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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. Researched taste aversion. Showed that when rats ate a novel substance before being nauseated by a drug or radiation - they developed a conditioned taste aversion for the substance.
Social Loafing
John Garcia
pineal gland
Rape
2. Part of the limbic system; influences emotions such as aggression - fear - and self-protective behaviors
decay
Bystander Effect
Standard score
amygdala
3. Moral development studies to follow up Kohlberg. She studied girls and women and found that they did not score as high on his six stage scale because they focused more on relationships rather than laws and principles. Their reasoning was merely diffe
Anxiety
Circadian Rhythms
Undifferentiated type of schizophrenia
Carol Gilligan
4. A person's experiences in the environment
Hue
Preoperational stage
nurture
Carl Rogers
5. A person's belief about whether he or she can successfully engage in and execute a specific behavior.
Self-efficacy
random sample
Albert Ellis
Equity Theory
6. A type of therapy in which two or more people who are committed to one another's well-being are treated at once - in and effort to change the ways the interact.
Family therapy
Group therapy
synapse
Depressants (AKA sedative-hypnotics)
7. The brain and spinal cord
Overjustification effect
central nervous system
cognitive psychology
Selye's General Adaptation Syndrome
8. Intelligence and development; discovered that first born and only children tend to have higher IQs than latter born children
Robert Yerkes
Zajonc & Markus
motor projection areas
introspection
9. A counterconditioning technique in which an aversive or noxious stimulus is paired with a stimulus with the undesirable behavior.
Aversive counterconditioning
Francis Galton
receptor site
Bonding
10. Assessing and choosing among alternatives.
Paranoid type of schizophrenia
Decision making
Conformity
Fundamental Attribution Error
11. Feelings of rivalry with the parent of the same sex and sexual desire for the parent of the other sex - occurring during the phallic stage and ultimately resolved through identification with the parent of the same sex.
Drive
Saccades
Oedipus Complex
Preconscious
12. Type of schizophrenia characterized either by displays of excited or violent motor activity or by stupor.
experimental group
frequency polygon
pancreas
Catatonic type of schizophrenia
13. Approximate distribution of scores expected when a sample is taken from a large population - drawn as a frequency polygon that often takes the form of a bell-shaped curve - called the normal curve
normal distribution
Aristotle
Logic
Accommodation
14. Social psychology; research evidence of internalized racism caused by stigmatization; doll experiments-black children chose white dolls
Stimulant
cones
Concordance rate
Kenneth Clark
15. A single long - fiber that carries outgoing messages to other neurons - muscles - or glands
axon
Noam Chomsky
Decentration
Unconditioned Stimulus
16. Behavior targeted at individuals or groups and intended to hold them apart and treat them differently.
Convergent thinking
GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)
Discrimination
Primary Reinforcer
17. Type of schizophrenia characterized by hallucinations and delusions of persecution or grandeur (or both) - and sometimes irrational jealousy.
Trichromatic theory
Paranoid type of schizophrenia
Type B behavior
emotional intelligence
18. Graphical record of brain-wave activity obtained through electrodes placed on the scalp and forehead
experimenter bias
retina
synapse
Electroencephalogram (EEG)
19. In Jung's theory - the emotionally charged ideas and images that are rich in meaning and symbolism and exist within the collective unconscious.
state-dependent learning
nurture
Social Psychology
Archetypes
20. The human need to fulfill one's potential
retina
neuron
Albert Bandura
self-actualization
21. Memory of ideas - rules - words - and general concepts about the world
Erik Erikson
Darley & Latane
Robert Yerkes
semantic memory
22. Psychopathology and Social Psychology; effects of labeling; Rosenhan and colleagues checked selves into mental hospitals with symptoms of hearing voices say 'empty - dull and thud.' Diagnosed with schizophrenia. After entered - acted normally. Never
Rosenhan
Stanley Schachter
encoding specificity principle
Disorganized type of schizophrenia
23. The tendency to recall information learned while in a particular physiological state most accurately when one is in that physiological state again
Means-ends analysis
natural selection
Ex Post Facto Design
state-dependent learning
24. Typically a pill that is used as a control in the experiment; a sugar pill
placebo
Spontaneous Recovery
sample
dualism
25. Type of schizophrenia characterized by severely disturbed thought processes - frequent incoherence - disorganized behavior - and inappropriate affect.
Mary Cover-Jones
Secondary Sex Characteristics
Disorganized type of schizophrenia
hypnosis
26. A collection of interrelated ideas and facts put forward to describe - explain - and predict behavior and mental processes
Accommodation
timbre
theory
olfaction
27. 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
William Sheldon
Elaboration Likelihood Model
Residual type of schizophrenia
28. Tiny oval-shaped sacs in a terminal of one neuron; assist in transferring mineral impulse from one neuron to another neuron by releasing specific neurotransmitters
synaptic vesicles
Conservation
industrial/organizational psychologist
monocular cues
29. The characteristic of requiring higher and higher doses of a drug to produce the same effect.
graded potential
Fixation
Tolerance
Arousal
30. The agreement of participants to take part in an experiment and their acknowledgement that they understand the nature of their participation in the research - and have been fully informed about the general nature of the research - its goals - and met
Preconscious
informed consent
adrenal glands
Phallic Stage
31. 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
Stanley Milgram
adaptation
cognitive psychology
procedural memory
32. Perspective that emphasizes the uniqueness of the individual and the idea that humans have free will
long-term potentiation
humanistic psychology
Skinner Box
school psychologist
33. Suffering from a gross impairment in reality testing that interferes with the ability to meet the ordinary demands of life.
schema
Conservation
Psychotic
Denial
34. Perspective concerned with how cultural differences affect behavior
Overjustification effect
David Rosenhan
sociocultural psychology
Zygote
35. Areas of the retina that - when stimulated - produce a change in the firing of cells in the visual system.
Receptive fields
Factor analysis
neuroscience
unconscious
36. A research technique in which neither the experimenter nor the participants know who is in the control and experimental groups.
Double-blind techniques
evolutionary psychology
Halo effect
Hallucinogens (AKA psychedelic drugs)
37. Emotion; stated that in order to experience emotions - a person must be physically aroused and know the emotion before you experience it
Stanley Schachter
declarative memory
olfaction
Case study
38. Any readily identifiable stable quality that characterizes how an individual differs from other individuals.
Syntax
norepinephrine
Trait
token economy
39. The middle division of brain responsible for hearing and sight; location where pain is registered; includes temporal lobe - occipital lobe - and most of the parietal lobe
Learned helplessness
Unconditioned Response
long-term memory
midbrain
40. Process by which a perceptual system analyzes stimuli and converts them into electrical impulses; also known as coding.
Transduction
twin studies
Egocentrism
Lloyd and Margaret Peterson
41. Motivation; human sexual response—studied how both men and women respond to and in relation to sexual behavior
Masters & Johnson
Transduction
Sublimation
hindbrain
42. The tendency of one person to evaluate another person (or a symbol or image of another person) in a positive way.
Metal retardation
Attributions
Interpersonal Attraction
retina
43. Able to see clearly things that are close but having trouble seeing objects at a distance; nearsighted.
Myopic
Transference
Carol Gilligan
independent variable
44. Applies psychological principles to the workplace to improve productivity and the quality of work life
Secondary Sex Characteristics
industrial/organizational psychologist
normal distribution
Genital Stage
45. Four distinct stages of sleep during which no rapid eye movements occur.
Cognitive Psychology
Non-rapid Eye Movement Sleep
Factor analysis
Gordon Allport
46. The law that the neuron either fires at 100% or not at all
Theory of mind
pancreas
all-or-none principle
procedural memory
47. Parenting style characterized by emotional warmth - high standards for behavior - explanation and consistent enforcement of rules - and inclusion of children in decision making
authoritative parenting
Robert Yerkes
Secondary Sex Characteristics
James-Lange theory of emotion
48. A drug that increases alertness - reduces fatigue - and elevates mood
token economy
Stimulant
case study
Harry Harlow
49. An eating disorder characterized by repeated episodes of binge eating (and a fear of not being able to stop eating) followed by purging
sound localization
Token economy
endorphins
Bulimia Nervosa
50. The most primitive of the three functional divisions of the brain - consisting of the pons - medulla - reticular formation - and cerebellum
Hermann Ebbinghaus
Alfred Binet
hindbrain
schema