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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. The cessation of the ability to reproduce
Aversive counterconditioning
menopause
Daniel Goleman
Stressor
2. Part of the brain that coordinates balance - movement - reflexes
Lawrence Kohlberg
cerebellum
Mediation
Oral Stage
3. Response elicited by a conditioned stimulus
Conditioned Response
monism
pseudoscience
Thanatology
4. The evaluation of the significance of a situation or event as it relates to a person's well-being
Appraisal
Selye's General Adaptation Syndrome
refractory period
Primary Reinforcer
5. Sleep/dreams/consciousness; pioneers of Activation-Synthesis Theory of dreams; sleep studies that indicate the brain creates dream states - not information processing or Freudian interpretations
memory span
aversive conditioning
Hobson & McCarley
Problem Solving
6. Pioneer in Rational-Emotive Therapy (RET) - focuses on altering client's patterns of irrational thinking to reduce maladaptive behavior and emotions
case study
Albert Ellis
representative sample
Group therapy
7. A treatment for severe mental illness in which an electric current is briefly applied to the head in order to produce a generalized seizure.
Groupthink
token economy
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
school psychologist
8. Informing participants about the true nature of a experiment after its completion.
experiment
Debriefing
evolutionary psychology
Social Need
9. Any neutral stimulus that initially has no intrinsic value for an organism but that becomes rewarding when linked with a primary reinforcer
Secondary Reinforcer
self-actualization
neurogenesis
Algorithm
10. 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
Brainstorming
Stanley Milgram
selection studies
Stanley Schachter
11. The analysis of the meaning of language - especially of individual words.
axon
Ego
polygenic inheritance
Semantics
12. People who can distinguish only two of the three basic colors.
behaviorism
genotype
Dichromats
hypothalamus
13. Developmental psychology; 'visual cliff' studies with infants
Ideal Self
Gibson & Walk
Cognitive theories
Hermann Ebbinghaus
14. The human need to fulfill one's potential
self-actualization
parallel processing
interference
Interpretation
15. Systematic procedure through which associations and responses to specific stimuli are learned
median
Conditioning
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
eclectic
16. A fixed - overly simple - sometimes incorrect idea about traits - attitudes - and behaviors of males or females
memory span
Gender stereotype
Phillip Zimbardo
Grasping reflex
17. One of the descriptive methods of research; it requires construction of a set of questions to administer to a group of participants
Time-out
Survey
Stanford-Binet intelligence tests
science
18. In Adler's theory - a feeling of openness with all humanity.
Social Interest
Elaboration Likelihood Model
neuron
normal distribution
19. Wrinkled outer portion of brain; center for higher order brain functions such as thinking - planning - judgment; processes sensory information and directs movement
Reaction Formation
(cerebral) cortex
endorphins
pupil
20. An aroused condition that directs people to behave in ways that allow them to feel good about themselves and others and to establish and maintain relationships
Social Need
Drug
Logic
Myopic
21. Largest - most complicated - and most advanced of the three divisions of the brain; comprises the thalamus - hypothalamus - limbic system - basal ganglia - corpus callosum - and cortex
motor projection areas
forebrain
Gibson & Walk
Equity Theory
22. Repetitive review of information with little or no interpretation
Depressive disorders
maintenance rehearsal
aphasia
educational psychologist
23. Psychopathology and Social Psychology; effects of labeling; Rosenhan and colleagues checked selves into mental hospitals with symptoms of hearing voices say 'empty - dull and thud.' Diagnosed with schizophrenia. After entered - acted normally. Never
memory span
Skinner Box
Rosenhan
sensory neurons
24. A location on a receptor neurons which is like a key to a lock (with a specific nerve transmitter); allows for orderly pathways
Social Facilitation
receptor site
Hallucinogens (AKA psychedelic drugs)
action potential
25. Process by which several genes interact to produce a certain trait; responsible for most important traits
Placebo effect
pituitary gland
polygenic inheritance
Preoperational stage
26. In Freud's theory - the source of a person's instinctual energy - which works mainly on the pleasure principle.
operational definition
Leon Festinger
Id
Masters & Johnson
27. In the study of motivation - an explanation of behavior that asserts that people actively and regularly determine their own goals and the means of achieving them through thought.
recency effect
selective attention
Body Language
Cognitive theories
28. Theory that suggests that organisms learn new responses by observing the behavior of a model and then imitating it; aka. Social learning theory
Observational Learning Theory
René Descartes
Myopic
habituation
29. Tendency to believe that one's own group is the standard - the reference point by which other people and groups should be judged
Attachment
ethnocentrism
vestibular sense
Reinforcer
30. Stage of sleep characterized by high-frequency - low-amplitude brain-wave activity - rapid and systematic eye movements - more vivid dreams - and postural muscle paralysis
receptor site
functionalism
Rapid Eye Movement Sleep
Transduction
31. Response to the belief that the IV will have an effect - rather than the IV's actual effect - which can be a confounding variable
menarche
Bystander Effect
scientific method
placebo effect
32. Learning; Positive Psychology; learned helplessness theory of depression; Studies: Dogs demonstrating learned helplessness
Martin Seligman
timbre
identical twins
decay
33. Primary area for processing visual information
occipital lobes
Insight therapy
Panic Attack
Problem Solving
34. A highly detailed description of a single individual or a vent
nature
excitatory neurotransmitter
case study
William James
35. Area on retina with no receptor cells (where optic nerve leaves the eye)
blind spot
peripheral nervous system
Reflex
Elaboration Likelihood Model
36. Hormone that controls imbalances levels of calcium and phosphate in the blood and tissue fluid; influences levels of excitability; secreted by parathyroids
Self-actualization
Perception
parathormone
antagonist
37. Process of changing from a totally self-oriented point of view to one tha recognizes other people's feelings - ideas - and viewpoints
Decentration
nurture
humanistic psychology
Gazzaniga or Sperry
38. Sleep researcher who discovered and coined the phrase 'rapid eye movement' (REM) sleep.
Longitudinal Study
menarche
William Dement
declarative memory
39. The period of extending from the onset of puberty to early adulthood
Ego
debriefing
experimenter bias
Adolescence
40. Did study in which healthy patients were admitted to psychiatric hospitals and diagnoses with schizophrenia; showed that once you are diagnosed with a disorder - the label - even when behavior indicates otherwise - is hard to overcome in a mental hea
Albert Bandura
medulla (also medulla oblongata)
Extrinsic motivation
David Rosenhan
41. The behavior of giving up or not responding - exhibited by people and animals exposed to negative consequences or punishment over which they feel they have no control.
Dissociative identity disorder
Conformity
Learned helplessness
sensory neurons
42. A descriptive statistic that measures the variability of data from the mean of the sample
somatic nervous system
Anna Freud
industrial/organizational psychologist
standard deviation
43. The principle that those characteristics and behaviors that help organisms adapt - be fit - and survive will be passed on to successive generations - because flexible - fit individuals have a greater chance of reproduction
Alfred Binet
natural selection
Working through
Orgasm phase
44. Pioneer in Cognitive Therapy. Suggested negative beliefs cause depression.
Dissociative identity disorder
Aaron Beck
heritability
Divergent thinking
45. Rehearsal involving repletion and analysis - in which a stimulus may be associated with (linked to) other information and further processed
elaborative rehearsal
selection studies
Aristotle
Paul Ekman
46. Pain is only experienced in the pain messages can pass through a gate in the spinal cord on their route to the brain
Intimacy
gate control theory
Catatonic type of schizophrenia
preconventional level of moral development
47. The study of the psychological and medical aspects of death and dying
moral development
Thanatology
sample
science
48. A reinforcement schedule in which a reinforcer (reward) is delivered after a predetermined but variable number of responses has occurred
Schachter-Singer theory of emotion
Intelligence
Variable-ratio Schedule
monocular cues
49. The measure of central tendency that is the data point with 50% of the scores above it and 50% below it
Absolute threshold
median
consolidation
Systematic desensitization
50. Professional who studies behavior and uses behavioral principles in scientific research or in applied settings
correlational research
psychologist
Deviation IQ
Denial