SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Psychology: History
Start Test
Study First
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. Tolman; pursuing signs towards a goal; purposive behaviour
Nature vs. nurture
Socrates
Sign learning
Gustav Fechner
2. Existential psychology; Man'S Search for Meaning - people innately seek meaningfulness in their lives - perceived meaninglessness is root of emotional difficulty; logotherapy
Victor Frankl
Hermann von Helmholtz
Johannes Muller
James Cattell
3. Carried Franz Joseph Gall on his work - even when others proved theory wrong
Herbert Spencer
Gustav Fechner
J. Spurzheim
Aaron Beck
4. wrote Origin of Species and the Descent of Man - did not create the concept of evolution - but made it a scientifically sound principle by positing that natural selection was its driving force
Rene Descartes
Charles Darwin
Lamarckian evolution
Thomas Hobbes
5. Believed healing of physical ailments came from manipulation of bodily fluids; animal magnetism (mind control of one person over another) responsible for patient recoveries; used technique of mesmerism (hypnotism)
Erik Erikson
Clark Hull
Scientific Revolution
Anton Mesmer
6. First to use statistics and created correlation coefficient; wrote Hereditary Genius - used Darwinian principles to promote eugenics
Plato
Sir Francis Galton
Immanuel Kant
B.F. Skinner
7. World'S first professor - studied based on order and logic - disagreed with Plato - believed that truth can be found in physical world
Jean Piaget
Middle Ages
Aristotle
Scientific Revolution
8. Human and animals are machines - sense-perception was all that could be known - can use science to learn people (like physics vs. machines)
Immanuel Kant
Thomas Hobbes
Erik Erikson
Names from 1800-1900
9. Physiologist - existence of 'Specific nerve energies' - taught Wilhelm Wundt
Charles Darwin
Johannes Muller
Logotherapy
6 periods
10. A plan for selective human breeding to strengthen species
Max Wertheimer - Wolfgang Kohler - and Kurt Koffka
Charles Darwin
Eugenics
John Locke
11. Mechanistic behavioural ideas; motivation: performance = drive x habit; we do what we need and what worked best in the past; Kenneth Spence modified theory
Nature vs. nurture
Max Wertheimer - Wolfgang Kohler - and Kurt Koffka
Clark Hull
Wilhelm Wundt
12. Created phrenology
Aaron Beck
Herbert Spencer
Franz Joseph Gall
Edward Tolman
13. 8 stages of psychosocial development; noted for completeness from infancy through old age; coined 'identity crisis' of adolescence
Sign learning
Lamarckian evolution
Erik Erikson
Gustav Fechner
14. Client-centered therapy; client directs course of therapy - receives unconditional positive regard; humanistic; also first to record sessions for later study and reference
Stanley Hall
Carl Rogers
Edward Thorndike
Sir Francis Galton
15. Opened more psychology labs - thought psychology should be more scientific than Wundt
William James
James Cattell
Enlightenment
Rene Descartes
16. Tolman; learning is acquired through meaningful behaviour towards a goal; sign learning
phrenology
Ancient Greeks
Enlightenment
Purposive behaviour
17. The original philosophic mentor who pondered the abstract ideas of truth - beauty and justice
Hermann von Helmholtz
Socrates
Logotherapy
Edward Thorndike
18. Movement for better care for mentally ill through hospitalization
Erik Erikson
John B. Watson
William James
Dorothea Lynde Dix
19. Gestalt ('whole') psychology - asserts perception is greater than the sum of its parts
Clark Hull
Max Wertheimer - Wolfgang Kohler - and Kurt Koffka
Erik Erikson
Sigmund Freud
20. Emerged after WWII - psychology research to a practical field
Clinical psychology
Aaron Beck
Sir Francis Galton
Franz Joseph Gall
21. One of most important in clinical - abnormal - personality - id - ego - superego; unconscious motivations; psychoanalysis; famous writings Interpretation of Dreams - Theory of Sexuality - Beyond the Pleasure Principle - Civilization and its Disconten
William James
Rene Descartes
Sigmund Freud
John B. Watson
22. Behaviourist - valued both behaviour and cognition; purposive behaviour and sign learning; rats in mazes formed cognitive maps rather than blindly attempting various routes like stimulus-response suggests; also expectancy-value theory of motivation:
Edward Tolman
John Locke
Charles Darwin
James Cattell
23. I think therefore I am - figure out truth through reason and deduction; dualism/ mind-body problem
Logotherapy
B.F. Skinner
Alfred Adler
Rene Descartes
24. Studied Thorndike and Watson; Skinner box - operant conditioning; Walden Two and beyond freedom and dignity - control of human behaviour
B.F. Skinner
John Dewey
Sir Francis Galton
Aristotle
25. America'S first Ph.D. in psychology from Harvard; coined the term 'adolescence' - started American Journal of Psychology - founded American Psychological Association
Rene Descartes
Alfred Adler
Aaron Beck
Stanley Hall
26. One of America'S most influential philosophers; synthesize philosophy and psychology; reflex arc; denied structuralism - that animals respond to disjointed stimulus and response chains; instead functionalism - constantly adapting to environment rathe
Clinical psychology
Wilhelm Wundt
John Dewey
Purposive behaviour
27. Ancient Greeks - middle ages (500-1600) - scientific revolution (1600-1700) - Enlightenment (1700-1800) The brink of psychology (1800-1900) - The saga continues (1900s)
Eugenics
6 periods
Clinical psychology
Edward Tolman
28. Founded behaviouralism; studied conditioning - stimulus-response chains - objective - observable behaviours; humans ready to be trained by environment
Jean Piaget
Sir Francis Galton
Carl Rogers
John B. Watson
29. Founding experimental psychology from Elements of Psychophysics; first systematic experiment to result in mathematical conclusions; previously thought the mind could not be studied empirically
phrenology
Gustav Fechner
Thomas Hobbes
Aristotle
30. Socrates - Plato - Aristotle
dualism/ mind-body problem
Nature vs. nurture
Ancient Greeks
Johannes Muller
31. Father of the psychology of adaptation - .also founder of sociology; used principles from Lamarckian evolution - physiology and associationism to understand people - idfferent species or races were elevated because of the greater number of associatio
Herbert Spencer
Rene Descartes
phrenology
Gustav Fechner
32. Modified Hull'S Performance = drive x habit theory
Kenneth Spence
William James
phrenology
Gustav Fechner
33. Frankl; focuses on person'S will to meaning
Kenneth Spence
Dorothea Lynde Dix
Sir Francis Galton
Logotherapy
34. Law of effect; precursor to operant conditioning
Franz Joseph Gall
Purposive behaviour
Edward Thorndike
Sigmund Freud
35. Man mind is tabula rasa (blank slate) at first; knowledge not innate - from experience
John Dewey
John Locke
Clark Hull
Logotherapy
36. Founder of ethology; imprinting in ducklings; On Aggression
Konrad Lorenz
Aaron Beck
Edward Thorndike
Gustav Fechner
37. Most important question of the time: understanding the mind (supplanted understanding existence)
Enlightenment
Clinical psychology
Franz Joseph Gall
Dorothea Lynde Dix
38. Rene Descartes - John Locke - Thomas Hobbes
Socrates
James Cattell
Scientific Revolution
Eugenics
39. The idea that the nature of a person could be known by examining the shape and contours of the skull - Brain - seat of the soul
phrenology
Edward Titchener
Socrates
Wilhelm Wundt
40. Father of experimental psychology - in America doing what Wundt was in Germany - combining physiology and philosophy; informally investigating psychological principles but did not have an official lab until later; wrote principle of psychology - wrot
William James
Stanley Hall
Abraham Maslow
Wilhelm Wundt
41. Cognitive development in children; The Language and Thought of the Child - Moral Judgment of the Child - Origins of Intelligence in Children
Hermann von Helmholtz
Jean Piaget
Names from 1800-1900
Herbert Spencer
42. Individual psychology; people motivated by inferiority; 4-type theory of personality: choleric (dominant) - phlegmatic (Dependent) - melancholic (withdrawn) - and sanguine (healthy)
Logotherapy
Jean Piaget
Alfred Adler
Eugenics
43. Cognitive therapy; problems arise from maladaptive ways of thinking; therapy to reformulating illogical cognition rather than searching for a life-stress cause; Beck Depression Inventory
Lamarckian evolution
Aaron Beck
Johannes Muller
Sign learning
44. Physical world not all that could be known - presence of universal forms and innate knowledge - abstract and unsystematic
James Cattell
Socrates
Plato
Sir Francis Galton
45. Felt Freud over-emphasized sexual instinct; analytic psychology (metaphysical and mythological components - collective unconscious and unconscious archetypes; autobiography (Memories - Dreams - Reflections)
Carl Gustav Jung
Rene Descartes
Enlightenment
Erik Erikson
46. Evolutionary psychology vs. social constructionism - whether psychological phenomena are the result of inborn - genetic factors or the result of cultural and society influences
Jean Piaget
Aaron Beck
Nature vs. nurture
Clinical psychology
47. The idea that characteristics acquired during lifetime passed to future generations
Alfred Adler
John Dewey
Lamarckian evolution
Names from 1800-1900
48. Digestion - classical conditioning
Scientific Revolution
Eugenics
Nature vs. nurture
Ivan Pavlov
49. Founder of structuralism - focused on the analysis of human consciousness; Through introspection - lab assistants objectively describe discrete sensations and contents of their minds; method soon dissolved
Johannes Muller
John B. Watson
Enlightenment
Edward Titchener
50. Sensation; hearing and color vision - foundation for modern perception research
6 periods
Clark Hull
James Cattell
Hermann von Helmholtz