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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.
Humanistic theory
Types
motive
Tolman
2. The most important area of the brain's occipital lobe - which receives and further processes information from the lateral geniculate nucleus; also known as the striate cortex.
Light
Visual cortex
Howard Gardner
Intelligence
3. In Roger's theory of personality - the perception an individual has of himself or herself and of his or her relationships to other people and to various aspects of life.
Self
state-dependent learning
Reaction Formation
monism
4. Unwillingness to help exhibited by witnesses to an event - which increase when there are more observers.
Secondary Reinforcer
Bystander Effect
frontal lobes
Noam Chomsky
5. Moral development; presented boys moral dilemmas and studied their responses and reasoning processes in making moral decisions. Most famous moral dilemma is 'Heinz' who has an ill wife and cannot afford the medication. Should he steal the medication
Color Blindness
decay
Lawrence Kohlberg
Trichromats
6. Defense mechanism by which anxiety-provoking thoughts and feelings are forced to the unconscious.
Abnormal Behavior
Repression
Benjamin Whorf
Brainstorming
7. Study of hereditary influences and how it influences behavior and thinking
Reinforcer
Attributions
behavioral genetics
Social Psychology
8. Reflex in which a newborn strectches out the arms and legs and cries in response to a loud noise or an abrupt change in the environment
memory span
Moro reflex
Schema
Object permanence
9. Perception; identified just-noticeable-difference (JND) that eventually becomes Weber's law
Means-ends analysis
Ernst Weber
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
pupil
10. Large band of white neural fibers that connects to to brain hemispheres and carries messages between them; myelinated; involved in intelligence - consciousness - and self-awareness; does it reach full maturity until 20s
recency effect
corpus callosum
instinct
serotonin
11. In Freud's theory - the moral aspect of mental functioning comprising the ego ideal (what a person would ideally like to be) and the conscience and taught by parents and society.
Regression
Superego
Survey
Schema
12. 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.
Saturation
Sublimation
cohort effect
Hermann Ebbinghaus
13. Electrically charged particles found both inside and outside a neuron; negative ions are found inside the cell membrane in a polarized neuron
ions
audition
Genital Stage
Lev Vygotsky
14. Anxiety disorders characterized by excessive and irrational fear of - and consequent attempted avoidance of - specific objects or situations.
Insight therapy
Discrimination
ethnocentrism
Phobic disorders
15. The overt story line - characters - and setting of a dream-the obvious - clearly discernible events of the dream
Manifest Content
Lawrence Kohlberg
token economy
Concrete operational stage
16. School of psychological thought that considered the structure and elements of conscious experience to be the proper subject matter of psychology
structuralism
Holmes & Rahe
Stereotypes
standard deviation
17. Communication of information through body positions and gestures.
William James
Von Restorff effect
Anorexia Nervosa
Body Language
18. The theory that children and adolescents use gender as an organizing theme to classify and interpret their perceptions about the world and themselves
Normal curve
Gender Schema Theory
Phineas Gage
Rooting reflex
19. Part of the brain which controls living functions such as breathing - heart rate - blood pressure - body temperature
Brightness
Insomnia
self-fulfilling prophecy
medulla (also medulla oblongata)
20. Behavior pattern exhibited by people who are calmer - more patient - and less hurried than Type A individuals
Law of Effect
Type B behavior
Stanley Schachter
Obedience
21. Shows brain activity when radioactively tagged glucose rushes to active neurons
positron emission tomography (PET scan)
Elizabeth Kübler-Ross
anorexia nervosa
Abnormal psychology
22. Pain is only experienced in the pain messages can pass through a gate in the spinal cord on their route to the brain
Humanistic theory
Functional fixedness
gate control theory
vestibular sense
23. A cognitive behavior therapy that emphasizes the importance of logical - rational thought processes.
Mary Cover-Jones
Extinction (operant conditioning)
reticular formation (RF) (RES)
Rational-emotive therapy
24. Memory for skills - including perceptual - motor - and cognitive skills required to complete tasks
procedural memory
Repression
cohort effect
pancreas
25. Austrian-Jewish woman (real name: Bertha Pappenheim) diagnosed with hysteria - treated by Josef Breuer for severe cough - paralysis of the extremities on the right side of her body - and disturbances of vision - hearing - and speech - as well as hall
Anna O.
Systematic desensitization
Self-serving Bias
experiment
26. Psychological disorders characterized by inflexible and longstanding maladaptive behaviors that typically cause stress and/or social or occupational problems.
Self-perception Theory
Personality disorders
cohort effect
Representative sample
27. Process of changing from a totally self-oriented point of view to one tha recognizes other people's feelings - ideas - and viewpoints
Intimacy
human genomes
Decentration
receptor site
28. Conscious memory that a person is aware of
explicit memory
Walter B. Cannon
implicit memory
Imaginary Audience
29. Rehearsal involving repletion and analysis - in which a stimulus may be associated with (linked to) other information and further processed
elaborative rehearsal
counseling psychologist
Prejudice
Morpheme
30. Personality assessment; created the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) with Christina Morgan - stated that the need to achieve varied in strength in different people and influenced their tendency to approach and evaluate their own performances
Attitudes
cones
debriefing
Henry Murray
31. Psychoanalytic phenomenon in which a therapist becomes the object of a patient's emotional attitudes about an important person in the patient's life - such as a parent.
Accommodation
Emotion
Transference
Attitudes
32. 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
Client-centered therapy
consolidation
agonist
pons
33. Neuroscience/biopsychology; studied split brain patients
Gazzaniga or Sperry
Specific phobia
Client-centered therapy
GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)
34. Deals with the extent to which heredity and the environment each influence behavior
Erik Erikson
Opponent-process theory
vestibular sense
nature-nurture controversy
35. 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;
Rosenhan
Operant Conditioning
peripheral nervous system
Photoreceptors
36. Focused awareness of only a limited amount of all you are capable of experiencing
levels-of-processing approach
graded potential
selective attention
Preoperational stage
37. Devised theory of multiple intelligences: logical-mathematic - spatial - bodily-kinesthetic - intrapersonal - linguistic - musical - interpersonal - naturalistic
hindbrain
Latency Stage
Howard Gardner
Attitudes
38. 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
Humanistic theory
recency effect
reticular formation (RF) (RES)
Stimulus Discrimination
39. Organ lying between the stomach and small intestine; regulates blood sugar by secreting to regulating hormones insulin and glucagon
Vasocongestion
brain
Sensation
pancreas
40. 30 -000 genes needed to build a human
Premack principle
myelin sheath
Photoreceptors
human genomes
41. Perspective that focuses on the mental processes involved in perception - learning - memory - and thinking
replication
occipital lobes
medulla (also medulla oblongata)
cognitive psychology
42. In emerging Theo psychology that focuses on positive experiences; includes subjective well-being - self-determination - the relationship between positive emotions and physical health - and the factors that allow individuals - communities - and societ
ex post facto study
encoding specificity principle
visual acuity
positive psychology
43. Problem-solving technique that involves considering all possible solutions without making prior evaluative judgments.
Arousal
Brainstorming
Dependence
Conflict
44. The bodies 'slow' chemical communication by secreting hormones directly into the bloodstream
frontal lobes
Attitudes
Impression Formation
endocrine glands
45. The behavior of giving up or not responding to punishment - exhibited by people or animals exposed to negative consequences or punishment over which they have no control
Learned Helplessness
Experimental design
confounding variable
Unconscious
46. Chemical that mimics or facilitates the actions of a neurotransmitter
Psychophysics
Carol Gilligan
agonist
sensory adaptation
47. The linguistic description of how a language functions - especially the rules and patterns used for generating appropriate and comprehensible sentences.
encoding specificity principle
Lloyd and Margaret Peterson
Grammar
sound localization
48. Child development; investigated how culture & interpersonal communication guide development; zone of proximal development; play research
Lev Vygotsky
Ivan Pavlov
Hyperopic
fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)
49. General category of mood disorders in which people show extreme and persistent sadness - despair - and loss of interest in life's usual activities.
reticular formation (RF) (RES)
Depressive disorders
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
Walter B. Cannon
50. Division of peripheral nervous system; controls voluntary actions
somatic nervous system
Ego
Emotion
(cerebral) cortex