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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. All of the individuals in the group to which a study applies
twin studies
population
mean
Stimulus Discrimination
2. Areas of the retina that - when stimulated - produce a change in the firing of cells in the visual system.
Transference
Dark adaptation
Experimental design
Receptive fields
3. Any behavior intended to harm another person or thing.
reticular formation (RF) (RES)
Aggression
percentile score
Francis Galton
4. Perception; identified just-noticeable-difference (JND) that eventually becomes Weber's law
Ernst Weber
Self-actualization
Ivan Pavlov
range
5. The small portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to the human eye.
Stanley Schachter
Light
rehearsal
Consciousness
6. Humanistic psychology; hierarchy of needs-needs at a lower level dominate an individual's motivation as long as they are unsatisfied; self-actualization - transcendence
Gibson & Walk
Abraham Maslow
Robert Sternberg
Wolpe
7. Defense mechanism by which people attribute their own undesirable traits to others.
William James
Projection
sound localization
prenatal development
8. Heuristic procedure in which a problem solver works backward from the goal or end of a problem to the current position - in order to analyze the problem and reduce the steps needed to get from the current position to the goal.
Repression
Gender Schema Theory
Backward search
Stimulant
9. A drug that increases alertness - reduces fatigue - and elevates mood
maintenance rehearsal
Carl Jung
Social Loafing
Stimulant
10. Establish the relationship between two variables
Phobic disorders
correlational research
Undifferentiated type of schizophrenia
postconventional level of moral development
11. Transparent covering of the eye
cornea
parallel processing
cerebellum
genetic mapping
12. The more accurate recall of items presented at the end of a series
photoreceptors
axon
recency effect
neural impulse
13. Seeing mind and body as different aspects of the same thing
Harry Harlow
Paranoid type of schizophrenia
monism
Jean Piaget
14. Shift in electrical charge in a tiny area of the neuron (temporary); transmits a long cell membranes leaving neuron and polarized state; needs higher than normal threshold of excitation to fire
graded potential
Impression Formation
elaborative rehearsal
monism
15. Three-stage process which describes the body's reaction to stress: 1) alarm reaction - 2) resistance - 3) exahaustion
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16. Type of schizophrenia characterized either by displays of excited or violent motor activity or by stupor.
Concordance rate
hindbrain
agonist
Catatonic type of schizophrenia
17. Intelligence and learning - self-fulfilling prophecy; Study Basics: Researchers misled teachers into believing that certain students had higher IQs. Teachers changed own behaviors and effectively raised the IQ of the randomly chosen students
Rosenthal & Jacobson
cognitive-appraisal theory of emotion
Insight therapy
case study
18. Reinforcer that has survival value for an organism; this value does not have to be learned
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
Harry Stack Sullivan
Variable-ratio Schedule
Primary Reinforcer
19. 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
Preoperational stage
Motive
Theory of mind
Model
20. Sleep researcher who discovered and coined the phrase 'rapid eye movement' (REM) sleep.
relative refractory period
schema
William Dement
social psychologist
21. The percentage of scores at or below a certain score
fluid intelligence
Walter B. Cannon
Hermann Ebbinghaus
percentile score
22. Inherited - automatic species-specific behaviors
Superego
instinct
Behavior therapy
Undifferentiated type of schizophrenia
23. Small opeing in iris that is smaller in bright light and larger in darkness
preconventional level of moral development
Family therapy
pupil
Imaginary Audience
24. A mechanism that prevents certain molecule from entering the brain but allows others to cross
Validity
pineal gland
Blood-Brain Barrier
Resolution Phase
25. Twins from two separate fertilized eggs (zygotes); share half of the same genes
Depressive disorders
fraternal twins
Stress
Carol Gilligan
26. Memory for specific information
autonomic nervous system
Psychophysics
declarative memory
population
27. The process of maintaining or keeping information readily available; the locations where information is held
storage
aptitude test
Charles Spearman
Alfred Adler
28. A DNA segment on a chromosome that controls transmission of traits
gene
industrial/organizational psychologist
dendrites
Representative sample
29. An explanation of behavior that assumes that an organism is motivated to act because of a need to attain - reestablish - or maintain some goal that helps with survival
Drive theory (aka - drive-reduction theory)
axon terminal
state-dependent learning
computerized axial tomography (CT scan)
30. Sense of smell
Case study
Electromagnetic Radiation
olfaction
Bystander Effect
31. The quality of a sound determined by the purity of a waveform
Denial
Consciousness
timbre
Unconscious
32. A type of design that contrasts groups of people who differ on some variable of interest to the researcher.
schema
Sensorimotor stage
Ex Post Facto Design
motivated forgetting
33. The most frequently occurring score in a set of data
Daniel Goleman
mode
Opiates (AKA narcotics)
human genomes
34. Behaviors followed by pleasant consequences are strengthened while behaviors followed by unpleasant consequences are weakened (Thorndike)
decay
Law of Effect
Dark adaptation
thalamus
35. 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
Assimilation
René Descartes
Harry Harlow
Cognitive Psychology
36. Devised theory of multiple intelligences: logical-mathematic - spatial - bodily-kinesthetic - intrapersonal - linguistic - musical - interpersonal - naturalistic
memory span
Need
monism
Howard Gardner
37. Applies psychological concepts to legal issues
Higher-order Conditioning
Placenta
afferent neuron nerve
forensic psychologist
38. Deoxyribonucleic acid; genetic formation in a double-helix; can replicate or reproduce itself; made of genes
Self-efficacy
thyroxine
DNA
frontal lobes
39. Studies of hereditability it be a behavioral traits using animals that have been inbred to produce strains that are genetically similar to one another
Raymond Cattell
central nervous system
Need
strain studies
40. One of the descriptive methods of research; it requires construction of a set of questions to administer to a group of participants
Survey
John Garcia
Divergent thinking
Concept
41. 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
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
experiment
Oral Stage
Size constancy
42. In an experiment - a difference that is unlikely to have occurred because of chance alone and is inferred to be most likely due to the systematic manipulations of variables by the researcher
Anxiety
Reliability
significant difference
William Sheldon
43. 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.
Reinforcer
Visual cortex
Saturation
Type A behavior
44. 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
Phonology
Personal Fable
Interpersonal Attraction
Stereotypes
45. An unscientific system which pretends to discover psychological information that his means are unscientific or deliberately fraudulent
Type A behavior
pons
pseudoscience
Mainstreaming
46. Professional who studies behavior and uses behavioral principles in scientific research or in applied settings
psychologist
Visual cortex
Coping
Motive
47. Expectation of the person conducting an experiment which may be affect the outcome
experimenter bias
operational definition
survey research
interference
48. Newly learned information interferes with the ability to recall previously learned information
John Garcia
retroactive interference
Oedipus Complex
Alfred Adler
49. Impairment of mental functioning and global cognitive abilities in otherwise alert individuals - causing memory loss and related symptoms and typically having a progressive nature
Dementia
Reactance
Edward Bradford Titchener
response bias
50. Located in left temporal lobe; plays role in understanding language and making meaningful sentences
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