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Test your basic knowledge |
Anthropology Basics - Praxis II
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Study First
Subject
:
humanities
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. Positive - constructive - helpful behavior. The opposite of antisocial behavior
Pluralistic Ignorance
Culture Clash
Prosocial Behavior
Ideals
2. The actions and activities assigned to or required or expected of a person or group.
Positive Sanctions
Ivan Pavlov
Role
Humanistic Psychology
3. Developmental Psychology: Psychosocial stage theory of development (eight stages)
Networks
Physical Anthroplogy
Erik Erickson
Pluralistic Ignorance
4. A state of opposition between persons or ideas or interests - an open clash between two opposing groups (or individuals).
Laws
Conformity
Conflict
Punishment
5. A generalization -oversimplified view or opinion that members of a group rigidly apply to a thing -an idea -or another group.
Reactionary Groups
Laws
Ideals
Sterotypes
6. An event that decreases the behavior that it follows.
Socialization
Ivan Pavlov
Conflict
Punishment
7. A partiality that prevents objective consideration of an issue or situation - an opinion or strong feeling formed without careful thought or regard to the facts.
Prejudice
Serial-Position Effect
Deindividualism
Multicultural diversity
8. Enforceable rules of conduct in a society.
Laws
Identity crisis
Punishment
Conformity
9. Historically significant perspective that emphasized the growth potential of healthy people; used personalized methods to study personality in hopes of fostering personal growth
Major Depressive Disorder
Humanistic Psychology
Dominant Cultures
Biases
10. Distress and disorientation (especially in adolescence) resulting from conflicting pressures and uncertainty about and one's self and one's role in society.
B.F. Skinner
Social Cognition
Identity crisis
Values
11. A term coined by Hermann Ebbinghaus - refers to the finding that recall accuracy varies as a function of an item's position within a study list. When asked to recall a list of items in any order (free recall) - people tend to begin recall with the en
Prejudice
Serial-Position Effect
Deindividualism
Humanistic Psychology
12. A Russian researcher in the early 1900s who was the first research into learned behavior (conditioning) who discovered classical conditioning.
Schizophrenia
Ivan Pavlov
Social Stratification
Behavioral Psychology
13. The recognition that all cultures develop their own ways of dealing with the specific demands of their environments - the need to consider the unique characteristics of the culture in which behavior takes place.
Cultural Relativity
Social mobility
Habituation
Beliefs
14. A mood disorder in which a person - for no apparent reason - experiences two or more weeks of depressed moods - feelings of worthlessness - and diminishes interest or pleasure in most activities (Most common psychologoical disorder in the United Stat
Major Depressive Disorder
Status
Social Stratification
Perception
15. A state of opposition between persons or ideas or interests - an open clash between two opposing groups (or individuals).
Habituation
Conflict
Subcultures
Schizophrenia
16. A set of informal and formal social ties that links people to each other.
Networks
Jean Piaget
Deviance
Biases
17. Critical Period in development is a period of time which an organism typically needs to be exposed to a particular stimulus in order for proper development to occur.
Punishment
Sensitive Development Period
Institutions
Mores
18. Abandoning normal restraints to the power of the group - doing together what we would not do alone
Deindividualism
Split Brain
Behavioral Psychology
Pluralism
19. A learning procedure in which associations are made between a natural stimulus and a learned - neutral stimulus.
Socialization
Classical Conditioning
Beliefs
Jean Piaget
20. The conventions that embody the fundamental values of a group - norms that are widely observed and have great moral significance.
Split Brain
Socialization
Mores
Deindividualism
21. A general accommodation to unchanging environmental conditions - decreasing responsiveness with repeated stimulation.
Carl Jung
Culture Clash
Habituation
Social Solidarity
22. Distress and disorientation (especially in adolescence) resulting from conflicting pressures and uncertainty about and one's self and one's role in society.
Identity crisis
Social Stratification
Serial-Position Effect
Role
23. Mental processes associated with people's perceptions of - and reactions to - other people.
Paranoid Personality Disorder
Ethnocentrism
Habituation
Social Cognition
24. A branch of psychology that focuses on observable actions - particularly stimulus-response methods.
Socialization
Behavioral Psychology
Jean Piaget
Ethnocentrism
25. A person's condition or position in the eyes of the law; relative rank or standing - especially in society; prestige
Cultural Anthroplogy
Group
Status
Major Depressive Disorder
26. An event that decreases the behavior that it follows.
Physical Anthroplogy
Enculturation
Social mobility
Punishment
27. A rare dissociative disorder in which a person exhibits two or more distinct and alternating personalities. Also called multiple personality disorder.
Abnormal Psychology
Major Depressive Disorder
Split Brain
Dissociative Identity Disorder
28. Type of personality disorder characterized by extreme suspiciousness or mistrust of others
Deviance
Cultural Relativity
Paranoid Personality Disorder
Latent Learning
29. 1875-1961; Field: neo-Freudian - analytic psychology; Contributions: people had conscious and unconscious awareness; archetypes; collective unconscious; libido is all types of energy - not just sexual; Studies: dream studies/interpretation
Laws
Role
Multicultural diversity
Carl Jung
30. Is experienced when an individual experiences conflict between the beliefs - values and expectations of their primary culture and a new culture in which they must function.
Positive Sanctions
Culture Clash
Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
Norms
31. Is a prediction that directly or indirectly causes itself to become true - by the very terms of the prophecy itself - due to positive feedback between belief and behavior.
Reactionary Groups
Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
Sigmund Freud
Culture Clash
32. The field of psychology concerned with the assessment - treatment - and prevention of maladaptive behavior.
Status
Abnormal Psychology
Major Depressive Disorder
Social Solidarity
33. Beliefs of a person or social group in which they have an emotional investment (either for or against something).
Cultural Diffusion
Values
Social mobility
Culture Clash
34. Refers to viewpoints that seek to return to a previous state (the status quo ante) in a society. The term is meant to stand in opposition to and as one end of a political spectrum whose opposite pole is 'radicalism'.
Paranoid Personality Disorder
Values
Biases
Reactionary Groups
35. The process whereby emotions are passed on or displaced from one person to another (psychoanalysis).
Identity crisis
Transference
Prejudice
Group Norms
36. The actions and activities assigned to or required or expected of a person or group.
Role
Multicultural diversity
Norms
Transference
37. Social position a person receives at birth or involuntarily later in life
Ascribed Status
Paranoid Personality Disorder
Prejudice
Secondary Groups
38. The spread of ideas - customs - and technologies from one people to another.
Beliefs
Group Norms
Negative Reinforcement
Cultural Diffusion
39. Any of several psychotic disorders characterized by distortions of reality and disturbances of thought and language and withdrawal from social contact.
Multicultural diversity
Split Brain
Sigmund Freud
Schizophrenia
40. Austrian physician whose work focused on the unconscious causes of behavior and personality formation; founded psychoanalysis - 1856-1939; Field: psychoanalytic - personality; Contributions: id/ego/superego - reality and pleasure principles - ego ide
Dissociative Identity Disorder
Sigmund Freud
Negative Reinforcement
Prejudice
41. Type of personality disorder characterized by extreme suspiciousness or mistrust of others
Paranoid Personality Disorder
Positive Sanctions
Dissociative Identity Disorder
Transference
42. A research strategy that identifies the relationships between two or more variables in order to describe how these variables change together. One advantage is that it helps psychologists make predictions.
Dissociative Identity Disorder
Schizophrenia
Enculturation
Correlational Research
43. Tendency to view one's own culture and group as superior to all other cultures and groups - belief in the superiority of one's own ethnic group.
Positive Sanctions
Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
Ethnocentrism
Group
44. A general accommodation to unchanging environmental conditions - decreasing responsiveness with repeated stimulation.
Habituation
Identity crisis
Ascribed Status
Deviance
45. One of two components - together with agricultural surplus - which enables the formation of cities; the differentiation of society into classes based on wealth - power - production - and prestige
Social Stratification
Subcultures
Ethnocentrism
Deviance
46. Groups that share in some parts of the dominant culture but have their own distinctive values - norms - language - and/or material culture.
Subcultures
Social Stratification
Carl Jung
Secondary Groups
47. A person's condition or position in the eyes of the law; relative rank or standing - especially in society; prestige
Social Stratification
Status
Schizophrenia
Group
48. Pioneer of operant conditioning who believed that everything we do is determined by our past history of rewards and punishments. He is famous for use of his operant conditioning aparatus which he used to study schedules of reinforcement on pidgeons a
B.F. Skinner
Prosocial Behavior
Negative Reinforcement
Folkways
49. Groups marked by impersonal - instrumental relationships (those existing as a means to an end). - groups that meet principally to solve problems
Values
Secondary Groups
Abnormal Psychology
B.F. Skinner
50. The lifelong process by which people learn their culture and develop a sense of self.
Norms
Multicultural diversity
Socialization
Group Norms