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Test your basic knowledge |
Gre Psychology: Experimental/natural Science Biology
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Subjects
:
gre
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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. Some brain communications are with the same side of the body
glutamate (neurotransmitter)
hair cells
sleep attack
ipsilateral
2. Extensive research in dreams - said BAH to Freud; proposed the activation-synthesis hypothesis (dreams are nothing more than the product of random electrical impulses)
Coolidge effect
Cranial Nerve IX
amacrine cells
Hobson & McCarley
3. Occurs when a neuron is hyperpolarized and characterized by sufficient strength of stimulation triggering a new action potential
glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD)
Cranial Nerve I
relative refractory period
norepinephrine
4. Audition: protrusions on top of midbrain; part of auditory system
inferior colliculi
autonomic nervous system
subdural space
reaction time
5. The Lee-Boot effect - Whitten effect - Vandenbergh effect - and the Bruce effect; all mediated by the VNO
Cranial Nerve V
slow-wave sleep
the 4 effects of pheromones on reproductive cycles
aphasia
6. Optic Nerve - sight
biological etiology of Parkinson'S Disease
red nucleus + substantia nigra
Cranial Nerve II
Vandenbergh effect
7. Emotional perception and expression (particularly fearful emotions and detection of threat)
prefrontal hypoactivity
amygdala
hypothalamus
direct antagonist
8. A drug that facilitates the effects of a particular neurotransmitter on the postsynaptic cell
aphasia
lipid soluble drugs/medications
agonist
diploid
9. Forebrain -band of nerve fibers connecting the two cerebral hemispheres
prefrontal cortex
corpus callosum
triggers of behavior
biological etiology of schizophrenia
10. If a synapse is active at about the same time that a postsynaptic neuron is active - that synapse will be strengthened
Hebb rule
REM sleep; Slow Wave Sleep
equipotentiality
superior colliculi
11. Is found in PTSD/CPTSD patients and persons exposed to chronic stress
a decrease in neuropeptide Y
path of cerebrospinal fluid
Cranial Nerve XII
Cranial Nerve XI
12. Bunch of dopaminergic neurons starting in the substantia nigra and ending in the neostriatum
ipsilateral
nigrostriatal system
Ketamine
fusiform face area
13. These two developed the criteria for habituation; basic process is a form of synaptic depression that occurs presyntaptically.
Cranial Nerve VII
pupil
Thompson & Spencer
the 4 effects of pheromones on reproductive cycles
14. A behavior that has different forms or occurs with different probabilities or under different circumstances in males than females
septal rage
mammillary bodies
sexual dimorphic behavior
GABA
15. The restorative effect of introducing a new female sex partner to a male that has apparently become 'exhausted' by sexual activity
ovaries/testes
basic rest-activity cycle
Coolidge effect
Cranial Nerve X
16. Symptom of narcolepsy - irresistible urge to
temporal summation
hair cells
accommodation (bodily)
sleep attack
17. Hypoglossal Nerve - moves the tongue
Cranial Nerve V
K Complexes
path of cerebrospinal fluid
Cranial Nerve XII
18. Two different presynaptic neurons/inputs to a post-synaptic cell
mesencephalon
amygdala
reticular formation
spatial summation
19. The synchronization of the menstrual or estrous cycles of a group of females - which occurs only in the presence of a pheromone in a male'S urine
contralateral
medulla & pons
norepinephrine
Whitten effect
20. Functions as both a hormone and a neurotransmitter in the brain
cataplexy
Cranial Nerve VI
norepinephrine
tardive dyskinesia
21. Include the Nigrostriatal system - Mesolimbic system and Mesocortical system
subarachnoid space
dopaminergic systems
pineal gland
Korsakoff'S amnesia
22. Part of limbic system; protrusion of the bottom of the brain at the posterior end of the hypothalamus - contains some hypothalamic nuclei
mammillary bodies
receptive field
tolerance
osmoreceptors
23. Occurs during the deepest stages of slow-wave sleep; regular - synchronous electrical activity of less than 4 Hz
All-or-None Law
delta activity
dirty medications; clean medications
osmoreceptors
24. Acetylcholine - glutamate - gamma-aminobutyric acid - dopamine - serotonin - norepinephrine - endorphin
the 7 major neurotransmitters
HPA Axis
corpus callosum
homeostatic regulation
25. Precursor to GABA (the most inhibitory/regulatory/pervasive neurotransmitter)
glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD)
adrenal cortex
equipotentiality
anterior hypothalamus
26. Is the primary inhibitory neurotransmitter in vertebrates; these receptors are ionotropic
adrenocorticotropic (ACTH)
hypothalamus
gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)
receptive field
27. A drug that opposes/inhibits the effects of a particular neurotransmitter on the postsynaptic cell
Farber et al. (1995)
tyrosine
hypnagogic activity
antagonist
28. Vision: protrusions on top of the midbrain; part of visual system
K Complexes
inferior colliculi
reticulum
superior colliculi
29. Links the nervous system and endocrine system; comprised of involuntary efferent neurons and divided into the Sympathetic and Parasympathetic branches: Sympathetic Nervous System is involved in the 'fight or flight' response and the Parasympathetic N
autonomic nervous system
retinal ganglion cells
projection area
the 3 major pathways of dopamine in the brain
30. Is found in the frontal lobe (which is divided into the prefrontal lobes and ___ ___)
nigrostriatal system
temporal lobes
motor cortex
basic rest-activity cycle
31. Instead of one continuum for sex (masculine-feminine) - her work in the presence of both masculine and feminine features/development suggests these are actually two separate continuums (defeminized-feminized and unmasculinized-masculinized)
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32. A sensory organ that detects the presence of certain chemicals - especially when a liquid is actively sniffed; mediates the effects of some pheromones
inferior colliculi
Ketamine
Cranial Nerve XI
Vomeronasal Organ
33. All have similar molecular structure - so many 'dirty' medications
ventricles
monoamines
endocrine system
Yerkes-Dodson Law
34. Supernormal
Coolidge effect
REM sleep
supernormal stimulus
equipotentiality
35. Termination of pregnancy by the odor of a pheromone in the urine of a male other than the one that impregnated the female; first observed in mice
mammillary bodies
phenotype
Bruce effect
osmoregulation
36. Portion of a sensory field to which a cell responds
Hebb rule
alpha activity
receptive field
an increase in alpha-1 receptors
37. Is characteristic of indirect antagonists
non-competitive bonding
meninges
locus coeruleus
bregma
38. Begins where spinal cord ends - 3 structures: the medulla - the pons - the cerebellum
norepinephrine
hippocampus
a decrease in neuropeptide Y
hindbrain
39. 'Roof'
non-REM sleep
path of lightwaves entering eye
tectum
indirect antagonists
40. Is a peptide neurotransmitter and a natural painkiller and antianxiety
tegmentum
law of specific nerve energies
Frontal lobe
endorphin
41. Auditory receptor cells in the cochlea that turn sound vibrations -> neural impulses
species- specific reactions
contralateral
sleep
hair cells
42. Can occur after long term antipsychotic tx (opposite of Parkinson'S?); oversensitivity to dopamine
homeostasis
temporal summation
progesterone
tardive dyskinesia
43. Decreases with age up until age 30 - then begins to increase *(counter intuitive)*
nystagmus
reaction time
the 7 major neurotransmitters
sign stimulus
44. Caudate nucleus and putamen
neostriatum
mammillary bodies
behavioral regulation
All-or-None Law
45. Includes the tectum and tegmentum
neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS)
sensorimotor cortex
mesencephalon
an increase in alpha-1 receptors
46. Lens changes initiated by the ciliary muscles to change the shape of the lens in order to focus image on the retina
locus coeruleus
glutamate (neurotransmitter)
proximate biological considerations
accommodation (bodily)
47. Governs eating/drinking (lateral and ventromedial hypothalami) and sexual activity (anterior portion
hypnagogic activity
pupil
osmoregulation
hypothalamus
48. Suggests that dreams are nothing more than the product of random electrical impulses (Hobson & McCarley)
sleep attack
monoamines
retinal ganglion cells
synthesis-activation hypothesis
49. A patient who had intact intelligence but an inability to learn/remember anything new (severe anterograde amnesia)
H.M
theta activity
GABA
adrenal cortex
50. Pass the easiest through the blood-brain barrier
lipid soluble drugs/medications
L-Dopa
cataplexy
amacrine cells