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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. Personality categories in which broad collections of traits are loosely tied together and interrelated.
aphasia
Subgoal analysis
Types
Perception
2. Temporarily holds current or recent information for immediate or short-term use; Information is maintained for 20-30 seconds while active processing (e.g. - rehearsal) takes place
Double bind
working memory
just noticeable difference (JND)
demand characteristics
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
Aggression
Preoperational stage
Schema
Approach-approach conflict
4. Dissociative disorder characterized by the sudden and extensive inability to recall important personal information - usually of a traumatic or stressful nature.
Photoreceptors
Dissociative amnesia
Sublimation
sample
5. Motivation; believes that we invent explanations to label feelings
Robert Zajonc
Schema
Backward search
adaptation
6. A type of research method that allows researchers to measure variables so that they can develop a description of a situation or phenomenon
Denial
Personality disorders
Generalized anxiety disorder
Descriptive Studies
7. One of the descriptive methods of research; it requires construction of a set of questions to administer to a group of participants
parathormone
Transference
placebo effect
Survey
8. Conscious experience of emnotion results from one's awareness of physiological arousal
Fulfillment
Spontaneous Recovery
James-Lange theory of emotion
Secondary Reinforcer
9. Neurotransmitter that influences voluntary movement - attention - alertness; lack of dopamine linked with Parkinson's disease; too much is linked with schizophrenia
Nonverbal Communication
range
Delusions
dopamine
10. A reinforcement schedule in which a reinforcer(reward) is delivered after a specified number of responses has occurred
Fixed-ratio Schedule
experimenter bias
DNA
Theory of mind
11. An environmental stimulus that affects an organism in physically or psychologically injurious ways - usually producing anxiety - tension - and physiological arousal
David McClelland
dopamine
Stressor
Percentile score
12. Psychological disorders characterized by inflexible and longstanding maladaptive behaviors that typically cause stress and/or social or occupational problems.
Personality disorders
confounding variable
Alfred Binet
Model
13. A sample that reflects the characteristics of the population from which it is drawn
Representative sample
Bonding
audition
DNA
14. The treatment of emotional or behavior problems through psychological techniques.
psychiatrist
Hermann Ebbinghaus
parasympathetic nervous system
Psychotherapy
15. Located in neck; regulates metabolism by secreting thyroxine
Metal retardation
thyroid gland
normal distribution
Robert Rosenthal
16. A subjective response - usually accompanied by a physiological change - which is interpreted n a particular way by the individual and often leads to a change in behavior
Leon Festinger
axon
Emotion
Counterconditioning
17. Focused awareness of only a limited amount of all you are capable of experiencing
aptitude test
selection studies
selective attention
Reflex
18. 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)
Edward Thorndike
Concordance rate
Elizabeth Kübler-Ross
Receptive fields
19. A cognitive distortion experienced by adolescents - in which they see themselves as always 'on stage' with an audience watching
Sublimation
computerized axial tomography (CT scan)
Actor-observer Effect
Imaginary Audience
20. Simultaneously analyzing different elements of sensory information - such as color - brightness - shape - etc.
Social Cognition
parallel processing
spinal cord
Self-serving Bias
21. Perspective that defines psychology as the study of behavior that is directly observable or through assessment instruments
behaviorism
sociocultural psychology
Myopic
Stanley Milgram
22. The structures and organs that facilitate electrical and chemical communication in the body and allow all behavior and mental processes to take place
nervous system
behaviorism
retina
Dark adaptation
23. Experience of the difference threshold
amygdala
just noticeable difference (JND)
Intelligence
Type A behavior
24. 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
reticular formation (RF) (RES)
Mainstreaming
Variable-ratio Schedule
Color Blindness
25. Conscious experience of emotion and physiological arousal occur at the same time
Cannon-Bard theory of emotion
Harry Stack Sullivan
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
case study
26. First menstrual period
occipital lobes
Functional fixedness
Case study
menarche
27. The folds in the cerebral cortex that increase the surface area of the brain
Blood-Brain Barrier
developmental psychologist
convolutions
gustation
28. A procedure in which a researcher systematically manipulates and observes elements of a situation in order to test a hypothesis and make a cause-and-effect statement
experiment
Secondary Punisher
Aristotle
Decision making
29. Chemical similar to opiates that relieves pain; may induce feelings of pleasure
Opiates (AKA narcotics)
endorphins
Wernicke's area
Rational-emotive therapy
30. A person's description and analysis of what he or she is thinking and feeling or what he or she has just thought about
forensic psychologist
Edward Thorndike
introspection
insulin
31. In Adler's theory - a feeling of openness with all humanity.
optic nerve
adrenal glands
Social Interest
control group
32. Language; his hypothesis is that language determines the way we think
fovea
Trichromatic theory
Benjamin Whorf
Assimilation
33. Storage mechanism that keeps a relatively permanent record of memory
long-term memory
variable
axon terminal
Stanley Milgram
34. Our emotional experience depends on our interpretation of the situation we are in
recency effect
cognitive-appraisal theory of emotion
Case study
Token economy
35. Neurotransmitter that causes contraction of skeletal muscles; lack of Ach linked with Alzheimer's disease;
Latent Learning
acetylcholine (ACh)
Social Interest
nerve
36. Perspective that focuses on the mental processes involved in perception - learning - memory - and thinking
cognitive psychology
percentile score
sociocultural psychology
Prevalence
37. A type of design that contrasts groups of people who differ on some variable of interest to the researcher.
Fixation
Cognitive Dissonance
Ex Post Facto Design
Stimulus Discrimination
38. The first person to study memory scientifically and systematically; used nonsense syllables and recorded how many times he had to study a list to remember it well
gonads
variability
Hermann Ebbinghaus
schema
39. An individual who takes part in an experiment and whose behavior is observed as part of the data collection process
Herman von Helmholtz
Obsessive-compulsive disorder
participant
Demand characteristics
40. Defense mechanism by which people redirect socially unacceptable impulses toward acceptable goals.
Sublimation
excitatory neurotransmitter
developmental psychologist
Gender Schema Theory
41. A donut ring-shaped of loosely connected structures located in the forebrain between the central core and cerebral hemispheres; consists of: septum - cingulate gyrus - endowments - hypothalamus - and to campus - and amygdala; associated with emotions
Problem Solving
limbic system
frontal lobes
human genomes
42. A type of research design that compares individuals of different ages to determine how they differ
Theory of mind
Cross-sectional Studies
Broca's area
Secondary Punisher
43. Below-average intellectual functioning - as measured on an IQ test - accompanied by substantial limitations in functioning that originate before age 8
Egocentrism
Metal retardation
engineering psychologist
Receptive fields
44. Inability to perceive a situation or event except in relation to oneself; also know as self-centeredness
Egocentrism
Latent Content
Unconditioned Response
Extinction (classical conditioning)
45. In Jung's theory - a shared storehouse of primitive ideas and images that reside in the unconscious and are inherited from one's ancestors.
Learning
survey research
Collective Unconscious
storage
46. A definition of a variable in terms of the set of methods or procedures used to measure or study that variable
storage
Anal Stage
Hyperopic
operational definition
47. Studies of hereditability it be a behavioral traits using animals that have been inbred to produce strains that are genetically similar to one another
Hermann Ebbinghaus
strain studies
Secondary Reinforcer
Projection
48. A test score that has not been transformed or converted in any way
short-term storage
Raw score
Semantics
Accommodation
49. Inherited - automatic species-specific behaviors
cohort effect
Cannon-Bard theory of emotion
instinct
Premack principle
50. General category of mood disorders in which people show extreme and persistent sadness - despair - and loss of interest in life's usual activities.
Depressive disorders
central nervous system
antagonist
semantic memory