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Test your basic knowledge |
Gre Psychology: Experimental/natural Science Biology
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Subjects
:
gre
,
psychology
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. Found in the hypothalamus - function to maintain the water balance in the body
symptoms of Parkinson'S Disease
menstrual cycle
osmoreceptors
efferent neurons
2. Causes mesolimbic dopamine hyperactivity; etiology of schizophrenia
ovaries/testes
projection area
the ___ refractory period follows the ____ refractory period
prefrontal hypoactivity
3. Junction of the sagittal and coronal sutures of the skull; often used as a reference point for stereotaxic brain surgery
ventricles
bregma
spinal cord
tegmentum
4. Having two copies of each chromosomes in most cells (except the gametes) - e.g. most mammals
Ketamine
acetylcholine (neurotransmitter)
diploid
diencephalon
5. Focuses light waves on the retina and is held in place by the suspensory ligament; aqueous humor on cornea side; vitreous humor on retina side
indirect antagonists
sensitivity
lens
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone
6. Synchronized EEG activity during its deeper stages
Cranial Nerve X
Cranial Nerve IV
non-REM sleep
tectum
7. Increasing effects/effectiveness of a medication due to repeated administration
basic rest-activity cycle
sensitivity
symptoms of Parkinson'S Disease
hypothalamus
8. Are direct antagonists; binds with a receptor but does not activate it - but prevents the natural ligand from binding with the receptor
receptor blockers
path of cerebrospinal fluid
galvanic skin response (GSR)
nystagmus
9. Vestibulocochlear Nerve - hearing and balance
Hebb rule
non-competitive binding
homeostasis
Cranial Nerve VIII
10. Located in the forebrain - basal ganglia -> movement -speech and other complex behaviors
basal ganglia
triggers of behavior
gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)
aphasia
11. Regulates body temperature
Cranial Nerve VI
cerebellum
efferent neurons
hypothalamus
12. Can occur after long term antipsychotic tx (opposite of Parkinson'S?); oversensitivity to dopamine
hypocretin
tolerance
tardive dyskinesia
slow-wave sleep
13. 1. Stage I (non-REM sleep) 2. Stage II (non-REM sleep 3. Stage III (non-REM sleep - slow-wave sleep) 4. Stage IV (non-REM sleep - slow-wave sleep) 5. Rapid Eye Movement Sleep (REM sleep) ~takes about 90 minutes for one full sleep cycle
anterior hypothalamus
monoamine neurotransmitters
Whitten effect
stages of sleep
14. Stimulates bone growth and produces the hormones: somatotropin - prolactin - thyroid-stimulating - adrenocorticotropic (ACTH) - follicle-stimulating - luteinnizing
tardive dyskinesia
lipid soluble drugs/medications
monoamine neurotransmitters
pituitary gland
15. Is everything anterior to the central sulcus
Frontal lobe
ionotropic receptors
ultimate biological considerations
sensorimotor cortex
16. Found that developmental changes occurring in puberty make the brain more susceptible to the psychotic effects of NDMA antagonist and therefore also related to the emergence of symptoms of schizophrenia
nystagmus
Farber et al. (1995)
ionotropic receptors
lateral hypothalamus (LH)
17. The maintenance of water balance in the body
ionotropic receptors
association area
Cranial Nerve XII
osmoregulation
18. Cumulative effects of repeated stimulation from a presynaptic neuron
association area
temporal summation
progesterone
sexual dimorphic behavior
19. Include the Nigrostriatal system - Mesolimbic system and Mesocortical system
Cranial Nerve IV
dopaminergic systems
sign stimulus
projection area
20. One of the primary noradrenergic nuclei whose ascending axons project to frontal cortex - thalamus - hypothalamus - limbic system
reticular formation
cerebellum
locus coeruleus
thyroid
21. Receptors whose activation directly affects potassium or chloride ion channels in the neuron - (many drugs of abuse substitute for natural GABA- alcohol - benzos - barbituates
ionotropic receptors
Mesolimbic System
Cranial Nerve XII
myelin sheath
22. Cells that integrate information across the retina; rather than sending signals toward the brain - amacrine cells link bipolar cells to other bipolar cells and ganglion cells to other ganglion cells
contralateral
amacrine cells
cerebellum
amygdala
23. Facial Nerve - moves face and salivates
Cranial Nerve VII
lens
sleep paralysis
Cranial Nerves
24. Colored part of the eye
hypnagogic activity
Frontal lobe
dirty medications; clean medications
iris
25. If a synapse is active at about the same time that a postsynaptic neuron is active - that synapse will be strengthened
ultimate biological considerations
red nucleus + substantia nigra
motor cortex
Hebb rule
26. Is regulated by the hypothalamus
homeostasis
Cranial Nerve VIII
pheromone
non-competitive bonding
27. First described by Descartes - a combination of antagonistic muscle movements (e.g. those involved in walking)
reciprocal innervation
dopamine (neurotransmitter)
Cranial Nerve II
reaction time
28. Combines input from diverse brain regions; receives sensory information/sends motor impulses
tolerance
hypothalamus + thalamus
lens
association areas; projection areas
29. States that performance is worst at extremely low or extremely high levels of arousal and optimally at an intermediate level
umami
zygote
Glial cells
Yerkes-Dodson Law
30. An axon of a neuron in one region of the brain whose terminals form synapses with neurons in another region
medulla & pons
serotonin (5-HT) (neurotransmitter)
projection fiber
hypothalamus
31. Smooth electrical activity of 8-12 Hz -medium frequency - awake but in a restful state (^ eyes closed but conscious)
zygote
fusiform face area
collateral sprouting
alpha activity
32. Acetylcholine - glutamate - gamma-aminobutyric acid - dopamine - serotonin - norepinephrine - endorphin
the 7 major neurotransmitters
suspensory ligament
equipotentiality
projection areas
33. Motor neurons found in the Somatic (voluntary) and Autonomic (involuntary) Nervous Systems
tectum
efferent neurons
dopamine (neurotransmitter)
septum
34. Strip of limbic cortex lying along the lateral walls of the groove separating the cerebral hemispheres - just above the corpus callosum
zygosity
basal forebrain
cingulate gyrus
iris
35. Fluid filled cavities in the middle of the brain - linking to the spinal canal that runs down the middle of the spinal cord; this fluid is cerebrospinal fluid
Cranial Nerve IV
mesencephalon
sensitivity
ventricles
36. Physiologically different from the other four stages of sleep (i.e. the similarity between the summed electrical activity of neurons measured on the scalp (EEG) during REM sleep and during wakefulness
septum
REM sleep
sleep spindles
substantia nigra
37. Actually are two kinds: monochorionic and dichorionic (blastocyst splis into two before day 4)
monozygotic twins
sleep spindles
indirect antagonists
sleep paralysis
38. Dorsal part of midbrain; includes the superior and inferior colliculi
tectum
acetylcholine (neurotransmitter)
anterior hypothalamus
gonad
39. The scientific study of animal behavior; documentation of species-specific instinctual behaviors
ethology
Korsakoff'S amnesia
basal ganglia
trichromatic levels of color vision
40. A chemical released by one animal that affects the behavior or physiology of another animal; usually smelled or tasted
pheromone
tectum
norepinephrine
basal forebrain
41. The earlier onset of puberty seen in female animals that are housed with males caused by a pheromone in the male'S urine and first observed in mice
hippocampus
osmoreceptors
absolute refractory periods
Vandenbergh effect
42. Damage to this are causes clumsiness and loss of balance
cerebellum
subcortical structures
consummatory stimulus
projection areas
43. Consummatory stimuli - sign stimuli - supernormal stimuli - releaser
triggers of behavior
acetylcholine (neurotransmitter)
reticulum
tyrosine
44. 1. ventral tegmentum to mesolimbic forebrain (cognition - reward systems - emotional behavior) 2. substantia nigra to caudate nucleus putamen (movement and sensory stimulation) 3. hypothalamus to pituitary gland (neuronal/hormonal control)
anterior hypothalamus
glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD)
ventricles
the 3 major pathways of dopamine in the brain
45. Located in the midbrain - a group of neurons which produce dopamine and degenerate in Parkinson'S Disease
anterior hypothalamus
mesencephalon
substantia nigra
Ketamine
46. A sensory organ that detects the presence of certain chemicals - especially when a liquid is actively sniffed; mediates the effects of some pheromones
red nucleus + substantia nigra
projection area
Vomeronasal Organ
hypocretin
47. Decreasing effects of a medication due to repeated administration
the ___ refractory period follows the ____ refractory period
Cranial Nerve IX
fornix
tolerance
48. Comprised of the hypothalamus - pituitary gland - thyroid gland - parathyroid - the adrenal cortex - the adrenal medulla - the pancreas - the ovaries/testes - pineal gland.
subarachnoid space
endocrine system
hair cells
ionotropic receptors
49. Has two lobes that are connected by the massa intermedia (looks like a pair of balls - without the nutsack)
relative refractory period
thalamus
trichromatic levels of color vision
triggers of behavior
50. Adenine - Guanine - Thymine - Cytosine
nystagmus
projection area
nucleotides
parietal lobes