SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
AP Psychology
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
psychology
,
ap
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. A sample that reflects the characteristics of the population from which it is drawn
Assessment
Hermann Rorschach
Law of Effect
Representative sample
2. A generalized feeling of fear and apprehension that may be related to a particular situation or object and is often accompanied by increased physiological arousal.
Equity Theory
Body Language
Anxiety
Gordon Allport
3. An observable action
Deindividuation
response bias
behavior
Myopic
4. In Roger's theory of personality - an inborn tendency directing people toward actualizing their essential nature and thus attaining their potential.
kinesthesis
Walter B. Cannon
Fulfillment
Functional fixedness
5. A type of research design that compares individuals of different ages to determine how they differ
forebrain
identical twins
Cross-sectional Studies
relative refractory period
6. 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.
Gordon Allport
Oral Stage
Social Influence
Cognitive theories
7. Type of schizophrenia characterized by hallucinations and delusions of persecution or grandeur (or both) - and sometimes irrational jealousy.
Excitement phase
Blood-Brain Barrier
Paranoid type of schizophrenia
Self
8. Hormone that controls imbalances levels of calcium and phosphate in the blood and tissue fluid; influences levels of excitability; secreted by parathyroids
Major depressive disorder
parathormone
Blood-Brain Barrier
Deindividuation
9. Defense mechanism by which people attribute their own undesirable traits to others.
Negative Reinforcement
Projection
pitch
Robert Rosenthal
10. The middle division of brain responsible for hearing and sight; location where pain is registered; includes temporal lobe - occipital lobe - and most of the parietal lobe
midbrain
recency effect
significant difference
Adolescence
11. General category of mood disorders in which people show extreme and persistent sadness - despair - and loss of interest in life's usual activities.
ESP
forebrain
Depressive disorders
Conflict
12. Trait theory of personality; 3 levels of traits: cardinal - central - and secondary
Gordon Allport
humanistic psychology
chromosome
neural plasticity
13. Process of presenting an undesirable or noxious stimulus - or removing a desirable stimulus - to decrease the probability that a preceding response will recur
Punishment
epinephrine
Puberty
Judith Langlois
14. The period of extending from the onset of puberty to early adulthood
mean
Adolescence
Observational Learning Theory
refractory period
15. A trait or inherited characteristic that has increased in a population because it solved a problem of survival or reproduction
convolutions
Cross-sectional Studies
adaptation
monocular cues
16. Body sense that provides information about the position and movement of individual parts of the body
Monochromats
Accommodation
Gender
kinesthesis
17. Operant training system that uses secondary reinforcers (tokens) to increase appropriate behavior; learners can exchange tokens for desired rewards
token economy
Subliminal perception
long-term memory
anorexia nervosa
18. Part of the brain which controls living functions such as breathing - heart rate - blood pressure - body temperature
medulla (also medulla oblongata)
Biofeedback
memory span
Ideal Self
19. 17t century French philosopher. Famously known for writing 'cogito ergo sum' ('I think - therefore I am'). Wrote about concept of dualism.
flashbulb memories
science
Dementia
René Descartes
20. Neo-Freudian - humanistic; 8 psychosocial stages of development: theory shows how people evolve through the life span. Each stage is marked by a psychological crisis that involves confronting 'Who am I?'
implicit memory
Erik Erikson
Psycholinguistics
rods
21. Endocrine glands located above the kidney and secretes epinephrine and norepinephrine - which prepare the body for 'fight or flight'
endorphins
cerebellum
frequency polygon
adrenal glands
22. Neurotransmitter that influences voluntary movement - attention - alertness; lack of dopamine linked with Parkinson's disease; too much is linked with schizophrenia
dopamine
genetics
Subliminal perception
explicit memory
23. School of psychological thought that was concerned with how and why the conscious mind works
Assessment
functionalism
percentile score
Saccades
24. Production of new brain cells; November 1988: cancer patients proved that new neurons grew until the end of life
Arousal
endocrine system
Prevalence
neurogenesis
25. A chronic and progressive disorder of the brain that is the most common cause of degeneration dementia
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
26. Perspective that emphasizes the uniqueness of the individual and the idea that humans have free will
humanistic psychology
serotonin
Need
ex post facto study
27. Therapies that use approaches or techniques derived from Freud - but that reject or modify some elements of Freud's theory.
Body Language
Walter B. Cannon
Psychodynamically
Social Interest
28. Perspective that seeks to explain and predict behaviors by analyzing how the human brain developed over time - how it functions - and how input from the environment affects human behaviors
agonist
Conservation
Psychotic
evolutionary psychology
29. The tendency to attribute other people's behavior to dispositional (internal) causes rather than situational (external) causes.
Fundamental Attribution Error
behavior
positive psychology
Generalized anxiety disorder
30. Focused awareness of only a limited amount of all you are capable of experiencing
selective attention
Gender Identity
Androgynous
Attitudes
31. The process by which the probability of an organism's emitting a response is reduced when reinforcement no longer follows the response
Denial
Extinction (operant conditioning)
peripheral nervous system
hindbrain
32. Part of the limbic system; influences emotions such as aggression - fear - and self-protective behaviors
amygdala
Anna O.
Reactance
Daniel Goleman
33. A state of being or feeling in which each person in a relationship is willing to self-disclose and to express important feelings and information to the other person.
Dichromats
operational definition
insulin
Intimacy
34. The tendency of one person to evaluate another person (or a symbol or image of another person) in a positive way.
Interpersonal Attraction
Client-centered therapy
empiricism
Dependence
35. In Roger's theory of personality - the perception an individual has of himself or herself and of his or her relationships to other people and to various aspects of life.
Demand characteristics
brainstem
Rosenthal & Jacobson
Self
36. Division which includes the cerebellum - Pons - and medulla; responsible for involuntary processes: blood pressure - body temperature - heart rate - breathing - sleep cycles
Color Blindness
Unconscious
hindbrain
emotional intelligence
37. An explanation of behavior that emphasizes the entirety of life rather than individual components of behavior and focuses on human dignity - individual choice - and self-worth
Langer & Rodin
Humanistic theory
Psycholinguistics
Depressants (AKA sedative-hypnotics)
38. Neurotransmitter that inhibits firing of neurons; linked with Huntington's disease
GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)
experimental group
Fetus
Selye's General Adaptation Syndrome
39. In Freud's theory - the moral aspect of mental functioning comprising the ego ideal (what a person would ideally like to be) and the conscience and taught by parents and society.
Superego
Absolute threshold
Aristotle
Negative Reinforcement
40. An excessive attachment to some person or object that was appropriate only at an earlier stage of development
Major depressive disorder
memory span
Fixation
efferent neuron nerve
41. Manageable and meaningful units of information organized in such a way that it can be easily encoded - stored - and retrieved
chunks
thyroid gland
insulin
autonomic nervous system
42. Endocrine gland that produces melatonin that helps regulate sleep/wake cycle
pineal gland
Mainstreaming
Excitement phase
Working through
43. Founder of functionalism; studied how humans use perception to function in our environment
implicit memory
Saccades
introspection
William James
44. Member of the gene terror that controls the appearance of a certain trait only if it is paired with the same gene
Depressive disorders
David Weschler
Latent Content
recessive gene
45. Neuroscience/biopsychology; studied split brain patients
experimental group
maintenance rehearsal
Gazzaniga or Sperry
Walter B. Cannon
46. Selective reinforcement of behaviors that gradually approach the desired response
Social Facilitation
Shaping
motivated forgetting
Conformity
47. In psychoanalysis - an unwillingness to cooperate - which a patient signals by showing a reluctance to provide the therapist with information or to help the therapist understand or interpret a situation.
Resistance
Primary Punisher
Aversive counterconditioning
cones
48. Anxiety disorders characterized as acute anxiety - accompanied by sharp increases in autonomic nervous system arousal - that is not triggered by a specific event.
Panic Attack
Dark adaptation
Mary Cover-Jones
Francis Galton
49. Anxiety disorder characterized by persistent and uncontrollable thoughts and irrational beliefs that cause the performance of compulsive rituals that interfere with daily life.
Benjamin Whorf
B.F. Skinner
Obsessive-compulsive disorder
Anna O.
50. Psychoanalytic technique in which a patient's dreams are described in detail and interpreted so as to provide insight into the individual's unconscious motivations.
Survey
Dream analysis
chromosome
norepinephrine