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Test your basic knowledge |
Gre Psychology: Experimental/natural Science Biology
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gre
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psychology
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
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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. A 90-minute activity cycle occurs throughout the day as well as throughout sleep (in humans) waxing and waning alertness controlled by a biological clock in the caudal brainstem that also controls cycles of REM and slow-wave sleep
sleep
biological etiology of schizophrenia
basic rest-activity cycle
subdural space
2. Tremors - rigidity of limbs - poor balance and difficulty initiating movements
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3. Controls circadian rhythms - produces melatonin (daylight signals go to the eyes to the hypothalamus to the pineal gland)
ethology
pineal gland
subcortical structures
receptive field
4. Important to motor system
motor cortex
synthesis-activation hypothesis
locus coeruleus
red nucleus + substantia nigra
5. One of the primary noradrenergic nuclei whose ascending axons project to frontal cortex - thalamus - hypothalamus - limbic system
locus coeruleus
projection areas
Cranial Nerve III
aqueous humor; vitreous humor
6. Sleep tests (i.e. to diagnosis sleep apnea)
polysomnograms
the 3 major pathways of dopamine in the brain
zygosity
endorphin
7. States that performance is worst at extremely low or extremely high levels of arousal and optimally at an intermediate level
Yerkes-Dodson Law
subcortical structures
Coolidge effect
ionotropic receptors
8. Forebrain -band of nerve fibers connecting the two cerebral hemispheres
mesencephalon
synthesis-activation hypothesis
corpus callosum
amacrine cells
9. The visual image of the world on the retina
temporal summation
Cranial Nerve IV
proximal image
sleep
10. Located in the midbrain - a group of neurons which produce dopamine and degenerate in Parkinson'S Disease
nigrostriatal system
substantia nigra
homeostatic regulation
menstrual cycle
11. learning and memory -neurotransmitter released at the neuromuscular junction of skeletal muscle axons to excite the muscle to contract
hindbrain
tegmentum
acetylcholine
HPA Axis
12. Abducens Nerve - moves eye
amacrine cells
Glial cells
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone
Cranial Nerve VI
13. Include indolamines (serotonin) and catecholamines (dopamine - norepinephrine and epinephrine)
affinity
acetylcholine (neurotransmitter)
subcortical structures
monoamines
14. 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
ipsilateral
sleep spindles
subarachnoid space
stages of sleep
15. Adenine - Guanine - Thymine - Cytosine
nucleotides
ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH)
Lee-Boot effect
path of lightwaves entering eye
16. Is found in PTSD/CPTSD patients and persons exposed to chronic stress
graded potentials
hypothalamus
monoamine neurotransmitters
a decrease in neuropeptide Y
17. Motor neurons found in the Somatic (voluntary) and Autonomic (involuntary) Nervous Systems
trichromatic levels of color vision
efferent neurons
dopamine (neurotransmitter)
spinal cord
18. Measure changes in the electrical resistance of the skin (sweat gland activity)
galvanic skin response (GSR)
nigrostriatal system
reaction time
midbrain
19. Functions as both a hormone and a neurotransmitter in the brain
subarachnoid space
norepinephrine
Cranial Nerve IV
gonad
20. The midbrain; a region that surrounds the cerebral aqueduct; includes tectum and the tegmentum
mesencephalon
Whitten effect
hypothalamus
bregma
21. Occurs when a neuron is hyperpolarized and characterized by sufficient strength of stimulation triggering a new action potential
dirty medications; clean medications
relative refractory period
effects of repeated administration
septum
22. A peptide - also known as OREXIN - produced by neurons whose cell bodies are located in the hypothalamus; their destruction causes narcolepsy
aphasia
biological etiology of Parkinson'S Disease
Yerkes-Dodson Law
hypocretin
23. Produce drowsiness and sleepiness
lesions in the reticular activating system
Korsakoff'S amnesia
REM rebound
Mesocortical system
24. Are postsynaptic potentials that are found in the dendrites and vary in their intensity
phenotype
ovaries/testes
Lee-Boot effect
graded potentials
25. A BEHAVIOR; insistent urge of sleepiness forces us to seek sleep/a bad
ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH)
absolute refractory periods
sleep
iris
26. Affect sex characteristics/development and produce estrogen/progesterone (in females - ovaries) and testosterone (in male - testes)
Cranial Nerve VIII
spinal cord
ovaries/testes
thalamus
27. Similarity of alleles for a trait in an organism (i.e. heterozygous or homozygous)
relative refractory period
zygosity
hypothalamus
projection fiber
28. There are 12 add more
subdural space
Cranial Nerve XI
Cranial Nerves
nucleotides
29. Precursor to GABA (the most inhibitory/regulatory/pervasive neurotransmitter)
Lee-Boot effect
endorphin & enkephalin
stages of sleep
glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD)
30. Absolute; relative
dopaminergic systems
the ___ refractory period follows the ____ refractory period
ventricles
tegmentum
31. Occurs under drug-induced conditions - including excessive use of marijuana; high body temperature - autonomic instability and muscle rigidity
pupil
H.M
neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS)
sensorimotor cortex
32. These two developed the criteria for habituation; basic process is a form of synaptic depression that occurs presyntaptically.
Thompson & Spencer
glutamate (neurotransmitter)
indirect antagonists
Cranial Nerve V
33. Glandular system control center - produces the hormones oxytocin and antidiuretic; functions in both the nervous system and endocrine sytem - In the forebrain - regulates motivated behaviors (eating - drinking - aggression - sexual behavior
tolerance
hypothalamus
collateral sprouting
REM rebound
34. SCN = controls circadian rhythms - located directly above the optic chasm in the anterior portion of the hypothalamus - receives input from the eyes which is why light exposure affects our sleep-wake cycles
hypothalamus
Coolidge effect
agonist
suprachiasmatic nucleus
35. Receive incoming sensory information or send out motor impulse commands
Coolidge effect
temporal lobes
projection areas
myelin sheath
36. Holds the lens in place
antimanics
suspensory ligament
basal forebrain
GABA
37. Damage to this are causes clumsiness and loss of balance
hypothalamus
hippocampus
reciprocal innervation
cerebellum
38. Includes the thalamus and hypothalamus; region of forebrain surrounding the 3rd ventricle
ultimate biological considerations
diencephalon
a decrease in neuropeptide Y
agonist
39. Located in the forebrain - basal ganglia -> movement -speech and other complex behaviors
glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD)
basal ganglia
mesencephalon
reaction time
40. Affect multiple receptors; highly preferential to which type of receptor they affect
nucleotides
dirty medications; clean medications
tardive dyskinesia
tegmentum
41. Is characteristic of indirect antagonists
Whitten effect
non-competitive bonding
subdural space
Hobson & McCarley
42. Synchronized EEG activity during its deeper stages
non-REM sleep
proximate biological considerations
brainstem
ethology
43. Combines input from diverse brain regions; receives sensory information/sends motor impulses
association areas; projection areas
inferior colliculi
menstrual cycle
homeostatic regulation
44. Supernormal
REM rebound
supernormal stimulus
pineal gland
Bruce effect
45. Is regulated by the hypothalamus
amygdala
anterior hypothalamus
ionotropic receptors
homeostasis
46. Lens changes initiated by the ciliary muscles to change the shape of the lens in order to focus image on the retina
cerebral cortex
accommodation (bodily)
cerebellum
reaction time
47. Opening in the iris; dilates and contracts allowing different levels of light in
glutamate (neurotransmitter)
sign stimulus
sleep paralysis
pupil
48. Attaches to a binding site on receptor and interferes with the action of the receptor without affecting the binding site for the principal ligand (noncompetitive binding)
indirect antagonists
ovaries/testes
diploid
nigrostriatal system
49. All have similar molecular structure - so many 'dirty' medications
Cranial Nerve VI
progesterone
monoamines
adrenal cortex
50. ...
ultimate biological considerations
law of specific nerve energies
locus coeruleus
substantia nigra
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