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GRE Psychology: Physiological/behavioral Neuroscience 2
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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. Bees dance to indicate food is far away
Waggle dance
Stickleback fish
Gamete
Phenotype
2. Von Frisch - once a scouting bee locates a promising food source - returns to hive and conveys the location through movements; round or waggle dance - the longer the dance the farther the food - the more vigorous display the better food; performed on
isolation by season
Atmospheric pressure
Communication of bees
Walter Cannon
3. Structural differences between sexes - arisen through both natural and sexual selections
Alleles
Sexual dimorphism
Eric Kandel
Waggle dance
4. Some use map-and-compass navigation (landmarks and sun or stars) - some have true navigational abilities and can point toward their goal with no landmarks and from any position (e.g. captured birds eventually arrive at their usual goal anyway); birds
geographic isolation
Gamete
Navigation of animals
Nikolaas Tinbergen
5. Instrumental learning in animals -- led to law of effect that successful behaviours are likelier to be repeated; cats in puzzle boxes: eventually accidentally press escape door lever and be free - later the cat activates lever right away
Edward Thorndike
geographic isolation
Zygote
Learning to learn from rhesus monkeys
6. Endogenous rhythms that revolve around a 24 hour time period
Circadian rhythms
phenotypic expression
Supernormal sign stimulus
Courting
7. Ability to reproduce and pass on genes
Ethology
Circadian rhythms
Animal aggression
Fitness
8. how one looks and sometimes acts - partially determined by heredity or genotype - but can also be influence by environment
Atmospheric pressure
Star compass
Harry Harlow
phenotypic expression
9. Evolved form of deception - ex: harmless snakes may mimic coloration and pattern of more poisonous ones to escape predation
Edward Thorndike
Mimicry
Courting
Mating of bees
10. Lorenz - triggered by releasing stimuli - automatic and innate - instinctual - complex chains of behaviour; four defining characteristics: 1) uniform patterns - 2) performed by most members - 3) more complex than simple reflexes - 4) cannot be interr
Harry Harlow
Sexual selection
Konrad Lorenz
Fixed action patterns (example)
11. Period in which a female is sexually receptive (usually used to describe non-human mammals)
Estrus
Contact comfort from rhesus monkeys
Selective breeding
Sexual selection
12. Tinbergen - males develop red coloration on belly - which is the releasing stimulus for attacks; males attacked red-bellied crude models rather than the detailed but non-red models
Contact comfort from rhesus monkeys
Echolocation
Hearing of owls
Stickleback fish
13. Dance of the honeybees - and also studied senses of fish
Altruism
Infrasound
Karl von Frisch
Fight or flight
14. Scouting bees look for food and nesting sites; can use landmarks as simple location cues - also sun - polarized light - and magnetic fields as aids
Sexual selection
Inclusive fitness
Walter Cannon
Navigation of bees
15. Experiments that attempt to separate effects of heredity and environment - sibling mice separated at birth and placed with different parents or situations; later differences in aggression attributed to experience rather than genetics
Fitness
Magnetic sense
Cross fostering experiments
Atmospheric pressure
16. Bees can see UV light - sees certain markers on flowers (honey guides) that people do not
Sensitive or critical periods
Flower selection of bees
Sexual dimorphism
Comparative psychology
17. The pair up of possible dominant and recessive gene variations for each characteristic
Mimicry
Alleles
Instinctual/innate behaviours
Stickleback fish
18. E.g. rodents reared in isolation perform instinctual nest-building but much less efficient and successful than those exposed to learning opportunities
Interaction between instinct and learning
behavioral isolation
Inclusive fitness
Genetic drift
19. Reproductive isolating mechanism - potentially compatible species mate during different seasons
Natural selection
Magnetic sense
Biological clocks
isolation by season
20. Harlow - monkeys became better at learning tasks as they acquired different learning experiences - eventually learned after only one trial
Supernormal sign stimulus
Contact comfort from rhesus monkeys
Learning to learn from rhesus monkeys
Mimicry
21. Birds - many birds can use star patterns and movements as navigational cue
Inbreeding
Star compass
Natural selection
Instinctual drift (example)
22. Animals invest in the survival of not only their own genes but also the genes of their kin
Edward Thorndike
Inclusive fitness
Sexual selection
Genetic drift
23. How particular genotypes selected out or eliminated from a population over time
homeostasis
Genetic drift
Natural selection
Stickleback fish
24. Lorez - certain aggression necessary for survival of species - instinctual rather than learned
Animal aggression
Waggle dance
Inclusive fitness
Contact comfort from rhesus monkeys
25. present in all normal members of a species - - stereotypic in form throughout members even for the first time - independent of learning or experience
Inbreeding
Instinctual/innate behaviours
Eric Kandel
Fitness
26. Most sophisticated type of perception - generally replaces sight - marine mammals (dolphin) and bats - - emit high-frequency sounds and locate nearby objects from the echo; bats can fly through grids of thin nylon strings and can locate and eat small
Zygote
Echolocation
Harry Harlow
Sensitive or critical periods
27. The internal physiological changes that occur in an organism in response to a perceived threat (increase in HR or respiration)
Fight or flight
Displacement activities/irrelevant behaviours
behavioral isolation
Sexual selection
28. Lorenz - certain species (often birds) young attach to first moving object they see - displayed by a 'following response' - subjective to sensitive learning period - after that period this would not occur
Genetic drift
Estrus
Imprinting
homeostasis
29. Bees when sun is obscured by clouds - bees can use this navigational cue to infer sun positioning
Cross fostering experiments
Atmospheric pressure
phenotypic expression
Polarized light
30. dominant gene always beat out recessive gene - recessive gene is not manifested unless it is paired with another recessive gene - combination of dominant and recessive genes determines what he/she looks like
Charles Darwin
Inbreeding
Fitness
Dominant and recessive gene
31. Contrived breeding - mates intentionally paired to increase chances of producing offspring with particular traits
Communication of bees
Polarized light
Genes
Selective breeding
32. coined 'fight or flight' - proposed idea homeostasis
homeostasis
Nikolaas Tinbergen
Cross fostering experiments
Walter Cannon
33. Form of natural selection - not the fittest that win but those with greatest chance of being chosen as a mate (best fighters - most attractive - etc)
Walter Cannon
Flower selection of bees
Harry Harlow
Sexual selection
34. Made up of external characteristics (eye color - size - etc)
R.M. Cooper and John Zubek
Inclusive fitness
Phenotype
Ethology
35. Times when a developing animal is particularly vulnerable to the effect of learning (e.g. birds learning their species' song - if reared in isolation cannot develop normal song later. and imprinting)
Sensitive or critical periods
R.M. Cooper and John Zubek
isolation by season
Wolfgang Kohler
36. Atmospheric pressure - infrasound - magnetic sense - sun compass - star compass - polarized light
Instinctual drift (example)
phenotypic expression
Sexual selection
Navigation cues
37. Harlow - study of attachment. mother-infant attachment - -infants attach to mothers through comforting experience rather than through feeding - infants placed with two surrogate mothers (wire with feeding bottle - and terrycloth with no bottle); infa
Phenotype
Round dance
Atmospheric pressure
Contact comfort from rhesus monkeys
38. Made the concept of evolution scientifically plausible by asserting that natural selection was at its core
Sexual selection
Biological clocks
Supernormal sign stimulus
Charles Darwin
39. Bees dance to indicate food is extremely nearby
Round dance
Instinctual drift (example)
Polarized light
Infrasound
40. Behaviours that seem out of place - illogical - and no particular survival function (e.g. scratching your head while thinking)
Altruism
phenotypic expression
Displacement activities/irrelevant behaviours
Fixed action patterns (example)
41. Tinbergen - peck at end of parents' bills which have a red spot on the tip - parents then regurgitates food for chicks; chicks pecked more at a red-tipped model bill than at a plain model bill; the greater the contrast between bill and red spot even
Navigation of animals
Herring gull chicks
Navigation of bees
Comparative psychology
42. Founder of ethology - imprinting - animal aggression - releasing stimuli - fixed action patterns
Konrad Lorenz
Learning to learn from rhesus monkeys
Estrus
Instinctual drift (example)
43. Sperm or ovum - haploid (23 single chromosomes)
Inclusive fitness
Sexual selection
Fitness
Gamete
44. Learning happens through trial - error and accidental success - animals then act based on previous successes
Instrumental learning
Cross fostering experiments
Instinctual drift (example)
Atmospheric pressure
45. Tinbergen - artificial stimuli that exaggerate naturally occurring sign stimulus or releaser - more effective than natural
Supernormal sign stimulus
Magnetic sense
Zygote
Social isolation from rhesus monkeys
46. Aka releasers or sign stimuli - Lorenz - continued by Tinbergen - elicits fixed action patterns from another individual in the same species
Estrus
Learning to learn from rhesus monkeys
Polarized light
Releasing stimuli
47. Behaviour that solely benefits another - imilar to group mentality - will help if benefit outweighs cost or expect to be repaid
Dominant and recessive gene
Altruism
Herring gull chicks
Comparative psychology
48. Pigeons and bees can compensate for daily solar movements for navigational cue
Instrumental learning
Learning to learn from rhesus monkeys
Sun compass
Echolocation
49. Reproductive isolating mechanism - different species breed in different areas to prevent confusion or genetic mixing
Karl von Frisch
geographic isolation
Mimicry
Biological clocks
50. Founder of modern ethology - models in naturalistic settings - stickleback fish and herring gull chicks
Inbreeding
Nikolaas Tinbergen
Reproductive isolating mechanisms (+types)
homeostasis
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