part 2
Metacognition
"Thinking about thinking" or the ability to evaluate a cognitive task to determine how best to accomplish it, and then to monitor and adjust one's performance on that task (A student learns about what things help him or her to remember facts, names, and events. A student learns about his or her own style of learning. A student learns about which strategies are most effective for solving problems)
Reflexive movement
(0-1 year) include involuntary movements (e.g. blinking, grasping, sucking) they are primitive, involuntary movements that serve to "prime" the neuromuscular system and form the basis for more sophisticated movements to come
Trust vs. Mistrust
(0-1) Erikson's first stage during the first year of life, infants learn to trust when they are cared for in a consistent warm manner
Rudimentary movement
(0-2 years) these are the first voluntary movements (e.g. crawling, sitting, standing) these form the foundation on which the fundamental movements are built and are primarily dictated by genetics
Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt
(1-3) Erikson's stage in which a toddler learns to exercise will and to do things independently; failure to do so causes shame and doubt
Conventional morality
(10-16) second level of Kohlberg's stages of moral development in which the child's behavior is governed by conforming to the society's norms of behavior
Postconventional morality
(16-) third level of Kohlberg's stages of moral development in which the person's behavior is governed by moral principles that have been decided on by the individual and that may be in disagreement with accepted social norms (personal beliefs)
Fundamental movement
(2-7 years) Child learns to manipulate body through actions such as running, jumping, throwing, catching. Movements initially start out uncoordinated and poorly controlled, but as the child advances in age, movements become more refined, coordinated, and efficient
Gender typing
(2-7) the acquisition of a traditional masculine or feminine role (For example, a male child may attribute himself to the male gender by growing up and wanting to be the stereotypical man. Because of society, the child may play with trucks and avoid societally dictated "girly" toys when growing up)
Gender constancy
(2-7) the idea that gender is fixed, and unchangeable
Initiative vs. Guilt
(3-6) Erikson's third stage in which the child finds independence in planning, playing and other activities
Industry vs. Inferiority
(6-12) Erikson's fourth stage between 6 and 11 years, when the child learns to be productive
Preconventional morality
(7-10) first level of Kohlberg's stages; self-interest; obey rules to avoid punishment or gain concrete rewards
Reversibility
(Concrete operational stage) the capacity to think through a series of steps and then mentally reverse direction, returning to the starting point (An example of is that a child might be able to recognize that his or her dog is a Labrador, that a Labrador is a dog, and that a dog is an animal)
Conservation
(Concrete operational stage) the idea that properties such as mass, volume, and number remain the same despite changes in the forms of objects (for example, a child in the concrete operational stage would be able to say that there is the same amount of play doh if there are multiple pieces, but a child in the preoperational stage might say there is more play doh if there are more pieces)
Psychosocial development
(Erik Erikson) pattern of change in emotions, personality, and social relationships
Conversion disorder
(Formerly hyseteria) A rare somatoform disorder in which a person experiences very specific genuine physical symptoms for which no physiological basis can be found. (For example, imagine taking a hard fall off your bike and then not being able to move your arm. But your arm isn't injured)
Personal unconscious
(Jung) comprised of repressed memories and clusters of thought
Collective unconscious
(Jung) concept of a shared, inherited reservoir of memory traces from our species' history, behavior and memory that is common to all humans
Internalization
(Lev Vygotsky) the absorption of knowledge into the self from environmental and social contexts
Equilibration
(Piaget) involves the assimilation of information to fit with an individual's own existing mental schemas and the accommodation of information by adapting it their way of thinking (For example, a child loves the soups that their family eats on a regular basis.)
Symbolic thinking
(Preoperational stage) the ability to use words to substitute for objects
Animism
(Preoperational stage) the belief that all things are living
Artificialism
(Preoperational stage) the belief that environmental features were made by people (For example, a child might say that it is windy outside because someone is blowing very hard, or the clouds are white because someone painted them that color)
Egocentrism
(Preoperational stage) the inability to see the world through anyone else's eyes
Dreams
(REM) a sequence of images, emotions, and thoughts passing through a sleeping person's mind
Object permanence
(Sensorimotor stage) describes a child's ability to know that objects continue to exist even though they can no longer be seen or heard (For example, a very young child who is able to roll over at will, but not yet able to crawl, may consciously roll over multiple times to reach a favorite toy)
Application substage
(Specialized movement subdivision) defined more by conscious decisions to apply these skills to specific types of activity (For example, one child might choose to play basketball, whereas another might use the same set of skills and abilities to play baseball. Additionally, the application of strategy to movement is now possible; for example, a child choosing to delay shooting the basketball until she has a clear shot at the basket)
Transitional substage
(Specialized movement subdivision) where the combination of movements occur (running + grasping + throwing = basketball)
Analytical intelligence
(Triarchic Theory of Intelligence) the ability measured by most IQ tests; includes the ability to analyze problems and find correct answers.
Creative Intelligence
(Triarchic Theory of Intelligence) the ability to create, design, invent, originate, and imagine
Practical intelligence
(Triarchic Theory of Intelligence) the ability to solve everyday problems through skilled reasoning that relies on tacit knowledge
Actual development level
(Vygotsky) the level of ability that a child displays
Potential development level
(Vygotsky) the potential level of ability of which the child is actually capable
Intellectual disability
(formerly referred to as mental retardation) is characterized by delayed development in general mental abilities (reasoning, problem-solving, judgment, academic learning, etc. These delays translate into an impairment of adaptive functioning in aspects of daily life such as self-care, communication, or occupation. The severity can range from mild to moderate to severe to profound.
Stages of psychosexual development
1. Oral Stage 2. Anal Stage 3. Phallic Stage 4. Latency Stage 5. Genital Stage
Disordered behavior
1. The behavior is unusual (It deviates statistically from typical behavior) 2. The behavior is maladaptive: that is, it interferes with a person's ability to function in a particular situation 3. The behavior is labeled abnormal by the society in which it occurs 4. The behavior is characterized by perceptual or cognitive dysfunction In order for a behavior to be disordered, it should meet these criteria.
Ernst Weber
1795-1878; Field: perception; Contributions: just-noticeable-difference (JND) that eventually becomes Weber's law; Studies: 1st study on JND
Carl Jung
1875-1961; Field: neo-Freudian, analytic psychology; Contributions: people had conscious and unconscious awareness; archetypes; collective unconscious; libido is all types of energy, not just sexual; Studies: dream studies/interpretation
Carl Rogers
1902-1987; Field: humanistic; Contributions: founded person-centered therapy, theory that emphasizes the unique quality of humans especially their freedom and potential for personal growth, unconditional positive regard, fully functioning person
B.F. Skinner
1904-1990; Field: behavioral; Contributions: created techniques to manipulate the consequences of an organism's behavior in order to observe the effects of subsequent behavior; Studies: Skinner box
Anal stage
2nd stage, from about 2 to 3, toddlers learn that they are praised when they do well with toilet training and are not praised (or even scolded) when they do not. (According to Freud, success at this stage is dependent upon the way in which parents approach toilet training. Parents who utilize praise and rewards for using the toilet at the appropriate time encourage positive outcomes and help children feel capable and productive. Freud believed that positive experiences during the toilet training stage serve as the basis for people to become competent, productive, and creative adults. However, not all parents provide the support and encouragement that children need during this stage. Some parents punish, ridicule, or shame a child for accidents. According to Freud, inappropriate parental responses can result in negative outcomes. If parents take an approach that is too lenient, Freud suggested that an anal-expulsive personality could develop in which the individual has a messy, wasteful, or destructive personality. If parents are too strict or begin toilet training too early, Freud believed that an anal-retentive personality develops in which the individual is stringent, orderly, rigid, and obsessive.)
Phallic stage
3rd stage (3-6) the primary focus of the libido is on the genitals. At this age, children also begin to discover the differences between males and females. (people who become fixated during this stage might be super picky and choose the opposite sex parent)
Latency stage
4th stage (6-12) children in this stage are partly focused on gender identification, which is why many boys associate primarily with other boys and girls with girl. Both groups regard one another with suspicion and interest. People who become fixated here may not socialize with the same gender - homosexuality
Genital stage
5th stage (12-death) the genital region becomes the primary source of sexual/sensual pleasure unless trauma in prior stages has resulted in fixation. a person fixated here can become a rapist.
Stroboscopic effect
A (motion picture) visual illusion in which the perception of motion is generated by a series of stationary images that are presented in rapid succession
Type-A pattern
A behavior pattern characterized by high levels of competitiveness and hostility, impatience, and an intense disposition; supposedly associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease. (People with this would respond to stress quickly and aggressively, they also act in ways that tend to increase the likelihood that they will have a stressful experience)
Type-B pattern
A behavior pattern characterized by lower levels of competitiveness and hostility, patience, and an easygoing disposition; supposedly associated with a decreased risk of coronary heart disease. (People with this get stressed more slowly, and their stress levels do not seem to reach those height seen with Type-A.)
Flashbulb memory
A clear and vivid long-term memory of an especially meaningful and emotional event. (For example: many might remember exactly what they were doing when they heard that the planes crashed into the World Trade Center "I was on call with an insurance company when I heard the planes crashed" )
conceptual definition and operational definition
A conceptual definition tells you what the concept means, while an operational definition only tells you how to measure it
G factor
A general ability, proposed by Spearman as the main factor underlying all intelligent mental activity
Exhaustion
A harmful third phase of the stress response, in which stress exceeds the body's ability to recover. Because the body cannot be aroused forever, the parasympathetic systems start to reduce the arousal rate, if the stressor still persists, it will take us into this phase and cause our body's resources to be exhausted, causing our body to be impaired and more susceptible to disease
Melatonin
A hormone manufactured by the pineal gland that produces sleepiness.
Transformational grammar
A linguistic theory that focuses on how changes in word order affect meaning (For example, it relates the active sentence "John read the book" with its corresponding passive, "The book was read by John")
Split-half reliability
A measure of reliability in which a test is split into two parts and an individual's scores on both halves are compared.
Mnemonic device
A memory trick or technique (For example, ROYGBIV is an acronym that is helpful in memorizing the colors of the rainbow (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet) )
Method of loci
A mnemonic technique that involves associating items on a list with a sequence of familiar physical locations (For example: If you are using your work route as an example for a walk-through, you might mentally store the introduction of your speech in the mailbox near your front door, symbolizing the beginning of your speech. Continue throughout your imaginary walk, and in each new location, mentally store another element from your speech until you have completed your mental walk and reached the end of your speech)
Linear perspective
A monocular cue for perceiving depth; the more parallel lines draw closer together, the greater their perceived distance.
Hypothalamus
A neural structure lying below the thalamus; it directs several maintenance activities (eating, drinking, body temperature), helps govern the endocrine system via the pituitary gland, and is linked to emotion and reward.
Working memory
A newer understanding of short-term memory that involves conscious, active processing of incoming auditory and visual-spatial information, and of information retrieved from long-term memory (Examples of working memory tasks could include holding a person's address in mind while listening to instructions about how to get there, or listening to a sequence of events in a story while trying to understand what the story means. In mathematics, a working memory task could involve keeping a formula in mind while at the same time using the formula to solve a math problem.)
Percentile
A point on a ranking scale of 0 to 100. The 50th percentile is the midpoint; half the people in the population being studied rank higher and half rank lower.
natural selection
A process in which individuals that have certain inherited traits tend to survive and reproduce at higher rates than other individuals because of those traits.
Rorschach Inkblot Test
A projective personality test in which individual interpretations of the meaning of a set of unstructured inkblots are analyzed to identify a respondent's inner feelings and interpret his or her personality structure
Insulin
A protein hormone synthesized in the pancreas that regulates blood sugar levels by facilitating the uptake of glucose into tissues, when insulin rises, glucose decreases, so we have to eat something to maintain homeostasis or a glucostatic balance
Gestalt approach
A psychological school of thought originating in Germany that proposed that the whole of a perception must be understood rather than trying to deconstruct perception into its parts
longitudinal studies
A research method that studies the same participants multiple times over a period of time (Example: How does drinking kool-aid affect child growth - examines the same children over many years)
PET scans (positron emission tomography)
A small amount of radioactive glucose (a sugar) is injected into a vein. The PET scanner rotates around the body and makes a picture of where glucose is being used in the brain. Malignant tumor cells show up brighter in the picture because they are more active and take up more glucose than normal cells do. The more glucose that is being used by a part of a brain, the more active that part is.
Edward Titchener and introspection
A student of Wilhelm Wundt. A method of self-observation in which participants report their thoughts and feelings
Stream of consciousness (William James)
A term used by William James to describe the mind as a continuous flow of changing sensations, images, thoughts, and feelings.
Arousal theory
A theory of motivation suggesting that people are motivated to maintain an optimal level of alertness and physical and mental activation.
Systematic desensitization
A type of exposure therapy that associates a pleasant relaxed state with gradually increasing anxiety-triggering stimuli. Commonly used to treat phobias.
Sensory memory
A type of storage that holds sensory information for a few seconds or less.
Control Variable
A variable that is kept constant during a controlled experiment.
Afterimage
A visual image that persists after a stimulus is removed.
Inferiority complex
Adler's conception of a basic feeling of inadequacy stemming from childhood experiences; develops from being inferior for a while
Dorohea Dix
Advocated for the rights of the mentally ill, and she founded the first public mental hospital in the US
G. Stanley Hall
American psychologist who established the first psychology research laboratory in the United States and founded the American Psychological Association
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 (panic attacks)
Evolutionary approach
An approach to psychology centered on evolutionary ideas such as adaptation, reproduction, and natural selection as the basis for explaining specific human behaviors.
Humanistic approach
An approach to psychology emphasizing a person's positive qualities, the capacity for positive growth, and the freedom to choose any destiny. Humanistic psychologists emphasize personal values and goals and how they influence behavior.
psychodynamic/psychoanalytical approach
An approach to psychology emphasizing unconscious thought, the conflict between biological drives (such as the drive for sex) and society's demands, and early childhood family experiences.
Sociocultural approach
An approach to psychology that examines the ways in which social and cultural environments influence behavior.
Escape
An individual learns how to get away from an aversive stimulus by engaging in a particular behavior. (For example, a child does not want to eat her vegetables (aversive stimulus), so she throws a temper tantrum. If the parents respond by not making the child eat the vegetables, then she will learn that behaving in a specific way will help her escape that particular aversive stimulus)
Experiment
An investigation done in order to make a discovery or test a hypothesis
Hobbes and materialism
Argued that spirit or soul is meaningless and all that exists is matter and energy. Materialism holds that everything can be explained by the machinery in our brains.
Reactive attachment disorder
Attachment disorder in which a child with disturbed behavior neither seeks out a caregiver nor responds to offers of help from one; fearfulness and sadness are often evident. The child was neglected.
John Bowlby
Attachment theory. Identified the characteristics of a child's attachment to his/her caregiver and the phases that a child experiences when separated from the caregiver.
Sigmund Freud
Austrian neurologist known for his work on the unconscious mind. Father of psychoanalysis. Also made a theory of psychosexual development.
Sigmund Freud
Austrian physician whose work focused on the unconscious causes of behavior and personality formation; founded psychoanalysis.
Sigmund Freud (conscious mind vs. unconscious mind)
Austrian physician whose work focused on the unconscious causes of behavior and personality formation; founded psychoanalysis.
Culture
Beliefs, customs, and traditions of a specific group of people also effect one's development
Psychoanalytic school
Believed that the unconscious contains thoughts, memories, and desires that are hidden but still influence current behavior.
Contingency approach
Believes that the CS and US get paired because the CS comes to predict the US - Robert Rescorla (For example, the fish come to expect food upon seeing the light)
Dendrites
Branchlike parts of a neuron that are specialized to receive information.
Delay conditioning
CS is present until US begins
Trace conditioning
CS is removed some time before the US is presented
Excitatory
Causes next cell to fire
Language acquisition device
Chomsky's concept of an innate, prewired mechanism in the brain that allows children to acquire language naturally
Factitious disorder
Condition in which a person acts as if he or she has a physical or mental illness when he or she is not really sick to get sympathy or aid from others
Jerome Kagan
Conducted longitudinal studies on temperament (infancy to adolescence) Found that children classified as low in effortful control were more likely to have higher baseline heart rates, more muscle tension, and greater pupil dilation
Cerebllum
Controls muscle tone and balance
Rationalization
Creating logical excuses for emotional or irrational behavior
Repression
Defense mechanism by which anxiety-provoking thoughts and feelings are forced to the unconscious. (For example, some people involved in terrible accidents have no memory of the accidents at all. The memory, according to Freudian theory, has been repressed)
Olds and Milner
Demonstrated existence of pleasure center in the brain using "self-stimulation" studies in rats (limbic system)
Rene Descartes and dualism
Descartes, a dualist, theorized that the world and all its creatures were like machines (they were observable), but he believed that humans were the exception because they had minds. He believed that the mind is not observable, so it is not subject to natural laws. He hypothesized that the mind and body interact, and that the mind controls the body while the body provides sensory input for the mind. Dualism divides the world and all things in it into two parts: body and spirit.
Stimulants
Drugs (such as caffeine, nicotine, and the more powerful amphetamines, cocaine, and Ecstasy) that excite neural activity and speed up body functions.
John Watson (classical conditioning)
Early behaviorist; famous for the "Little Albert" experiments on fear conditioning. The idea of learning in which behavior evokes by a formerly neutral stimulus.
identity vs. role confusion
Erikson's fifth stage during which teenagers and young adults search for and become their true selves
integrity vs despair
Erikson's final stage in which those near the end of life look back and evaluate their lives for both the successes and failures
Intimacy vs. Isolation
Erikson's sixth stage in which individuals form deep personal relationships, marry, begin families
Generativity vs. Stagnation
Erikson's stage of social development in which middle-aged people begin to devote themselves more to fulfilling one's potential and doing public service. The stage where people want to contribute to the next generation with ideas and maybe kids
Lawrence Kohlberg
Famous for his theory of moral development in children; made use of moral dilemmas in assessment
Kurt Lewin
Father of Social Psychology
Warm fibers
Fire in response to warm stimuli
Margaret Floy Washburn
First female to be awarded a PhD in psychology; 2nd president of the APA (1921)
Oral stage
Freud's first stage of personality development, from birth to about age 2, during which the instincts of infants are focused on the mouth as the primary pleasure center. (Crying, sucking, people who develop fixations during this stage may become addicted to gum or verbal abuse)
Pleasure principle
Freud's theory regarding the id's desire to maximize pleasure and minimize pain in order to achieve immediate gratification.
Elizabeth Loftus
Her research on memory construction and the misinformation effect created doubts about the accuracy of eye-witness testimony, she asked misleading questions which created false memories
Self-esteem
How much we value ourselves
pre-screening/advertising bias
How volunteers are screened or where advertising is placed might skew the sample. (Example: Survey about men's shaving cream advertises by asking for people who shave their face regularly, you would get men mostly because they shave their face for the most part)
Abraham Maslow
Humanistic psychologist is known for his "Hierarchy of Needs" and the concept of "self-actualization"
Abraham Maslow
Humanistic psychologist known for his "Hierarchy of Needs" and the concept of "self-actualization"
Zone of proximal development
In Vygotsky's theory, the range between children's present level of knowledge and their potential knowledge state if they receive proper guidance and instruction (A student is able to perform simple addition when working with a teacher or parent, but is frustrated when performing the task alone. By guiding the student to use tools and strategies, and by asking questions about why he/she is using each tool or strategy, the student is able to fortify knowledge and eventually add independently.)
Bobo Doll experiment
In a classic study by Albert Bandura, children were waiting in a room with an adult confederate. For one group of children, the adult would simply wait. For another group of children, the adult would punch and kick an inflatable doll (thus the experiment is now nicknamed the Bobo Doll experiment, in both groups, the children were then brought into another room to play with interesting toys, but after a short time, the experimenters told the children that they had to stop playing with the interesting toys, and were brought back to the initial waiting room. The idea was to frustrate the children, and then see how they managed their frustration. Many of the children who had witnessed an adult abusing the doll proceeded to abuse the doll themselves. But most of the children who had witnessed an adult quietly waiting proceeded to quietly wait themselves.)
Experimental group
In an experiment, the group that is exposed to the treatment, that is, to one version of the independent variable.
Auditory input
In the form of sound waves, enters the ear by passing the outer ear, the part of the ear that is on the outside of your head, and into the ear canal.
Bipolar cells
In the retina, the specialized neurons that connect the rods and cones with the ganglion cells (cells of optic nerve)
Neurons
Individual cells in the nervous system that receive, integrate, and transmit information. (nerve cells)
GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)
Inhibitory neurotransmitter
Cognitive dissonance
Inner tension that a consumer experiences after recognizing an inconsistency between behavior and values or opinions
Superego
Is the internal representation of all of society's rules, morals, and obligations. It represents the polar opposite of the ID.
Evolutionary Theory
It focuses primarily on psychological adaptations: mechanisms of the mind that have evolved to solve specific problems of survival or reproduction.
Wisdom
It is assumed in many cultures that older members of society have a perspective or level of accumulated knowledge that gives them this. It is a form of insight into life situations and conditions that result in good judgements about difficult life problems
Opponent process theory
It posits that we start off at a motivational baseline, at which we are not motivated to act. Then we encounter a stimulus that feels good, such as a drug or even a positive social interaction. The pleasurable feelings we experience are the results of neuronal activity in the pleasure centers of the brain (the nucleus accumbens). We now have acquired a motivation to seek out the stimulus that made us feel good. Our brains, however, tend to revert back to a state of emotional neutrality over time. This reversion is a result of an opponent process, which works in opposition to the initial motivation toward seeking the stimulus. In other words, we are motivated to seek stimuli that makes us feel emotion, after which an opposing motivational force brings us back in the direction of a baseline. After repeated exposure to a stimulus, its emotional effects begin to wear off; that is, we begin to habituate to the stimulus. The opponent process, however, does not habituate as quickly, so what used to cause a very positive response now barely produces one at all. Additionally, the opponent process overcompensates, producing withdrawal. As with drugs, we now need larger amounts of the formerly positive stimuli just to maintain a baseline state. In other words, we are addicted.
Dual-coding hypothesis
It's easier to remember words associated with images than either one alone. (For example, quizlet terms with pictures)
Conditioned taste aversion (CTA, Garcia effect)
John Garcia determined that animals that eat a food that results in nausea (even by drug or radiation) will not eat that food if they ever encounter it again. This is highly resistant to extinction.
John Locke and Empiricism
John Locke extended Descartes's application of natural law, and applied it to all things. He believes that even the mind is under the control of such laws. Locke started empiricism, which is the acquisition of truth through observations and experiences because he believed humans started off with a blank slate.
Inhibitory
Keeps next cell from firing
Jean Piaget
Known for his theory of cognitive development in children
Wernicke's area
Language comprehension (controls language reception - a brain area involved in language comprehension and expression; usually in the left temporal lobe)
receptive aphasia
Language incomprehension (Damage to Wernicke's area can cause this condition in which a person hears a sound, but it has no meaning)
(observational learning/vicarious learning)Social learning
Learning through observing others
Julian Rotter
Locus of Control (internal/external)
Psychometric
Looks at the measurement of behavior through the development of psychological tests; assesses issues of validity and reliability as well as statistical modeling
Carl Rogers: unconditional positive regard
Love and support are given to another person with no conditions attached
Howard Gardner
Made the theory of Multiple intelligences, which consisted of verbal, mathematical, musical, spatial, kinesthetic, environment, interpersonal (people skills) and intarpersonal (insightful, self-awareness)
Heuristics
Mental shortcuts or "rules of thumb" that often lead to a solution (but not always, Firefighters, for example, may have an instinctive sense for when a burning building might collapse).
Aerial perspective
Monocular cue to distance and depth based on the fact that more distant objects are likely to appear hazy and blurred.
Depressive disorders
Mood disorders in which the individual suffers from depression—an unrelenting lack of pleasure in life. These disorders go far beyond normal sadness or grief and last longer than usual periods of sadness.
Alfred Adler
Neo-Freudian; introduced concept of "inferiority complex" and stressed the importance of birth order
Karen Horney
Neo-Freudian; offered feminist critique of Freud's theory; talked about basic anxiety
Efferent
Neurons conveying information from the brain (motor neurons)
Afferent
Neurons sending information to the brain are sensory
nonassociative learning
Occurs when a single repeated exposure leads to a change in behavior.
Self-efficacy
One's belief in his or her own ability (One who has a high level of self-efficacy would be more confident in his or her work)
Conditions of worth
Other people's evaluations of our worth, distort our self concept
Authoritative style
Parents also expect compliance to rules but explain rules and encourage independence. Parents set limits, give out punishments, and forgive. Children of these parents have high self-esteem, are independent, and are articulate. Authoritative parents will exert a high level of control and high level of warmth.
Permissive style
Parents have few expectations and are warm and non-demanding. Children are rarely punished, and parents consider themselves friends of the child. Children of these parents are not good at accepting responsibility, controlling their impulses, or being generous in social relationships. Permissive parents will exert a low level of control and high level of warmth
Authoritarian style
Parents have high expectations for their child to comply with rules without debate or explanation. This style is the most likely to use corporal punishment (like spanking) for disobedience. Children of these parents are socially withdrawn, lack decision-making capabilities, and lack curiosity. Authoritarian parents will exert a high level of control and low level of warmth.
Contiguity approach
Pavlov and Watson believed that the pairing of the CS (initially neutral) and US (natural) stimuli occur because they are paired in time
Life-span psychologists
People who study psychological development throughout life.
Hoarding disorder
Persistent difficulty discarding or parting with possessions, regardless of their actual value
Abraham Maslow (self actualization)
Proposed the idea of self-actualization, which is the need for individuals to reach their full potential in a creative way. Attaining self-actualization means accepting yourself and your nature while knowing your limits and strengths.
Enzymes
Proteins that speed up chemical reactions
Child psychologists
Psychologists who focus on an earlier portion of people's lives (childhood).
surveys
Questionnaires and interviews that ask people directly about their experiences, attitudes, or opinions. (Mass study)
Type I error
Rejecting null hypothesis when it is true
Memory Reconstruction
Remembering past events and features of these events and putting them together during memory recall.
Compulsions
Repetitive behaviors or mental acts that are performed to prevent or reduce anxiety. (excessive cleaning and hand washing; repeatedly checking doors, locks, appliances, and such; rituals designed to ward off contact with superstitious objects; using prayers or chants to prevent bad things from happening; arranging and rearranging objects)
correlational research
Research that examines the relationships between variables, whose purpose is to examine whether and how two variables change together.
Harry and Margaret Harlow
Researchers known for their controversial experiments with monkeys in which they showed that baby monkeys are drawn to mothers that provide comfort rather than simply food. Also showed that monkeys raised in isolation developed severe mental and social deficits
Confidentiality
Respecting the privacy of both parties and keeping details secret
Stereotyped ingestive responses
Responses by babies that involve sucking and smacking their lips if someone places a drop of sugar water in their mouths, and gaping and sticking out the tongue (and probably crying) if lemon juice is used. (This behavior makes evolutionary sense given that sour and bitter flavors are often associated with harmful bacteria that can make the baby ill)
Amacrine cells
Retinal cells that connect the rods and cones, and bipolar cells to the ganglion cells (cells of optic nerves)
Cones
Retinal receptors that are near the center of the retina are sensitive to bright light and detect color vision
Rods
Retinal receptors that are sensitive to low light and detect black, white, and gray
Regression
Reverting to childish behaviors
Positive symptoms
Schizophrenic symptoms that involve behavioral excesses or peculiarities, such as hallucinations, delusions, bizarre behavior, and wild flights of ideas.
General Adaptation Syndrome
Selye's concept of the body's adaptive response to stress in three phases—alarm, resistance, exhaustion.
Sensory coding
Sensory receptors translate the physical properties of stimuli into patterns of neural impulses (receptors send information to the brain)
single-or double-blind placebo
Single-blind means that the subjects do not know if they are in a control or experimental. Double-blind is when neither the experimenters nor the participants know who got the placebo.
B. F. Skinner and Operant Conditioning
Skinner's box is a soundproof box with a key or bar that an animal can press to release a reward of food or water and a device that records these responses taught us about precise conditions that allow for efficient and enduring learning. Operant conditioning is the idea that a subject learns through the consequences of its behavior.
William Dement
Sleep researcher who discovered and coined the phrase "rapid eye movement" (REM) sleep (He studied the affects of depriving the REM cycle, and he found that people tend to have longer REM sessions immediately after going back to sleep)
Terminal buttons
Small knobs at the end of axons that secrete chemicals called neurotransmitters
Primary reinforcement
Something that is naturally reinforcing, such as food (if you were hungry), warmth (if you were cold), and water (if you were thirsty).
Secondary reinforcement
Something that you have learned to value, like money (money is a good example of a secondary reinforcer. In nature, money is just paper or metal; it has no intrinsic value. We have learned, however, that money can be exchanged for primary reinforcers)
Receptor cells
Specialized cells in every sensory system of the body that can turn other kinds of energy into action potentials (neural impulses) that the brain can process. (For example, the visual system has specialized receptor cells for detecting light waves)
Physical development
Starts at conception; a developmental process that refers to the physical growth of a person's body; this growth affects height, weight, and internal body systems
Eric Kandel
Studied the sea slug Aplysia and posited that learning and memory are evidenced by changes in synapses and neural pathways. (continued Donald Hebb's idea, found that when there's a correlation between two stimuli, and every time it is activated, it causes the neurons to release neuromodulators)
Environmental interaction
Stuff someone interacts with (It has been demonstrated that children raised in situations in which their ability to crawl or walk is restricted have impaired motor skills. This occurs, for example, in some institutions in counties without regulation of childcare facilities. Additionally, perceptual development can be delayed by lack of stimulation.
Shadowing
Technique where a participant is asked to repeat a word or phrase immediately after its heard
George Sperling
Tested recall time by flashing rows of numbers and saw if participants could immediately recall the numbers
Disorganized attachment
The child has an erratic relationship with the primary caretaker and with other adults. This attachment style is more common in cases of severe neglect and/or abuse (For example, a child might be distressed to be left with a new babysitter or unfamiliar caregiver)
Secure attachment
The child is generally happy in the presence of the primary caretaker, is distressed when he or she leaves, but can be consoled again quickly after he or she returns
Avoidant attachment
The child may be inhibited in the presence of the primary caretaker, and may pretend to not be distressed when he or she leaves (Blood pressure and cortisol analyses show that the child is in fact quite stressed out)
Ambivalent attachment
The child may have a "stormed" relationship with the primary caretaker, is distressed when he or she leaves, and has difficult being consoled after his or her return
Forward conditioning
The conditioned stimulus signals that the unconditioned stimulus is coming
Tympanic membrane
The eardrum. A membrane where vibrations from the outer ear enter. The vibrations that enter vibrate the membrane and then the ossicles (the ossicles are right next to the membrane)
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 intrinsic interest, as the motivation for performing the task. Intrinsic to extrinsic behavior (For example, a person may love to play the violin for fun, but when he is a paid concert performer, he will play less for fun and view using the violin as a part of his job)
Pituitary gland
The endocrine system's most influential gland. Under the influence of the hypothalamus, the pituitary regulates growth and controls other endocrine glands.
independent variable
The experimental factor that is manipulated; the variable whose effect is being studied.
Germinal stage
The first phase of prenatal development, encompassing the first two weeks after conception, here the zygote undergoes cell division, expanding to 64 cells and implanting itself in the uterine wall
Social comparison theory
The idea that we learn about our own abilities and attitudes by comparing ourselves to other people (For example, a music student might compare herself to the star student of the class. If she finds that her abilities do not measure up to her peer's talents, she might be driven to achieve more and improve her abilities)
Acquisition
The initial stage in classical conditioning; the phase associating a neutral stimulus with an unconditioned stimulus so that the neutral stimulus comes to elicit a conditioned response. In operant conditioning, the strengthening of a reinforced response. (Loud noise and rat)
Just noticeable difference (JND) (Difference threshold)
The minimum amount of distance between two stimuli that can be detected as distinct
Pearson correlation coefficient
The most common statistical measure of the strength of linear relationships among variables
Law of Pragnanz
The most general Gestalt principle, which is the idea that we tend to see objects in their simplest forms
Dependent Variable
The outcome factor; the variable that may change in response to manipulations of the independent variable.
Cerebral cortex
The outer layer of the brain. It is involved in higher cognitive functions such as thinking, planning, language use, and fine motor control. It receives input (sensory cortex) and sends out motor information (motor cortex)
Visual persistence
The perceptual phenomenon in which a visual stimulus still seems to be present even after its termination, usually a few hundred milliseconds to a few seconds.
16PF (Personality Factory) Questionnaire
The personality model developed my Raymond Cattel, it signifies one of the 16 traits
Transduction
The process of converting outside stimuli, such as light, into neural activity (We hear something -> recepts in the ear convert mechanical vibrations into electrochemical signals (action potential) )
Insight learning
The process of learning how to solve a problem or do something new by applying what is already known, or it is the process of mentally working through a problem until the sudden realization of a solution occurs "a ha moment"
Spreading activation
The process through which activity in one node in a network flows outward to other nodes through associative links. Memory is organized into neighborhoods divided by like topics (For instance, subjects respond faster to the word "doctor" when it is preceded by "nurse" than when it is preceded by an unrelated word like "carrot".)
Parallel processing
The processing of several aspects of a problem simultaneously; the brain's natural mode of information processing for many functions, including vision. This contrasts with the step-by-step (serial) processing of most computers and of conscious problem-solving.
Denial
The refusal to acknowledge or accept unwanted beliefs or actions
Flynn effect
The rise in average IQ scores that has occurred over the decades in many nations. The need for restandardization every so often
Embryonic stage
The second stage of prenatal development, lasting from two weeks until the end of the second month/beginning of the third month. Here, the organs form.
Resistance
The second stage of the general adaptation syndrome, when there are intense physiological efforts to either resist or adapt to the stressor.
Context-dependent memory
The theory that information learned in a particular situation or place is better remembered when in that same situation or place. (For example: I remember that a triangle with a 90 degree angle is a right triangle at school because I learned that at school)
State-dependent memory
The theory that information learned in a particular state of mind (e.g., depressed, happy, somber) is more easily recalled when in that same state of mind. (For example: I learned that blue + yellow makes green when I was sad, so it would be more likely that I remember that fact when I am sad again)
Fetal stage
The third stage of prenatal development, lasting from two months through birth. Here, sexual differentiation occurs and movement begins to develop, growth is rapid in this stage.
Musical intelligence
Theory of Multiple intelligences; potential to appreciate, compose and perform music
Intrapersonal intelligence
Theory of Multiple intelligences; potential to understand and regulate oneself
Spatial intelligence
Theory of Multiple intelligences; the ability to generate, retain, retrieve, and transform well-structured visual images
Environmental intelligence (naturalistic)
Theory of Multiple intelligences; the ability to identify, classify and manipulate elements of the environment, objects, animals or plants
Interpersonal intelligence
Theory of Multiple intelligences; the ability to read, empathize, and understand others (people smart)
Verbal intelligence (Linguistic)
Theory of Multiple intelligences; the ability to think in words and use language to express meaning
Secondary traits
Traits that are more preferences/attitudes (public speaking anxiety, or impatience while waiting in line)
Nomothetic analysis
Traits, like the big five, that are thought to be universal
Lens
Under the cornea, its curvature of the lens changes to accommodate for focal distance so that the light can focus on the retina
Attention resource theories
We have a fixed amount of attention, and this resource can be divided up as is required in a given situation. It is inadequate, however, because all attention is not equal. (For example, a conversation occurring near you is more likely to interfere with your reading than is some other nonverbal noise)
Contralateral processing
When stimuli is processed on the opposite side where it was detected: e.g. Information from the left half of the visual field is detected by the right half of each retina and is processed by the right hemisphere of the brain, and vice versa for left visual field.
healthy user bias
When study population is likely healthier than the general population (Example: Asking people about how their lives are in a rich community)
Edward L. Thorndike
Widely known for the law of effect- the principle that rewarded behavior is likely to recur and punished behavior is unlikely to recur. This principle was the basis for BF Skinner's behavioral technology.
Wilhelm Wundt and structuralism
Wilhelm Wundt opened the first laboratory in Leipzig, Germany, and was the "founder" of psychology. Structuralism entails looking for patterns in thought, which are illuminated through introspection.
William James and functionalism
William James, an American, opposed structuralism, instead he argued that the function of the mind is more important. Functionalism focused on how our mental and behavioral processes function- how they enable us to adapt, survive, and flourish.
Strange situation
a behavioral test developed by Mary Ainsworth that is used to determine a child's attachment style. Here, a parent or primary guardian leaves a child with a stranger and then returns, Ainsworth recognized four attachment patterns: secure, avoidant, ambivalent, and disorganized
biological
a branch of psychology concerned with the links between biology and behavior
biological psychology
a branch of psychology concerned with the links between biology and behavior (Example: Which part of the brain is involved in x function?)
counseling
a branch of psychology that assists people with problems in living (often related to school, work, or marriage) and in achieving greater well-being
Developmental
a branch of psychology that studies physical, cognitive, and social change throughout the life span
Developmental psychology
a branch of psychology that studies physical, cognitive, and social change throughout the life span
clinical
a branch of psychology that studies, assesses, and treats people with psychological disorders
Panic attack
a brief, intense episode of extreme fear characterized by sweating, dizziness, light-headedness, racing heartbeat, and feelings of impending death or going crazy
corpus callosum
a broad band of nerve fibers joining the two hemispheres of the brain.
Unconditional positive regard
a caring, accepting, nonjudgmental attitude, which Carl Rogers believed would help clients to develop self-awareness and self-acceptance
Intelligence quotient (IQ)
a child's mental age divided by chronological age, multiplied by 100. The mental age is calculated by the Stanford-Binet test.
Approach-avoidance
a choice must be made about whether to pursue a single goal that has both attractive and unattractive aspects (For example, a college you got in is good, and you got your major, but it costs a lot )
Approach-approach
a choice must be made between two attractive goals (For example: two similar colleges)
Avoidance-avoidance
a choice must be made between two unattractive goals (For example, a person has to choose between getting an F in Math, or an F in Science)
Narcotics
a class of opium-related drugs that suppress the sensation of pain by binding to and stimulating the nervous system's natural receptor sites for endorphins and increases relaxation
Cochlea
a coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear through which sound waves trigger nerve impulses. it gets vibrated by the oval window, which is like the gate to the inner ear
Standard deviation
a computed measure of how much scores vary around the mean score
Schema
a concept or framework that organizes and interprets information (For example a child may develop one when he encounters dogs and cats. When he goes to the zoo and sees a more exotic four-legged animal like elephants or giraffes, he must assimilate this new information into his existing category of animals.)
Desensitization therapy
a conditioning technique designed to gradually reduce anxiety about a particular object or situation (For example, if you have a phobia of snakes, you might engage in systematic desensitization, where you look at a picture of a snake until your reaction is normal, and in various therapy sessions, you get closer and closer to the snake, eventually even handling it. By being exposed to the stimulus but having no bad outcomes, you can become desensitized to the stimulus and thus overcome your phobia)
Desensitization
a decreased responsiveness to an aversive stimulus after repeated exposure
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
a disorder characterized by unwanted repetitive thoughts (obsessions) and/or actions (compulsions) (Obsessions cause compulsions)
Illness anxiety disorder
a disorder in which a person interprets normal physical sensations as symptoms of a disease (For example a noisy stomach might lead to fears of severe stomach problems or a minor rash might create fears of skin disease)
Binge eating
a disorder in which a person repeatedly eats too much food at one time, and it is usually followed by inappropriate means of loosing weight (purging)
Depersonalization
a dissociative disorder characterized by persistent or recurrent feelings of detachment from one's mental processes or body; "this is not happening to me" (for example, like you're living in a movie or a dream. Feeling emotionally disconnected from people you care about, as if you were separated by a glass wall)
Derealization
a dissociative disorder situation in which the individual loses a sense of the reality of the external world; "This is not really happening" (for example, like you're living in a movie or a dream. Feeling emotionally disconnected from people you care about as if you were separated by a glass wall)
Confounding (Third/Extraneous) Variables
a factor other than the independent variable that might produce an effect in an experiment (Unknown factor)
Stagnation
a failure to develop, progress, or advance, which can be caused if one cannot successfully complete the generativity vs stagnation phase
Myelin sheath
a fatty tissue layer that surrounds the axon, and they serve as insulation for the electrical information that travels down the axon (The better insulated the axon is, the faster the electrical signals go)
Mental set
a fixed frame of mind, that we use when approaching the problems. (For example, if the last time your computer froze you restarted it and it worked, that might be the only solution you can think of the next time it freezes)
Self
a force that balances all of the opposing forces and desires of the mind
Motor disorders
a group of disorders characterized by motor symptoms such as tics, stereotypic movements, or dyscoordination
Population
a group of interest, to be studied
Axon
a long tubelike structure attached to a neuron that transmits impulses away from the neuron cell body
Heritability coefficient
a measure (derived from a correlation coefficient) of the extent to which a trait or characteristic is inherited. (Taking the IQ from two separated twins and calculating it to find out what that coefficient is to find how nature affects one's IQ)
Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)
a medical condition in which body deformation or facial development or mental ability of a fetus is impaired because the mother drank alcohol while pregnant
Declarative (or explicit) memory
a memory a person can consciously consider and retrieve, such as episodic and semantic memory (For example: I can remember y=mx+b on the spot)
Prototype
a mental image or best example of a category (For example, when I think of a phone, I think of an iPhone)
Cognitive map
a mental representation of the layout of one's environment. For example, after exploring a maze, rats act as if they have learned a cognitive map of it.
Test-retest method
a method of calculating reliability by repeating the same measure at two or more points in time (after the participants forget about the terms on the first test)
Cross-sectional method
a method of research that looks at different age groups at the same time in order to understand changes that occur during the life span (This approach can reveal the average age at which certain skills or abilities appear. However, the data collected in cross sectional studies tells us little about the actual development of any single individual)
Elaborative rehearsal
a method of transferring information from STM into LTM by making that information meaningful in some way. You can do this by organizing and understanding the information
Motivation
a need or desire that energizes and directs behavior
Reticular formation
a nerve network in the brainstem that plays an important role in controlling arousal
Semantic memory
a network of associated facts and concepts that make up our general knowledge of the world (For example: I know the math equation y=mx+b)
Autism spectrum disorder
a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by persistent deficits in social interaction and communication across different life settings (e.g., home, school) and by restricted and repetitive behavior, interests or activities, and in which symptoms begin during early childhood
Reuptake
a neurotransmitter's reabsorption by the sending neuron
B.F. Skinner
a noted behaviorist, countered Chomsky's argument for language acquisition. He explored the idea of the "language acquisition support system," which is the language-rich or language-poor environment the child is exposed to while growing up. Chomsky's language acquisition device (LAD) provides the foundational structure of language, while the language acquisition support system (LASS) provides the scaffolding to help young children learn language.
Cocktail party phenomenon
a phenomenon in which people tune in one message even while they filter out others nearby, additionally, it demonstrates the subliminal perception as when we hear our name, we focus our attention on it. It is the process of our unconscious.
Vanishing point
a point in space, usually located on the horizon, where parallel edges of an object appear to converge. A point where two lines become indistinguishable from a single line.
Thematic Apperception Test
a projective test in which people express their inner feelings and interests through the stories they make up about pictures that are presented to someone
Schizophrenia
a psychological disorder characterized by delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, and/or diminished, inappropriate emotional expression
Attention-defecit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
a psychological disorder marked by the appearance by age 12 of one or more of three key symptoms: extreme inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity
Eysenck Personality Inventory
a questionnaire designed to examine people's personalities based on their traits
Dissociative identity disorder (DID)
a rare dissociative disorder in which a person exhibits two or more distinct and alternating personalities. Formerly called multiple personality disorder. This disorder is most often associated with significant trauma or abuse in childhood.
Sucking reflex
a reflex a neonate has that is triggered by placing something in the baby's mouth
Palmar reflex
a reflex a neonate has that is triggered by placing something on its hands, it will cause it to grasp whatever is placed in its palm
Head-turning reflex
a reflex response elicited by touching the baby's cheek
Babinski reflex
a reflex where in response to the sole of the foot being stroked, a baby's big toe moves upward or toward the top surface of the foot and the other toes fan out
Learning
a relatively permanent or stable change in behavior as a result of experience
Standardization sample
a representative group of people who take the test and establish the norms.
cross-sectional studies
a research method that test a wide array of subjects from different backgrounds to increase generalizability (Example: I test the effect of drinking coffee on people aged from 16 to 90, variety is age here)
Wolfgang Kohler
a researcher who studied insight learning in chimps. He put a chimp in a cage with two sticks, and put some bananas outside the cage. The chimp wanted the bananas, but he could not reach them with either stick. After struggling for a while, the chimp took the two stocks, and put the thinner end of one into the hollow end of the other, making one long stick of sufficient length to reach the bananas. The novel approach of combining sticks was presumably the result of this.
Id
a reservoir of unconscious psychic energy that, according to Freud, strives to satisfy basic sexual and aggressive drives. The id operates on the pleasure principle, demanding immediate gratification.
Representative Sample
a sample that accurately reflects the characteristics of the population as a whole
Random sampling
a sample that fairly represents a population because each member has an equal chance of inclusion
Sleep apnea
a sleep disorder characterized by temporary cessations of breathing during sleep and repeated momentary awakenings (stops breathing -> wakes up in like a min or two cause you can't breathe)
alertness and arousal
a state of consciousness that allows us to remain attentive to our surroundings
correlation coefficient
a statistical measure of the extent to which two factors vary together, and thus of how well either factor predicts the other (-1 to 1+)
Insight
a sudden understanding of a problem or potential strategy for solving a problem that usually involves conceptualizing the problem in a new way (A dog is in a room with a small gate to keep him from leaving. He pushes a box over to the gate in order to stand on it and jump over the gate.)
Bias of selection
a systematic difference in the enrollment of participants in a study that leads to an incorrect result (e.g., risk ratio or odds ratio) or inference. (Example: I select participants near a girls college, population is likely to favor girls)
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
Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
a test that consists of a series of items that vary according to the age of the person being tested
Longitudinal method
a type of research in which the same people are studied over a long time period
MMPI-2-RF
a widely used self-report test that identifies people with psychological difficulties and is employed to predict some everyday behaviors, essentially measures personality to mental disorders
Effortful control
ability of a child to self-regulate moods and behavior
Parasomnias
abnormalities of movement during deep sleep; they include sleep walking (somnambulism and night terrors
Manifest content
according to Freud, the remembered storyline of a dream
Self-actualization
according to Maslow, one of the ultimate psychological needs that arises after basic physical and psychological needs are met and self-esteem is achieved; the motivation to fulfill one's potential
Bottom-up processing
achieves recognition of an object by breaking it down into its component parts, using stimulus to perceive (no preconceived idea before, and stimulus allows you to understand by piecing and object together)
Short-term memory
activated memory that holds a few items briefly, such as the seven digits of a phone number while dialing, before the information is stored or forgotten
Accommodation
adapting our current understandings (schemas) to incorporate new information (For example, a child's schema of an animal might go through this process if he encountered a kangaroo that hopped on two legs)
Norepinephrine
affects levels of alertness (a lack of it is implicated in depression)
Acetylcholine
affects memory function, as well as muscle contraction, particularly in the heart (neurotransmitter)
Tetragens
agents, such as chemicals and viruses, basically any harmful environmental agents that can reach the embryo or fetus during prenatal development and cause harm (alcohol for example_
Louis Terman
altered Binet's IQ test, calling it the Stanford-Binet
Negative affect
amount of frustration and sadness
Surgency
amount of positive affect and activity level
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
an anxiety disorder characterized by haunting memories, nightmares, social withdrawal, jumpy anxiety, and/or insomnia that lingers for four weeks or more after a traumatic experience. If something related to the trauma comes up, a person may react. (For example, a soldier hears a sound that sounds like a bomb, he falls and hides)
Carl Wernicke
an area of the brain (in the left temporal lobe) involved in language comprehension and expression was named for him because he discovered it
Temperament
an aspect of personality concerned with emotional dispositions and reactions and their speed and intensity; the term often is used to refer to the prevailing mood or mood pattern of a person.
Bulimia nervosa
an eating disorder characterized by episodes of overeating, usually of high-calorie foods, followed by vomiting, laxative use, fasting, or excessive exercise
Anorexia nervosa
an eating disorder in which a normal-weight person diets and becomes significantly underweight, yet, still feeling fat, continues to starve
Anorexia nervosa
an eating disorder in which an irrational fear of weight gain leads people to starve themselves
Informed consent
an ethical principle that research participants be told enough to enable them to choose whether they wish to participate
Second-order conditioning
an existing conditioned stimulus can serve as an unconditioned stimulus for a pairing with a new conditioned stimulus (The fish is now trained with a new CS, such as tone, which would be paired with light, which would now serve as the new US. If the conditioning were successful, the fish would learn to swim to the top in response to the tone)
Partial report
an experimental technique in which participants recall just a specified subset of the study material, which showed that iconic memory has more capacity than was revealed by the full report technique
Phi phenomenon
an illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on and off in quick succession
Dissociative amnesia
an inability to recall life events that goes far beyond normal forgetting (For example, a crime victim may have no memory of being robbed at gunpoint but can recall details from the rest of that day. Generalized: Memory loss affects major parts of a person's life and/or identity, such as a young woman being unable to recognize her name, job, family, and friends)
long-term potentiation
an increase in a cell's firing potential after brief, rapid stimulation. Believed to be a neural basis for learning and memory. "Neurons that fire together, wire together"
Sensitization
an increase in behavioral response after exposure to a stimulus (For example, the sound of a car backfiring might sound like a gunshot to a war veteran, and the veteran may drop to the ground in response, even if there is no threat present)
Fight-or-Flight reaction
an increase in heart rate and respiration, accompanied by a decrease in digestion and salivation
Persona
an individual's characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting
Personality
an individual's characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting
Biopsychosocial approach
an integrated approach that incorporates biological, psychological, and social-cultural levels of analysis
Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children
an intelligence test for children between the ages of 6 and 16 inclusive that can be completed without reading or writing. The WISC generates an IQ score
Token economy
an operant conditioning procedure in which people earn a token of some sort for exhibiting a desired behavior and can later exchange the tokens for various privileges or treats (For example, your teacher gives you tickets when you behave super well, and she says you can trade them in at the end of the year for prizes. This economy will encourage you to behave your best so you can get some prizes)
Shaping (differential reinforcement of successive approximations)
an operant conditioning procedure in which reinforcers guide behavior toward closer and closer approximations of the desired behavior (For example: to get the rats to learn to press a lever, the experimenter would use this technique in which a rat first receives a food reward for being near the lever, then for touch the lever, and finally for pressing the lever. In the end, the rat is rewarded only for pressing the lever)
Critical period
an optimal period shortly after birth when an organism's exposure to certain stimuli or experiences produces proper development (language - Noam Chomsky)
Operant conditioning (instrumental conditioning)
an organism's learning to make a response in order to obtain a reward or avoid punishment
alternative hypothesis
anything other than the null hypothesis, is false until proven true
generalizable
applicable to similar circumstances because of the predictable outcomes of repeated tests
Overgeneralization
applying grammar rules in areas they don't apply ("I writed a story"; goed; comed)
Dyssomnias
are abnormalities in the amount, quality, or timing of sleep, and they include insomnia, narcolepsy, and sleep apnea
Syllogism
are deductive conclusions drawn from two premises (For example, consider the following argument: All politicians are trustworthy. Janet is a politician, Therefore, Janet is trustworthy)
Stages
are patterns of behavior that occur in a fixed sequence
Association areas
areas responsible for associating information in the sensory and motor cortices
Surface traits
aspects of personality that can easily be seen by other people in the outward actions of a person
Echoic
auditory sensory memory
Parenting styles
authoritarian, permissive, and authoritative
Mean
average
Delusions
beliefs that are not based in reality (For example, believing that one can fly, that one is the president of a country, or that one is being pursed by the CIA)
Maturation
biological growth processes that enable orderly changes in behavior, relatively uninfluenced by experience (Biological>Environmental)
Circadian rhythms
biological patterns that occur at regular intervals as a function of time of day
Tabula Rasa
blank slate
Blood glucose
blood sugar, the main source of energy for the body
Endorphins
body's natural painkillers (neurotransmitter)
Central nervous system (CNS)
brain and spinal cord
Theta waves
brain waves indicating the early stages of sleep
Tegmentum
brain's floor
Tectum
brain's roof
Nerves
bundles of neurons
Soma
cell body
Altered consciousness
change in consciousness (Example: head injuries, drugs, toxins, or medical conditions)
Leak channels
channels that are always open and allow ions to move along their gradient
Neurotransmitters
chemical messengers
Lev Vygotsky
child development; investigated how culture & interpersonal communication guide development; zone of proximal development; play research (Piaget focused on biological impact, vs this guy who did social impact)
Binocular depth cues
clues about distance based on the differing views of the two eyes
Edward Tolman
cognitive psychologist; latent learning and cognitive map; researched rats in a maze
Pica
compulsive eating of nonnutritive substances such as (ice, chalk, dirt, plastic, soap)
Divided attention
concentrating on more than one activity at the same time
Basic concept
concepts that have a moderate number of instances and that are easier to acquire than those having few or many instances (For example, bread, instead of the superordinate concept: food)
Albert Bandura
conducted the famous Bobo doll experiments that showed that people imitate others' actions, regardless of whether or not they observe the consequences
Source confusion
confusion about the origin of a memory (For example: if children read and reread a story, they may come to think the events of the story happened to them rather than to the character, I remembered the time I thought I was on a cliff)
Reliability
consistency of measurement
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)
continual feelings of worry, anxiety, physical tension, and irritability across many areas of life functioning. A constant state of autonomic nervous system arousal and feelings of dread and worry.
Reticular activating system (RAS)
controls arousal (wakefulness and alertness)
medulla oblongata
controls involuntary actions, such as breathing, digestion, heart rate, and swallowing (basic life functions)
Autonomic nervous system
controls the non skeletal or smooth muscles, such as those of the heart and digestive tract, and it is not voluntary, rather it is automatic. it is also part of the peripheral nervous system.
Hypothalamus
controls the temperature and water balance of the body; controls hunger and sex drives; orchestrates the activation of the sympathetic nervous system and the endocrine system; and it is divided into the lateral hypothalamus and ventromedial hypothalamus
Motor cortex
controls voluntary movements
Factor analysis
correlations among many variables are analyzed to identify closely related clusters of variables (For example, when you take a multiple choice Introductory Psychology test, a (term) can be done to see what types of questions you did best on and worst on (maybe they did best on factual types of questions but really poorly on conceptual types of questions)
left and right cerebral hemispheres
covered by the cortex of the brain and joined by the corpus callosum
Charles Spearman
creator of "g-factor", or general intelligence, concept
Individualist culture
culture in which personal accomplishments are a more important component of one's self-concept than group membership (For example, workers in an individualist culture are more likely to value their own well-being over the good of the group, independence) People in these societies value making their children independent, both socially and economically. Self-worth and self-esteem are developed by focusing on individual achievement.
expressive aphasia
damage to Broca's area can cause this condition in which person cannot talk, though understand speech. Inability of speech.
anterograde amnesia
damage to the hippocampus can cause this, which is the inability to form new memories
Sensorineural deafness
deafness that results from damage to the auditory nerve (cochlea)
Habituation
decreasing responsiveness with repeated stimulation (For example: you hear trains when you first move into a house, but after a couple of months, you become used to it and it may even become background noise if you've gotten used to it so much)
Shadow
deep, passionate, inner person
ventromedial hypothalamus
depresses hunger
ventromedial hypothalamus
depresses hunger (set point)
Retinal convergence
depth cue that results from the fact that your eyes must turn inward slightly to focus on near objects
Need for affiliation
desire to associate with others, to be part of a group, to form close and intimate relationships
Richard Lazarus
developed a cognitive theory of how we respond to stress--in this approach, the individual evaluates whether the event appears to be stressful (PRIMARY APPRAISAL), then (SECONDARY APPRAISAL) it is assessed whether the individual can handle the stress--stress is minimized or maximized by the individuals ability to respond to the stressor
Eleanor Gibson and Richard Walk
developed the visual cliff to test depth perception
Mary Rothbart
developmental psychologist--temperament is generally assessed on three scales: 1) surgency (amount of positive affect and activity level) 2) negative affect (amount of frustration and sadness) 3) effortful control (ability of a child to self-regulate moods and behavior)
Mary Ainsworth
developmental psychology; compared effects of maternal separation, devised patterns of attachment; "The Strange Situation": observation of parent/child attachment
Equivalent-form reliability
different but similar tests covering the same concepts are given to the same group of subjects and the results are correlated
Specific learning disorders
difficulties in the acquisition and use of listening, speaking, reading, writing, reasoning, or mathematical abilities
Agnosia
difficulty processing sensory input
Paul Broca
discovered area in the brain (named for him) in the left frontal lobe responsible for language production
Ivan Pavlov
discovered classical conditioning; trained dogs to salivate at the ringing of a bell
Incongruence
discrepancies between our self-concept and our actual thoughts and behavior as well as feedback from out surroundings
Disorganized thinking
disjointed and incoherent thought processes, usually detected by what a person says
Bipolar disorders
disorders marked by alternating or intermixed periods of mania and depression
Androgyny
displaying both traditional masculine and feminine psychological characteristics
Body dysmorphia
distorted body image
Natural reinforcement
doesn't need to be learned to be liked (food, water, sex)
Secondary drive
drives that are learned or acquired through experience, such as the drive to achieve monetary wealth
Barbiturates
drugs that depress the activity of the central nervous system, reducing anxiety but impairing memory and judgment
Anxiolytics
drugs that reduce anxiety
Depressants
drugs that reduce neural activity and slow body functions
Amphetemines
drugs that stimulate neural activity, causing speeded-up body functions and associated energy and mood changes
Telegraphic speech
early speech stage in which a child speaks like a telegram—"go car"—using mostly nouns and verbs. usually 2-3 word groups (For example, "mommy food" would mean "mommy, give me food".) It is called this because back in the day they only sent the essential words to save money.
Limbic system
emotional center of the brain, composed of thalamus, hippocampus, amygdala, and hypothalamus
Daniel Goleman
emotional intelligence, and created programs to help those lacking it
Latent content
emotional significance and underlying meaning of the dream (freud)
Maturationists
emphasize the role of genetically programmed growth and development on the body, and particularly on the nervous system
Cognition
encompasses the mental processes involved in acquiring, organizing, using, and constructing knowledge.
Purging
engaging in behaviors such as vomiting or misusing laxatives to rid the body of food, commonly used to loose weight
Hans Selye
enhanced fight or flight, made General Adaptation Syndrome
Glutamate
excitatory neurotransmitter
Divergent thinking
expands the number of possible problem solutions (creative thinking that diverges in different directions, how to succeed in school)
external validity
extent to which we can generalize findings to real-world settings
Extrinsic factors
factors coming from the outside world (Usually associated with pressures from society such as getting an education, having a job, and being sociable)
Intrinsic factors
factors originating from within ourselves (For example: Curiosity, competition, control)
Decay
fading away of memory over time
Type II error
failing to reject a false null hypothesis
Agoraphobia
fear of open spaces
Albert Bandura
felt that sexual roles could be acquired through vicarious or social learning. (Young boys see older boys being rewarded for being masculine and punished for being feminine, parents reward independence and competition in boys, while they reward nurturing and caring behavior for girls)
Estrogens
female sex hormones
Anima
female side of personality
Zygote
fertilized egg
Walter Cannon
fight or flight
Cold fibers
fire in response to cold stimuli
Mary Whiton Calkins
first female president of the APA (1905); a student of William James; denied the PhD she earned from Harvard because of her sex (later, posthumously, it was granted to her)
Attention
focusing awareness on a narrower range of stimuli or events (allows us to focus on one small aspect of our perceptual world by filtering stuff out)
kinesthesis
found in the joints and ligaments, transmits information about the location and position of the limbs and body parts
Nodes of Ranvier
gaps in the myelin sheath which help speed up neural transmission
CAT scans (computerized axial tomography)
generate cross-sectional images of the brain using a series of X-ray pictures taken from different angles (This is just a snapshot, not real time)
Instinct
genetically programmed patterns of behavior (Examples of this include a dog shaking after it gets wet, a sea turtle seeking out the ocean after hatching, or a bird migrating before the winter season)
Institutional Review Boards (IRBs)
groups responsible for evaluating and overseeing the ethical soundness of research practices at an institution
temporal lobe
handles auditory input and is critical for processing speech and appreciating music
paretial lobe
handles somatosensory information and is the home of the primary somatosensory cortex. This area receives information about temperature, pressure, texture, and pain. Basically, sense of touch.
Speed tests
have very easy items, but the test is timed, making completion difficult (How many 5th grade level multiplications can you do out of 100)
Relative clarity
hazy object seen as more distant
Conductive deafness
hearing loss caused by damage to the middle ear, thus interfering with the transmission of sound waves to the cochlea (Eardrum and ossicles)
Diana Baumrind
her theory of parenting styles had three main types (permissive, authoritative, & authoritarian)
Sociocultural approach
holds that society and cultures help define what is acceptable behavior
Psychodynamic
how behavior springs from unconscious drives and conflicts
Quantitative dimension
how much of a stimulus there is (Bright light = more neurons going to occipital lobe)
Perceptual processes
how our mind interprets different stimuli
Active self
how we behave
cognitive
how we encode, process, store, and retrieve information (For example, cognitive effect on learning - If humans can be conditioned to salivate to the word style, they would also be likely to salivate to the word fashion. These words are not acoustically similar, but rather semantically similar, meaning they have a related meaning instead of sounding alike, so this pattern of behavior results from cognitive evaluation)
Social self
how we interact with others
Interposition
if one object partially blocks our view of another, we perceive it as closer
Autokinetic effect
illusion, caused by very slight movements of the eye, that a stationary point of light in a dark room is moving (twinkle)
Amygdala
implicated in the expression of anger and frustration
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
Sensorimotor stage
in Piaget's theory, the stage (from birth to nearly 2 years of age) during which infants know the world mostly in terms of their sensory impressions and motor activities (For example, if an infant kicks its legs and hits the mobile on its crib with its foot, stimulating movement, the infant is likely to repeat the action in the future)
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
Formal operational stage
in Piaget's theory, the stage of cognitive development (normally beginning about age 12) during which people begin to think logically about abstract concepts
Discrimination
in classical conditioning, the learned ability to distinguish between a conditioned stimulus and stimuli that do not signal an unconditioned stimulus
Frequency theory
in hearing, 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
Phoneme
in language, the smallest distinctive sound unit (for example p, b, d, and t in the English words pad, pat, bad, and bat)
Morpheme
in language, the smallest unit that carries meaning (Examples would be the parts "un-", "break", and "-able" in the word "unbreakable".)
Variable-ratio schedule
in operant conditioning, a reinforcement schedule that reinforces a response after an unpredictable number of responses (For example, putting in money and pulling out money of a slot machine, is reinforced with the payout in a random manner. Reinforcement can come at any time. This type of schedule takes longer to condition a response, but it is basically resistant to extinction)
Variable-interval schedule
in operant conditioning, a reinforcement schedule that reinforces a response at unpredictable time intervals (For example, getting paid randomly, and this would make you wanna come to work everyday because if not, you might miss the paycheck, if it is based on your attendance)
Fixed-ratio schedule
in operant conditioning, a reinforcement schedule that reinforces a response only after a specified number of responses (For example, a rat might have to press a lever 10 times to get a food pellet. This schedule is called a 10:1 ration schedule)
Fixed-interval schedule
in operant conditioning, a reinforcement schedule that reinforces a response only after a specified time has elapsed (For example, getting paid every two weeks. The paycheck arrives regardless of your work performance (as long as you show up) )
Free association
in psychoanalysis, a method of exploring the unconscious in which the person relaxes and says whatever comes to mind, no matter how trivial or embarrassing
Confederates
in psychological and social research, a confederate is a person who is working with the experimenter and posing as a part of the experiment, but the subjects are not aware of this affiliation
Apraxia
inability to organize movement
Alexia
inability to read
Color blindness
inability to see some or all colors, common in males
Insomnia
inability to sleep
Agraphia
inability to write
Semantically encoded
information in the long term memory that is encoded in the form of word meanings
Repression
information that was put down by the Defense mechanism by which anxiety-provoking thoughts and feelings are forced to the unconscious.
Archetypes
inherited memories or common themes found in all cultures, religions, and literature, both ancient and modern
Primary drives
innate drives, such as hunger, thirst, and sexual desire, that arise from basic biological needs
Raymond Cattell
intelligence: fluid & crystal intelligence; personality testing: 16 Personality Factors (16PF personality test)
Robert Sternberg
intelligence; devised the Triarchic Theory of Intelligence (analytical, practical, and creative)
Assimilation
interpreting our new experiences in terms of our existing schemas
Night terrors
involve behaviors such as screaming, crying, jerking/lunging movement while asleep
Hippocampus
involved in processing and integrating memories
Somatic symptom disorder
involves a person having a significant focus on physical symptoms, such as pain, weakness or shortness of breath, that results in major distress and/or problems functioning. The individual has excessive thoughts, feelings and behaviors relating to the physical symptoms (For example, after a heart attack, they may completely recover physically, but they may continue to behave as invalids or constantly worry about having another heart attack)
Body dysmorphic disorder
involves an excessive preoccupation with an imagined defect in physical appearance
Social development
involves the ability to interact with others and with the social structures in which we live
Phobias
irrational fears of specific objects or situations
Fixations
is a persistent focus on an earlier psychosexual stage
Positive reinforcement
is a reward or event that increases the likelihood that a particular type of response will be repeated (For example, picture an experiment in which a rat is given a food pellet every time it presses a lever. The food provides positive reinforcement, increasing the likelihood that the rat will press the lever again)
Concept
is a way of grouping or classifying the world around us (For example, chairs come in a large variety of sizes and shapes, yet we can identify them as theirs. The concept of chairs allows us to identify them without learning every possible trait of all chairs.)
Orienting reflex
is activated when they orient themselves to sudden changes in their surroundings (For example, if there is a loud crash, infants will search for the origin of the noise to orient themselves. This reflex persists into adulthood, however, most of the reflexes mentioned above disappear months after as the child matures and develops)
Hypnosis
is an altered state of consciousness in which a hypnotized person is very relaxed and open to suggestion
Nightmares
is an elaborate dream sequence that produces a high level of anxiety or fear for the dreamer
Adaptation
is an unconscious, temporary change in response to environmental stimuli (Going from a heated room to a cold pool, you will feel cold because you were adapted to the heated room)
Dopamine
is associated with movement, attention, and reward (neurotransmitter, and its imbalances may play a role in Parkinson's disease and in schizophrenia)
Retina
is at the back of the eye and serves as the screen onto which the proximal stimulus is projected. It is covered with receptors called rods and cones.
Behaviorism approach
is based on the notion that all behavior, including disordered behavior is learned. Disordered behavior has, at some point, been rewarded or reinforced, and has now been established as a pattern of behavior. Treatment involves the unlearning of the maladaptive behavior, or the modification of the learned responses to certain stimuli.
Continuous
is development gradual? (skills for example)
Discontinuous
is development stage-oriented? (growth for example)
Serotonin
is related to arousal, sleep, pain sensitivity, and mood and hunger regulation (neurotransmitter)
Frontal lobe
is responsible for higher level thought and reasoning. That includes working memory, paying attention, solving problems, making plans, forming judgements, and performing movements
Somatic nervous system
is responsible for voluntary movements of large skeletal muscles, and it is a part of the peripheral nervous system
Typicality
is the degree to which an object fits the average (For example, what are the average characteristics of a chair? When we picture "chair," an image emerges in our brain. Thy typical image we envision is referred to as a prototype, but we can imagine other images of a chair that are distant from the prototype to varying degrees.)
Psychosexual development
is the development of an awareness of one's own sexuality, including the identification of the self with a particular gender
Unconditioned stimulus (US)
is the initially meaningful stimulus (the food in the fish example)
Conditioned stimulus (CS)
is the initially neutral stimulus (light in the fish example)
Normative development
is the predictable and relatively stable stages of growth or maturation that the majority of people of a specific age are expected to achieve (For example, some developmental psychologists talk about development occurring in a series of stages, universal to human development, or the individual pattern of development, including differences among individuals during development)
Inductive reasoning
is the process of drawing general inferences from specific observations. (For example, you might notice that everybody on the football team seems to be a good student. You could infer that all people who play football are good students. However, this is not necessarily true. You are drawing an inference based on a common occurrence. Inductive reasoning, while useful, is not as airtight as deductive reasoning : My mother is Irish. She has blond hair. Therefore, everyone from Ireland has blond hair.)
Deductive reasoning
is the process of drawing logical conclusions from general statements (My mother is Irish. Everyone from Ireland has blond hair. Therefore, my mother has blond hair.)
Negative reinforcement
is the removal of an aversive event in order to encourage the behavior (For example, a rat sitting on a mildly electrified cage floor. Pressing a bar in the cage turns off the electrical current. The removal of the negative experience (shock) is rewarding)
Conditioned response (CR)
is the response to the conditioned stimulus after conditioning
Moro reflex
is the splaying out of the limbs in response to loss of support, such as when a baby believes it is falling
Representativeness heuristic
judging objects and events in terms of how closely they match the prototype of that object or event (For example, many people view high school athletes as less intelligent. However, most high school athletes must meet certain academic standards in order to participate in sports. A person's particular view of the athlete will determine whether the (term) is leading to a correct or incorrect conclusion. Unfortunately, such erroneous conclusions are how racism, sexism, and ageism persist, stereotyping sort of)
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
K complexes
large single spikes in the EEG (sometimes break sleep spindles)
Weber's law
law that states that the greater the magnitude of the stimulus, the larger the differences must be to be notices
Latent learning
learning that remains hidden until its application becomes useful (For example, suppose that Ravi's dad drives him to school every day. In this way, Ravi learns the route from his house to his school, but he's never driven there himself, so he has not had a chance to demonstrate that he's learned the way. One morning Ravi's dad has to leave early for a meeting, so he can't drive Ravi to school. Instead, Ravi follows the same route on his bike that his dad would have taken in the car. This demonstrates latent learning. Ravi had learned the route to school, but had no need to demonstrate this knowledge earlier)
Deafness
loss of the ability to hear (can occur from damage to the ear structure or neural pathway)
Compensation
making up for failures in one area by success in others
Androgens
male sex hormones
Animus
male side of personality
Ossicles
malleus, incus, stapes (the three bones that the eardrum vibrates)
Multiple approach-avoidance
many options are available, but each has positives and negatives (For example, you got into college x and y, college x is your major and high in prestige, but costs a lot, but college y is lower in prestige, and its still your major, but it costs significantly less)
Positive skew
mean > median
Central tendency
mean, median, mode, range
Variability
measure of how loosely or tightly bunched scores are
Functional MRI (fMRI)
measures brain activity by detecting changes associated with blood flow. This technique relies on the fact that cerebral blood flow and neuronal activation are coupled. When an area of the brain is in use, blood flow to that region also increases. (MRIs measure structure and FMRIs measure blood flow, which can let us see brain activity)
Power tests
measures candidates' level of performance in a certain topic (One example would be an English vocabulary examination in which a list of words is presented to a group of sixth-grade students who then have to find a synonym for each word without using any external help)
EEG (electroencephalogram)
measures subtle changes in brain electrical activity through electrodes placed on the head (This data can be filtered mathematically to yield evoked potentials, which allow psychologists to get an electrical picture of brain activity during various cognitive states or tasks)
Negative skew
median > mean
Nondeclarative (or implicit) memory
memory beyond conscious (unconscious) consideration and would include procedural memory, priming, and classical conditioning (For example: Riding a bicycle or driving a car. Buttoning and unbuttoning a shirt. Recalling the words of a song when you hear its beginning. Doing everyday activities like brushing your teeth.)
Interference
memory displaced by new information (original memory is forgotten)
Deception
misleading participants about the true purpose of a study or the events that will actually transpire
Carol Gilligan
moral development studies to follow up Kohlberg. She studied girls and women and found that they did not score as high on his six stage scale because they focused more on relationships rather than laws and principles. Their reasoning was merely different, not better or worse
Convergent thinking
narrows the available problem solutions to determine the single best solution (Factoring out a problem)
Self-determination
need to feel competent and in control (intrinsic factor)
Feature detector
nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of the stimulus, such as shape, angle, or movement (they detect various traits of something)
Action potential
nerve impulse
Cutaneous receptors
nerve receptors in the skin that respond to pressure, temperature, or pain (skin)
Retroactive interference
new information pushes out old information out of short-term meory
Neonate
newborn baby
Stanley Milgram
obedience to authority; had participants administer what they believed were dangerous electrical shocks to other participants; wanted to see if Germans were an aberration or if all people were capable of committing evil actions
naturalistic observation
observing and recording behavior in naturally occurring situations without trying to manipulate and control the situation
Specialized movement
occurs 7-14. Applies fundamental movements to a specific task- e.g. playing basketball (subdivided into to transitional substage and application substage)
Contralateral shift
occurs at the level of the thalamus; process in which much of the sensory input from one side of the body travels to the opposite side of the brain
Dishabituation
occurs when a change in the stimulus, even a small change, causes us to notice it again (You get used to the AC sound in the room, but after a few minutes, the compressor kicks in and now you notice it even after the compressor turns off)
Pavlonian Conditioning (Classical conditioning)
occurs when a neutral stimulus, paired with a previously meaningful stimulus, eventually takes on some meaning itself (For example: if you shine a light in your fish tank, the fish will ignore it. If you put food in the tank, they will typically swim to the top to get food. If, however, each time you feed the fish, you shine the light in the tank before putting in the food, the fish will begin to learn about the light. Eventually, the light alone will cause the fish to swim to the top, as if food had been placed in the tank)
Avoidance
occurs when a person performs a behavior to ensure an aversive stimulus is not presented (For example, a child notices Mom cooking vegetables for dinner and fakes an illness so Mom will send him to bed with ginger ale and cracker. The child has effectively avoided confronting the aversive stimulus (the offensive vegetables) altogether)
Addiction or Dependence
occurs when an individual continues using a drug despite overarching negative consequences in order to avoid unpleasant physical and/or physiological feelings associated with not taking it
Learned helplessness
occurs when consistent efforts fail to bring rewards. If this situation persists, the subject will stop trying. (Psychologist Martin Seligman's original experiment placed dogs in a room with an electrical floor. At first, the dogs would try to escape the room or avoid the floor, but they ultimately learned that there was nothing they could do to prevent being shocked. Eventually, when the dogs' leashes were removed, they still stayed on the electrified floor, even though they could have escaped. This fact shows that they have learned to be helpless. Seligman sees this condition as possibly precipitating depression in humans. If people try repeatedly to succeed at work, school, and/or relationships, and find their efforts are in vain no matter how hard they try, depression may result)
Self-selection
occurs when participants place themselves in a sample, rather than being selected for inclusion by a researcher. (Example: an optional subway survey for a free cookie might attract those who really like subway only)
Serial processing
occurs when the brain computes information step-by-step in a methodical and linear matter (one at a time) (action can turn into parallel processing if there is practice, for example riding a bike, at first you take your time but soon you are used to it)
Visual sensation
occurs when the eye receives light input from the outside world
Proactive interference
old information makes it more difficult to learn new information
Collectivist culture
one in which the needs of society are placed before the needs of the individual (For example, children in these societies are likely to take care of elderly parents if they fall ill and will change their own plans in the event of a family emergency, interdependence) This affects the development of children as it would make children in dependent behaviors including obedience, calmness, politeness and respect toward others. Ultimately, these child-rearing practices emphasize feeling responsible for behavior and avoiding shaming both personally and for the family, clan or community
Opponent process theory
one of the two processes that contributes to our ability to see in color, says that cells in our thalamus respond to opponent pairs of receptor sets (black/white, red/green, blue/yellow) and that if one color in a set is activated, the other is turned off.
Young-Helmholtz theory (trichromatic theory)
one of the two processes that contributes to our ability to see in color, says that the cones in the retina of the eyes are activated by light waves associated with blue, red, and green--we see all colors through combinations of these three
Self-efficacy
one's sense of competence and effectiveness (If i have a high of this in something, i am more likely to do that something)
Holophrases
one-word utterances that stand for a whole phrase, whose meaning depends on the particular context in which they are used, commonly used by infants (For example, the child may say "go" to mean "I want to leave now," or "mine" to say "This is my toy and I don't want you to play with it.")
Big Five
openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, neuroticism
Somnambulism
or sleepwalking, occurs when an individual walks around and sometimes even talks, while sleeping
Chunking
organizing items into familiar, manageable units; often occurs automatically
Vestibular sacs
organs in the inner ear that connect the semicircular canals and the cochlea and contribute to the body's sense of balance
Psychogenic
originating in the mind
Physical self
our body, our name, and the like
Psychological self
our feelings and personalities
Serial position effect
our tendency to recall best the last and first items in a list
Self-concept
our understanding and evaluation of who we are
Prefrontal cortex
part of frontal lobe responsible for thinking, planning, and language
Inventory-type tests
participants answer a standard series of questions
Pons
passes neural information from one brain region to another
Dichromats
people who are blind to either red-green or yellow-blue
Monochromats
people who can only see in shades of black and white
Environmentalists
people who study the learning persepctive on development (Environmental effects on people)
Split-brain patients
people whose corpus callosum has been surgically severed (used to control epileptic seizures)
Motion detection
perception of motion, either through the perception of its changing position, or through how we move our heads to follow the stimuli
Hallucinations
perceptions that are not based in reality, such as seeing things or hearing things that are not there (feeling spiders on my skin, hearing a dead person you used to know, etc)
Obsessions
persistent ideas, thoughts, or impulses that are unwanted and inappropriate, causing marked distress (fear of contamination, illness, or harm)
Communication disorders
persistent problems in understanding or producing language (stuttering)
Projective tests
personality assessments that present ambiguous visual stimuli to the client and ask the client to respond with whatever comes to mind
Hans Eysenck
personality theorist; asserted that personality is largely determined by genes, used introversion/extroversion, made the Eysenck Personality Inventory
Corticosterone
physiological index of stress
Drive-reduction theory
physiological need creates an aroused tension states (drive) that motivates an organism to satisfy that need (For example, if I am hungry, the body will create a state of tension to let me know that I am hungry (drive) so that I can reduce this drive by eating something)
Alfred Binet
pioneer in intelligence (IQ) tests, designed a test to identify slow learners in need of help-not applicable in the U.S. because it was too culture-bound (French) it measured the "mental age" of children so they can get the help they need to be up to standard
Albert Bandura
pioneer in observational learning (AKA social learning), stated that people profit from the mistakes/successes of others; Studies: Bobo Dolls-adults demonstrated 'appropriate' play with dolls, children mimicked play
Discrimination threshold
point at which one can distinguish the difference between two stimuli
Maintenance rehearsal
practice of saying some information to be remembered over and over in one's head in order to maintain it in short-term memory (For example: repeating a phone number to yourself over and over again until you can dial it)
Reality principle
principle by which the ego functions; the satisfaction of the demands of the id only when negative consequences will not result
inferential statistics
procedures used to draw conclusions about larger populations from small samples of data
Homeostasis
process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment, when the balance shifts, the body becomes motivated to get back into balance. (For example, we are running low on food, so we get a metabolic signal to tell us to eat food, and it stops once we eat something)
Visual cliff
process to tell if a baby has a sense of depth (most babies didn't so they had a sense of depth)
Occipital lobe
process visual input
Social and emotional learning
programs at school which help develop empathy and conflict resolution in students
Adjustment disorders
prolonged negative emotional reaction following a major life stressor (I took a test, I feel like I failed, and I feel like poop for a while)
Filter theories
propose that stimuli must pass through some form of screen or filter to enter into attention (disregarded because our names can catch our attention, so the filter has to be at a higher processing level that that of the receptors because the meaning has already been processed)
Donald Hebb
proposed that human learning takes place by neurons forming new connections with one another or by the strengthening of connections that already exist
Lewis Thurstone
proposed that intelligence could be even broader than the Triarchic theory of Intelligence, and this idea was moved forward with Howard Gardner
Cornea
protective layer on the outside of the eye
Leptin
protein hormone secreted by fat cells; when abundant, causes the brain to increase metabolism and decrease hunger
Tactile receptors
provide sensations of touch, pressure, and vibration (skin)
Hallucinogens
psychedelic drugs, such as LSD, that distort perceptions and evoke sensory images in the absence of sensory input
Reaction formation
psychoanalytic 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. (For example, a person who unconsciously hates the poor might consciously experience this feeling as a strong desire to help the homeless. Or a lawmaker who is gay but closeted may speak and vote against gay rights)
Displacement
psychoanalytic 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 (For example, a boy angry with his father may not want to show hostility to his father, instead, he may yell at a friend or stuffed animal, displaying his rage but in a way that does not make his situation worse)
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross
psychologist who created the 5 stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance
George Miller
psychologist; found that short term memory has the capacity of about 7 (plus or minus 2) items
Reflexes
quick, involuntary, stereotyped reactions of glands or muscle to stimulation
Flashback
recall of the memory of the experience
Walter Mischel
recognized that traits are not necessarily consistent across various situations, but often vary depending upon the circumstances
Dishabituation
recovery of a habituated response after a change in stimulation (For example: I get used to the water in my old house, I go to an hotel and drink their water for a week, and when I come back to my house, the water tastes weird because I am no longer habituated to the water)
Feature detector approach
reduces an image to its simplest form by positing (put in position; place) that organisms respond to specific aspects of a particular stimulus (For example, when driving a car, we use feature detection to anticipate the movement of other cars and pedestrians that demand our immediate attention, helping us to be more aware of the enviorment)
Critical period
refers to a time during which a skill or ability must develop; if the ability does not develop during that time, it probably will never develop or may not develop as well (language and walking for example)
Self-concept
refers to how we view ourselves
Relative size
refers to the fact that images that are farther from us project a smaller image on the retina than do those that are closer to us. Therefore, we expect an object that appears much larger than another to be closer to us.
Partial (intermittent) reinforcement schedule
reinforcing a response only part of the time; results in slower acquisition of a response but much greater resistance to extinction than does continuous reinforcement
Continuous reinforcement schedule
reinforcing the desired response every time it occurs (rapid learning, but rapid extinction as well, and it will cause the disappearance of a response once the behavior is no longer reinforced)
Thalamus
relays sensory information; receives and directs sensory information from visual and auditory systems
Child attachment patterns
secure, avoidant, ambivalent, disorganized
Omission training
seeks to decrease the frequency of behavior by withholding the reward until the desired behavior is demonstrated (For example, if a high school student got a speeding ticket (undesirable behavior) their parents might take away their driving privileges. Not wanting to lose driving privileges again, the student will drive slowly to avoid getting another ticket. So the parents give the privileges back once he demonstrates desired behavior, causing the undesirable to reduce in frequency because it is associated with the punishment)
Olfaction
sense of smell
Gustation
sense of taste (sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami)
sleep spindles
short bursts of brain waves detected in stage 2 sleep
Binge-eating disorders
significant binge-eating episodes, followed by distress, disgust, or guilt, but without the compensatory purging or fasting that marks bulimia nervosa
Confederate
someone who is "in" on the experiemnt
null hypothesis
something we believe or expect to be true
Chronic (stressors)
sources of stress that occur continuously or repeatedly and those that effect one's health
Disorganized speech
speaking in an incoherent fashion that involves frequently changing topics and saying strange or inappropriate things
Stressors
specific events or pressures that place demands on a person or threaten the person's well-being (from mild traffic jams to a divorce)
Crystallized intelligence
specific knowledge of facts and information (Examples include recalling historical events and dates, remembering geographical locations, building one's vocabulary, and reciting poetic texts) As one ages, this increase.
Broca's area
speech production (Controls language expression - an area of the frontal lobe, usually in the left hemisphere, that directs the muscle movements involved in speech)
Rapid eye movement (REM)
stage of sleep in which the eyes move rapidly under the eyelids and the person is typically experiencing a dream
Norms
standards of performance against which anyone who takes a give test can be compared
Henry Murray
stated that the need to achieve varied in strength in different people and influenced their tendency to approach success and evaluate their own performances; devised the TAT (Thematic Appreciation Test)
Lipostatic hypothesis
states that fat is the measured and controlled substance in the body that regulates hunger. Leptin might be the substance used to monitor fat. So basically, less fat = you hungry, more fat = more metabolism
Yerkes-Dodson Law
states that tasks of moderate difficulty, neither too easy nor hard, elicit the highest level of performance. It also posts that high levels of arousal for difficult tasks and low levels of arousal for easy tasks are detrimental, while high levels of arousal for easy tasks and low levels of arousal for difficult tasks are preferred.
Theory of linguistic relativity
states that the differences among languages result in similar differences in how people think of and perceive the world (For example, Garo people of Burma, who have many words for rice. English speakers have only a few words to describe rice. The hypothesis is that rice is critical to the Garo way of life and so involves more categorization and complexity of thought than it does for someone in an English-speaking culture)
Descriptive statistics
statistics that summarize the data collected in a study
lateral hypothalamus
stimulates hunger
Lateral hypothalamus
stimulates hunger (set point)
Monocular depth cues
stimuli that enable us to judge depth using only one eye
Stapes
stirrup; last of the three auditory ossicles of the middle ear, this bone vibrates against the oval window, which is the beginning of the inner ear
Encoded
storing and making it possible for information to be recalled later, putting information into long-term memory
Neuromodulators
strengthen the synapses between the sensory neurons and the motor neurons. In other words, the neurons sensing shock and those that withdraw the gill become more connected than they were before)
Roger Sperry
studied split brain patients; showed that left/right hemispheres have different functions
case studies
studies that involve extensive, in-depth interviews with a particular individual or small group of individuals (Example: Studying the guy with the rod in his head)
Psychoanalytic
study of the unconscious, includes childhood and aggression issues
Humanistic
study that says that humans are basically good and possess a free will
Humanistic school
suggests that abnormal behavior is, in part, a result of people being too sensitive to the criticisms and judgments of others. This tendency is related to people being unable to accept their own nature and having low self-esteem. This lack of acceptance may result from feelings of isolation due to a lack of unconditional positive regard received as a child.
Negative symptoms
symptoms of schizophrenia that are marked by deficits in functioning, such as apathy, lack of emotion, and slowed speech and movement
Algorithms
systematic, mechanical approaches that guarantee an eventual answer to a problem
Transient (stressors)
temporary challenges that cause stress
Self-reference effect
tendency to better remember information relevant to ourselves. A useful took for memory, then, is to relate new information to existing knowledge by making it personally relevant (participants could recall more people with the same first name as their own than could paired participants. For example, Simon retrieved more people called Simon than David did, but David retrieved more people called David than Simon did.)
Attachment
tendency to prefer specific familiar individuals to others
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
Belief perseverance
tendency to stick to our initial beliefs even when evidence contradicts them (An example is a person who believes that smoking does not cause cancer despite the abundance of evidence that shows that smoking does cause cancer.
Achievement tests
tests designed to assess what a person has learned. (AP)
Aptitude tests
tests designed to predict a person's future performance; aptitude is the capacity to learn (Road test - Drivers license)
DSM-5
the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition; a widely used system for classifying psychological disorders.
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale
the WAIS is the most widely used intelligence test; contains verbal and performance (nonverbal) subtests
Visual perception
the ability to interpret the surrounding environment by processing information that is contained in visible light (depth, size, shape, and motion)
Emotional intelligence
the ability to perceive, understand, manage, and use emotions
Creativity
the ability to produce novel, new and valuable ideas (Coming up with a way to cure cancer)
Fluid intelligence
the ability to think in terms of abstract concepts and symbolic relationships (Examples include solving puzzles, constructing strategies to deal with new problems, seeing patterns in statistical data, and engaging in speculative philosophical reasoning) as one ages, this decreases
Alpha
the accepted probability that the result of an experiment can be attributed to chance rather than the manipulation of the independent variable
Priming
the activation, often unconsciously, of certain associations, thus predisposing one's perception, memory, or response
Accommodations
the adjustments of the lens
Receptive field
the area from which our receptor cells receive input (Mechanical - touch, Electromagnetic - vision, Chemical - tase)
Nature-nurture debate
the arguments concerning whether psychological characteristics are biologically innate or acquired through education, experience, and culture
Gender identity
the awareness that one is a boy or a girl, usually gained by the age of 2 or 3
Mind and brain
the brain is the physical matter. The mind is the thoughts and ideas that are not readily observed.
Psychophysics
the branch of psychology that deals with the effects of physical stimuli on sensory response
Fovea
the central focal point in the retina, around which the eye's cones cluster
Moral development
the changes in people's sense of justice and of what is right and wrong, and in their behavior related to moral issues (Lawrence Kohlberg)
Sublimation
the channeling or redirecting of sexual or aggressive feelings into a more socially acceptable outlet
Episodic memory
the collection of past personal experiences that occurred at a particular time and place (For example: the time I went to San Miguel with my friends on June 1st)
inter-rater reliability
the degree of agreement between observers of the same events
representativeness
the degree to which a sample reflects the diverse characteristics of the population that is being studied
internal validity
the degree to which changes in the dependent variable are due to the manipulation of the independent variable, not the confounding variable
External validity
the degree to which results from the test can be generalizable to the "real world"
Internal validity
the degree to which the subject's results are due to the questions being asked and not another variable
Generativity
the desire, in middle age, to use one's accumulated wisdom to guide future generations, contributing babies or ideas
Signal detection theory (SDT)
the detection of a stimulus depends on both the intensity of the stimulus and the physical/psychological state of the individual. Basically, we notice things based on how strong they are and on how much we're paying attention
Cognitive development
the development of thinking, problem solving, and memory
Range
the difference between the highest and lowest scores in a distribution
Binocular disparity
the difference in the retinal images of the two eyes that provides information about depth
Tolerance
the diminishing effect with regular use of the same dose of a drug, requiring the user to take larger and larger doses before experiencing the drug's effect
Extinction
the diminishing of a conditioned response; occurs in classical conditioning when an unconditioned stimulus (US) does not follow a conditioned stimulus (CS); occurs in operant conditioning when a response is no longer reinforced. (rat does not produce unpleasant response anymore)
sympathetic nervous system
the division of the autonomic nervous system that arouses the body, mobilizing its energy in stressful situations
Sympathetic nervous system
the division of the autonomic nervous system that arouses the body, mobilizing its energy in stressful situations (flight or fight)
Parasympathetic nervous system
the division of the autonomic nervous system that calms the body, conserving its energy
parasympathetic nervous system
the division of the autonomic nervous system that calms the body, conserving its energy
Resting membrane potential
the electrical charge of a neuron when it is not active (-70mV)
Acoustically encoded
the encoding of audio into the long (into the long term)
Visually encoded
the encoding of picture images (into the long term)
Halo effect
the error by which we generalize a high-self evaluation from one domain to another (An example this is when one assumes that a good-looking person in a photograph is also an overall good person)
Validity
the extent to which a test measures or predicts what it is supposed to
Locus of control theory
the extent to which people believe that their successes or failures are due to their own efforts plays a major role in personality (For example, students with an internal locus of control might blame poor grades on their failure to study, whereas students with an external locus of control may blame an unfair teacher or test for their poor performance.)
Basis anxiety
the feeling of being alone in an unfamiliar or hostile world. The idea that the interaction between the child and the parent, as the child deals with this anxiety, forms the basis for adult personality. Children who find security in their relationships with their parents will find security in other adult relationships. Children who lack secuirotu in their relationships with their parents and their surroundings will grow up insecure and distrusting, and they are likely to end up with various unhealthy personality styles.
Alarm
the first phase of the stress response, in which the person faces a challenge and starts paying attention to it.
Erik Erikson
the first to successfully champion the view that development occurs across an entire lifetime
Meditation
the focusing of attention to clear one's mind and produce relaxation (used as a stress reducer or manage pain, stress, and anxiety disorders)
Schedule of reinforcement
the frequency with which an organism receives reinforcement for a type of response
Procedural memory
the gradual acquisition of habits and skills as a result of practice, or "knowing how" to do things (For example: knowing how to tie my shoe)
Control group
the group that does not receive the experimental treatment.
Glucostatic hypothesis
the hypothesis that hunger is caused by a low level of glucose in the blood; glucose levels are assumed to be monitored by specialized sensory neurons called glucostats
Selective attention
the idea that we try to attend to one thing while ignoring another (I watch a movie and ignore the people talking behind me)
Proximal stimulus
the image of the object on the retina (because of the shape of the retina and the positions of the cornea and the lens, the proximal stimulus is inverted. The brain, through perceptual processes, is then capable of interpreting this image correctly)
Fight-or-Fight response
the initial reaction of the body to stress
Synapse
the junction between the terminal buttons of the sending neuron and the dendrite or cell body of the receiving neuron
Ego
the largely conscious, "executive" part of personality that, according to Freud, mediates among the demands of the id, superego, and reality. The ego operates on the reality principle, satisfying the id's desires in ways that will realistically bring pleasure rather than pain.
Nerve impulse
the message carried by a neuron
Median
the middle score in a distribution; half the scores are above it and half are below it
Absolute threshold
the minimum stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus 50 percent of the time
Source traits
the more basic traits that underlie the surface traits, forming the core of personality
Mode
the most frequently occurring score in a distribution
Superordinate concept
the most general form of a type of concept, such as "animal" or "fruit"
Subordinate concept
the most specific category of a concept, such as sourdough bread
Unconditioned response (UR)
the natural response to the unconditioned stimulus (fish swimming to the top of the tank)
Optic nerves
the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain (in the brain, it will go to the visual cortex areas for processing)
Sample size
the number of observations or individuals measured
Distal stimulus
the object as it exists in the environment
Behavior
the observable actions of a person or animal
Overextension
the overly broad use of words, overgeneralizing their meaning, common among children (For example, it is not uncommon to hear an infant call any passing women "mama")
Underextension
the overly restrictive use of words, common among children just mastering spoken language (For example, a child thinks her "mama" is the only "mama")
reticular activating system
the part of the brain that is involved in attention, sleep, and arousal
The unconscious (Sigmund Freud)
the part of the mind that operates outside of awareness but influences conscious thoughts, feelings, and actions
Autonomic nervous system
the part of the peripheral nervous system that controls the glands and the muscles of the internal organs (such as the heart). Its sympathetic division arouses; its parasympathetic division calms.
Sensory cortex
the parts of the brain that receive information from the sensory receptors
Motion parallax
the perception of motion of objects in which close objects appear to move more quickly than objects that are farther away
Apparent motion
the perception of movement as a result of alternating signals appearing in rapid succession in different locations. It is an issue as it makes us believe that it is moving.
External locus of control
the perception that chance or outside forces beyond your personal control determine your fate.
Internal locus of control
the perception that you control your own fate
Set point
the point at which an individual's "weight thermostat" is supposedly set. When the body falls below this weight, an increase in hunger and a lowered metabolic rate may act to restore the lost weight.
optic chiasm
the point in the brain where the visual field information from each eye "crosses over" to the appropriate side of the brain for processing
Optic chiasm
the point in the brain where the visual field information from each eye "crosses over" to the appropriate side of the brain for processing (left eye goes to the right brain)
Debriefing
the postexperimental explanation of a study, including its purpose and any deceptions, to its participants
Central traits
the primary characteristics of the person (kindness, honesty, or friendliness)
p-value
the probability of making a type I error
Punishment
the process by which a behavior is followed by a consequence that decreases the likelihood that the behavior will be repeated (For example, (positive punishment) if cadets speak out of turn in military boot camp, the drill sergeant makes them do push-ups. (Negative punishment) For example, if a child breaks a window while throwing a baseball in the house, he loses TV privileges for a week. Positive punishment adds and negative punishment removes)
Convergence
the process by which information becomes more complex as it travels through the sensory system
Habituation
the process by which we become accustomed to a stimulus and notice it less and less over time (Going in to a room with the AC on, after a few minutes, you don't realize the sound)
Reasoning
the process of drawing a conclusion on the basis of evidence
modeling
the process of observing and imitating a specific behavior
Sensation
the process of taking in information from the enviorment
Withdrawal
the process of weaning off a drug one has become dependent upon; this often involves physical and psychological symptoms of a highly unpleasant nature
Spontaneous recovery
the reappearance, after a pause, of an extinguished conditioned response (You shine a light, and don't give food for a couple of times, the fish stops coming, but after a while, you shine a light, and it pops right up)
Subliminal perception
the registration of sensory input without conscious awareness
Long-term memory
the relatively permanent and limitless storehouse of the memory system. Includes knowledge, skills, and experiences.
Prosody
the rhythm, stress, and intonation of speech (For example, it provides clues about attitude or affective state: The sentence "Yeah, that was a great movie," can mean that the speaker liked the movie or the exact opposite, depending on the speaker's intonation. It is also used to provide semantic information)
Availability heuristic
the rule of thumb is judged by what events come readily to mind (For example, we see terrorists attacks and violence on the news, and assume violence is at an all-time high even though it is not, we use the things we see and notice to judge our decisions and thinking)
Psychology
the science of behavior and mental processes
Behaviorism
the science of behavior that focuses on observable behavior only, not mental processes and the mind because they cannot be observed (Many people today do not agreed with this).
Cognitive
the scientific study of all the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating
Social
the scientific study of how we think about, influence, and relate to one another
Cognitive Psychology
the scientific study of mental processes, including perception, thought, memory, and reasoning
Positive
the scientific study of optimal human functioning; aims to discover and promote strengths and virtues that enable individuals and communities to thrive
Psychometrics
the scientific study of the measurement of human abilities, attitudes, and traits. To do this, ethics must be followed -Confidentiality -Information about the study -Institutional Review Board combs through studies for unethical behavior -Questions should be answered
Confirmation bias
the search for information that supports a particular view, also hinders problem solving by distorting objectivity (If I was a Republican, I would only look for stuff that supports Republicans)
Vestibular sense
the sense of balance and equilibrium (located in the semicircular canals of the inner ear)
Peripheral nervous system (PNS)
the sensory and motor neurons that connect the central nervous system to the rest of the body
Grammar
the set of rules by which language is constructed, is governed by syntax and semantics
Syntax
the set of rules used in the arrangement of morphemes into meaningful sentences (For example, "Eugene walked the dog" versus "The dog walked Eugene." The order of words is not arbitrary—in order for the sentence to convey the intended meaning, the words must be in a certain order.)
Correct rejection
the signal was absent, and the participant did not report sensing it
False alarm
the signal was absent, but the participant reported sensing it
Hit
the signal was present, and the participant reported sensing it
Miss
the signal was present, but the participant did not sense it
Detection thresholds
the smallest amount of sound, pressure, taste, or other stimuli that an individual can detect
Experimental
the study of behavior and thinking using the experimental method
Physiological Psychology
the study of behavior as influenced by biology. It draws its techniques and research methods from biology and medicine to examine psychological phenomena
Personality
the study of characteristic thoughts, emotions, and behaviors in people and how they vary across social situations
Educational
the study of how psychological processes affect and can enhance teaching and learning
industry-organizational
the study of how psychology can help and hinder the workplace
clinical research
the study of individuals or small groups of people who seek help from mental health professionals or other social scientists
behavioral genetics
the study of the effects of heredity on behavior (Example: How is depression linked to genetics?)
Surface structure of language
the superficial way in which words are arranged in a text or in speech
Normal curve
the symmetrical bell-shaped curve that describes the distribution of many physical and psychological attributes. Most scores fall near the average, and fewer and fewer scores lie near the extremes.
Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon
the temporary inability to remember something you know, accompanied by a feeling that it's just out of reach
Hindsight bias
the tendency after the fact to think you knew what the outcome would be, also distorts our availability to view situations objectively. (For example, after attending a baseball game, you might insist that you knew that the winning team was going to win beforehand.)
REM rebound
the tendency for REM sleep to increase following REM sleep deprivation (created by repeated awakenings during REM sleep)
Texture gradient
the tendency for textured surfaces to appear to become smaller and finer as the distance from the viewer increases (pebbles up close are rough, but afar are smooth as a pair of butt cheecks)
Functional fixedness
the tendency to perceive an item only in terms of its most common use (For example, people may assume that a textbook is meant for learning, but it can also serve as a pillow or a riser for something)
Constancy
the tendency to perceive certain objects in the same way regardless of changing angle, distance, or lighting (For example, people who have never seen airplanes on the ground will have trouble perceiving the actual size of the plane because of their experience with the size of the object when airborne. The ability to achieve constancy, which is innate, and the experience, which is learned, both contribute to our development of the various types of constancy)
Continuity
the tendency to perceive fluid or continuous forms, rather than jagged or irregular ones
Symmetry
the tendency to perceive preferentially forms that makeup mirror images
Similarity
the tendency to prefer to group like objects together
Stimulus generalization
the tendency to respond to a stimulus that is only similar to the original conditioned stimulus with the conditioned response (For example, you eat a peach and get sick. You may never want to eat a peach again, but you may also develop an aversion to other similar fruits, such as nectarine. The two fruits are similar, so you generalize from one stimulus (the peach) to the other (the nectarine) )
Closure
the tendency to see closed objects rather than those that are incomplete
Proximity
the tendency to see objects near each other as forming groups (two groups of lines)
Generalization
the tendency, once a response has been conditioned, for stimuli similar to the conditioned stimulus to elicit similar responses (little albert experiment - Rat and rabbit are similar white fluffy animals)
Instinct theory
the theory that all organisms are born with innate biological tendencies that help them survive (For example, cats and other predatory animals have an instinctive motivation to react to movement in their environment to protect themselves and their offspring)
Cannon-Bard Theory
the theory that an emotion-arousing stimulus simultaneously triggers (1) physiological responses and (2) the subjective experience of emotion (For example, the sight of a tarantula, which acts as an emotion-provoking stimulus, would stimulate the thalamus. The thalamus would send simultaneous messages to both the autonomic nervous system and the cerebral cortex. Messages to the cortex produce the experience of emotion (fear), and messages to the autonomic nervous system produce physiological arousal (running, heart palpitations)
Place theory
the theory that links the pitch we hear with the place where the cochlea's membrane is stimulated
James-Lange Theory
the theory that our experience of emotion is our awareness of our physiological responses to emotion-arousing stimuli (For example, if an argument makes you angry, it is the physiological response (increased heart rate and increased respiratory rate) that prompts the experience of emotion) This theory is incorrect, For example, cutting onions makes us water our eyes, but it does not make us sad
Schachter-Singer two-factor theory
the theory that to experience emotion one must be physically aroused and cognitively label the arousal (For example, if we cry at a wedding, we interpret our emotion as happiness, but if we cry at a funeral, we interpret our emotion as sadness) it is a twist from the James-Lange theory.
Modal model
the three-stage memory model that divides memory into 3 areas--sensory, short term, and long term
behavior modification
the use of operant-conditioning techniques to eliminate unwanted behaviors and replace them with desirable ones (Example: I get hit if I bite my nails, so after a while, the behavior of biting nails will be replaced by not biting my nails)
Framing
the way a question is phrased (For example, take two yogurt pots. One says "10 percent fat" and another says "90 percent fat free")
Perception
the way we recognize, interpret, and organize our sensations
Stanford-Binet Test
the widely used American revision (by Terman at Stanford University) of Binet's original intelligence test.
Social-cognitive theories
theories that emphasize how behavior is learned and maintained through observation and imitation of others, positive consequences, and cognitive processes such as plans, expectations, and beliefs
Edward Sapir
theory of linguistic relatively with Benjamin Lee Whorf
Bejamin Lee Whorf
theory of linguistic relatively with Edward Spair
Paul Ekman
theory that facial expressions are universal (anger, fear, disgust, surprise, happiness, and sadness) emotion = inate (For example, anger can cause a heightened state of mind, allowing for a better fighting experience)
Top-down theory
this view holds that most perceptual stimuli can be broken down into figure-ground relationships. Figures are those things that stand out, whereas the ground is the field against which the figures stand out. (vase face)
Stereopsis
three-dimensional vision
Gordon Allport
trait theory of personality; 3 levels of traits: cardinal, central, and secondary
Idiographic analysis
traits that are unique to the individual, such as openness or curiosity
Cardinal traits
traits that override a person's whole being (Don Juan, for example, was so renowned for his sexual exploits that his name became a synonym for heartbreaker and libertine)
Fidelity
truthfulness to one's self
Bimodal
two modes
Narcolepsy
uncontrollable sleep attacks
Deep structure of language
underlying meaning of words and sentences
MRI (magnetic resonance imaging)
uses extremely powerful electromagnets and radio waves to get 3-D structural information from the brain (This is just a snapshot, not real time)
Top-down processing
uses your background knowledge to influence perception, using whatever is in our head to perceive
Biological view
views disordered behavior as a manifestation of abnormal brain function, due to either structural or chemical abnormalities in the brain. This point of view supports medication as a providing appropriate treatment for various types of disordered behavior.
Cognitive perspective
views disordered behavior as the result of faulty or illogical thoughts. Distortions in the cognitive process, according to this point of view, lead to misperceptions and misinterpretations of the world, which in turn lead to disordered behavior. The cognitive approach to treatment involves changing the contents of thought
Iconic
visual sensory memory
short-term visual memory (ionic memory)
visual sensory memory register which stores visual images after the extinction of a physical stimulus. While it contains a huge capacity, it declines rapidly. Information stored in it generally disappears within half a second (depending on the brightness).
delta waves
waves associated with deep sleep (stage 4)
Beta waves
waves that are present when you are awake and alert
Alpha waves
waves that indicate a state of relaxation
Explanatory styles
ways in which people explain themselves or react in different situations
Qualitative dimension
what the stimulus is (Example: neurons firing in occipital lobe indicate that the sensory info is light)
framing
when repeated suggestions and misleading questions create false memories
Semantics
word meaning