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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. The brain and spinal cord
Lewis Terman
psychoanalyst
Tolerance
central nervous system
2. Conditioning in which an increase or decrease in the probability that a behavior will recur is affected by the delivery of reinforcement or punishment as a consequence of the behavior;
Albert Ellis
receptor site
Rosenhan
Operant Conditioning
3. 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
Abnormal Behavior
Stress
Preoperational stage
Elizabeth Kübler-Ross
4. School of psychological thought that argued that behavior cannot be studied in parts but must be viewed a s whole
bottom-up processing
Skinner Box
Cross-sectional Studies
Gestalt psychology
5. Sharpness of vision
visual acuity
fluid intelligence
Standard score
Ideal Self
6. Pain is only experienced in the pain messages can pass through a gate in the spinal cord on their route to the brain
René Descartes
Heuristics
gate control theory
Cross-sectional Studies
7. A type of research method that allows researchers to measure variables so that they can develop a description of a situation or phenomenon
Dependence
Actor-observer Effect
Descriptive Studies
Reaction Formation
8. The prenatal organism from the 5th through the 49th day after conception
endocrine glands
Critical Period
Overjustification effect
Embryo
9. A test designed to predict a person's future performance
Aristotle
psychiatrist
aptitude test
neural impulse
10. Developmental psychology; wrote 'On Death and Dying': 5 stages the terminally ill go through when facing death (1. denial - 2. anger - 3. bargaining - 4. depression - 5. acceptance)
Extrinsic motivation
Classical Conditioning
Elizabeth Kübler-Ross
Anorexia Nervosa
11. Conflict that results from having to choose an alternative that has both attractive and unappealing aspects
Psychoactive Drug
Approach-avoidance conflict
neurotransmitters
psychoanalytic
12. Rules of proper and acceptable conduct that investigators use to guide psychological research
iris
ethics
Plateau phase
axon
13. The level of consciousness devoted to processes completely unavailable to conscious awareness (e.g. - fingernails growing)
normal distribution
Deviation IQ
nonconscious
Gender Schema Theory
14. Suffering from a gross impairment in reality testing that interferes with the ability to meet the ordinary demands of life.
Psychotic
Opponent-process theory
long-term potentiation
Drug
15. 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.
control group
Photoreceptors
Cognitive Psychology
refractory period
16. Theory suggesting that there are two routes to attitude change: the central route - which focuses on thoughtful consideration of an argument for change - and the peripheral route - which focuses on less careful - more emotional - and even superficial
Decentration
Schachter-Singer theory of emotion
Elaboration Likelihood Model
Social Facilitation
17. The process by which the location of sound is determined
sound localization
Unconditioned Stimulus
Metal retardation
variability
18. Neuroscience/biopsychology; studied split brain patients
iris
population
Extrinsic motivation
Gazzaniga or Sperry
19. In Jung's theory - a shared storehouse of primitive ideas and images that reside in the unconscious and are inherited from one's ancestors.
Obedience
psychology
Language
Collective Unconscious
20. Change in behavior that occurs when people believe they are in the presence of other people.
Social Facilitation
Dichromats
hippocampus
maintenance rehearsal
21. Discovered classical conditioning; trained dogs to salivate at the ringing of a bell
Ivan Pavlov
Extinction (operant conditioning)
Standard score
adrenal glands
22. An unconscious way of reducing anxiety by distorting perceptions of reality.
Abnormal Behavior
Rosenhan
Self-actualization
Defense Mechanism
23. Behaviorism; emphasis on external behaviors of people and their reactions on a given situation; famous for Little Albert study in which baby was taught to fear a white rat
John B Watson
empiricism
Placenta
EEG (electroencephalogram)
24. Ability of the brain to change their experience - both structurally and chemically
peripheral nervous system
neural plasticity
menopause
Hobson & McCarley
25. Light-sensitive surface on back of eye containing rods and cones
authoritarian parenting
Extinction (operant conditioning)
retina
Ivan Pavlov
26. Framework of basic ideas about people - objects and events based on past experience in long-term memory
endocrine system
REM (rapid eye movement) sleep
schema
Prejudice
27. In Piaget's view - a specific mental structure; an organized way of interacting with the environment and experiencing it- a generalization a child makes based on comparable occurences of various actins - usally physical - motor actions
Broca's area
midbrain
replication
Schema
28. Clues participants discover about the purpose of a study that suggest how they should respond
demand characteristics
parietal lobes
Social Interest
social psychologist
29. Anxiety disorders characterized by excessive and irrational fear of - and consequent attempted avoidance of - specific objects or situations.
Gender
interference
Social phobia
Phobic disorders
30. Organizing sensory information so it can be processed by the nervous system
Babinski reflex
Means-ends analysis
Factor analysis
encoding
31. Individual cells that are the smallest unit of the nervous system; it has three functions: receive information - process it - send to rest of body
Saturation
Reflex
Placenta
neuron
32. Communication of information through body positions and gestures.
Body Language
central nervous system
occipital lobes
strain studies
33. Intelligence; devised the Triarchic Theory of Intelligence (academic problem-solving - practical - and creative)
Robert Sternberg
normal distribution
Self-fulfilling prophecy
Altruism
34. Netlike system of neurons that weaves through limbic system and plays an important role in attention - arousal - and alert functions; arouses and alerts higher parts of the brain; anesthetics work by temporary shutting off RF system
long-term potentiation
(cerebral) cortex
case study
reticular formation (RF) (RES)
35. A type of research design that compares individuals of different ages to determine how they differ
aversive conditioning
Cross-sectional Studies
Rapid Eye Movement Sleep
Altruism
36. Division that connects the central nervous system to the rest of the body; includes all sensory and motor neurons; divided into somatic nervous system and autonomic nervous system
Biofeedback
peripheral nervous system
Phonology
Stereotypes
37. Defense mechanism by which anxiety-provoking thoughts and feelings are forced to the unconscious.
Repression
Sex
Convergent thinking
EEG (electroencephalogram)
38. The appearance of one overt symptom to replace another that has been eliminated by treatment.
Manifest Content
Symptom substitution
top-down processing
Social Loafing
39. Motivation that leads to behaviors engaged in for no apparent reward except the pleasure and satisfaction of the activity itself
Intrinsic motivation
genotype
debriefing
chromosome
40. Rehearsal involving repletion and analysis - in which a stimulus may be associated with (linked to) other information and further processed
fluid intelligence
ESP
Prevalence
elaborative rehearsal
41. Fixed - overly simple and often erroneous ideas about traits - attitudes - and behaviors of groups of people; stereotypes assume that all members of a given group are alike.
Subgoal analysis
Preoperational stage
Dissociative identity disorder
Stereotypes
42. Photoreceptors that detect color and fine detail in bright-light conditions; not present in peripheral vision
David Rosenhan
cones
habituation
Prototype
43. 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
experimental group
Zygote
social psychologist
Personal Fable
44. Portion of the CNS above the spinal cord; consists of hindbrain - midbrain - and forebrain
brain
Body Language
Ideal Self
Denial
45. The procedure of withholding the unconditioned stimulus and presenting the conditioned stimulus alone - which gradually reduces the probability of the conditioned response
Extinction (classical conditioning)
Latent Content
significant difference
Hallucinogens (AKA psychedelic drugs)
46. Professional who studies behavior and uses behavioral principles in scientific research or in applied settings
Major depressive disorder
psychologist
Electromagnetic Radiation
Elaboration Likelihood Model
47. Any stimulus or event that is naturally painful or unpleasant to an organism
Primary Punisher
mutation
Temperament
Emotion
48. A state of consciousness that occurs during sleep - usually accompanied by vivid visual - tactile - or auditory imagery.
cochlea
Phineas Gage
Dream
endocrine glands
49. Freud's level of the mind that contains those experiences that are not currently conscious but may become so with varying degrees of difficulty.
independent variable
Preconscious
Brightness
neurotransmitters
50. Detailed memory for events surrounding a dramatic event that is vivid and remembered with confidence
flashbulb memories
Learned helplessness
Representative sample
ethnocentrism