Trapezoidal room that creates an optical illusion with one large and one small person

absolute and relative

Two types of refractory periods

Memory

Type of disorder that doesn't have its own category in the DSMV

Variable ratio

Type of reinforcement schedule that is very resistant to extinction and is connected to addictive gambling behavior

Minimal Justification Effect

When the external justification is minimal, you will reduce your dissonance by changing internal cognitions (task wasn't actually boring) When behavior is justified by means of external inducements (i.e. money), there is no need to change internal cognitions (task was boring)

Hering illusion

When the horizontal lines are actually straight, they appear to be bowed.

False consensus bias

When we assume everyone else agrees with what we do, even if they do not

field dependence

Witkin: The extent to which an individual's problem solving is influenced by salient but irrelevant aspects of the context in which the problem occurs -more influenced by opinions of others

Field independence

Witkin: The extent to which an individual's problem solving is not influenced by salient but irrelevant aspects of the context in which the problem occurs

theory of isomorphism

Wolfgang Kohler: suggests that there is a one-to-one correspondence between the object in the perceptual field and the pattern of stimulation in the brain

systematic desensitization

Wolpe: A type of exposure therapy for phobias that associates a pleasant relaxed state with gradually increasing anxiety-triggering stimuli in a hierarchy

XX vs XY sex chromosome

XX: female XY: male -mothers (egg) give the X, fathers (sperm) give the X or Y

Rods

_____ allow you to see in a poorly lit environment

three

______ morphemes are in the word "dreamers"

Blacky Pictures Test

a CHILDREN projective technique designed specifically to assess information relevant to psychosexual stages using 12 cartoon pictures

token economies

a behavioral technique in which desirable behaviors are reinforced with a token, such as a small chip or fake coin, which can be exchanged for privileges or taken away for undesired behaviors

self-fulfilling prophecy

a belief that leads to its own fulfillment

Somatotype

a body-type classification system that describes people as a mesomorph, ectomorph, or endomorph; William Sheldon

Wernicke's area

a brain area involved in language comprehension and expression: usually in the left temporal lobe -understand spoken language (memory processing, emotional control, and language)

backward masking

a brief visual stimulus after another brief visual stimulus that leads to failure to remember the first

Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder

a childhood disorder marked by severe recurrent temper outbursts along with a persistent irritable or angry mood

antipsychotics

a class of psychotropic medications used for the treatment of schizophrenia and other disorders that involve psychosis -block receptor sites for dopamine

simultaneous conditioning

a classical conditioning procedure in which the CS and the US are presented at the same time on each conditioning trial

flashbulb memory

a clear memory of an emotionally significant moment or event

factor

a cluster of variables highly correlated with each other and assumed to be measuring the same thing

cochlea

a coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear through which sound waves trigger nerve impulses

monoamine (biogenic amines) neurotransmitters

a compound having a single amine group in its molecule (epinephrine, norepinephrine, dopamine, serotonin)

pyromania

a compulsion to set things on fire

standard deviation

a computed measure of how much scores vary around the mean score: square root of the variance

schema

a concept or framework that organizes and interprets information

Kluver-Bucy syndrome

a condition, brought about by bilateral amygdala damage, that is characterized by dramatic emotional changes including reduction in fear and anxiety: hypersexuality

spreading activation model

a connectionist theory proposing that people organize general knowledge based on their individual experiences -the closer the items, the more related

kleptomania

a continual urge to steal regardless of economic motive

motion parallax

a depth cue in which there is a variation in apparent speed and motion (car ride) -when looking at a fixed point, objects closer to you appear to move in the same direction -perceived speed the objects appear to move depends on how close the object is to the point

texture gradient

a depth cue where variations in perceived texture as a function of distance - the more distant parts of a scene appear to have smaller, denser elements -sudden changes in texture signals change in distance or direction

stereotaxic instrument

a device for the precise placement of electrodes in the brain to create lesions in animals

stereoscope

a device that gives the impression of depth to a flat picture by presenting each eye a separate but slightly different picture

cohort differences

a disadvantage of cross-sectional studies because results can be influenced by this

Trichotillomania

a disorder characterized by the repeated pulling out of one's own hair

body dysmorphic disorder

a disorder characterized by the unrealistic perception of physical flaws

impulse control disorders

a disorder in which a person acts on an irresistible, but potentially harmful, impulse (not elsewhere classified)

Hoarding Disorder

a disorder in which individuals feel compelled to save items and become very distressed if they try to discard them, resulting in an excessive accumulation of items

cyclothymic disorder

a disorder marked by numerous periods of mild hypomanic symptoms and mild depressive symptoms (not quite bipolar disorder)

premenstrual dysphoric disorder

a disorder marked by repeated episodes of significant depression and related symptoms during the week before menstruation

reversible figure

a drawing that is compatible with two interpretations that can shift back and forth

Chlorpromazine

a drug that reduces the symptoms of schizophrenia by blocking dopamine D2 receptors

Slippery Slope

a fallacy which assumes that taking a first step will lead to subsequent steps that cannot be prevented

myelin sheath

a fatty tissue layer that insulates the axons of some neurons -enables vastly greater transmission speed as neural impulses hop from one node to the next

blood-brain barrier

a filtering mechanism of the capillaries that carry blood to the brain and spinal cord tissue, blocking the passage of certain substances.

implosion therapy

a form of behavior therapy involving intensive recollection and review of anxiety-producing situations or events in a patient's life in an attempt to develop more appropriate responses to similar situations in the future -forcing client to imagine the feared object

persistent depressive disorder

a form of depression that is not severe enough to be diagnosed as major depressive disorder: formerly known as dysthymia

active speech

a form of expression that involves speaking or taking some other physical action such as parading with a banner; Katherine Nelson

Cretinism

a form of mental retardation that occurs in children whose mothers experienced iodine deficiency during pregnancy

Scatterplot

a graphed cluster of dots, each of which represents the values of two variables

Phenothiazine

a group of antihistamine drugs that became the first group of effective antipsychotic medications

innate releasing mechanism

a hypothetical neural mechanism thought to control an innate response to a sign stimulus

democratic leadership

a leadership style that promotes the active participation of workers in taking decisions; more satisfying, cohesive, motivational, and interest

secondary reinforcement

a learned reinforcing stimulus (i.e. money); often learned through society

Free-recall learning

a list of items is learned, and then must be recalled in any order with no cue

z-score

a measure of how many standard deviations you are away from the norm (average or mean)

mental age

a measure of intelligence test performance devised by Binet: the chronological age that most typically corresponds to a given level of performance

method of savings

a measure of retention in which the difference between the number of repetitions originally required to learn a list and the number of repetitions required to relearn the list after a certain amount of time has elapsed is calculated

prototype

a mental image or representative best example of a category

test-retest method

a method of calculating reliability by repeating the same measure at two or more points in time

CAT scan

a method of creating static images of the brain through computerized axial tomography

elaborative rehearsal

a method of transferring information from STM into LTM by making that information meaningful in some way

Model of Helping

a model based on orders of stages that includes noticing, interpretation, perception of responsibility, knowing how to help, and actually helping; Latane & Darley

Elaboration Likelihood Model of Persuasion (Petty & Cacioppo)

a model that predicts responses to persuasive messages by distinguishing between the central (important issue) and the peripheral (not important/not heard) routes to persuasion

echoic memory

a momentary sensory memory of auditory stimuli: if attention is elsewhere, sounds and words can still be recalled within 3 or 4 seconds

Lithium Carbonate

a mood stabilizing chemical used to counteract symptoms of mood swings and mania in bipolar disorder

Neuron

a nerve cell: the basic building block of the nervous system

semantic memory

a network of associated facts and concepts that make up our general knowledge of the world (meanings of words and concepts)

action potential

a neural impulse: a brief electrical charge that travels down an axon

suprachiasmatic nucleus

a pair of cell clusters in the hypothalamus that controls circadian rhythm; damage could cause interference with the biological clock

Tegmentum

a part of the midbrain that is involved in movement and arousal (analgesic effects of opiates)

insecure-avoidant attachment (Type A)

a pattern of attachment in which an infant avoids connection with the caregiver, as when the infant seems not to care about the caregiver's presence, departure, or return example: not distressed when left alone, avoids contact with mother upon her return

secure attachment (Type B)

a pattern of attachment in which an infant obtains both comfort and confidence from the presence of his or her caregiver example: mildly distressed during separations, greet mother positively upon return

insecure-resistant attachment (Type C)

a pattern of attachment in which the child shows little exploratory behavior when the parent is present, great distress when the parent leaves the room, and resists contact with mother upon the parent's return

active phase

a period in the course of schizophrenia in which psychotic symptoms are present

prodromal phase

a period in the course of schizophrenia of poor adjustment (vague symptoms and malaise) - can serve as a warning of more symptoms to come but may not be noticed

N-Ach

a person is high in _________ when he takes personal responsibility for solving problems, setting moderate goals, not too hard nor too easy. There needs to be a balance for accomplishment and satisfaction to occur.

borderline personality disorder

a personality disorder characterized by disturbances in identity, in affect, in relationships, in impulse control & a fear of abandonment -suicide attempts and self-mutilation are common

narcissistic personality disorder

a personality disorder characterized by need for admiration, exaggerated ideas of self-importance and achievements, preoccupation with fantasies of success, and arrogance -low self-esteem and are constantly concerned with others view them

schizoid personality disorder

a personality disorder characterized by social detachment and little expression of emotion

antisocial personality disorder

a personality disorder in which a person exhibits a disregard for wrongdoing, even toward friends and family members and an absence of guilt -illegal acts, deceitfulness, aggressiveness, and lack of remorse (serial killers)

Psychoticism

a personality pattern typified by aggressiveness and interpersonal hostility

Myers-Briggs

a personality test that taps 4 characteristics and classifies people into 1 of 16 personality types; Jung

experimenter bias

a phenomenon that occurs when a researcher's expectations or preferences about the outcome of a study influence the results obtained

bogus pipeline

a phony lie-detector device that is sometimes used to get respondents to give truthful answers to sensitive questions

excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP)

a postsynaptic potential that depolarizes the neuronal membrane, making the neuron more likely to fire an action potential

inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP)

a postsynaptic potential that hyperpolarizes the neuronal membrane, making a cell less likely to fire an action potential

Peter Principle

a principle of organizational life according to which every employee within a hierarchy tends to rise to his or her level of incompetence which is where they remain

meta-analysis

a procedure for statistically combining the results of many different research studies to come to a general conclusion

higher-order conditioning

a procedure in which the conditioned stimulus in one conditioning experience is paired with a new neutral stimulus, creating a second (often weaker) conditioned stimulus.

forward conditioning

a procedure that occurs when the conditioned stimulus signals that the unconditioned stimulus is coming

Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)

a projective test of 20 pictures in which people express their inner feelings and interests through the stories they make up about ambiguous scenes -no standardized score, similar to Rorschach

nonequivalent control group design

a quasi-experimental study that has at least one treatment group and one comparison group, but participants have not been randomly assigned to the two groups

personality inventory

a questionnaire (often with true-false or agree-disagree items) on which people respond to 100-500 items designed to gauge a wide range of feelings and behaviors; used to assess selected personality traits.

personality inventory

a questionnaire (often with true-false or agree-disagree items) on which people respond to items designed to gauge a wide range of feelings and behaviors: used to assess selected personality traits. -people may not tell truth

difference threshold is expressed how?

a ratio

generation-recognition model

a recall task taps the same basic process of accessing information in memory as does a recognition task BUT recall is an additional step (to generate the information rather than recognizing it)

postsynaptic receptor

a receptor molecule in the postsynaptic membrane of a synapse that contains a binding site for a neurotransmitter

power law

a relationship between two quantities such that one is proportional to a fixed power of the other.

postive correlation

a relationship between two variables in which both variables either increase or decrease together

Learning

a relatively permanent change in an organism's behavior due to experience

Catharsis

a release of emotional tension; Freud; also abreaction

skewed distribution

a representation of scores that lack symmetry around their average value -mean, median, and mode NOT identical

within-subjects design

a research design that uses each participant as his or her own control: for example, the behavior of an experimental participant before receiving treatment might be compared to his or her behavior after receiving treatment

field study

a research investigation carried out in a naturally occurring setting

correlational study

a research project designed to discover the degree to which two variables are related to each other: IV not manipulated

Iris

a ring of muscle tissue that forms the colored portion of the eye around the pupil and controls the size of the pupil therefore control amount of light coming in

Neobehaviorism

a school of psychology based on the general principles of behaviorism but broader and more flexible in concept. It stresses experimental research and laboratory analyses in the study of overt behavior and in various subjective phenomena that cannot be directly observed and measured, such as fantasies, love, stress, empathy, trust, and personality; psychologists belonging to this school believe that behavior can be modified by rewards or punishments; Pavlov

California Psychological Inventory (CPI)

a self-report inventory that assesses personality characteristics in normal populations (high school and college students) -20 scales

partial report procedure

a sensory memory task in which observers are cued to report only certain items in a display of items (based on a tone) *nine item limit actually for capacity of sensory memory*

whole-report procedure

a sensory memory task that requires observers to report everything they see in a display of items in 1 second: found sensory memory can hold 4 items

graded potential

a shift in the electrical charge at the axon hillock that fires impulses down axon to terminal buttons

supernormal stimulus

a sign stimulus whose features have been artificially enhanced or exaggerated to produce an abnormally large modal action pattern

Loudness

a sound's intensity (subjective experience)

REM sleep (waves)

a stage of sleep characterized by rapid eye movements, dreaming, fast, irregular EEGs, and a high level of brain activity -similar to alpha levels, when we have dreams

operational definition

a statement of the procedures (operations) used to define research variables. For example, human intelligence may be operationally defined as what an intelligence test measures.

correlation coefficient

a statistical index of the relationship between two variables (from -1 to +1) -cannot be anything except from -1 to +1

factor analysis

a statistical procedure that identifies clusters of related items (called factors) on a test: used to identify different dimensions of performance that underlie a person's total score.

multiple regression analysis

a statistical technique which analyzes the linear relationship between a dependent variable and multiple independent variables by estimating coefficients for the equation for a straight line (ie: using SAT to predictor college GPA)

t-test

a statistical test used to evaluate the size and significance of the difference between two groups' means

unconditioned stimulus

a stimulus that can reflexively elicit a response

conditioned stimulus

a stimulus that elicits a response only after learning has taken place

factoral design

a study in which there are two or more independent variables, or factors

Sample

a subset of the population

dissociative amnesia

a sudden loss of memory for important personal information that is too extensive to be due to normal forgetting: not due to neurological disorder

correlation matrix

a table showing the relationships among discrete measures

dichotic listening

a task to study selective attention in which people wearing headphones hear different messages presented to each ear -show people listen to one message and tune out the other

dream interpretation

a technique used in psychoanalysis in which the content of dreams is analyzed for unconscious conflicts, disguised or symbolic wishes, meanings, and motivations

cluster analysis

a technique used to divide an information set into mutually exclusive groups such that the members of each group are as close together as possible to one another and the different groups are as far apart as possible

regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF)

a technique used to record patterns of neural activity based on blood flow to different areas of the brain measured using detection of inhaled radioactive marker (CAT, PET, and MRI scans) -noninvasive

activation effect

a temporary change in behavior resulting from the administration of a hormone to an adult animal (ie: gonadal hormones altering sexual behavior)

mental set

a tendency to approach a problem in one particular way, often a way that has been successful in the past -past experiences influence problem solving

confirmation bias

a tendency to search for information that confirms one's preconceptions (ie: Jake believing his friend lied to him, so he reviews they texts looking for instances in which he lied)

Hypothesis

a tentative statement about the relationship between two or more variables

achievement test

a test designed to assess what a person has learned

aptitude test

a test designed to predict a person's future performance through training

psychodynamic theory

a theory of behavior that emphasizes internal conflicts, motives, and unconscious forces

Performance = Drive x Habit

a theory where individuals are first motivated by drive, and then they act according to old successful habits. They will do what has worked in the past to satisfy the drive; Clark Hull

Performance = Expectation x Value

a theory where individuals are motivated by goals that they think they might actually meet; Tolman

existential therapy

a therapy that encourages clients to accept responsibility for their lives and to live with greater meaning and value; lacks well-defined therapeutic techniques

instrumental

a thief harming a store clerk so he can steal money is an example of ______ aggression

olfactory epithelium

a thin layer of tissue, within the nasal cavity, that contains the receptors for smell

Raymond Cattell

a trait theorist who used factor analysis with hundreds of surface traits to identify which traits were related to each other. By this process, he identified sixteen source traits, and by factor analysis reduced fifteen of these into five global factors: extroversion, anxiety, receptivity, accommodation, and self-control

PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder)

a trauma-related disorder characterized by haunting memories, nightmares, social withdrawal, jumpy anxiety, numbness of feeling, and/or insomnia that lingers for four weeks or more after a traumatic experience

matched-subjects design

a type of correlated-groups design in which subjects are matched between conditions on variable(s) that the researcher believes is (are) relevant to the study -ensures both groups are approximately equal on the matching variable (i.e. intelligence, PTSD severity)

tertiary circular reactions

a type of feedback loops in sensorimotor intelligence that involves active exploration and experimentation -Infants explore a range of new activities, varying their responses as a way of learning about the world. "little scientist"

operant conditioning

a type of learning in which behavior is strengthened by reinforcement or diminished if punished

classical conditioning

a type of learning in which one learns to link two or more stimuli and anticipate events

schizophrenigenic mother

a type of mother who causes children to become schizophrenic; Fromm & Reichman

confounding variable

a variable other than the independent variable that might produce an effect in an experiment

mediating variable

a variable that helps explain the relationship between two other variables (violent television -> arousal*** -> aggression

PET scan

a visual display of brain activity that detects where a radioactive form of glucose goes while the brain performs a given task

Style of Life

according to Adler, represents the manifestation of the creative self and describes a person's unique way of achieving superiority

creative self

according to Adler, the force by which each individual shapes his uniqueness and establishes his personality

Oedipus complex

according to Freud, a boy's sexual desires toward his mother and feelings of jealousy, hatred, and fears of castration for the rival father -feels guilty about his wishes and resolves conflict by over-identifying with father -de-eroticizes his sexual energy into socially acceptable things (collecting things or focusing on schoolwork)

Electra Complex

according to Freud, term for the desire a female child feels toward the male parent (penis envy) -girls less sex-typed and less morally developed

peak experiences

according to Maslow, profound deeply moving experiences that have important and lasting effects that self-actualized people have

consistency paradox

according to Mischel, the persistent belief that human behavior is more consistent than is indicated by experimental evidence

joint

according to education psychologists, cooperative learning involves _______ effort among students

innate releasing

according to ethologists, fixed patterns of responses to particular classes of stimuli as a result of ________ __________ mechanism

id

according to freud, a child who grabs food from another child because of hunger is driven by what?

axon

action potential is electrically transmitted along this structure to the terminal buttons

behavioral schemata

action tendencies (reflexes)

short-term memory

activated memory that holds a few items briefly before the information is stored or forgotten (i.e. the seven digits of a phone number while dialing)

distal stimulus

actual object or event in the world

surface structure of a sentence

actual word order of the words in a sentence

factors involved in brightness perception

adaptation and simultaneous brightness contrast

MMPI-2

added content scales (more theoretical)

pituitary gland

adrenocorticotropic hormone is secreted by which gland

Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS)

adult IQ test

complex cell responses give information about

advanced orientation information like movement

18 months

age at which a child knows dozens of words but only speaks 1 at a time; 1 word may have multiple meanings example: apple could mean the object, they want one, is it an apple? etc

18-22 months

age at which children begin combining words; 2 word sentences

2.5 to 3 years old

age at which children being producing longer sentences, their vocab expands, and errors of growth occur

30

age at which personality changes do not happen as often anymore

5 years old

age in which language is usually mastered and suggests language acquisition is fairly simple

damage to association area of visual cortex

agnosia

criterion of statistical significance

aka "alpha level"--usually 5%

laissez-faire leadership

allows the group to function more or less on its own; less efficient, organized, and satisfying

eye movements and cognition

an "on-line" (measured as subject is actually performing tasks) measure of information processing -used to study reading and language comprehension

korkasoff's syndrome

an alcohol related disorder marked by extreme confusion, memory impairment, and other neurological symptoms caused by lack of b1 (thiamin)

generalized anxiety disorder

an anxiety disorder in which a person is continually tense, apprehensive, and in a state of autonomic nervous system arousal: constant anxiety

obsessive-complusive disorder

an anxiety-related disorder characterized by unwanted repetitive thoughts (obsessions) and/or actions (compulsions) that causes significant impairment

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

motor cortex

an area at the rear of the frontal lobes that controls voluntary movements and commands muscles (projection area)

frequency distribution

an arrangement of data that indicates how often a particular score or observation occurs

covariation model

an attribution theory in which people make causal inferences to explain why other people and ourselves behave in a certain way; concerned with both social perception and self-perception; Kelley

bulimia nervosa

an eating disorder characterized by episodes of overeating, usually of high-calorie foods, followed by vomiting, laxative use, fasting, or excessive exercise -90% females

adjustment disorder

an emotional disturbance caused by ongoing stressors within the range of common experience

criterion validity

an empirical form of measurement validity that establishes the extent to which a measure is correlated with a behavior or concrete outcome that it should be related to

double-blind experiment

an experiment in which neither the experimenter nor the participants know which participants received which treatment -double blind takes away experimenter bias

3 ways to resist persuasion

analogy of inoculation, belief perseverance, and reactance

male sex development requires the presence of what?

androgens

altruism

animal's behavior decreases its reproductive fitness

Antisocial Acts

anonymity in a social situation produces this ___ ___

Two parts of the pituitary gland

anterior and posterior

SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors)

antidepressants that can treat serotonin disorders by inhibiting the reuptake of serotonin (Prozac)

Vasopressin

antidiuretic hormone that helps regulate water levels in the body and blood pressure

Phenothiazines

antipsychotic drugs that reduce sensitivity of dopamine receptors to treat schizophrenia

I, III

anxiety disorder would be classified in axis ____ while diabetes would be classified in axis _____

extraneous variable

any aspect of the experimetal setting that must be held constant to prevent unplanned environmental variation

Environmental

any differences between monozygotic twins must be _____ factors

punishment

any event or object that, when following a response, makes that response less likely to happen again -send child to room when they draw on the walls to decrease the behavior

Reinforcement

any event that strengthens the behavior it follows (reward or punishment) *people will act aggressively because they may expect a reward (material benefits, social approval, attention)*

Neo-freudian Approach to psychoanalysis

approach that places emphasis on current interpersonal relationships rather than child experiences & psychosexuality -cheaper, less time, modification to psychoanalysis

damage to association area of motor cortex

apraxia

Kulpe and experimental psychology

believed that there could be imageless thought (Wundt thought that there could be no thought without an image)

somatosensory cortex

area at the front of the parietal lobe that registers and processes touch, pressure, temperature, and pain sensory signals

Louis Thurstone

argued against g in favor of several primary mental abilities, used factor analysis

Neurons in the motor cortex

arranged systematically according to the parts of the body which they are connected (starts with toes, ends with face) -some areas have more space because more muscles to control

supernormal sign stimulus

artificial stimuli that exaggerate the naturally occurring sign stimulus or releaser; stickleback fish (red belly = fights); herring gull chicks red spot on beak is pecked at

achievement tests

assess what one knows or can do now (learning content and skill)

random assignment

assigning participants to experimental and control conditions by chance, thus minimizing preexisting differences between those assigned to the different groups

adaptation take place through what two complementary processes?

assimilation and accomodation

brain imaging and cognition

associate cognitive processes to various parts of the brain

Guilford's test of divergent thinking

attempt to measure creativity by testing divergent thinking: attempting to produce as many creative answers to a question as possible

Central route of persuasion

attitude change path in which interested people focus on the arguments, evaluate arguments by generating counter-arguments, and only strong arguments will change their minds

most common hallucination

auditory

Lewin Leadership Styles

autocratic, democratic, laissez-faire

Metacognition

awareness and understanding of one's own thought processes.

Are axons or dendrites myelinated?

axons

Where is the pituitary gland located?

base of the brain

conditioned aversion

based on classical conditioning: learning that occurs when negative associative memories cause something to subsequently be experienced as unpleasant (smoking, fetishes)

encoding for long term memory

based on meaning

contingency management therapy

based on operant conditioning: a therapeutic approach used in the treatment of drug addiction and other behavior problems that works to reduce the bad behavior through a highly structured reinforcement and punishment program; (i.e. behavioral contracts, time-outs, token economics, Premack principle)

frequency theory

basilar membrane vibrates as a whole: the theory that the rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, thus enabling us to sense its pitch

Altruism

behavior marked by unselfish concern for the welfare of others

John Watson

behaviorism; emphasis on external behaviors of people and their reactions on a given situation; famous for Little Albert study in which baby was taught to fear a white rat

Bandura

behaviorist theorist known for his social learning theory -did modeling experiment using "Bobo" doll and studied observational learning

Cultural Truisms

beliefs that are rarely attacked SO especially vulnerable to attack because we rarely have to defend them

Wundt & experimental psychology

believed experimental psychology had limited use and that methodology could not be used to study the higher mental processes

Watson

believed psychology should be an objective study of behavior wherein mind and consciousness serve no purpose

Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors (MAO)

block the metabolic breakdown of dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin

two major types of psychological processing of object recognition

bottom-up processing and top-down processing

Central Nervous System (CNS)

brain and spinal cord

central nervous system

brain and spinal cord

medial amygdala

brain structure that inhibits parental behavior in rodents

amygdala

brain structure that plays a crucial role in regulating and moderating an organism's emotional responses and learning about emotional events

theta waves

brain waves indicating the early stages of sleep

beta waves

brain waves that cause fast EEG activity -person is awake and alert

alpha waves

brain waves that indicate a state of relaxation with eyes closed (more synchronized waves) -person is still awake with slower EEG activity

Industrial Psychology

branch of psychology that studies job characteristics, applicant characteristics, and how to match them; also studies employee training and performance appraisal

electroconvulsive shock therapy

brief electrical shock administered to the brain, usually to reduce depression that does not respond to drug treatments

amino acids

building blocks of proteins

convolutions (gyri)

bumps and folds of the cortex that provide increased cellular mass

sleep spindles

bursts of rapid, rhythmic brain-wave activity

how are experimental hypotheses confirmed?

by disconfirming the null hypothesis

7+/-2 pieces or chunks

capacity of short term memory

efferent fibers

carry motor signals from the CNS to effectors (DOWN)

afferent fibers

carry sensory signals from receptors to the CNS (UP)

representativeness heuristic

categorizing items on the basis of whether they fit the prototypical, stereotypical, or representative image of the category

glial cells

cells in the nervous system that support, nourish, and protect neurons via nutrients, oxygen, insulation, and protection from pathogens

right hemisphere

cerebral hemisphere that controls the left side of the body visual-faces auditory-music language-emotion spatial processing- creativity, sense of direction

left hemisphere

cerebral hemisphere that controls the right side of the body visual: letters, words auditory: language related sounds language: speech, reading, writing, arithmetic movement: complex voluntary movement

Ventricles

chambers filled with cerebrospinal fluid that insulate the brain from shock

power

changing from a two tailed to a one tailed test increases what?

auditory canal

channels sound to the eardrum

Neurotransmitters

chemical messengers that cross the synaptic gaps between neurons when a neuron fires

Anna Freud

child (ego)psychoanalysis: emphasized importance of the *ego* and its constant struggle in relation to the world, to the unconscious, and to the superego -founder of ego psychology

cognitive development theory

children actively construct knowledge as they manipulate and explore their world; symbolic thought develops toward end of the sensorimotor period; Piaget

evidence-based practice

clinical decision making that integrates the best available research with clinical expertise and patient characteristics and preferences

FACS

coding system that can determine genuine emotions

Attitudes

cognition or beliefs, feelings, & behavioral predispositions (opinion statements, likes and dislikes) *key in social psychology*

creativity and problem solving

cognitive ability that results in new ways of viewing problems or situations

dementia

cognitive impairment characterized by loss of intellectual brain function

Walter Cannon

coined the term homeostasis

Walter Cannon

coined the term homeostasis and credited with ANS

Bleuler

coined the term schizophrenia

what do you combine to get perception of depth (stereopsis)

combine binocular disparity and binocular parallax

what do you combine to get perception of depth (stereopsis)?

combine binocular disparity and binocular parallax

400-800nm

common wavelength range of light entering eye

dendrites

component of a neuron that can regenerate

axon

component of a neuron that cannot regenerate

adaptive test

computerized achievement test that adapts to test-taker's ability by assessing the accuracy of previously answered questions

top-down processing

conceptually driven information processing influenced by beliefs and expectancies to recognize the whole object and then recognize the components

Social Psychology

concerned with social behavior, the ways people influence each other's attitudes and behaviors, impact individuals have on one another, social groups have on members, members have on group, and social groups have on other groups

Wernicke's aphasia

condition resulting in the affected person being unable to understand language -lesions in Wernicke's area

inhibitory conditioning

conditioning procedure created by backward conditioning; a type of classical conditioning in which the conditioned stimulus becomes a signal for the absence of the unconditioned stimulus

backward conditioning

conditioning procedure in which the conditioned stimulus is presented after the unconditioned stimulus; pavlov presenting dog with food and then ringing bell; proved to be ineffective

corticospinal tract

connections between brain and spine

Wolfgang Kohler

considered to be the founder of Gestalt Psychology: theory of isomorphism

Balance Theory (Heider)

consistency theory that is concerned with the way 3 elements are related: the person whom we're talking about (symbolized as P), some other person (symbolized as O), and a thing, idea, or some other person (symbolized by X). Balance exists when all three fit together harmoniously. When there isn't balance, there will be stress, and a tendency to remove this stress by achieving balance

differentiated self concept

contains the actual self, ideal self, feared self

types of test validity

content, face, criterion/concurrent, predictive, construct/convergent, and discriminate

inferior colliculus

controls auditory reflexes (hearing) -role in reflexes to sudden noises

central region of parietal lobe

controls spatial processing and manipulation

superior colliculus

controls visual reflexes (seeing)

emotion-focused coping

coping strategies that change the impact of a stressor by changing the emotional reaction to the stressor (ie: trying to feel better about some of his less pleasant duties)

difference between correlation and cause and effect relationship

correlation just shows a possible relationship, not a cause and effect connection

Correlation between affiliation and similarity

correlations found between affiliation & similarity of intelligence, attitudes, education, height, age, religion, SES, habits, and mental health.

Perls, Wertheimer, Koffka

created Gestalt theory

Jung

created analytical theory

Skinner, Pavlov, Wolpe

created behavior therapy

Rogers

created client-centered theory

Festinger

created cognitive dissonance theory and social comparison theory

Back

created cognitive theory

Frankl

created existential theory

Adler

created individual theory

Freud

created psychoanalytical theory

Ellis

created rational emotive therapy

Sternberg's experiential intelligence

creativity

Chomsky: 2 to puberty

critical age period for language development

Interposition (overlap)

cue for depth perception: if an object partially blocks our view of another, we perceive it as closer

demand characteristics

cues in an experiment that tell the participant what behavior is expected -may cause them to perform as expected rather than naturally

intelligence quotient (IQ)

defined originally as the ratio of mental age (ma) to chronological age (ca) multiplied by 100 [thus, IQ = (ma/ca) x 100]. On contemporary intelligence tests, the average performance for a given age is assigned a score of 100.

what did schizophrenia used to be called?

dementia praecox

can axons or dendrites regenerate?

dendrites

do dendrites or axons change over time?

dendrites (change significantly) -axons are stable even with aging

dendrite v. axon function

dendrites are receptors of information while axons are the communication pathway

high reliability test measures are

dependable, reproducible, and consistent

too little norepinephrine

depression

undersupply of serotonin

depression

reactive depression

depression resulting from particular events; noted for likeness to Seligman's learned helplessness

2 types of statistics

descriptive and inferential

E.L. Thorndike's puzzle box

designed with cat in box aimed at escape, once it escapes once, it escapes quicker each time: best explained by the law of effect (trial and error)

Fechner

developed Fechner's law, which expresses the relationship between the intensity of the stimulus and the intensity of the sensation

Stern

developed IQ: an equation to compare mental age to chronological age

Yerkes and Dodson

developed Yerkes-Dodson law which states that performance is best at intermediate levels of arousal

Kraepelin

developed a system in the 19th century for classifying mental disorders

Kohler

developed insight learning based on experiments with chimps trying to get bananas (used insight to assess the situation and problem solve to get the bananas)

Seligman

developed learned helplessness theory of depression

Hering

developed opponent process theory of color vision

Franz Gall and Phrenology

developed phrenology: if a particular trait were well-developed, then a part of the brain responsible for that trait would expand and cause a bulge on the head FALSE

Morgan and Murray

developed the TAT; associated with need to achieve

Craik and Lockhart

developed the levels-of-processing theory of memory as an alternative to the stage theory of memory

Eleanor Gibson and Richard Walk

developed the visual cliff to test depth perception

Cephalocaudal

development from head to tail

Wundt illusion

diamond shape with parallel vertical lines and lines from center connect on sides. parallel lines appear bowed when they are straight because of the converging lines

David Rosenhan

did study in which healthy patients were admitted to psychiatric hospitals and diagnosed with schizophrenia- showed that once you are diagnosed with a disorder, the label, even when behavior indicates otherwise, is hard to overcome in a mental health setting

Olds and Milner

discovered "pleasure-centers" in the limbic system: stimulation creates immense pleasure

External Threats to Prenatal Development

disease, infections, drugs, medicine, maternal malnutrition (protein deficiency), smoking, alcohol, x-rays

dissociative fugue

disorder in which one travels away from home and is unable to remember details of his past, including often his identity: may assume new identity

schizophrenia

disorder that imbalances of dopamine may cause

Wenicke's aphasia

disorder that occurs when there is left temporal lobe damage, speech is fluent but nonsensical

anxiety disorders

disorders caused by issues with GABA

somatoform disorders

disorders characterized by physical symptoms for which no known physical cause exists

Trauma Related Disorders

disorders in which a person experiences long-term problems with adjustment following a traumatic event (new to DSM)

dissociative disorders

disorders in which conscious awareness becomes separated (dissociated) from previous memories, thoughts, and feelings -still have intact sense of reality (not schizophrenia)

mood disorders

disorders in which mood is severely disturbed

bipolar disorders

disorders marked by alternating or intermixed periods of mania and depression

Parasomnias

disorders that relate to abnormal behaviors during sleep

Dyssomnias

disorders that relate to sleep abnormalties

word salad

disorganized speech with no apparent goal or direction (schizophrenia)

dissociative disorders include

dissociative amnesia, dissociative identity disorder, depersonalization/derealization disorder

arbitrary inference

distortion of thinking in which a person draws a conclusion that is not based on any evidence

Personalizing

distortion of thinking in which a person inappropriately takes responsibility

Magnifying/minimizing

distortion of thinking in which a person makes too much or too little our of something

Overgeneralization

distortion of thinking in which a person mistakes isolated incidents for the norm

dichotomous thinking

distortion of thinking in which a person thinks black-and-white

anterograde amnesia

disturbs LTM for events that happen AFTER brain injury occurs -damage of hippocampus

retrograde amnesia

disturbs memory for events that happened BEFORE brain injury occurred

split-half reliability

dividing the test into two equal halves and assessing how consistent the scores are (80% positive correlation is high)

amygdala lesions

docility and hypersexuality

behavioral stimulants

drug category that increases motor activity and counteracts fatigue

Alcohol

drug that affects the cerebellum

Opium

drug that binds directly to opiate receptors

anesthetics

drug that depresses the reticular formation to cause unconsciousness

Antidepressants

drugs that combat depression by affecting the levels or activity of neurotransmitters in the brain to elevate mood, increase activity, appetite, and improve sleep

Antagonist

drugs that decrease the effects of a specific neurostransmitter; Botox

Barbiturates

drugs that depress central nervous system activity, reducing anxiety but impairing memory and judgement (sedatives)

Agonist

drugs that increase the action of a neurotransmitter; SSRIs

Amphetamines

drugs that stimulate neural activity in CNS, causing sped-up body functions and associated energy and mood changes -stimulate receptors for dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin

what results in loss of detail?

each ganglion cell represents combined activity of rods and cones

Thorndike

early psychologist who studied learning: functionalist (how mind functions in adapting to the environment) and behaviorist -law of effect

telegraphic speech

early speech stage in which a child speaks like a telegram—"go car"—using mostly nouns and verbs.

neural transmission

electrochemical communication within and between neurons and the final destination

Projection

electrochemical energy is sent to various projection areas in the brain along various neural pathways and processed by nervous system

hippocampus

encoding of new memories is most likely to be disrupted by damage to which neural structure

deep processing

encoding semantically, based on the meaning of the words; tends to yield the best retention in the concrete operational stage

3 mental processes of memory

encoding, storage, retrieval

Asylum Reform

end inhumane treatment of people who were mentally ill, separate from criminals.

striving towards superiority when socially oriented (leads to endeavors that benefit all people) leads to what?

enhances the personality

manic episode

experience marked by dramatically elevated mood, decreased need for sleep, increased energy, inflated self-esteem, increased talkativeness, and irresponsible behavior -rapid onset and more brief than depressive episodes

placebo effect

experimental results caused by expectations alone: any effect on behavior caused by the administration of an inert substance or condition, which the recipient assumes is an active agent.

external validity

extent to which we can generalize findings to real-world settings

catatonic motor behavior (schizophrenia)

extreme behaviors characteristic of some people living with schizophrenia. Spontaneous movement and activity may be greatly reduced orpatient may maintain a rigid posture, refusing to be moved. On the other extreme may include useless or bizarre movements not caused by any external stimuli.

Outliers

extreme values that don't appear to belong with the rest of the data -median and mode stay the same but mean changes drastically

eating disorders

extreme, harmful eating behaviors that can cause serious illness or even death

both orientations are present in the personality but normally one is dominant

extroversion and introversion

Cattell's global factors

extroversion, anxiety, receptivity, accommodation , and self-control

source traits

extroversion, anxiety, receptivity, accommodation, self-control; Cattell

chunking

facilitates memory by clumping items together

non-sensory factors

factors based in experience, motives, and expectations

type 2 error

failing to reject a false null hypothesis: beta

sunk costs fallacy

fallacy that causes continued commitment because a person has already invested in a course of action and does not recognize what they invested initially is sunk (gone)

Clark Hull's theory of motivation (drive reduction theory)

goal of behavior is to reduce biological drives and reinforcement happens when a drive is reduced

syntax

grammar and sentence structure

Chomsky's theory on grammar

grammar is a formal device with a finite set of rules that generates an infinite set of well-formed sentences: we're born with a capacity to learn language -deep and surface grammatical structure, transformational rules

forgetting curve

graphs retention and forgetting over time

Social Loafing

group phenomenon for the tendency of people in a group to exert less effort toward attaining a common goal than when alone

mesomorphy body type

hard, muscular, and rectangular

Vitamin A deficiency and sight

have hard time seeing in the dark

Bimodal

having two modes, or most common scores

George Kelly

he believed (personal construct theory) our personality consists of our thoughts about ourselves, including our biases, errors, mistakes, and false conclusions -individual is a scientist

auditory hallucinations

hearing voices, noises, music, or sounds that are not actually real: most common delusions

2 types of prosocial behavior

helping behavior and altruism

where are the three major divisions on the brain located?

hindbrain (base), midbrain (on top of base), and forebrain (closer to top)

what two structures form the brainstem

hindbrain and midbrain

which brain structures were the first to develop?

hindbrain and midbrain b/c necessary for survival

brain divided into what 3 major divisions?

hindbrain, midbrain, and forebrain

layers of neurons between receptors and optic nerve

horizontal, amacrine, bipolar cells, and ganglion cells

epinephrine acts as both a neurotransmitter and a ____

hormone

catecholomines

hormones produced by the adrenal glands, which sit on top of the kidneys.

contralerally

how the cerebral hemispheres communicate with the side of the body (opposite side of body) example: right side of brain controls left side of body

perception of form

how we abstract perceptual objects (like a book) out of everything appearing on our retina

construct validity

how well performance on the test fits the theoretical framework related to what the test is supposed to measure

Muller-Lyer Illusion

illusion of line length that is distorted by inward-turning or outward-turning corners on the ends of the lines, causing lines of equal length to appear to be different

motion aftereffect

illusion of motion of a stationary object that occurs after prolonged exposure to a moving pattern: object will seem like it is going in the opposite direction that it was

autokinetic effect

illusion that a stationary point of light in a dark room is moving because there is no frame of reference

icon

image in visual memory that lasts for about 1 second; Ulric Neisser

Apraxia

impaired ability to carry out motor activities despite intact motor function (not paralysis just disorganized) -damage to association area of motor cortex

aphasia

impairment of language, usually caused by left hemisphere damage either to Broca's area or Wernicke's area

damage to the prefrontal cortex

impairs decision making, more impulsive, less in control, depressed, vulgar/inappropriate

connotations

implied meanings

neutral stimulus

in classical conditioning, a stimulus that elicits no response before conditioning example: ringing a bell

conditioned stimulus

in classical conditioning, an originally neutral stimulus that, after association with an unconditioned stimulus, comes to trigger a conditioned response

conditioned response

in classical conditioning, the learned response to a previously neutral (but now conditioned) stimulus (CS)

behavioral contract

in contingency management therapy, negotiated agreement that explicitly states the behavioral change that is desired and indicates consequences of certain acts

variable ratio

in operant conditioning, a reinforcement schedule that reinforces a response after an unpredictable number of responses (i.e. slot machines)

variable interval

in operant conditioning, a reinforcement schedule that reinforces a response at unpredictable time intervals (i.e. parent responding to child from the child's point of view)

fixed ratio

in operant conditioning, a reinforcement schedule that reinforces a response only after a specified number of responses (i.e. food every 5 lever pulls)

fixed interval

in operant conditioning, a reinforcement schedule that reinforces a response only after a specified time has elapsed (i.e. going to office to pick up bimonthly check)

Chaining

in operant conditioning, combining the steps of a sequence to progress toward a final action (ie learning the alphabet)

discriminative stimulus

in operant conditioning, stimulus condition that indicated that the organism's behavior will have consequences example: pigeon becks key to receive pellet, only receive pellet when a light is on, light is the SD (discriminative stimulus)

distance, attractiveness, attitude, reciprocity

in order of importance -- levels of attraction

Resistance

in psychoanalysis, the blocking from consciousness of anxiety-laden material -example: forgetting parts or dreams or missing a therapy session indicates resistance and is subject to analysis

conception

in the fallopian tubes: where the egg is fertilized by sperm

Thalamus

in the forebrain: serves as a relay station for incoming sensory information (all senses except smell) -sorts the sensory information and transmits them to the right places in the cerebral cortex

semantic priming

in the task, when word pairings are semantically related (nurse-doctor), the recognition response time is quicker

Prosopagnosia

inability to recognize faces

visual agnosia

inability to recognize objects (can see but not associate) -damage to association area of visual cortex

if the object size remains constant: the closer the object, the _____ the visual angle and retinal size

larger

Frustration-Aggression Hypothesis

increased frustration = increased aggression

white myelin

increases the speed of the electrical impulses

recall

independently reproducing the information that you have previously been exposed to

standard error of measurement

index of how much, on average, we expect a person's observed score to vary from the score the person is capable of receiving based on actual ability -best SEM is 0

mental retardation

indicated by IQ of 70 or below. -mild: 55-70 -moderate: 40-55 -severe: 25-40 -profound: < 25

delirium

indicated by disturbed consciousness and cognition

learning disorders

indicated by school achievement or standardized scores at least two standard deviations below the mean for the appropriate age and IQ

developmental disorders

indicated by severe problems with social skills, communication, and interests (i.e. autism)

Charles Spearman

individual differences in intelligence are largely due to variations in the amount of general, unitary factor (g) and second factor to describe individual differences in ability in performing specific tasks (s)

Habituation

infants: new stimulus is presented and the infant stops responding to it eventually. different stimulus presented and infant responds to it = can perceive difference between new and old stimulus

proximal stimulus

information our sensory receptors receive about the object ( image on the retina)

SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors)

inhibits serotonin reuptake and increases supply of serotonin -ex: Luvox, Paxilo, Prozac, Zoloft

cochlea, semicircular canals, vestibule

inner ear parts

what are the propelling aspect's of Freud's dynamic theory of personality?

instincts

Keller and Marion Breland experiment

instinctual drift: tried to train raccoon to pick up coins and put them in a piggy bank -reinforced when they picked them up -but racoons couldn't learn past their instinct to rub the coins together (like they rub crayfish in the wild)

cohort limitations

limitations of any longitudinal study -cost -lose people -some disease outcomes too rare

James Cattell

introduced mental testing to the US

Bleuler

introduced the term "schizophrenia" "Splitting of the mind"

Frequency is _____ related to wavelength

inversely (shorter the wavelength, the higher the frequency)

Rosenhan

investigated the effect of being labeled mentally ill by having pseudopatients admitted into mental hospitals

Kahneman and Tversky

investigated the use of heuristics in decision-making: studied the availability heuristic and the representativeness heuristic

Norm-referenced testing

involves assessing an individual's performance in terms of how that individual performs in comparison to others (test norms) -problem: norms change frequently

3 prominent theories of emotion

james-lange theory, cannon-bard theory, and schachter-singer theory

metamemory

knowledge about memory

Noam Chomsky

language development: disagreed with Skinner about language acquisition, stated there is an infinite # of sentences in a language, humans have an inborn native ability to develop language

cognitive developmental theory of language

language has to do with child's capacity for symbolic thought, language continues to develop according to child's cognitive level (Piaget)

learning theory of language

language is acquired through classical conditioning, operant conditioning, and/or modeling (Skinner)

If the variance between groups is low and the variance within the groups are high, what is the f ratio?

large F, more likely to be significantly significant

law of proximity

law where elements close to one another tend to be perceived as a unit

law of good continuation

law where elements that appear to follow the same pathway tend to be grouped together

Law of Pragnanz

law where perceptual organization will always be "good" (simple, regular, and symmetric) as possible

law of similarity

law where similar elements tend to be grouped together

law of closure

law where the tendency to see incomplete figures as complete

Maslow

leader of humanistic movement

Bandura and personality

learning principles (reinforcement and environment) account for personality

latent learning

learning that occurs but is not apparent until there is an incentive to demonstrate it (ie watching someone play chess but not playing it, playing it later and knowing what to do)

Robert Rescorla

learning- developed contingency model of classical conditioning: classical conditioning was a matter of learning signals for the UCS

post conventional morality phase

level of Kohlberg's stages of moral development in which the child's behavior is governed beyond black and white of laws' attentive to rights and social welfare and making decisions based on abstract ethical principles

pre-conventional morality phase

level of Kohlberg's stages of moral development in which the child's behavior is governed by avoiding punishments and gaining rewards (learn right and wrong)

conventional morality phase

level of Kohlberg's stages of moral development in which the child's behavior is governed bygaining approval and following the law and authority (based on social rules)

medium arousal

level of arousal the Hebb postulated is best for performances

Hypothalamus

lies below the thalamus: directs homeostatic functions (eating, drinking, body temperature), drive behaviors (hunger, thirst, and sex), helps govern the endocrine system via the pituitary gland, and is linked to emotion and reward. -divided into lateral hypothalamus, ventromedial hypothalamus, and anterior hypothalamus

Two types of instincts

life (eros) and death (thanatos)

how does light go through the retina?

light passes through intermediate sensory neurons to reach and stimulate the photoreceptors

not everyone experiences each stage

limitation of Kubler-Ross' stages of coping

neologisms

made up words (schizophrenia)

autocratic leadership

making managerial decisions without consulting others; more hostile, aggressive, and dependent on leader

oversupply of serotonin

mania

too much norepinephrine

mania

Machiavellianism personality traits

manipulative and deceitful

animus archetype

masculine aspects of the female psyche

mean and standard deviation of distribution of z scores

mean=0, standard deviation= 1

ceiling effect

measurement limitation that occurs when the highest possible score or close to the highest score on a test or measurement instrument is reached, thereby decreasing the likelihood that the testing instrument has accurately measured the intended domain

mode, median, mean

measures of central tendency

reproductive isolating mechanisms

mechanisms that prevent interbreeding between different species -provide animal with way of identifying own species (example: calls)

episodic memory

memory for one's personal past experiences

IQ formula

mental age/chronological age x 100

2 impediments on problem solving

mental sets and functional fixedness

PET scan

method of brain imaging using positron emissions used to scan glucose metabolism & measure activity

sociometric techniques

methods for determining who is well liked and popular and who is disliked or neglected in a group

Example of Amphetamine

metyhlphenidate (ritalin)

what is the mesencephalon

midbrain

what do psychoactive drugs do to brain?

modify neurotransmissions

a-ha! experience

moment of insight; Kohler; chimps

Dimensions of Personal Identity

more salient the identity in a particular situation, the more we conform to role expectations of that identity

dopamine

most antipsychotic medications work by blocking receptors for what neurotransmitter?

phonetic errors

motor articulation errors

three strategies to overcome basic anxiety as a child?

moving toward people to obtain the good will of people who can provide security, moving against people to obtain upper hand, and moving away

questions that test recognition

multiple choice

why is REM sleep paradoxical?

muscles are relaxed but other body systems are active

Mesomorph

muscular, athletic body; energetic, aggressive behavior

myelin sheath divisions

myelinated and unmyelinated areas to speed up impulse

Morphine

narcotic drug derived from opium, used to treat severe pain

Horney's Neurotic Needs

need for affection and approval, need for a partner, need to restrict one's life within narrow borders, need for power, need to exploit others, need for prestige, need for personal admiration, need for person achievement, need for self-sufficiency and independence, and need for perfection/unassailability

reflex arcs

neural circuits that control reflexive behavior AND control interneurons

basal ganglia

neural structure where high concentrations of dopamine occurs

axon terminal

neuronal structure where neurotransmitters are released from

motor (efferent) neurons

neurons that carry outgoing motor information from the brain and spinal cord to the muscles and glands -transmit information through efferent fibers

sensory (afferent) neurons

neurons that transmit sensory information from receptors to the spinal cord and brain -transmit information through afferent fibers

Interneurons

neurons within the brain and spinal cord that communicate internally and intervene between the sensory inputs and motor outputs -most numerous and linked to reflexive behavior

Acetylecholine

neurotransmitter released at the neuromuscular junction of skeletal muscle axons to excite the muscle to contract

key and lock neurotransmitters

neurotransmitters can only bind to specific receptor sites (lock and key)

Klein

object relations theorist

psychoanalysis

object relations therapy is most closely related to what type of therapy?

ordinal scale of measurement

observations are ranked in terms of size or magnitude example: 1st highest score, 2nd highest score, 3rd highest score

naturalistic observation

observing and recording behavior in naturally occurring situations without trying to manipulate and control the situation

Scaffolding Learning

occurs when a teacher encourages the student to learn independently and only provides assistance with topics or concepts that are beyond the student's capability

superstitious behavior

occurs when the delivery of a reinforcer or punisher occurs close together in time with an independent behavior; the behavior is accidentally reinforced or punished, increasing the likelihood of that behavior occurring again.

septal rage

occurs when there is damage to the septal area and results in unchecked aggressive and vicious behavior

Walter Mischel and trait theory

offered famous critique of trait theory and its claims: believed that human behavior is largely determined by the characteristics of the situation, not the characteristics of the person

Walter Dill Scott

one of the first to apply psychology to business, specifically in advertising; also involved in helping military implement psychological testing to aid with personnel selection

sympathetic nervous system and parasympathetic nervous system act in ____ to each other

opposite example: SNS accelerates heartbeat and inhibits digestion while PSNS decelerates heartbeat and increases digestion

5 stages of psychosexual development

oral stage, anal stage, phallic stage, latency stage, genital stage

generalization (operant conditioning)

organism's response to similar stimuli is also reinforced -example: pigeon learns to peck for food when a green light is on and will peck for any colored lights esp lights closer to green

clustering

organizing items into related groups during recall from long-term memory

vestibular sacs

organs in the inner ear that connect the semicircular canals and the cochlea and contribute to the body's sense of balance

simple cell responses give information about

orientation and boundaries of an object

Extroversion

orientation toward external, objective world

mother parenting style

parenting style marked by stressing verbal reactions over physical reactions

father parenting style

parenting style marked by vigorous play

temporal lobes function

part of of the cerebral cortex that controls auditory function, speech, and complex visual perceptions: contains Wernicke's area

parietal lobe

part of the cerebral cortex that is responsible for the somatosensory system -rear of frontal lobe

occipital lobes

part of the cerebral cortex that processes visual information -visual cortex & striate cortex

inner ear

part of the ear responsible for both hearing and balance

Telencephalon

part of the forebrain: contains the limbic system, hippocampus, amygdala, and cingulate gyrus

medulla, pons, cerebellum, reticular formation

parts of the hindbrain

criticism of flooding and implosion therapies

patient goes through great deal of anxiety

Bem's gender identity and personality

people can be androgynous so important to separate masculinity and femininity dimensions

semantic differential charts

people plot meanings of words on graph; similar backgrounds plotted similarly; Charles Osgood

Door-in-the-Face Phenomenon

people who refuse a large initial request are more likely to agree to a later smaller request

color constancy

perceiving familiar objects as having consistent color, even if changing illumination alters the wavelengths reflected by the object

3-5%

percentage of ADHD in children

25%

percentage of REM in adulthood

90%

percentage of females who have bulimia nervosa and anorexia nervosa compared to males

ground perception

perception of background on which the figure appears

figure perception

perception of the integrated visual experience that stands out at center of attention (a ball in the foreground)

Ernst Weber

perception: identified just-noticeable-difference (JND) that eventually becomes Weber's law -published De Tactu (investigation of muscle sense)

William Sheldon's Somatotypes

personality assumptions based on body types. (endomorphy, mesomorphy, ectomorphy)

paranoid personality disorder

personality disorder characterized by distrust and suspicion

Schizotypal personality disorder

personality disorder characterized by eccentricity and distorted reality

histrionic personality disorder

personality disorder characterized by excess emotions and attention seeking

obsessive compulsive personality disorder

personality disorder characterized by excessive orderliness and control: perfectionism

avoidant personality disorder

personality disorder characterized by social inhibitions, hypersensitivity, and perceptions of inadequacy

dependent personality disorder

personality disorder characterized by the need to be taken care of: clinging

California Personality Inventory (CPI)

personality measure used for more "normal", less clinical groups than MMPI (common person inventory); 13+

Eysenck and personality

personality theorist who used factor analysis and asserted that personality is largely determined by genes - 2 dimensions where personalities differ: introversion/extroversion & emotional stability/neuroticism - later included psychoticism

linear perspective

perspective that occurs when there is an influence of expectation on perception

Peripheral Communication

persuasive communications that focus on emotions

preattachment phase

phase in the development of attachment from birth to 6 weeks; The infant produces innate signals that bring others to his or her side and is comforted by the interaction that follows regardless of who they see

encoding specificity

phenomenon of remembering something better when the conditions under which we retrieve information are similar to the conditions under which we encoded it

Foot-in-the-Door Phenomenon

phenomenon where people are much more likely to agree to a large request if they first agree to a smaller one

encoding for short-term memory

phonological and acoustic rather than visual example: when asked to recall letters from ST memory, confusions occur with words that sound alike rather than look alike

eidetic memory

photographic memory

hierarchy of needs

physiological/safety, belongingness & love, esteem, and self-actualization

symbolic play

play in which children (1-2 y/o) make believe that objects and toys are other than what they are. Also called pretend play.

parallel play

play in which children (2-3 y/o) play with similar toys in similar ways, but not together

optic chiasm

point at which optic nerve fibers closest to nose (nasal) cross paths in the brain

null hypothesis

population mean is the same as the sample mean

prefrontal lobe

portion of the frontal cortex involved in higher-order thinking (executive function), such as memory, moral reasoning, and planning -governs and integrates numerous cognitive and behavioral processes example: reminds you that you have something to remember, tells you to wake up or relax (with reticular formation)

The nurture side of the nature vs. nurture debate refers to

position that human capabilities are determined by the environment and shaped by experience; individual differences come from environmental and experiential differences

The nature side of the nature vs. nurture debate refers to

position that human capabilities are innate (present at birth), and individual differences come from genetic differences

Ions

positively and negatively charged atoms

Arthur Jensen

postulated a heritability and genetic influence explanation for cultural differences in intelligence (IQ tests)

aptitude tests

predict what one can accomplish through training/predict future performance (intelligence tests)

2 major research methods for studying visual perception in infants

preferential looking and habituation

fetal period

prenatal development stage 3 months after conception until the birth of the child; measurable electrical activity in the brain

embryonic period

prenatal development stage from 2 to 8 weeks after fertilization, during which the major organs and structures of the organism develop

zygote stage

prenatal development stage where sperm fertilizes egg and creates zygote -lasts between the first 10-14 days

Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI)

preschool IQ test

Jung

psychodynamic theorist who broke with Freud over the concept of libido -suggested that the unconscious could be divided into the personal unconscious and the collective unconscious, with archetypes being in the collective unconscious

four areas of personality theories

psychodynamic, behaviourist, phenomenological, type-and-trait

somatic symptom disorder

psychological disorder in which the symptoms take a somatic (bodily) form without apparent physical cause

anxiety disorders

psychological disorders characterized by distressing, persistent anxiety or maladaptive behaviors that reduce anxiety

personality disorders

psychological disorders characterized by inflexible and enduring behavior patterns that impair social functioning -impaired functioning of cognition, emotions, interpersonal functioning, or impulse control

L-dopa side effects

psychotic symptoms in Parkinsons patients

hedonism

pursuit of pleasure, avoidance of pain, especially of the senses

Encoding

putting new information into memory

Timbre

quality of sound (complexity of sound wave or mixture of different frequencies)

Phineas Gage

railroad worker who survived a severe brain injury that dramatically changed his personality and behavior -case played a role in the development of the understanding of the localization of brain function

Pick's disease

rare neurological disorder that results in prehensile dementia characterized by personality changes

multiplication and division are only meaningful on what measurement scales?

ratio

addition and subtraction are only meaningful on what measurement scales?

ratio and interval

100

ratio iq number where a person's mental age is equal to chronical age

2 most common methods of retrieval

recall and recognition

state-dependent learning

recall will be better if your psychological or physical state at the time of recall is the same as your state when you memorized the material example: if you study while angry, remember better while angry

projection areas in the brain

receive sensory information or send out motor-impulse commands (visual cortex or motor cortex)

hippocampus

recent findings indicate that new neurons can form in which neural area

steps in all sensory information processing

reception, transduction, projection

hair cells in organ of corti

receptors for hearing: hair cells bend and transmit signals to nerve fibers in the auditory nerve

electrocencephalograph

recording of brain's electrical activity at the surface of the skull from electrodes on head -noninvasive, used in sleep studies

damage to amygdala

reduced fear and aggression

Secondary gains

refers to perceived advantages that are afforded to a patient due to an illness; frequently associated with hypochondria - advantages of illness outweigh discomfort created by illness

two-point threshold

refers to the minimum distance necessary between two points of stimulation on the skin such that the points will be felt as two distinct stimuli -depends on density of nerves in area of skin

John A. Swets

refined the use of ROC curves

grasping reflex

reflex of automatically closing fingers around objects placed in hands

Moro reflex

reflex where abrupt movements of infants head causes arms to fling out, extend fingers, and bring arms back to the body

thyroid gland

regulates metabolism, growth, and development

continuous reinforcement schedule

reinforcing schedule of the desired response every time it occurs; quickest, but most fragile learning

8 main defense mechanisms

repression, suppression, projection, reaction formation, rationalization, regression, sublimation, and displacement

monocular depth cues

require one eye (all depth cues except stereopsis)

between-subjects design

research design where different participants are assigned to each of the conditions in the experiment so they don't receive the same level of IV as other participants example: high protein, medium protein, and low protein groups

hostility

research has revealed that the trait most associated with heart attacks in type A individuals is ______

more

research on problem solving indicates that heuristic search strategies are ___ efficient when compared to algorithmic strategies

cross-sectional studies

research study in which people of different ages are compared with one another at one time point

longitudinal studies

research study in which the same people are restudied and retested over a long period

Asch

researcher famous for line study of conformity

Albert Bandura

researcher famous for work in observational or social learning including the famous Bobo doll experiment

twin studies

researchers assess hereditary influence by comparing the resemblance of identical (monozygotic) twins and fraternal (dizygotic) twins with respect to a trait -shared environment, different genetics --> differences between the twins could be attributed to genetics

family studies

researchers assess hereditary influence by examining blood relatives to see how much they resemble one another on a specific trait example: schizophrenia risk runs in families and siblings -constrained because family share environment so may be environmental

Merkel's disks

respond to light pressure, pain

free nerve endings

respond to pain and temperature changes

Ruffini endings

respond to stretch

fixation at oral stage

results in excessive dependency (smoking, eating, drinking)

fixation in phallic stage

results in excessive masturbation, flirts frequently, excessively modest, excessively timid, overly proud, promiscuity

fixation in genital stage

results in fetishism

fixation in anal stage

results in person being extremely messy or overly orderly, overly concerned about punctuality, fear of dirt, love of bathroom humor, anxiety about sexual activities, overly giving, rebellious

Fixation in Latency Stage

results in sexual desire not being dormant

storage

retaining information in memory

Lewis Terman

revised Binet's IQ test and established norms for American children; tested group of young geniuses and followed in a longitudinal study that lasted beyond his own lifetime to show that high IQ does not necessarily lead to wonderful things in life

Terman

revised Binet's test (became the Stanford-Binet)

methylphenidate

ritalin: to treat hyperactive children with ADHD (increases alertness and decreases motor activity)

cones or rods: which amount is greater that converge on ganglion cells?

rods

what is in the periphery of the retina?

rods

photoreceptors in retina

rods and cones

connectivity of layers of neurons

rods and cones connect to bipolar cells that connect to ganglion cells

Fovea

rods are not present in the _______ of the eye

Bindle (1979)

role theory: perspective that people are aware of the social roles they are expected to fill and their observable behavior is attributed to these roles

striving towards superiority when selfish leads to what?

root of personality disturbances

difference threshold and JND

same thing: The smallest change in stimulation that can be detected 50% of the time.

process schizophrenia

schizophrenia develops gradually, lower rate of recovery: especially poor prognosis

reactive schizophrenia

schizophrenia develops suddenly in response to a particular event: higher rate of recovery

school of behaviorism

school of thought that Watson created; conditioning was key to behavior

discriminant validity

scores on the measure are not related to other measures that are theoretically different

convergent validity

scores on the measure are related to other measures of the same construct

limbic system is first or second major area of brain to evolve?

second

attachment in the making phase

second phase in the development of attachment, occurring at 3 months of age and characterized by preference for familiar figures

depolarization

second step of an action potential firing

low dose

sedative-hypnotics dose that reduces anxiety

high dose

sedative-hypnotics dose that results in anesthesia or coma

medium dose

sedative-hypnotics dose that results in sedation

filter theory of attention

selective attention acts as a filter between sensory stimuli and our processing systems

which level in levels of processing theory results in long-term memory?

semantic

2 types of declarative memory

semantic and episodic

3 stages of memory

sensory memory, short-term memory, long-term memory

hindbrain

severe injury to what part of the brain is most likely to be life threatening

Morpheme

smallest units of meaning in a language example: walked has 2 morphemes (walk and ed)

twins raised apart

shared genotype but not environment *identical twins raised apart are more similar in personality than fraternal twins raise together SO personality characteristics are somewhat heritable*

subordinate goals

shared goals obtained through intergroup cooperation that override differences among people

Reciprocity of disclosure

sharing secrets/feelings facilitates emotional closeness

proximal vs distal stimulus

shoe on the floor (proximal= image of retina) (distal= shoe itself)

questions that test recall

short answer and fill in the blank

ADHD and attention

short attention spans, difficulty staying on task, unable to follow directions, can't stick to activities over long period of time

sleep spindles

short bursts of alpha waves

peptides

short chains of amino acids involved in neurotransmission

Ebbinghaus and experimental psychology

showed that higher mental processes could be studied using experimental methodology

releaser

sign stimuli exchanged between members of the same species

research method used to measure cell responses

single-cell recording

independence phase

sixth stage in development of attachment at 3yo when child is able to separate from mother without prolonged distress

4 major constancies in visual perception

size constancy, shape constancy, lightness constancy, and color constancy

what determine the visual angle of an object (thus the retinal size of the object?)

size of the object and the distance between the object and the eye

Excoriation Disorder

skin picking disorder

Ectomorph

skinny, fragile body; inhibited, intellectual behavior

sleep apnea

sleep disorder characterized by temporary cessations of breathing during sleep and repeated momentary awakenings

Narcolepsy

sleep disorder characterized by uncontrollable sleep attacks -may lapse directly into REM sleep at inopportune times.

insomnia

sleep disorder marked by recurring problems in falling or staying asleep

resting potential

slight electrical negative charge stored inside the cell's membrane (energy potential when neuron is at rest) (-70 mV)

what ions pass through the cell membrane?

smaller ions -blocks larger negative ions (too big)

phoneme

smallest unit of sound example: field has 4 phonemes (f sound, ie sound, l sound, and d sound)

What two factors contribute to bystander intervention effect?

social influence and diffusion of responsibility

Primary Effect

social perception effect when 1st impression is more important than subsequent impressions

Recency Effect

social perception effect when most recent information we have is the most important in forming impressions

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

society is unneccessary and detrimental to optimal development

*endomorphy* body type

soft and spherical

somatform disorders include

somatic symptom disorder, conversion, illness anxiety

sensorimotor cortex

somatosensory cortex and motor cortex (movement and touch)

pathway of sound

sound -> pinna -> auditory canal -> ear drum (tympanic membrane) -> inner ear (hammer, anvil, stirrup) -> oval window -> cochlea -> auditory nerve -> superior olivary complex -> inferior colliculus-> medial geniculate nucleus in the thalamus ->temporal cortex

depth cues

sources of information that signal the distance from the observer to the distal stimulus

Spearman's s

specific intelligence

reflexes

specific patterns of motor response that are triggered by specific patterns of sensory stimulation: control behavior crucial to survival

Phonology/Phonemes

speech sounds in language; 40 in english -children learn to distinguish these from noises

Collins and Loftus

spreading activation model of semantic memory

Variance

standard deviation squared

T-score

standard score with a mean of 50 and a standard deviation of 10 -used in test score interpretation

test norms are derived from

standardized, large samples that are representative of the population

functionalists view on reflex processes

study the process as a whole and not break down the reflex arc into different motor and sensory phases

descriptive statistics

statistics that summarize the data collected in a study

binocular depth cue

stereopsis because it requires two eyes

gonadotropins in females

stimulate ovaries to secrete estrogen to develop female genitals and menstrual cycle

gonadotropins in males

stimulate testes to produce sperm, surge in testosterone that leads to facial hair and deep voice

Wilder Penfield

stimulated brain with electrical probes while patients underwent surgery for epilepsy -created maps of sensory and motor cortices

Releasing stimuli

stimuli that elicits fixed action patterns from another individual in the same species; Lorenz, continued by Tinbergen; aka releasers or sign stimuli

standard stimulus

stimulus whose intensity remained the same

Sternberg's contextual intelligence

street smarts/business sense

According to Adler, what drives personality?

striving towards superiority

the more transmitters bind, the ____ the post synaptic potential

stronger

Meissner's corpuscles

structures that detect touch or contact

Rods

structures that function best in reduced illumination; perception only of achromatic colors; low sensitivity to detail

Vygotsky

studied cognitive development and stressed the importance of the zone of proximal development

Norman Triplett (1898)

studied cyclists - had children wind fishing reels in a group or alone Group --> faster winding; ** one of the FIRST social psychology experiments on effect of competition on performance**

Gibson, J.

studied depth cues (especially texture gradients) that help us to perceive depth

Pavlov conditioning experiment

studied dog's automatic reflex to salivate in response to food

Elizabeth Loftus

studied eyewitness memories and the tendency for eyewitnesses to be influenced or confused by misleading information -also inaccuracy of repressed memories

Hubel and Wiesel

studied feature detection in visual cortex and discovered simple, complex, and hypercomplex cells

Witkin

studied field-dependence and field-independence using the rod and frame test

Kluver and Bucy

studied loss of normal fear and rage reactions in monkeys resulting from damage to temporal lobes -also studied the amygdala's role in emotions

Sir Frederic Bartlett study

studied memory in a study that used the "War of the Ghosts" Native American folktale -*found that subjects reconstructed the story in line with their own culture, expectations, and schema for a ghost story*

Kohlberg

studied moral development using moral dilemmas

M. Rokeach

studied racial bias and the similarity of beliefs; people prefer to be with like-minded people more than with like-skinned people

metapsychology

study of nature of the mind -metacognition & metamemory

Proxemics (Edward Hall)

study of personal space; how people place themselves in relation to others *cultural norms govern our proxemics* - In the US, talking to someone intimate with is around a foot and talking to a stranger is several feet apart

semantic verification task

subjects are asked to indicate whether or not a simple statement presented is true or false: response latency will provide information about semantic organization

Bem

suggested that masculinity and femininity were two separate dimensions -also linked with concept of androgyny

Jensen

suggested that there were genetically based racial differences in IQ; this suggestion has been much criticized

theory of kin selection

suggests that animals act to increase their inclusive fitness rather than their reproductive fitness

Robert Sternberg's Triarchic Theory

suggests that there are 3 aspects to intelligence: componential (performance on tests), experiential (creativity), and contextual (street smarts/ business smarts)

John Locke

tabula rasa (blank slate)

cocktail party phenomenon

talking with someone and you hear your name across the room (in the background noise) -was focusing on conversation but still slightly attending to background noise

receptors of taste

taste buds

flooding

technique for treating phobias and other stress disorders in which the person is rapidly and intensely exposed to the fear-provoking situation or object and prevented from making the usual avoidance or escape response

mnemonic device

techniques that we use to improve the likelihood that we will remember something

transformational rules

tell us how we can change from one sentence form to another example: change a statement to a question

physiological zero

temperature that is sensed as neither warm nor cold (just temp of skin)

Group Polarization Effect

tendency for group discussion to enhance group's initial tendency towards riskiness or caution

A-not-B error

tendency of 8- to 12-month-olds to search for a hidden object where they previously found it even after they have seen it moved to a new location -Piaget

response bias

tendency of subjects to systematically respond to a stimulus in a particular way due to nonsensory factors like personality traits, experiences..

niche-picking

tendency to actively choose environments that complement our heredity (ie: a physically fit child decides to get involved in sports)

Attractiveness Stereotype

tendency to attribute positive qualities and desirable characteristics to attractive people

primacy effect

tendency to remember words at the beginning of a list especially well

recency effect

tendency to remember words at the end of a list especially well

language acquisition device (LAD)

term for a hypothesized innate mental structure that enables humans to learn language, including the basic aspects of grammar, vocabulary, and intonation and triggered by language exposure

flat affect

term for a lack of emotional responsiveness

high self esteem

term for a person who uses internal loci & attributes their failures to inability: Rotter

Ablation (extirpation)

term for a surgically produced brain lesion in animals (to study relationship between brain and behaviors)

phobia

term for abnormal/irrational fear

Cynophobia

term for an abnormal fear of dogs

claustrophobia

term for an abnormal fear of narrow, enclosed spaces

Gene

the basic unit of heredity that is transferred 50% from each parent to offspring and is held to determine some characteristic of the offspring. -contains 2 alleles

circadian rhythm

the biological clock: regular waking and sleeping bodily rhythms that occur on a 24-hour cycle -somewhat affected by external cues like day light and night (minor changes)

Central Nervous System

the body system that is made up of the brain and spinal cord

olfactory bulb

the brain center for smell, located below the frontal lobes

reproductive fitness

the capacity to get one's genes passed on to subsequent generations

Pluralistic Ignorance

the case in which people think that everyone else is interpreting a situation in a certain way, when in fact they are not example: majority of members interpret situation (fire) as dangerous but incorrectly assume that others accept it and go along with it

Fovea

the central focal point in the retina, contains only cones -where visual acuity is best

private conformity

the change of beliefs that occurs when a person privately accepts the position taken by others

declarative memory

the cognitive information retrieved from explicit memory: knowledge that can be declared (facts)

salavation to bell

the conditioned response after dog learned through classical conditioning

bell ringing

the conditioned stimulus after dog learned through classical conditioning

binocular parallax

the degree of disparity between the retinal images of the eyes due to the slight differences in the horizontal position of each eye in the skull

discriminate validity

the degree to which your measure does not relate to others in a predictable manner

predictor variable

the dependent variable in a correlational study that is used to predict the score on another variable

hippocampus

the destruction of which part of the brain disrupts the transfer of info from the STM to the LTM

Phrenology

the detailed study of the shape and size of the cranium as a supposed indication of character and mental abilities.

E.G. Boring

the development of psychology is due to the changing spirit of the times (Zeitgeist)

range

the difference between the highest and lowest scores in a distribution

binocular disparity (stereopsis)

the difference in images between the two eyes, which is greater for objects that are close and smaller for distant objects

extinction

the diminishing of a conditioned response: behavior that used to bring reward no longer does so (decreases probability)

Extinction

the diminishing of a conditioned response: occurs in classical conditioning when an unconditioned stimulus (US) does not follow a conditioned stimulus (CS) (NOT REINFORCED)

retroactive interference

the disruptive effect of new learning on the recall of old information

proactive interference

the disruptive effect of prior learning on the recall of new information

tectum

the dorsal part of the midbrain that includes the superior and inferior colliculi (vision & hearing reflexes)

menarche

the first menstrual period

cerebrospinal fluid

the fluid in ventricles and spinal cord/canal

selective attention

the focusing of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus, as in the cocktail party effect -all or nothing process: we attend to something and don't attend to anything else WRONG

Weber's constant

the fraction of the intensity by which a source of physical energy must be increased or decreased so that a difference in intensity will be perceived -"K" -as K gets smaller, the better the sensitivity

procedural memory

the gradual acquisition of skills as a result of practice, or "knowing how" to do things (implicit memory)

depth of processing

the idea that information that is thought about at a deeper level is better remembered; Craik & Lockhart

preparedness theory

the idea that people are instinctively predisposed to associate certain stimuli with certain consequences (food and nausea, sight/sound and pain)

Interactionism

the idea that situations and personality interact to determine behavior

reactance theory

the idea that when people feel their freedom to perform a certain behavior is threatened, an unpleasant state of resistance is aroused, which they can reduce by performing the prohibited behavior

sensory memory

the immediate, very brief recording of sensory information in the memory system

Egocentrism

the inability to see the world through anyone else's eyes

synapse/synaptic cleft

the junction between the axon tip of the sending neuron and the dendrite or cell body of the receiving neuron -neurons transform chemical energy to electrical energy and vice versa

corpus callosum

the large band of neural fibers connecting the two brain hemispheres and carrying messages between them

delta waves

the large, slow brain waves associated with deep sleep

sample size's relation to significance levels

the larger the sample size, the smaller the difference between two groups has to be in order to be significant

conditioned response

the learned response to a previously neutral (but now conditioned) stimulus (CS)

Retina

the light-sensitive back surface of the eye, containing the receptor rods and cones plus layers of neurons that begin the process of detecting images

Androgens

the main class of male sex hormones

tympanic membrane (eardrum)

the membrane at the end of the ear canal that relays vibrations into the middle ear to the inner ear

presynaptic membrane

the membrane of a terminal button that lies adjacent to the postsynaptic membrane of an adjacent neuron's dendrite and through which the neurotransmitter is released

oval window

the membrane that separates the middle ear from the inner ear that is on the edge of the stirrup

Median

the middle score in a distribution: half the scores are above it and half are below it -if you have an event set of numbers: add middle numbers and divide by 2

absolute threshold

the minimum intensity of stimulation that must occur before you experience a sensation

Glutamate

the most abundant excitatory neurotransmitter in the nervous system (amino acid); involved in memory

mode

the most frequently occurring score(s) in a distribution

behavior

the most fundamental characteristic of traits is that they are inferences based on _____________

Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)

the most widely researched and clinically used of all personality tests. Originally developed to identify emotional disorders (still considered its most appropriate use), this test is now used for many other screening purposes. -550 statements of true or false (ten clinical scales)

Rorschach inkblot test

the most widely used projective test, a set of 10 inkblots, designed by Hermann Rorschach -seeks to identify people's inner feelings by analyzing their interpretations of the blots

Strong-Campbell Interest Inventory

the most widely used vocational interest test: based on answers of people successful in certain fields -asked whether they like or dislike the interest listed

bell

the neutral stimulus in Pavlov's experiment

Frequency

the number of complete wavelengths (cycles) that pass a point in a given time (per second): Hz

the farther you move from the fovea, ..

the number of rods increase and the number of cones decrease

brainstem

the oldest part and central core of the brain, beginning where the spinal cord enters the skull -the brainstem is responsible for automatic survival functions (hindbrain and midbrain)

autonomic

the part of the nervous system that primarily deals with visceral muscles and glands

illusory correlation

the perception of a relationship where none exists

subjective contours

the perception of contours where none actually exist

categorical perception

the perception of speech sounds as belonging to discrete categories

external loci of control

the perception that luck and chance play a big part in what happens to them: Rotter

Mere Exposure Effect (Zajonc)

the phenomenon that repeated exposure (familiarity) to stimuli increases liking of it

Radical Behaviorism

the philosophical position that free will is an illusion or myth and that human and animal behavior is completely determined by environmental and genetic influences; Skinner

blind spot

the point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, creating a "blind" spot because no receptor cells are located there

Yerkes-Dodson Law

the principle that performance increases with arousal only up to a point, beyond which performance decreases

Weber's Law

the principle that, to be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage (rather than a constant amount)

avoidance learning

the process by which one learns to perform a behavior in order to ensure that a negative or aversive stimulus will not be present (i.e. following a stop sign, not crashing)

sound localization

the process by which the location of sound is determined

retrieval

the process of getting information out of memory storage

Modeling

the process of observing and imitating a specific behavior

reconstructive memory

the process whereby memories of an event become distorted by information encountered after the event occurred

subliminal perception

the processing of information/perception of a stimulus below the threshold by sensory systems without conscious awareness

spontaneous recovery

the reappearance, after a pause, of an extinguished conditioned response

negative reinforcement

the reinforcement of a desired response by the removal, escape from, or avoidance of an unpleasant stimulus -escape and avoidance

continuous reinforcement

the reinforcement of each and every correct response (FR 1)

negative correlation

the relationship between two variables in which one variable increases as the other variable decreases

long-term memory

the relatively permanent and limitless storehouse of the memory system. Includes knowledge, skills, and experiences. -can be brief or a lifetime

abnormal psychology

the scientific study of abnormal behavior in an effort to describe, predict, explain, and change abnormal patterns of functioning

developmental psychology

the scientific study of physical, cognitive, and social change throughout the life span

vestibular sense

the sense of balance and equilibrium

kinesthetic sense

the sense of body position and movement of body parts relative to each other (muscle, tendon, and joint position)

dominant hemisphere

the side of the brain that provides analytic, language, logic, and math skills -in most individuals (97%), the left hemisphere (located opposite to the hand used for writing) -Brocas and Wernickes area

variability of scores

the standard deviation of a sample of test scores is a measure of what?

psychophysics

the study of relationships between the physical characteristics of stimuli, such as their intensity, and our psychological experience of them

pitch

the subjective highness or lowness of a sound

surface structure of language

the superficial way in which words are arranged in a text or in speech

tip of the tongue phenomenon

the temporary inability to remember something you know, accompanied by a feeling that it's just out of reach= problem with retrieval

REM rebound

the tendency for REM sleep to increase following REM sleep deprivation

partial reinforcement effect

the tendency for a response that is reinforced after some, but not all, correct responses to be very resistant to extinction: behavior only enforced occasionally (i.e. gambling)

Risky Shift

the tendency for groups to make riskier decisions after group discussions than individuals would

actor-observer bias

the tendency to attribute one's own behavior to situational factors but to attribute the behavior of others to dispositional factors

hindsight bias

the tendency to believe, after learning an outcome, that you knew it all along

size constancy

the tendency to interpret an object as always being the same actual size, regardless of its distance -depends on perceived distance: the harder to perceive distance, size constancy diminishes

shape constancy

the tendency to interpret the shape of an object as being constant, even when its shape changes on the retina example: see a door as a rectangle even when the shape changes as it's opened and closed

functional fixedness

the tendency to think of things only in terms of their usual functions: an impediment to problem solving

Generalization

the tendency, once a response has been conditioned, for stimuli similar to the conditioned stimulus to elicit similar responses

Tolman

the terms "purposive behaviorism" and "sign gestalt learning" are used to describe the learning theory developed by ____________

Young-Helmholtz trichromatic theory

the theory of color vision that the retina contains three different color receptor cones—one most sensitive to red, one to green, one to blue—which, when stimulated in combination, can produce the perception of any color.

Cannon-Bard Theory

the theory that an emotion-arousing stimulus simultaneously triggers physiological responses and the subjective experience of emotion -gives brain more central role in emotion -subjective experience of emotion must affect specific neural circuits corresponding to different emotions

duplexity theory of vision

the theory that cones and rods (photoreceptors) in the retina mediate different kinds of vision

place theory of hearing

the theory that different areas of the basilar membrane vibrate (different hair cells bend) to different frequencies (higher than 1000Hz)

Theory of Association

the theory that knowledge results from linking or associating simple ideas to form complex ideas; grouping things together

James-Lange Theory

the theory that our experience of emotion is due to our awareness of our physiological responses to emotion-arousing stimuli example: we feel sorry because we cry, we feel angry because we strike, we feel afraid because we tremble

excitation transfer theory

the theory that physiological arousal stemming from one situation is carried over to and enhances emotional experience in an independent situation; liking someone more because they took you bungee jumping on a first date rather than to dinner

dopamine theory of schizophrenia

the theory that schizophrenia is caused by too much dopamine and, conversely, that anti-schizophrenic drugs (phenothiazines) exert their effects by decreasing dopamine levels

just noticeable difference

the threshold at which one can distinguish two stimuli that are of different intensities example: if the 2 oz change is the noticeable difference than 1 JD= 2oz, 2 JD= 4oz

refractory period

the time following an action potential during which a new action potential cannot be initiated: period of rest

postsynaptic potential

the tiny electrical charge change in the membrane potential of a neuron that occurs when neurotransmitters bind to the receptor site on dendrites

Cornea

the transparent outer covering of the eye: gathers and focuses light

Lens

the transparent structure that lies behind the iris: controls curvature of light coming in and focuses images on the retina

drooling

the unconditioned response/reflex in Pavlov's experiment

class inclusion

the understanding that a general category can encompass several subordinate elements

unconditioned response

the unlearned, naturally occurring response to the unconditioned stimulus (US), such as salivation when food is in the mouth.

holophrasis

the use of a single word for many things (18 months)

pinna

the visible part of the ear that channels sound waves into the auditory canal

ventral stream

the visual pathway that tells us what we are looking at; the "what" path

membrane potential

the voltage difference across a membrane

Standford-Binet Test

the widely used American revision of Binet's original intelligence test

Flynn effect

the worldwide phenomenon that shows intelligence test performance have been gradually increasing over the years

Karen Horney

theorist who proposed confrontation, avoidance, and seeking social support were ways people cope with anxiety

Erikson

theorist who revised Frued's stages of development and replaced psychosexual stages with psychosocial stages

Hering Opponent Process Theory

theory of color vision that states 3 kinds of receptors each toggle between 2 alternative signals (= 6 neural processes) (1) red OR green (2) blue OR yellow (3) black OR white -4 primaries: yellow, red, green, blue -don't mix: only one or the other

James and Lange

theory of emotion in which physiological arousal precedes the emotion

dopamine hypothesis of schizophrenia

theory of schizophrenia that states it results from excess activity at dopamine synapses in certain brain areas -explains effectiveness of antipsychotics

deep structure (Abstract) of a sentence

underlying form that specifies the meaning of the sentence example: can have different surface structure "the boy picked up the book" and "the book was picked up by the boy" with similar deep structure meaning

deep structure of language

underlying meaning of words

doubt and lack of control (what happens is the result of external factors not self)

unfavorable outcome of Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt

Selfishness, stagnation

unfavorable outcome of Generativity vs. Stagnation

incompetence, low self-esteem, inadequacy

unfavorable outcome of Industry vs. Inferiority

fear of punishment & overcompensation (showing off)

unfavorable outcome of Initiative vs. Guilt

Noncommitment, withdrawn

unfavorable outcome of Intimacy vs. Isolation

identity crisis

unfavorable outcome of identity vs. role confusion

bitterness & despair & fear of death

unfavorable outcome of integrity v. despair

suspicion of the world

unfavorable outcome of trust v. mistrust

reflex

unlearned response to a stimulus

method of loci

use of familiar locations as cues to recall items that have been associated with them

visual cliff experiment

used to determine when infants can perceive depth with 2 different "levels" presented -infants as young as 6 months can perceive depth

prefrontal lobotomy

used to treat schizophrenia: surgical procedure that severs fibers connecting the frontal lobes of the brain from the underlying hypothalamus/limbic system

interval scale of measurement

uses actual numbers and not ranks example: number of answer correct on a test

MRI scan

uses magnetic fields and radio waves to produce computer-generated images that distinguish among different types of soft tissue

base rate fallacy

using prototypical or stereotypical factors while ignoring actual numerical information

base-rate fallacy

using prototypical or stereotypical factors while ignoring actual numerical information

dominant hemisphere

usually left hemisphere

nondominant hemisphere

usually right hemisphere

cohort differences

variations in the characteristics of an area of study over time among individuals who are defined by some shared temporal experience or common life experience, such as year of birth

what determines the size of an image on the retina?

visual angle

dorsal stream

visual path in the parietal cortex that helps the motor system locate objects; the "where" path

iconic (visual) memory

visual sensory memory: George Sperling, people can see more than that can remember

cognitive-structural approach

ways in which people conceptualize and solve problems through experiences with environment emphasizing developmental changes in modes and styles of thinking

Bandura's Social Learning Theory

we learn social behavior by *modeling* (observing and imitating) and by *reinforcement* (being rewarded and punished)

lightness constancy

we perceive an object as having a constant lightness even while its illumination varies example: when the sun goes behind the clouds, a sail on a boat still appears white and not gray

cognitive triad

what Beck believed causes depression; negative views about self, the world, and the future

severe abuse

what DID stems from

all or nothing law

what action potential is governed by

Ratio IQ

what did William Stern develop

excessive stress

what increases diathesis to lead to a disorder

prolongation of neurotransmitter effects

what is most likely to occur quickly when cocaine blocks the reuptake of norepinephrine and dopamine?

-50mV

what mV is reached when the neuron fires

mean, mode, and median

what three things are identical when scores are in a normal distribution?

proactive inhibition

what you learned earlier interferes with what you learn later example: if you learn French as a second language and then Spanish as a 3rd language, as you are learning Spanish you'll confuse it with French

Exploratory drive

when individuals are motivated simply to try something new or to explore their environment

Morphemic Error

when morphemes change places (ie: "I'm not in the reading for mood")

accommodation

when new information doesn't fit in our existing schemata, adapting our current understandings (schemas) to incorporate new information

acquiesence bias

when people agree with opposing statements

empirical

when psychology first emerged, it was distinguished from philosophy because of emphasis on _______ data

bleaching

when rhodopsin (in rods) absorbs a light photon, pigment decomposes in retinene & opsin

retroactive inhibition

when you forget what you learned earlier as you learn something new example: if you learn List A, then learn List B, then you can't recall List A

dark adaptation

when your eyes adapt to a darker environment and recover from bleaching of the photopigment in rods

brain & spinal cord

where interneurons are located

papillae

where taste buds are located

taste center in thalamus

where taste information travels to

axon hillock

where the action potential is triggered: small elevation on a neuron where the axon meets the cell body

spinal cord

where the gate theory of pain mechanism is located

Somatosensory cortex (parietal lobe)

where touch information travels to in the brain

what does tracking the neonatal reflexes tell about a baby?

whether neural development is taking place in a normal fashion, delays could be a sign of developmental difficulties/disabilities

amnestic disorder

which disorder has a known organic basis

Bandura

who coined vicarious reinforcement

church

who controlled psychology in the middle ages

identical twins

who has the highest risk developing schizophrenia if one has it

Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC)

widely used test designed to measure the intelligence of children 6 years and older

Truddi Chase

woman who was thought to have 92 different personalities

rationality

word that best represents Gilligan's theories of moral development

motivation

word that best represents Kohlberg's theories of moral development

nouns, familiar

words in a young language learner's lexicon are most likely to be ______ referencing ________ objects in the environment

Beck's cognitive therapy for depression

writing down negative thoughts and figure out more realistic and less destructive cognitions


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