SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
AP Psychology
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
psychology
,
ap
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. Piaget's second stage of cognitive development (lasting from about age 2 to age 6 or 7) - during which the child begins to represent the world symbolically
occipital lobes
top-down processing
Longitudinal Study
Preoperational stage
2. Change in behavior that occurs when people believe they are in the presence of other people.
Social Facilitation
endocrine glands
Group therapy
episodic memory
3. A person who overuses and relies on drugs to deal with everyday life
Substance Abuser
William Sheldon
cones
Descriptive Studies
4. Conditioning process in which an originally neutral stimulus - by repeated pairing with a stimulus that normally elicits a response - comes to elicit a similar or even identical response; aka Pavlovian conditioning
Debriefing
Classical Conditioning
synapse
Residual type of schizophrenia
5. Brain surgery used in the past to alleviate symptoms of serious mental disorders.
Psychosurgery
James-Lange theory of emotion
autonomic nervous system
standard deviation
6. Primary motor cortex; areas of the three boat cortex for response messages from the brain to the muscles and glands
motor projection areas
Convergent thinking
levels-of-processing approach
central nervous system
7. Graphical record of brain-wave activity obtained through electrodes placed on the scalp and forehead
Consciousness
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
Validity
Regression
8. A design in which researchers manipulate an independent variable and measure a dependent variable to determine a cause-and-effect relationship
Howard Gardner
Syntax
Experimental design
Edward Bradford Titchener
9. Psychologist who treats people serious psychological problems or conducts research into the causes of behavior
clinical psychologist
Longitudinal Study
Conditioned Response
Thanatology
10. Freud's fourth stage of personality development - from about age 7 until puberty - during which sexual urges are inactive.
Substance Abuser
Hermann Rorschach
Latency Stage
Color Blindness
11. Freud's level of mental life that consists of those experiences that we are aware of at any given time.
demand characteristics
Impression Formation
Consciousness
Prevalence
12. Neurotransmitter that influences voluntary movement - attention - alertness; lack of dopamine linked with Parkinson's disease; too much is linked with schizophrenia
dopamine
hypnosis
pituitary gland
correlation coefficient
13. Perspective that seeks to explain and predict behaviors by analyzing how the human brain developed over time - how it functions - and how input from the environment affects human behaviors
Transference
evolutionary psychology
Cognitive Psychology
conventional level of moral development
14. Reflex that causes a newborn to turn the head toward a light touch on lips or cheek
Receptive fields
Types
Validity
Rooting reflex
15. Relatively permanent change in an organism that occurs as a result of experiences in the environment
frontal lobes
Learning
Mediation
Social Cognition
16. Any chemical substance that - in small amounts - alters biological or cognitive processes or both
Negative Reinforcement
counseling psychologist
Drug
random sample
17. Sets of strategies - rather than strict rules - that act as guidelines for discovery-oriented problem solving.
Ex Post Facto Design
storage
Heuristics
Latent Content
18. Light sensitive cells (rods and cones) that convert light to electrochemical impulses
Observational Learning Theory
Phallic Stage
photoreceptors
Displacement
19. Established an intelligence test especially for adults (WAIS); also WISC and WPPSI
David Weschler
interference
Naturalistic observation
Receptive fields
20. An abstraction - an idealized pattern of an object or idea that is stored in memory and used to decide whether similar objects or ideas are members of the same class of items.
Socrates
Harry Stack Sullivan
ACTH (arenocorticotropic hormone)
Prototype
21. Small area of retina where image is focused
fovea
Naturalistic observation
Representative sample
Non-rapid Eye Movement Sleep
22. Anxiety disorders characterized by excessive and irrational fear of - and consequent attempted avoidance of - specific objects or situations.
Phobic disorders
frontal lobes
genotype
William James
23. Preset natural body weight - determined by the number of fat cells in the body
crystallized intelligence
Bonding
set point
gate control theory
24. The structures and organs that facilitate electrical and chemical communication in the body and allow all behavior and mental processes to take place
Ideal Self
James-Lange theory of emotion
nervous system
Ernst Weber
25. Photoreceptors that detect black - white - and gray - and movement; used for vision in dim light
Broca's area
epinephrine
rods
rehearsal
26. Concerned with the relationship between brain/nervous system and behavior
Ego
neuropsychologist
Type A behavior
long-term potentiation
27. The tendency of people in a group to seek concurrence with one another when reaching a decision - rather than effectively evaluating options.
Groupthink
natural selection
neuron
Ernst Weber
28. Four distinct stages of sleep during which no rapid eye movements occur.
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
Non-rapid Eye Movement Sleep
Survey
polarization
29. Expectations of an observer which may distort an authentic observation
Alfred Adler
observer bias
neurogenesis
Schizophrenic disorders
30. Perspective concerned with how cultural differences affect behavior
olfaction
sociocultural psychology
Aggression
chromosome
31. Any of a class of drugs that relax and calm a user and - in higher doses - induce sleep; also known as a depressant
gonads
midbrain
Descriptive Studies
Depressants (AKA sedative-hypnotics)
32. Manageable and meaningful units of information organized in such a way that it can be easily encoded - stored - and retrieved
chunks
Sociobiology
Rationalization
Motivation
33. Ability of the visual perceptual system to recognize that an object remains constant in size regardless of its distance from the observer or the size of its image on the retina.
Major depressive disorder
graded potential
Theory of mind
Size constancy
34. The space between two neurons where neurotransmitters are secreted by terminal buttons and received by dendrites
Photoreceptors
synapse
limbic system
standard deviation
35. Test designed to determine a person's level of knowledge in a given subject area
Fixation
Concrete operational stage
mean
achievement test
36. Wrinkled outer portion of brain; center for higher order brain functions such as thinking - planning - judgment; processes sensory information and directs movement
Prototype
evolutionary psychology
(cerebral) cortex
Adolescence
37. A type of design that contrasts groups of people who differ on some variable of interest to the researcher.
Albert Ellis
Bonding
Dementia
Ex Post Facto Design
38. Focuses on how the individual's behavior and mental processes are affected by interactions with other people
sensory memory
social psychologist
schema
Darley & Latane
39. School of psychological thought that argued that behavior cannot be studied in parts but must be viewed a s whole
Cognitive Dissonance
(cerebral) cortex
operational definition
Gestalt psychology
40. Behavior that benefits someone else or society but that generally offers no obvious benefit to the person performing it and may even involve some personal risk or sacrifice.
Divergent thinking
positron emission tomography (PET scan)
Prosocial Behavior
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
41. A number that expresses the degree and direction of the relationship between 2 variables - ranging from -1 to +1
Panic Attack
correlation coefficient
short-term storage
Subliminal perception
42. An insight therapy - developed be Carl Rogers - that seeks to help people evaluate the world and themselves from their own perspective by providing them with a nondirective environment and unconditional positive regard; also known as person-centered
Social Need
Case study
Client-centered therapy
double-blind procedure
43. When the neuron is at rest; condition of neuron when the inside of the neuron is negatively charged relative to the outside of Enron; is necessary to generate the neuron signal in release of this polarization
Debriefing
Hyperopic
correlation coefficient
polarization
44. The depth and richness of a hue determined by determined by the homogeneity of the wavelengths contained in the reflected light; also known as purity.
pseudoscience
Broca's area
Robert Yerkes
Saturation
45. The biologically based categories of male and female
Insomnia
Sex
Disorganized type of schizophrenia
Ideal Self
46. Temporary decrease in sensitivity to a stimulus that occurs when stimulation is unchanging
Stanley Schachter
decay
sensory adaptation
cohort effect
47. Newly learned information interferes with the ability to recall previously learned information
rehearsal
Ego
retroactive interference
decay
48. A definition of a variable in terms of the set of methods or procedures used to measure or study that variable
Free association
Syntax
peripheral nervous system
operational definition
49. An observable action
forebrain
Zajonc & Markus
Wechsler intelligence tests
behavior
50. Reproductive glands-male - testes; female - ovaries
monocular cues
gonads
Alfred Binet
preconscious