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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. One of the descriptive methods of research; it requires construction of a set of questions to administer to a group of participants
Survey
Oral Stage
Equity Theory
midbrain
2. A drug that increases alertness - reduces fatigue - and elevates mood
Stimulant
Phobic disorders
self-actualization
Withdrawal Symptoms
3. An unscientific system which pretends to discover psychological information that his means are unscientific or deliberately fraudulent
Monochromats
Phineas Gage
pseudoscience
Sex
4. The more accurate recall of items presented at the beginning of a series
Double bind
Symptom substitution
recency effect
primacy effect
5. Child development; investigated how culture & interpersonal communication guide development; zone of proximal development; play research
Lev Vygotsky
theory
vestibular sense
lens
6. Process of developing uniform procedures for administering and scoring a test and for establishing norms
Dependence
Standardization
genotype
Hallucinogens (AKA psychedelic drugs)
7. In Piaget's view - a specific mental structure; an organized way of interacting with the environment and experiencing it- a generalization a child makes based on comparable occurences of various actins - usally physical - motor actions
Schema
Interpersonal Attraction
experimental group
Size constancy
8. Helps athletes improve their focus - increase motivation - and deal with anxiety and fear of failure
flashbulb memories
achievement test
sports psychologist
Rationalization
9. Any readily identifiable stable quality that characterizes how an individual differs from other individuals.
Interpretation
Trait
Arousal
significant difference
10. The first of Piaget's four stages of cognitive development (covering roughly the first 2 years of life) - during which the child develops some motoer coordination skills and a memory for past events
levels-of-processing approach
Hermann Ebbinghaus
Sensorimotor stage
Darley & Latane
11. The number of items a person can reproduce from short-term memory - usually consisting of one or two chunks
Moro reflex
memory span
Ekman & Friesen
pupil
12. For glands embedded in the thyroid; secretes parathormone; controls announces level of calcium and phosphate (which influence levels of excitability)
Classical Conditioning
Vulnerability
Catatonic type of schizophrenia
parathyroid
13. School of psychological thought that considered the structure and elements of conscious experience to be the proper subject matter of psychology
sensory adaptation
structuralism
Reactance
Trichromats
14. In Jung's theory - a shared storehouse of primitive ideas and images that reside in the unconscious and are inherited from one's ancestors.
Collective Unconscious
genetic mapping
Factor analysis
crystallized intelligence
15. Discovered classical conditioning; trained dogs to salivate at the ringing of a bell
Linguistics
Ivan Pavlov
Self-actualization
Abnormal Behavior
16. A socially and culturally constructed set of distinctions between masculine and feminine sets of behaviors that is promoted and expected by society
Gender
computerized axial tomography (CT scan)
range
science
17. Large band of white neural fibers that connects to to brain hemispheres and carries messages between them; myelinated; involved in intelligence - consciousness - and self-awareness; does it reach full maturity until 20s
Cannon-Bard theory of emotion
Unconditioned Response
corpus callosum
Time-out
18. Process of presenting an undesirable or noxious stimulus - or removing a desirable stimulus - to decrease the probability that a preceding response will recur
Leon Festinger
Punishment
Secondary Punisher
Harry Harlow
19. Process of evaluating individual differences among human beings by means of tests interviews - observations - and recordings of physiological.
functional MRI (fMRI)
insulin
Assessment
neuropsychologist
20. Temporary decrease in sensitivity to a stimulus that occurs when stimulation is unchanging
dopamine
Rapid Eye Movement Sleep
Bipolar disorder
sensory adaptation
21. A person's diminished ability to deal with demanding life events.
Insight therapy
Double-blind techniques
lens
Vulnerability
22. The biochemical processes that make it easier for the neuron to respond again when it has been stimulated
long-term potentiation
Plateau phase
sample
Hans Eysenck
23. Neurotransmitter that affects sleep - arousal - mood - appetite; lack of it is linked with depression
Skinner Box
serotonin
Debriefing
Martin Seligman
24. 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 -
Carl Rogers
Self-actualization
Approach-avoidance conflict
Mary Cover-Jones
25. A chart or array of scores - usually arranged from highest to lowest - showing the number of instances for each score
functional MRI (fMRI)
frequency distribution
case study
Percentile score
26. The first phase of the sexual response cycle during which there are increases in heart rate blood pressure and respiration
Excitement phase
industrial/organizational psychologist
Secondary Sex Characteristics
Specific phobia
27. The ability to recall past events - images - ideas - or previously learned information or skills; the storage system that allows a person to retain and retrieve previously learned information
memory
split brain patients
Excitement phase
pupil
28. Named for its developer - B.F. Skinner - a box that contains a responding mechanism and a device capable of delivering a consequence to an animal in the box whenever it makes the desired response
Albert Ellis
Observational Learning Theory
Skinner Box
Abnormal Behavior
29. All of the individuals in the group to which a study applies
population
implicit memory
Insomnia
Heritability
30. Able to see objects at a distance clearly but having trouble seeing things up close; farsighted
Hyperopic
Longitudinal Study
neuroscience
Unconditioned Stimulus
31. The agreement of participants to take part in an experiment and their acknowledgement that they understand the nature of their participation in the research - and have been fully informed about the general nature of the research - its goals - and met
Hallucinogens (AKA psychedelic drugs)
Drive
informed consent
motive
32. Drugs derived from the opium poppy - including opium - morphine - and heroin
unconscious
photoreceptors
Opiates (AKA narcotics)
serotonin
33. Member of a gene terror that controls the appearance of a certain trait
Hobson & McCarley
twin studies
vestibular sense
dominant genes
34. Reflex in which a newborn fans out the toes when the sole of the foot is touched
Androgynous
Extinction (classical conditioning)
Babinski reflex
Grammar
35. The situation that occurs when the drug becomes part of the body's functioning and produces withdrawal symptoms when the drug is discontinued
Dependence
Fixed-ratio Schedule
Daniel Goleman
menopause
36. Perception below the threshold of awareness.
Social Influence
Subliminal perception
range
Logic
37. Prejudice against the elderly and the resulting discrimination against them
neurogenesis
Brainstorming
Ageism
Genital Stage
38. Internally generated patterns of body functions - including hormonal signals - sleep - blood pressure - and temperature regulation - which have approximately a 24-hour cycle and occur even in the absence of normal cues about whether it is day or nigh
Debriefing
Psychosurgery
Psychoactive Drug
Circadian Rhythms
39. Snail-shaped fluid-filled tube in the inner ear involved in transduction
cochlea
Metal retardation
Intrinsic motivation
Stereotypes
40. Biologist; developed theory of evolution; transmutation of species - natural selection - evolution by common descent; 'The Origin of Species' catalogs his voyage on The Beagle
parasympathetic nervous system
family studies
Charles Darwin
William Sheldon
41. Informing participants about the true nature of a experiment after its completion.
Self-perception Theory
Robert Rosenthal
Debriefing
Avoidance-avoidance conflict
42. The study of the lifelong - often age-related - processes of change in the physical - cognitive - moral - emotional - and social domains of functioning; such changes are rooted in biological mechanisms that are genetically controlled - as well as in
Secondary Punisher
strain studies
Developmental Psychology
Ivan Pavlov
43. The process of maintaining or keeping information readily available; the locations where information is held
parasympathetic nervous system
storage
Self
cohort effect
44. The statistically determined minimum level of stimulation necessary to excite a perceptual system.
Lewis Terman
Absolute threshold
Anna Freud
monocular cues
45. Carries impulses from the eye to the brain
Elaboration Likelihood Model
Manifest Content
optic nerve
genetic mapping
46. Study of the brain and nervous system; overlaps with psychobiology
convolutions
Prosocial Behavior
Kenneth Clark
neuroscience
47. Ability of a test to measure what it is supposed to measure and to predict what it is supposed to predict
Validity
nurture
humanistic psychology
nonconscious
48. Motor sensory relay center for four of the five senses; and with a brain stem and composed of two egg-shaped structures; integrates in shades incoming sensory signals; Mnemonic-'don't smell the llamas because the llamas smell bad'
inhibitory neurotransmitter
Latent Content
thalamus
Genital Stage
49. Theory that holds that an observer's perception depends not only on the intensity of a stimulus but also on the observer's motivation - the criteria he or she sets for determining that a signal is present - and on the background noise.
Ex Post Facto Design
Saccades
Social Need
Signal Detection Theory
50. Process by which a conditioned response becomes associated with a stimulus that is similar but not identical to the original conditioned stimulus
Fixed-ratio Schedule
functional MRI (fMRI)
Stimulus Generalization
Elizabeth Loftus