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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. Ancient Greek philosopher. Promoted introspection by saying - 'Know thyself.'
Socrates
implicit memory
myelin sheath
monocular cues
2. Loss of memory for events and experiences occurring from the time of an amnesia-causing event forward
anterograde amnesia
encoding
Psychodynamically
mutation
3. Portion of the CNS that carries messages to the PNS; connects brain to the rest of the body
Prosocial Behavior
Altruism
spinal cord
Wernicke's area
4. The behavior of giving up or not responding to punishment - exhibited by people or animals exposed to negative consequences or punishment over which they have no control
Specific phobia
Learned Helplessness
Conservation
limbic system
5. Synaptic gap or synaptic space; tiny gap between the terminal of one neuron and the dendrites of another neuron (almost never touch); location of the transfer of an impulse from one neuron to the next
Carl Rogers
operational definition
synaptic cleft
thalamus
6. Language; his hypothesis is that language determines the way we think
insulin
Benjamin Whorf
Validity
Attachment
7. The structures and organs that facilitate electrical and chemical communication in the body and allow all behavior and mental processes to take place
Dream analysis
William Sheldon
Edward Bradford Titchener
nervous system
8. 'Wernicke's area'; discovered area of left temporal lobe that involved language understanding: person damaged in this area uses correct words but they do not make sense
Resolution Phase
dualism
Reliability
Karl Wernicke
9. The expression of genes
amygdala
phenotype
Karen Horney
Group
10. Unwillingness to help exhibited by witnesses to an event - which increase when there are more observers.
Bystander Effect
Experimental design
preconventional level of moral development
Phobic disorders
11. The entire spectrum of waves initiated by the movement of charged particles.
Psycholinguistics
transfer appropriate processing
Electromagnetic Radiation
experiment
12. Heuristic procedure in which the problem solver compares the current situation with the desired goal to determine the most efficient way to get from one to the other.
Projective Tests
conventional level of moral development
Means-ends analysis
Emotion
13. Body sense that provides information about the position and movement of individual parts of the body
limbic system
ESP
kinesthesis
Psychophysics
14. 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
Antisocial personality disorder
family studies
John B Watson
Variable-interval Schedule
15. The measure of central tendency that is the data point with 50% of the scores above it and 50% below it
Need for achievement
median
audition
Wilhelm Wundt
16. Professional who studies behavior and uses behavioral principles in scientific research or in applied settings
Self-perception Theory
Phineas Gage
fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)
psychologist
17. A state of being or feeling in which each person in a relationship is willing to self-disclose and to express important feelings and information to the other person.
Intimacy
audition
levels-of-processing approach
Orgasm phase
18. Retrieval cues that match original information work better
schema
receptor site
Herman von Helmholtz
encoding specificity principle
19. Temporary decrease in sensitivity to a stimulus that occurs when stimulation is unchanging
sensory adaptation
B.F. Skinner
Hermann Rorschach
myelin sheath
20. Clues participants discover about the purpose of a study that suggest how they should respond
informed consent
Self-efficacy
demand characteristics
efferent neuron nerve
21. Does research on how people function best with machines
Light
behavioral genetics
engineering psychologist
anorexia nervosa
22. Primary area for processing visual information
occipital lobes
endorphins
Decision making
Hallucinogens (AKA psychedelic drugs)
23. Cognition; studied rats and discovered the 'cognitive map' in rats and humans
Tolman
Placebo effect
self-actualization
Higher-order Conditioning
24. 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
Representative sample
median
motor neurons
Cognitive Dissonance
25. Process by which stored information is recovered from memory
Zygote
pineal gland
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
retrieval
26. Control emotional behaviors - make decisions - carry out plans; speech (Broca's area); controls movement of muscles
frontal lobes
ESP
percentile score
introspection
27. Studies as identical and rhetorical twins to determine relative influence of heredity and environment on human behavior
top-down processing
EEG (electroencephalogram)
Herman von Helmholtz
twin studies
28. The ability to perceive - express - understand - and regulate emotions
Psychoneuroimmunology
Moro reflex
Behavior therapy
emotional intelligence
29. A type of therapy in which two or more people who are committed to one another's well-being are treated at once - in and effort to change the ways the interact.
Social Facilitation
Family therapy
Double-blind techniques
Superego
30. The range between the level at which a child can solve a problem working alone with difficulty - and the level at which a child can solve a problem with the assistance of adults or children with more skill
René Descartes
zone of proximal development
Superstitious Behavior
top-down processing
31. Neurotransmitter that inhibits firing of neurons; linked with Huntington's disease
GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)
significant difference
science
David McClelland
32. Behaviorism; emphasis on external behaviors of people and their reactions on a given situation; famous for Little Albert study in which baby was taught to fear a white rat
David Rosenhan
participant
iris
John B Watson
33. Establish the relationship between two variables
Percentile score
Raymond Cattell
correlational research
Classical Conditioning
34. Endocrine glands located above the kidney and secretes epinephrine and norepinephrine - which prepare the body for 'fight or flight'
Learned helplessness
adrenal glands
hypnosis
Mary Cover-Jones
35. The biologically based categories of male and female
forebrain
Sex
Kenneth Clark
Charles Darwin
36. Detailed memory for events surrounding a dramatic event that is vivid and remembered with confidence
Motivation
flashbulb memories
pons
Representative sample
37. Area of the brain that is part of the limbic system and regulates behaviors such as - eating - drinking - sexual behaviors - motivation; also body temperature
antagonist
Body Language
adrenal glands
hypothalamus
38. Dissociative disorder characterized by the existence within an individual of two or more distinct personalities - each of which is dominant at different times and directs the individual's behavior at those times; commonly known as multiple personalit
Dissociative identity disorder
Law of Effect
Secondary Punisher
Gordon Allport
39. Social cognition - cognitive dissonance; Study Basics: Studied and demonstrated cognitive dissonance
Karl Wernicke
Leon Festinger
Social phobia
Reliability
40. An abstraction - an idealized pattern of an object or idea that is stored in memory and used to decide whether similar objects or ideas are members of the same class of items.
Law of Effect
Spontaneous Recovery
Prototype
Fetus
41. Chemical that opposes the actions of a neurotransmitter
Emotion
Appraisal
medulla (also medulla oblongata)
antagonist
42. Any therapy that attempts to discover relationships between unconscious motivations and current abnormal behavior.
Insight therapy
operational definition
William James
Grammar
43. Differential psychology AKA 'London School' of Experimental Psychology; Contributions: behavioral genetics - maintains that personality & ability depend almost entirely on genetic inheritance; compared identical & fraternal twins - hereditary differe
schema
Francis Galton
Avoidance-avoidance conflict
Group
44. Piaget's thrid stage of cognitive development (lasting from approximately age 6 or 7 to age 11 or 12) - during which the child develops the ability to understand constant factors in the environment - rules - and higher-order symbolic systems
Concrete operational stage
thyroid gland
case study
epinephrine
45. Selection of a part of the population which mirrors the current demographics
Monochromats
representative sample
positron emission tomography (PET scan)
Panic Attack
46. 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
Shaping
association areas
Albert Bandura
Coping
47. The process by which a person uses behavior and appearance of others to form attitudes about them.
synaptic vesicles
nature-nurture controversy
Psychophysics
Impression Formation
48. Process by which a neutral stimulus takes on conditioned properties through pairing with a conditioned stimulus
Higher-order Conditioning
terminal buttons (axon terminals)
Psychosurgery
Kurt Lewin
49. Trait theory of personality; 3 levels of traits: cardinal - central - and secondary
William Dement
neuroscience
Gordon Allport
Group Polarization
50. Parenting style characterized by emotional warmth - high standards for behavior - explanation and consistent enforcement of rules - and inclusion of children in decision making
experimenter bias
relative refractory period
authoritative parenting
David Weschler