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AP Psychology
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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. Shifts or exaggeration in group members' attitudes or behavior as a result of group discussion.
Group Polarization
state-dependent learning
Approach-avoidance conflict
flashbulb memories
2. Seeing mind and body as different aspects of the same thing
brainstem
statistics
Photoreceptors
monism
3. Clues participants discover about the purpose of a study that suggest how they should respond
Prototype
demand characteristics
Martin Seligman
fovea
4. Perspective concerned with how cultural differences affect behavior
Self-serving Bias
ex post facto study
visual acuity
sociocultural psychology
5. When a researcher's expectations unknowingly create a situation that affects the results
educational psychologist
Gender Identity
self-fulfilling prophecy
Orgasm phase
6. Neutral stimulus that - through repeated association with an unconditioned stimulus - begins to elicit a conditioned response
Secondary Punisher
Unconscious
Conditioned Stimulus
Intrinsic motivation
7. Early-emerging and long-lasting individual differences in disposition and in the intensity and especially the quality of emotional reactions
hypnosis
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
top-down processing
Temperament
8. Motivation; believes that we invent explanations to label feelings
ACTH (arenocorticotropic hormone)
Robert Zajonc
clinical psychologist
Group
9. Motivation theory - drive reduction; maintained that the goal of all motivated behavior is the reduction or alleviation of a drive state - mechanism through which reinforcement operates
Clark Hull
inhibitory neurotransmitter
dendrites
placebo
10. A descriptive study that includes an intensive study of one person and allows an intensive examination of a single case - usually chosen for its interesting or unique characteristics
Resolution Phase
Carol Gilligan
Case study
Clark Hull
11. In Freud's theory - the technique of providing a context - meaning - or cause for a specific idea - feeling - or set of behaviors; the process of tying a set of behaviors to its unconscious determinant.
Reaction Formation
ex post facto study
Interpretation
Electromagnetic Radiation
12. Brain surgery used in the past to alleviate symptoms of serious mental disorders.
Psychosurgery
Psychoneuroimmunology
Phoneme
encoding specificity principle
13. The situation that occurs when the drug becomes part of the body's functioning and produces withdrawal symptoms when the drug is discontinued
Trichromats
menarche
David Weschler
Dependence
14. Preset natural body weight - determined by the number of fat cells in the body
behavior
Motive
Delusions
set point
15. Consciousness-altering drugs that affect moods - thoughts - memory - judgment - and perception and that are consumed for the purpose of producing those results
Panic Attack
consolidation
Hallucinogens (AKA psychedelic drugs)
Anorexia Nervosa
16. Observed group differences based on the era when people were born and grew up - exposing them to particular experiences that may affect the results of cross-sectional studies
behavioral genetics
Shaping
Stressor
cohort effect
17. 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.
Prosocial Behavior
Archetypes
Selye's General Adaptation Syndrome
placebo
18. Our emotional experience depends on our interpretation of the situation we are in
Karl Wernicke
Law of Effect
cognitive-appraisal theory of emotion
Intimacy
19. Temporary decrease in sensitivity to a stimulus that occurs when stimulation is unchanging
EEG (electroencephalogram)
sensory adaptation
Motive
Defense Mechanism
20. Procedure for solving a problem by implementing a set of rules over and over again until the solution is found.
retrieval
Conditioned Stimulus
Algorithm
Representative sample
21. In psychology - the techniques used to discover knowledge about human behavior and mental processes
scientific method
preconventional level of moral development
mean
educational psychologist
22. A nonspecific improvement that occurs as a result of a person's expectations of change rather than as a direct result of any specific therapeutic treatment.
Stereotypes
Placebo effect
DNA
sociocultural psychology
23. Did study in which healthy patients were admitted to psychiatric hospitals and diagnoses with schizophrenia; showed that once you are diagnosed with a disorder - the label - even when behavior indicates otherwise - is hard to overcome in a mental hea
cornea
Coping
Appraisal
David Rosenhan
24. General category of mood disorders in which people show extreme and persistent sadness - despair - and loss of interest in life's usual activities.
nervous system
Decentration
Depressive disorders
Arousal
25. The degree to which a condition or traits shared two or more individuals or groups
binocular cues
Concordance rate
Approach-avoidance conflict
Denial
26. Response to the belief that the IV will have an effect - rather than the IV's actual effect - which can be a confounding variable
William Dement
Aggression
placebo effect
Brightness
27. Obedience to authority; had participants administer what they believed were dangerous electrical shocks to other participants; wanted to see if Germans were an aberration or if all people were capable of committing evil actions
Hobson & McCarley
Phineas Gage
debriefing
Stanley Milgram
28. Process by which a perceptual system analyzes stimuli and converts them into electrical impulses; also known as coding.
Collective Unconscious
Daniel Goleman
Transduction
Cognitive theories
29. Explanations of behavior that focus on people's expectations about reaching a goal and their need for achievement as energizing factors
receptor site
psychoanalyst
conventional level of moral development
Expectancy Theories
30. A type of research method that allows researchers to measure variables so that they can develop a description of a situation or phenomenon
Jean Piaget
Descriptive Studies
instinct
Aversive counterconditioning
31. Perspective that focuses on the mental processes involved in perception - learning - memory - and thinking
EEG (electroencephalogram)
cognitive psychology
Extinction (operant conditioning)
zone of proximal development
32. The emotional state or condition that arises when a person must choose between two or more competing motives - behaviors - or impulses
Conflict
Blood-Brain Barrier
anterograde amnesia
Naturalistic observation
33. The study if the overlapping fields of perception - learning - memory - and thought - with a special emphasis on how people attend to - acquire - transform - store - and retrieve knowledge.
Monochromats
Henry Murray
Factor analysis
Cognitive Psychology
34. The overt story line - characters - and setting of a dream-the obvious - clearly discernible events of the dream
Oedipus Complex
Factor analysis
participant
Manifest Content
35. Conformity; showed that social pressure can make a person say something that is obviously incorrect ; in a famous study in which participants were shown cards with lines of different lengths and were asked to say which line matched the line on the fi
Free association
Ego
authoritative parenting
Solomon Asch
36. Stimulus that normally produces a measurable involuntary response
Unconditioned Stimulus
sports psychologist
Schizophrenic disorders
Dream
37. Emotion; stated that in order to experience emotions - a person must be physically aroused and know the emotion before you experience it
semantic memory
Stanley Schachter
olfaction
parathormone
38. A type of research design that compares individuals of different ages to determine how they differ
instinct
Health psychology
Cross-sectional Studies
aptitude test
39. The process by which a person infers other people's motives or intensions by observing their behavior.
anterograde amnesia
Fixed-ratio Schedule
Harry Harlow
Attributions
40. Small area of retina where image is focused
visual acuity
fovea
adrenal glands
Reflex
41. A cognitive distortion experienced by adolescents - in which they believe they are so special and unique that other people cannot understand them and risky behaviors will not harm them
Mary Ainsworth
rehearsal
Personal Fable
levels-of-processing approach
42. Part of the limbic system and is involved in learning and forming new long-term memories
hippocampus
spinal cord
Undifferentiated type of schizophrenia
Experimental design
43. Chemical that mimics or facilitates the actions of a neurotransmitter
Unconditioned Response
Gender Identity
correlation coefficient
agonist
44. Forcible sexual assault on an unwilling partner.
sensory neurons
Conservation
Rape
Oral Stage
45. Behaviors followed by pleasant consequences are strengthened while behaviors followed by unpleasant consequences are weakened (Thorndike)
cochlea
psychologist
Psychotherapy
Law of Effect
46. The ways people alter the attitudes or behaviors of others - either directly or indirectly.
Social Influence
Saccades
Punishment
experiment
47. The law that the neuron either fires at 100% or not at all
brainstem
Saturation
sound localization
all-or-none principle
48. Process by which stored information is recovered from memory
mode
Altruism
Paul Ekman
retrieval
49. Intelligence and learning - self-fulfilling prophecy; Study Basics: Researchers misled teachers into believing that certain students had higher IQs. Teachers changed own behaviors and effectively raised the IQ of the randomly chosen students
Rosenthal & Jacobson
Conservation
encoding specificity principle
Concrete operational stage
50. Shows brain activity at higher reolution than PET scan when changes in oxygen concentration in neurons alters its magnetic qualities
Von Restorff effect
functional MRI (fMRI)
Logic
William James
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