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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. A schizophrenic disorder that is characterized by a mixture of symptoms and does not meet the diagnostic criteria of any one type.
Undifferentiated type of schizophrenia
functionalism
nature
Skinner Box
2. Group of abnormalities that occur in the babies of mothers who drink alcoholic beverages during pregnancy
Manifest Content
Cross-sectional Studies
optic nerve
fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)
3. Freud's last stage of personality development - from the onset of puberty through adulthood - during which the sexual conflicts of childhood resurface (at puberty) and are often resolved during adolescence).
Stressor
ACTH (arenocorticotropic hormone)
adaptation
Genital Stage
4. Sense of taste
gustation
norepinephrine
spinal cord
gonads
5. Biologist; developed theory of evolution; transmutation of species - natural selection - evolution by common descent; 'The Origin of Species' catalogs his voyage on The Beagle
Primary Punisher
central nervous system
Drive theory (aka - drive-reduction theory)
Charles Darwin
6. Cognitive psychology; created a 4-stage theory of cognitive development - said that two basic processes work in tandem to achieve cognitive growth (assimilation and accommodation)
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
split brain patients
behavior
Jean Piaget
7. In the study of motivation - an explanation of behavior that asserts that people actively and regularly determine their own goals and the means of achieving them through thought.
Non-rapid Eye Movement Sleep
Cognitive theories
Dream
Obsessive-compulsive disorder
8. Did work on short-term memory
Personality disorders
imagery
Lloyd and Margaret Peterson
debriefing
9. Studies that estimate the hereditability of a trait by breeding animals with another animal that has the same trait
selection studies
Archetypes
Fixed-interval Schedule
school psychologist
10. Suffering from a gross impairment in reality testing that interferes with the ability to meet the ordinary demands of life.
Solomon Asch
Alzheimer's Disease
sample
Psychotic
11. A person's inherited traits - determined by genetics
nature
B.F. Skinner
Token economy
Panic Attack
12. Communication of information through body positions and gestures.
Unconditioned Stimulus
pitch
Validity
Body Language
13. Morality based on fitting in to the norms of society
Albert Bandura
Avoidance-avoidance conflict
shaping
conventional level of moral development
14. Assessing and choosing among alternatives.
Decision making
Transference
ex post facto study
Normal curve
15. Portion of the CNS that carries messages to the PNS; connects brain to the rest of the body
spinal cord
ex post facto study
maintenance rehearsal
Denial
16. Part of the limbic system and is involved in learning and forming new long-term memories
Representative sample
Bonding
Carol Gilligan
hippocampus
17. Motivation; believed that gastric activity as in empty stomach - was the sole basis for hunger; did research that inserted balloons in stomachs
Halo effect
Walter B. Cannon
maintenance rehearsal
nature-nurture controversy
18. Able to see clearly things that are close but having trouble seeing objects at a distance; nearsighted.
Myopic
decay
Self-serving Bias
corpus callosum
19. Top of the spinal column
brainstem
genotype
Brightness
proactive interference
20. The first of Piaget's four stages of cognitive development (covering roughly the first 2 years of life) - during which the child develops some motoer coordination skills and a memory for past events
token economy
Sensorimotor stage
Stanley Schachter
thyroxine
21. Neurotransmitter that causes contraction of skeletal muscles; lack of Ach linked with Alzheimer's disease;
Accommodation
Behavior therapy
acetylcholine (ACh)
Phoneme
22. An unscientific system which pretends to discover psychological information that his means are unscientific or deliberately fraudulent
cohort effect
pseudoscience
convolutions
Ego
23. A descriptive statistic that tells which result or score best represents an entire set of scores
Anal Stage
Alfred Binet
Archetypes
measure of central tendency
24. Development - contact comfort - attachment; experimented with baby rhesus monkeys and presented them with cloth or wire 'mothers;' showed that the monkeys became attached to the cloth mothers because of contact comfort
eclectic
Self-actualization
Dementia
Harry Harlow
25. Emotional intelligence
Daniel Goleman
unconscious
Social Cognition
Insomnia
26. A trait or inherited characteristic that has increased in a population because it solved a problem of survival or reproduction
Heuristics
thalamus
Elaboration Likelihood Model
adaptation
27. Chemical that opposes the actions of a neurotransmitter
cognitive-appraisal theory of emotion
hypnosis
antagonist
Debriefing
28. Describes differences between groups of participants that differ naturally on a variable such as race or gender
forebrain
ex post facto study
nature-nurture controversy
Oral Stage
29. Endocrine gland that produces a large amount of hormones; it regulates growth and helps control other endocrine glands; located on underside of brain; sometimes called the 'master gland'
ESP
pituitary gland
experiment
monism
30. Sleep stage when the eyes move about - during which vivid dreams occur; brain very active but skeletal muscles paralyzed
REM (rapid eye movement) sleep
transfer appropriate processing
descriptive statistics
Cross-sectional Studies
31. Personality categories in which broad collections of traits are loosely tied together and interrelated.
Zajonc & Markus
normal distribution
polarization
Types
32. Mood disorder originally know as manic-depressive disorder because it is characterized by behavior that vacillates between two extremes; mania and depression.
Bipolar disorder
Lawrence Kohlberg
Albert Ellis
Kurt Lewin
33. A system of learned attitudes about social practices - instituations - and individual behavior used to evaluate situations and behavior as right or wrong - good or bad
Dissociative identity disorder
motor projection areas
Morality
median
34. The extent to which scores differ from one another
David McClelland
Reactance
timbre
variability
35. Cell that sends messages to brain or spinal cord from other parts of the body; also called sensory neurons
afferent neuron nerve
autonomic nervous system
genotype
Intrinsic motivation
36. Having both stereotypically male and stereotypically female characteristics
Superego
Androgynous
Noam Chomsky
Solomon Asch
37. Study that focuses on biological foundations of behavior and mental processes; overlaps with neuroscience
psychobiology
John Locke
correlation coefficient
Experimental design
38. A process through which people receive information about the status of a physical system and use this feedback information to learn to control the activity of that system
Latency Stage
Conflict
Resolution Phase
Biofeedback
39. Neo-Freudian - psychodynamic; Contributions: inferiority complex - organ inferiority; Studies: birth order influences personality
Subliminal perception
Projective Tests
Alfred Adler
Attitudes
40. A standard IQ test score whose mean and standard deviation remain constant for all ages
industrial/organizational psychologist
hippocampus
adrenal glands
Deviation IQ
41. Presentation of a stimulus after a particular response in order to increase the likelihood that the response will recur
double-blind procedure
Electromagnetic Radiation
Excitement phase
Positive Reinforcement
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
Avoidance-avoidance conflict
forebrain
Extinction (operant conditioning)
positive psychology
43. An excessive attachment to some person or object that was appropriate only at an earlier stage of development
Fixed-ratio Schedule
Fixation
structuralism
behaviorism
44. Pioneer in Rational-Emotive Therapy (RET) - focuses on altering client's patterns of irrational thinking to reduce maladaptive behavior and emotions
John B Watson
Symptom substitution
Albert Ellis
Metal retardation
45. Reflex that causes a newborn to grasp vigorously any object touching the palm or fingers or placed in the hand
Embryo
Actor-observer Effect
Grasping reflex
Holmes & Rahe
46. School of psychological thought that argued that behavior cannot be studied in parts but must be viewed a s whole
ethics
Sex
Gestalt psychology
dependent variable
47. Visual theory - proposed by Herring - that color is coded by stimulation of three types of paired receptors; each pair of receptors is assumed to operate in an antagonist way so that stimulation by a given wavelength produces excitation (increased fi
Opponent-process theory
DNA
nerve
Depressive disorders
48. Positively reinforcing closer and closer approximation of a desired behavior to teach a new behavior
Survey
Projection
shaping
Gender Identity
49. Depth cues that are based on two eyes
Paul Ekman
binocular cues
parasympathetic nervous system
Jean Piaget
50. People who can distinguish only two of the three basic colors.
Burnout
neurogenesis
family studies
Dichromats