Psychology 105 Exam 1
How did psychology change from prehistoric times to modern times?
Moved from a philosophical background to being more science based
Cognitive psychology
How poeple remember, think, speak, and solve problems
In behavioral genetics, what are the 4 research methods and what do they hope to answer ?
1. Complex connection between genes and behavior. 2. Polygenic influence on behavior. 3. Genes and the environment 4. Epigentics, how the environment change gene expression. They hope to understand how heredity affects behavior
What is diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (DSM)?
A book used by clinicians and psychiatrists to diagnose mental illness. Non-theoretical, focuses mostly on describing symptoms/statistics
What are chromosomes and how many do you have?
A coiled up tread of dna and 23 chromosomes
Mode
Most often occuring in the data
What is a dominant gene? Will you always get a disorder if it is dominant?
A dominant gene is a gene that shows their phenotype even if there is only one allele for that trait.
What is a pseudoscience? Is religion a pseudoscience? literature?
A psuedoscience is something that appears and claims be science but is not supported by evidence provided by the scientific method. Religion and Literature are both not a psuedoscience
What is the importance of random assignment and receiving a representative sample?
A random assignment is exactly the way it sounds. For example, you randomly assign a drug to different people in your sample group. You do not tell the members of the group what they are getting. this is important because it allows you to get the most accurate observation of the substance your are issuing
What is a recessive gene? Will you always get a disorder if its recessive?
A recessive gene is a gene that shows their effect only when both alleles are the same. Not always, example anxiety, both genetic and environment plays a role in developing it
Mean
Average of all data
Why are twins used in psychological research?
Because it allows a researcher to study people with the same or close to the same genetic code. This allows the researcher to determine whether some conditions may be caused by nature or nurture.
Functionalism
Better to look at why the mind works; William James
Forensic psychology
Blend of psychology, law, and criminal justice
Midbrain
Brainstem, reticular formation
Structuralism
Breaking down experience into elements; Wilhelm Wundt
Hindbrain
Cerebellum, medulla, pons
What is the importance of a meta-analysis?
Combining all research together in one question and drawing a conclusion.
How is causation established in research?
Correlation does not imply causation. Causation implies that one thing causes another
What was the academically gifted students study and what were the major implications of it psychological research?
If a teacher think that a kid is "gifted", regardless of actual talent, the child wil become a higher acheiver in the class.
What are independent variables and dependent variables?
Independent variables are things that are purposefully manipulated, dependent variables are the outcomes.
What is informed consent and why is it important in research?
Informed consent is when a researcher lets the participant know what they are going to be studying. It is important because it is unethical to make a participant do something potentially emotionally damaging without them knowing the procedure and study that is being conducted.
Who is John Locke and what did empiricists believe?
John Locke is an 18th century English Philosopher who thought of the mind as a blank state, in which nurture taught you everything you knew. (empiricism=knowledge comes from personal experience)
Median
Middle of data
What are monoztgotic twins and dizygotic twins?
Monozygotic are identical twins, dizygotic is fraternal twins
What is the scientific method and what is its importance in psychology?
Observe, predict, test, interpret, communicate. It is important because it allows all research to be based on scientific method; which leads us to probabilities.
What is nurture?
Our behavior, thought process and personality are formed by our life experiences and our environment
Why do researchers not always use the mean as means of central tendency?
Outliers tend to mess with the data.
What are the 2 cells of the nervous systems and what do they do?
Peripheral nervouse system: comprises all the nerve cells in the body outside the central nervouse system. Somatic transmit sensory info to the central nervous system and those that transmit info from cns to the skeletal system
Self Report: Surverys and interviews
Pro: Inexpensive, reponse are limited, easy to use Cons: people aren't always the best sources of information about themselves, no way to know what the person is thinking
Behavioral measures: systematic observations of peoples actions
Pros: Get to see people in their natural environment Cons: Since people know they are being watched they might act differently
Physiological measures: provides data on bodily responses
Pros: Gives us specific brain reactions/enhanced understanding. Cons: requires specialized equipment training, very expensive
Sports psychology
Psychological factors and their role they may play in sports
Behaviorism
Psychology can only be a true science if it examines behavior, not internal forces (thoughts); John B. Jones
Why must all conditions be the same in the experimental group and the control group except the independent variable?
So the researchers can directly and better observe the reactions caused by their independent variable on the subjects without any outside interferences
Forebrain
Thalamus, limbic system, cerebrum, and cerebral cortex
What is the IRB and why is it so important in research?
The IRB is short for the industrial review board. They are in charge of reviewing research projects to make sure they are ethical or not.
Explain the difference between the experimental group and the control group?
The experimental is the group being given the substance or scenario. The control group is the group that is manipulated into thinking they are receiving the same thing as the experimental group, however, they are not.
What is the Perpheral Nervous system?
The part of the nervous system that comprises all the nerve cells in the body outside of the central nervous system.
What is the Central Nervous System?
The part of the nervous system that comprises the brain and spinal cord.
What is a polygenic transmission?
The process by which many genes interact to create a single characteristic
What is Psychology?
The scientific study of thought and behavior
How do researchers reduce confounding variables?
Variables that have influence on the dependent variable cannot be seperated from the independent variable being examined.
What is nature?
Who we are through our behavior, thought process and personality comes from out genetic traits and heredity.
What is the action potential and resting potential?
action: the impulse of positive charge that runs down an axon. Resting: the diff in electrical charge between the inside and the outside of the axon when the neuron is at rest.
Behavrioal neurscience
application of the principals of biological to the study of physiological, genetic, and developmental mechanisms of behavior in human and non human animals.
Descriptive studies
defines a problem but doesn't form a hypothesis or try to control or manipulate anything; makes careful observations about the world
Clinical Psychology
diagnosis and treatment of mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders
Experimental studies
experimental manipulation of a predicted cause and measure of the response.
Evolutionary psychology
focused on the fuctions of the human mind, how do humans evolve, emotions are behavioral adaptions
Social psychology
how living among others influence thoughts, feeling, and behavior
Educational psychology
how students learn, psychological aspects of teaching
Developmental psychology
how thought and behavior change/remain the same over time
Correlation studies
measures two or more variables and relationship between one another
Industrial/organizational psychology
psychological concepts applied to work settings
Health psychology
psychological factors in regards to health and illness
Biological Psychology
relationship between bodily systems and chemicals/influence on behavior and thoughts
Standard deviation
statistical measure of how much scores in a sample vary around the mean
Perceptual set
the effect of frame of mind on perception; a tendency to perceive stimuli in a certain manner.
weber's law
the finding that the size of a just noticeable difference is a constant fraction of the intensity of stimulus
difference threshold
the smallest amount of change between two stimulli that a person can detect half of the time.
Signal detection theory
the viewpoint that both stimulus intensity and decision making processes are involved in the detection of a stimulus
Personality psychology
what makes people unique/consistencies over time