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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. Problem-solving technique that involves considering all possible solutions without making prior evaluative judgments.
Brainstorming
menopause
Francis Galton
functional MRI (fMRI)
2. An eating disorder characterized by an obstinate and willful refusal to eat - a distorted body image - and an intense fear of being fat
Law of Effect
Anorexia Nervosa
Social Influence
Case study
3. Unwillingness to help exhibited by witnesses to an event - which increase when there are more observers.
Working through
Consciousness
Bystander Effect
case study
4. A subjective response - usually accompanied by a physiological change - which is interpreted n a particular way by the individual and often leads to a change in behavior
Group therapy
hindbrain
Emotion
normal distribution
5. Graph of a frequency distribution that shows the number of instances of obtained scores - usually with the data points connect by straight lines
frequency polygon
Herman von Helmholtz
Anxiety
Superego
6. The biochemical processes that make it easier for the neuron to respond again when it has been stimulated
norepinephrine
axon
long-term potentiation
Theory of mind
7. Parenting style characterized by emotional warmth - high standards for behavior - explanation and consistent enforcement of rules - and inclusion of children in decision making
Carl Jung
genotype
engineering psychologist
authoritative parenting
8. A person who overuses and relies on drugs to deal with everyday life
Repression
Classical Conditioning
Stress
Substance Abuser
9. Shift in electrical charge in a tiny area of the neuron (temporary); transmits a long cell membranes leaving neuron and polarized state; needs higher than normal threshold of excitation to fire
Extinction (operant conditioning)
graded potential
Ideal Self
levels-of-processing approach
10. Motivation that leads to behaviors engaged in for no apparent reward except the pleasure and satisfaction of the activity itself
Intrinsic motivation
introspection
Backward search
Self-actualization
11. Approximate distribution of scores expected when a sample is taken from a large population - drawn as a frequency polygon that often takes the form of a bell-shaped curve - called the normal curve
Skinner Box
normal distribution
Learned Helplessness
Lloyd and Margaret Peterson
12. The linguistic description of how a language functions - especially the rules and patterns used for generating appropriate and comprehensible sentences.
Fixation
proactive interference
Grammar
Hermann Ebbinghaus
13. The process by which the probability of an organism's emitting a response is reduced when reinforcement no longer follows the response
Vasocongestion
Extinction (operant conditioning)
Gestalt psychology
Developmental Psychology
14. Holds information for processing; fragile; also called short term memory or working memory
Schachter-Singer theory of emotion
Wolpe
short-term storage
demand characteristics
15. Twins from two separate fertilized eggs (zygotes); share half of the same genes
fraternal twins
Working through
Personality
Bipolar disorder
16. Area on retina with no receptor cells (where optic nerve leaves the eye)
blind spot
dualism
brain
forensic psychologist
17. Fixed - overly simple and often erroneous ideas about traits - attitudes - and behaviors of groups of people; stereotypes assume that all members of a given group are alike.
Karen Horney
Schizophrenic disorders
prenatal development
Stereotypes
18. Reflex that causes a newborn to make sucking motions when a finger or nipple if placed in the mouth
Sensation
parietal lobes
binocular cues
Sucking reflex
19. Focuses on how the individual's behavior and mental processes are affected by interactions with other people
Delusions
Object permanence
social psychologist
pons
20. A type of research method that allows researchers to measure variables so that they can develop a description of a situation or phenomenon
token economy
Descriptive Studies
Ageism
Drive
21. The structures and organs that facilitate electrical and chemical communication in the body and allow all behavior and mental processes to take place
identical twins
midbrain
acetylcholine (ACh)
nervous system
22. Process by which a person takes some action to manage - master - tolerate - or reduce environmental or internal demands that cause or might cause stress and that tax the individual's inner resources
Tolerance
Consciousness
Coping
transfer appropriate processing
23. Behaviors that benefit other people and for which there is no discernable extrinsic reward - recognition - or appreciation.
cognitive-appraisal theory of emotion
Social Categorization
Psychodynamically
Altruism
24. Emotion; found that facial expressions are universal
instinct
Reflex
Paul Ekman
self-actualization
25. Intelligence; found that specific mental talents were highly correlated - concluded that all cognitive abilities showed a common core which he labeled 'g' (general ability)
Social phobia
Charles Spearman
population
acetylcholine (ACh)
26. Motivation; human sexual response—studied how both men and women respond to and in relation to sexual behavior
EEG (electroencephalogram)
medulla (also medulla oblongata)
Masters & Johnson
Latent Learning
27. The third phase of the sexual response cycle - during which autonomic nervous system activity reaches its peak and muscle contractions occur in spasms throughout the body - but especially in the genital area
Gibson & Walk
Orgasm phase
Antisocial personality disorder
Receptive fields
28. State of physiological imbalance usually accompanied by arousal
statistics
B.F. Skinner
counseling psychologist
Need
29. 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.
nature-nurture controversy
Secondary Punisher
Robert Yerkes
Signal Detection Theory
30. Part of the limbic system and is involved in learning and forming new long-term memories
psychoanalyst
Coping
hippocampus
Learned Helplessness
31. Use of techniques and ideas from a variety of approaches
Alfred Adler
Babinski reflex
human genomes
eclectic
32. Level of consciousness that is outside awareness but contains feelings and memories that can easily be brought into conscious awareness
Prototype
preconscious
Homeostasis
iris
33. Conscious memory that a person is aware of
explicit memory
Raymond Cattell
normal distribution
endocrine system
34. A therapy that is based on the application of learning principles to human behavior and that focuses on changing overt behaviors rather than on understanding subjective feelings - unconscious processes - or motivations; also known as behavior modific
computerized axial tomography (CT scan)
Behavior therapy
Rosenhan
Stress
35. Studies as identical and rhetorical twins to determine relative influence of heredity and environment on human behavior
selective attention
twin studies
Kenneth Clark
(cerebral) cortex
36. Body sense that provides information about the position and movement of individual parts of the body
kinesthesis
Erik Erikson
levels-of-processing approach
Transference
37. Intelligence - comparative; Yerkes-Dodson law: level of arousal as related to performance
Accommodation
sensory memory
antagonist
Robert Yerkes
38. Concerned with the relationship between brain/nervous system and behavior
afferent neuron nerve
Operant Conditioning
autonomic nervous system
neuropsychologist
39. Ability of the visual perceptual system to recognize that an object remains constant in size regardless of its distance from the observer or the size of its image on the retina.
Depressive disorders
Size constancy
cerebellum
schema
40. Process in which the sense organs' receptor cells are stimulated and relay initial information to higher brain centers for further processing.
Sensation
positive psychology
Trichromatic theory
Case study
41. A design in which researchers manipulate an independent variable and measure a dependent variable to determine a cause-and-effect relationship
pineal gland
positron emission tomography (PET scan)
Experimental design
Dream
42. Personality assessment; created the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) with Christina Morgan - stated that the need to achieve varied in strength in different people and influenced their tendency to approach and evaluate their own performances
Opiates (AKA narcotics)
Henry Murray
pseudoscience
Overjustification effect
43. Selection of a part of the population which mirrors the current demographics
Daniel Goleman
Consciousness
thyroid gland
representative sample
44. Professional who studies behavior and uses behavioral principles in scientific research or in applied settings
psychologist
Working through
strain studies
excitatory neurotransmitter
45. Freud's level of mental life that consists of mental activities beyond people's normal awareness.
pancreas
Unconscious
all-or-none principle
Specific phobia
46. A type of research design that compares individuals of different ages to determine how they differ on an important dimension
Dissociative amnesia
Cross-sectional study
Walter B. Cannon
chunks
47. The analysis of the meaning of language - especially of individual words.
forebrain
psychoanalyst
Theory of mind
Semantics
48. Response elicited by a conditioned stimulus
Optic chiasm
Conditioned Response
genotype
fraternal twins
49. The genetically determined proportion of a trait's variation among individuals in a population
pancreas
frontal lobes
Heritability
James-Lange theory of emotion
50. In humanistic theory - the final level of psychological development - in which one strives to realize one's uniquely human potential-to achieve everything one is capable of achieving
Self-actualization
William Sheldon
Longitudinal Study
Avoidance-avoidance conflict