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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 first phase of the sexual response cycle during which there are increases in heart rate blood pressure and respiration
Excitement phase
recessive gene
pancreas
Panic Attack
2. Located in neck; regulates metabolism by secreting thyroxine
thyroid gland
John Locke
Stimulant
Validity
3. A standard IQ test score whose mean and standard deviation remain constant for all ages
Wernicke's area
statistics
Deviation IQ
Karl Wernicke
4. Tendency to believe that one's own group is the standard - the reference point by which other people and groups should be judged
Opponent-process theory
Secondary Reinforcer
ethnocentrism
Obedience
5. Did work on short-term memory
Lloyd and Margaret Peterson
Representative sample
Mainstreaming
Broca's area
6. Freud's level of the mind that contains those experiences that are not currently conscious but may become so with varying degrees of difficulty.
hindbrain
Preconscious
synaptic cleft
Excitement phase
7. Conflict that results from having to choose between two distasteful alternatives
Representative sample
Trait
Avoidance-avoidance conflict
nature-nurture controversy
8. Cell that send messages from brain and spinal cord to other parts of body; also called motor neurons
William Sheldon
hormone
anterograde amnesia
efferent neuron nerve
9. Colored part of the eye that regulates size of pupil
preconventional level of moral development
Ageism
iris
Generalized anxiety disorder
10. Two or more individuals who are working with a common purpose or have some common goals - characteristics - or interests.
Group
binocular cues
Social Interest
Hermann Ebbinghaus
11. Problem-solving technique that involves considering all possible solutions without making prior evaluative judgments.
Learning
rods
Brainstorming
iris
12. Removal of a stimulus after a particular response to increase the likelihood that the response will recur
Personal Fable
Negative Reinforcement
Variable-interval Schedule
Bipolar disorder
13. Memory of specific personal events and situations (episodes) tagged with information about time
Vasocongestion
bulimia nervosa
episodic memory
Shaping
14. Efferent neurons; neurons that carry messages from spinal cord/brain to muscles and glands
motor neurons
bulimia nervosa
Client-centered therapy
proactive interference
15. Part of the brain involved in sleep/wake cycles; also connects cerebellum and medulla to the cerebral cortex
Standard score
photoreceptors
pons
Anxiety
16. Processes sensory information including touch - temperature - and pain from other body parts
medulla (also medulla oblongata)
Elaboration Likelihood Model
parietal lobes
Monochromats
17. Neurotransmitter that inhibits firing of neurons; linked with Huntington's disease
Judith Langlois
empiricism
GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)
forensic psychologist
18. A feature of thought and problem solving that includes the tendency to generate or recognize ideas considered to be high-quality - original - novel - and appropriate.
ex post facto study
Accommodation
Resolution Phase
Creativity
19. The treatment of emotional or behavior problems through psychological techniques.
Psychotherapy
developmental psychologist
Benjamin Whorf
Harry Harlow
20. The scores and corresponding percentile ranks of a large and representative sample of individuals from the population for which a test was designed
range
Substance Abuser
Homeostasis
Norms
21. Robert Sternberg's theory that describes intelligence as having analytic - creative and practical dimensions
Embryo
Aristotle
triarchic theory of intelligence
Representative sample
22. According to Piaget - the process by which existing mental structures and behaviors are modified to adapt to new experiences
Transference
Accommodation
transfer appropriate processing
Subgoal analysis
23. Devised theory of multiple intelligences: logical-mathematic - spatial - bodily-kinesthetic - intrapersonal - linguistic - musical - interpersonal - naturalistic
Howard Gardner
Norms
Optic chiasm
Conditioned Stimulus
24. Eating disorder most common in adolescent females characterized by weight less than 85% of normal - restricted eating - and unrealistic body image
memory
anorexia nervosa
bottom-up processing
Schema
25. Sets of strategies - rather than strict rules - that act as guidelines for discovery-oriented problem solving.
Sensation
ex post facto study
Positive Reinforcement
Heuristics
26. People whose corpus callosum has been surgically severed
interference
school psychologist
Libido
split brain patients
27. Process in which the sense organs' receptor cells are stimulated and relay initial information to higher brain centers for further processing.
Premack principle
Sensation
Negative Reinforcement
Stanley Schachter
28. School of psychological thought that was concerned with how and why the conscious mind works
positron emission tomography (PET scan)
Transduction
functionalism
Body Language
29. Perspective concerned with how cultural differences affect behavior
sociocultural psychology
Type A behavior
Normal curve
forensic psychologist
30. School of psychological thought that argued that behavior cannot be studied in parts but must be viewed a s whole
Anxiety
moral development
Gestalt psychology
placebo effect
31. Humanistic psychology; Contributions: founded client-centered therapy - theory that emphasizes the unique quality of humans especially their freedom and potential for personal growth - unconditional positive regard -
Cognitive theories
Egocentrism
Carl Rogers
cognitive psychology
32. Developmental psychology;: social development & processing - effects of appearance on behavior - origin of social stereotypes - sex/love/intimacy - facial expression
semantic memory
Judith Langlois
EEG (electroencephalogram)
Monochromats
33. Any internal condition - although usually an internal one - that initates - activates - or maintains an organism's goal directed behavior
Secondary Sex Characteristics
Motivation
Phineas Gage
somatic nervous system
34. 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.
myelin sheath
Decentration
Standardization
Anxiety
35. Reflex that causes a newborn to make sucking motions when a finger or nipple if placed in the mouth
Sucking reflex
hypothalamus
cognitive-appraisal theory of emotion
Metal retardation
36. Compliance with the orders of another person or group of people.
Obedience
independent variable
Discrimination
aversive conditioning
37. Information processing that begins at the sensory receptors and works up to perception
bottom-up processing
Means-ends analysis
axon terminal
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
38. Depth cues that are based on one eye
central nervous system
monocular cues
Monochromats
Darley & Latane
39. The suppression of one bit of information by another
Attributions
interference
Stimulus Generalization
Need for achievement
40. Memory a person is not aware of possessing
implicit memory
GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)
Self-serving Bias
Substance Abuser
41. Released by thyroid; hormone that regulates the body's metabolism; OVERACTIVE-over-excitability - insomnia - reduced attention span - fatigue - snap decisions - reduced concentration (hyperthyroidism); UNDERACTIVE-desire to sleep - constantly tired -
Abnormal Behavior
thyroxine
measure of central tendency
Prosocial Behavior
42. Anxiety disorder characterized by irrational and persistent fear of a particular object or situation - along with a compelling desire to avoid it.
Self-actualization
Specific phobia
clinical psychologist
parathormone
43. Developmental psychology; 'visual cliff' studies with infants
Gibson & Walk
Elizabeth Kübler-Ross
Zajonc & Markus
Family therapy
44. A three-stage counterconditioning procedure in which people are taught to relax when confronting stimuli that forming elicited anxiety.
dominant genes
Little Albert
all-or-none principle
Systematic desensitization
45. The tendency to recall information learned while in a particular physiological state most accurately when one is in that physiological state again
state-dependent learning
nurture
conventional level of moral development
Heuristics
46. Located in left temporal lobe; plays role in understanding language and making meaningful sentences
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47. Unlearned or involuntary response to an unconditioned stimulus
schema
Unconditioned Response
nerve
median
48. A reinforcement schedule in which a reinforcer (reward) is delivered after predetermined but varying amounts of time - provided that the required response occurs at least once after each interval
Variable-interval Schedule
Saturation
survey research
antagonist
49. Type of schizophrenia characterized either by displays of excited or violent motor activity or by stupor.
Bystander Effect
Halo effect
Catatonic type of schizophrenia
Tolerance
50. Motivation theory - drive reduction; maintained that the goal of all motivated behavior is the reduction or alleviation of a drive state - mechanism through which reinforcement operates
parietal lobes
Clark Hull
informed consent
pseudoscience