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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. Automatic behavior that occurs involuntarily in response to a stimulus and without prior learning and usually shows little variability from instance to instance
REM (rapid eye movement) sleep
Child abuse
Equity Theory
Reflex
2. Intelligence; found that specific mental talents were highly correlated - concluded that all cognitive abilities showed a common core which he labeled 'g' (general ability)
ESP
imagery
Classical Conditioning
Charles Spearman
3. The realization of infants that objects continue to exist even when they are out of sight
Object permanence
Edward Bradford Titchener
Intrinsic motivation
Secondary Punisher
4. Anxiety disorder characterized by fear of - and desire to avoid - situations in which the person might be exposed to scrutiny by others and might behave in an embarrassing or humiliating way.
Robert Yerkes
Robert Zajonc
pitch
Social phobia
5. Morality based on one's own individual moral principles (i.e. - conscience)
Id
postconventional level of moral development
Phillip Zimbardo
experimental group
6. Division which includes the cerebellum - Pons - and medulla; responsible for involuntary processes: blood pressure - body temperature - heart rate - breathing - sleep cycles
Latent Content
hindbrain
Gibson & Walk
Social Facilitation
7. 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.
Latent Content
Phineas Gage
Resistance
Konrad Lorenz
8. Areas of the retina that - when stimulated - produce a change in the firing of cells in the visual system.
Operant Conditioning
Self-fulfilling prophecy
Receptive fields
Classical Conditioning
9. The fourth phase of the sexual response cycle - following orgasm - during which the body returns to its resting - or normal state
human genomes
optic nerve
Intimacy
Resolution Phase
10. An understanding of mental states such as feelings - desires - beliefs - and intentions and of the causal role they play in human behavior
Embryo
Orgasm phase
pitch
Theory of mind
11. Parenting style characterized by emotional warmth - high standards for behavior - explanation and consistent enforcement of rules - and inclusion of children in decision making
Charles Spearman
Gordon Allport
Erik Erikson
authoritative parenting
12. Process of developing uniform procedures for administering and scoring a test and for establishing norms
Self-fulfilling prophecy
thyroxine
Robert Zajonc
Standardization
13. Loss of memory of events and experiences that preceded an amnesia-causing event
nerve
retrograde amnesia
Learning
Rationalization
14. Any of a class of drugs that relax and calm a user and - in higher doses - induce sleep; also known as a depressant
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
Mainstreaming
Grammar
Depressants (AKA sedative-hypnotics)
15. Part of the brain that coordinates balance - movement - reflexes
interference
Motive
cerebellum
James-Lange theory of emotion
16. A procedure to inform participants about the true nature of an experiment after its completion
debriefing
Vulnerability
semantic memory
Overjustification effect
17. Stimulus that normally produces a measurable involuntary response
Unconditioned Stimulus
Size constancy
Secondary Sex Characteristics
cornea
18. In Freud's theory - the source of a person's instinctual energy - which works mainly on the pleasure principle.
Anxiety
efferent neuron nerve
Rapid Eye Movement Sleep
Id
19. The scientific study of how people think about - interact with - influence - and are influenced by the thoughts - feelings - and behaviors of other people.
Gordon Allport
Social Psychology
Agoraphobia
pseudoscience
20. A mechanism that prevents certain molecule from entering the brain but allows others to cross
Blood-Brain Barrier
proactive interference
episodic memory
Behavior therapy
21. When a researcher's expectations unknowingly create a situation that affects the results
synaptic cleft
Carol Gilligan
self-fulfilling prophecy
ex post facto study
22. Removal of a stimulus after a particular response to increase the likelihood that the response will recur
Negative Reinforcement
authoritarian parenting
behavioral genetics
Social Facilitation
23. Drugs derived from the opium poppy - including opium - morphine - and heroin
Opiates (AKA narcotics)
Conditioned Response
Nonverbal Communication
epinephrine
24. The first person to study memory scientifically and systematically; used nonsense syllables and recorded how many times he had to study a list to remember it well
Trichromatic theory
Edward Thorndike
Stanley Schachter
Hermann Ebbinghaus
25. The field of psychology concerned with the assessment - treatment - and prevention of maladaptive behavior.
Heuristics
Kenneth Clark
Phoneme
Abnormal psychology
26. Commonly occurring behavior can reinforce a less frequent behavior
Lev Vygotsky
Social Cognition
variable
Premack principle
27. The situation that occurs when the drug becomes part of the body's functioning and produces withdrawal symptoms when the drug is discontinued
Catatonic type of schizophrenia
Perception
Emotion
Dependence
28. Unexpected changes in the gene replication process that are not always evident in phenotype and create unusual and sometimes harmful characteristics of body or behavior
Cross-sectional Studies
Leon Festinger
mutation
percentile score
29. Sense of smell
EEG (electroencephalogram)
neuropsychologist
olfaction
Carl Rogers
30. Learned knowledge and skills such as vocabulary - which tends to increase with age
Agoraphobia
Unconscious
crystallized intelligence
Stanley Milgram
31. 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
Personality disorders
Survey
Humanistic theory
Aggression
32. Conformity; showed that social pressure can make a person say something that is obviously incorrect ; in a famous study in which participants were shown cards with lines of different lengths and were asked to say which line matched the line on the fi
Solomon Asch
Symptom substitution
Attributions
Brainstorming
33. An excessive attachment to some person or object that was appropriate only at an earlier stage of development
amnesia
retrograde amnesia
Fixation
DNA
34. Revised Binet's IQ test and established norms for American children; tested group of young geniuses and followed in a longitudinal study that lasted beyond his own lifetime to show that high IQ does not necessarily lead to wonderful things in life
Psychoactive Drug
B.F. Skinner
Lewis Terman
Albert Ellis
35. Moral development; presented boys moral dilemmas and studied their responses and reasoning processes in making moral decisions. Most famous moral dilemma is 'Heinz' who has an ill wife and cannot afford the medication. Should he steal the medication
conventional level of moral development
Cross-sectional Studies
synaptic vesicles
Lawrence Kohlberg
36. The arithmetic average of a set of scores
Self-efficacy
mean
Non-rapid Eye Movement Sleep
Visual cortex
37. School of psychological thought that was concerned with how and why the conscious mind works
Collective Unconscious
all-or-none principle
Systematic desensitization
functionalism
38. A location on a receptor neurons which is like a key to a lock (with a specific nerve transmitter); allows for orderly pathways
theory
selection studies
receptor site
Extinction (classical conditioning)
39. An individual who takes part in an experiment and whose behavior is observed as part of the data collection process
Metal retardation
timbre
psychologist
participant
40. State of physiological imbalance usually accompanied by arousal
Need
cochlea
Self-actualization
Psychotic
41. Action potential; the firing of a nerve cell; the entire process of the electrical charge (message/impulse) traveling through inner on; can be as fast as 400 fps (with myelin) or 3 fps (no myelin)
Bonding
neural impulse
Demand characteristics
fovea
42. 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.
Cognitive theories
Ernst Weber
Schizophrenic disorders
mean
43. Shows brain activity at higher reolution than PET scan when changes in oxygen concentration in neurons alters its magnetic qualities
functional MRI (fMRI)
explicit memory
Accommodation
Norms
44. Snail-shaped fluid-filled tube in the inner ear involved in transduction
Brightness
habituation
Group Polarization
cochlea
45. For glands embedded in the thyroid; secretes parathormone; controls announces level of calcium and phosphate (which influence levels of excitability)
Reaction Formation
implicit memory
Secondary Reinforcer
parathyroid
46. A sample of individuals who match the population with whom they are being compared with regard to key variables such as socioeconomic status and age
Bulimia Nervosa
Preconscious
Representative sample
Substance Abuser
47. Presentation of a stimulus after a particular response in order to increase the likelihood that the response will recur
parathyroid
Blood-Brain Barrier
Positive Reinforcement
range
48. Chemical that opposes the actions of a neurotransmitter
antagonist
fluid intelligence
Wolpe
frequency distribution
49. Personality; theory that linked personality to physique on the grounds that both are governed by genetic endowment: endomorphic (large) - mesomorphic (average) - and ectomorphic (skinny)
Time-out
mean
William Sheldon
Robert Yerkes
50. Eating disorder characterized by pattern 9of eating binges followed by purging (e.g. - vomiting - laxatives - exercise)
bulimia nervosa
Teratogen
prenatal development
nerve