SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
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. Eating disorder most common in adolescent females characterized by weight less than 85% of normal - restricted eating - and unrealistic body image
Myopic
anorexia nervosa
Dissociative disorders
neurogenesis
2. Control emotional behaviors - make decisions - carry out plans; speech (Broca's area); controls movement of muscles
optic nerve
positron emission tomography (PET scan)
frontal lobes
action potential
3. Body sense that provides information about the position and movement of individual parts of the body
kinesthesis
demand characteristics
anorexia nervosa
Depressive disorders
4. Behavior learned through coincidental association with reinforcement
self-actualization
Lucid Dream
Superstitious Behavior
Edward Thorndike
5. Study that focuses on biological foundations of behavior and mental processes; overlaps with neuroscience
Conflict
psychobiology
Temperament
pupil
6. A location on a receptor neurons which is like a key to a lock (with a specific nerve transmitter); allows for orderly pathways
frequency
Light
receptor site
Latent Learning
7. Main area for hearing - understanding language (Wernicke's area) - understanding music; smell
Residual type of schizophrenia
Social Psychology
encoding
temporal lobes
8. A therapy that is based on the application of learning principles to human behavior and that focuses on changing overt behaviors rather than on understanding subjective feelings - unconscious processes - or motivations; also known as behavior modific
Gender
Behavior therapy
occipital lobes
refractory period
9. Study of hereditary influences and how it influences behavior and thinking
Paranoid type of schizophrenia
Benjamin Whorf
behavioral genetics
Latent Content
10. Emotion; found that facial expressions are universal
Paul Ekman
representative sample
primacy effect
Emotion
11. A nonspecific - emotional response to real or imagined challenges or threats; a result of a cognitive appraisal by the individual
Vasocongestion
Stress
Denial
Latent Content
12. 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
motor neurons
efferent neuron nerve
Francis Galton
Preoperational stage
13. Member of the gene terror that controls the appearance of a certain trait only if it is paired with the same gene
binocular cues
amygdala
recessive gene
Panic Attack
14. Typically a pill that is used as a control in the experiment; a sugar pill
ex post facto study
placebo
Saturation
midbrain
15. Cognition and memory; studied repressed memories and false memories; showed how easily memories could be changed and falsely created by techniques such as leading questions and illustrating the inaccuracy in eyewitness testimony
Elizabeth Loftus
synaptic vesicles
Jean Piaget
Carl Jung
16. Child development; investigated how culture & interpersonal communication guide development; zone of proximal development; play research
EEG (electroencephalogram)
Depressive disorders
fluid intelligence
Lev Vygotsky
17. Organ lying between the stomach and small intestine; regulates blood sugar by secreting to regulating hormones insulin and glucagon
Fixation
declarative memory
behaviorism
pancreas
18. The view that knowledge should be acquired through observation and often an experiment
polarization
Generalized anxiety disorder
empiricism
Phillip Zimbardo
19. Conflict that results from having to choose between two distasteful alternatives
Avoidance-avoidance conflict
neurogenesis
correlational research
structuralism
20. Studies of hereditability it be a behavioral traits using animals that have been inbred to produce strains that are genetically similar to one another
strain studies
Motivation
Hermann Rorschach
measure of central tendency
21. Freud's level of the mind that contains those experiences that are not currently conscious but may become so with varying degrees of difficulty.
Preconscious
encoding specificity principle
Stanley Schachter
photoreceptors
22. The number of items a person can reproduce from short-term memory - usually consisting of one or two chunks
Projection
memory span
Karl Wernicke
eclectic
23. The Reaction experienced when a substance abuser stops using a drug with dependence properties
preconventional level of moral development
Imaginary Audience
Withdrawal Symptoms
Normal curve
24. Intelligence: fluid & crystal intelligence; personality testing: 16 Personality Factors (16PF personality test)
retroactive interference
Heuristics
Raymond Cattell
unconscious
25. A situation in which an individual is given two different and inconsistent messages.
Double bind
Collective Unconscious
representative sample
strain studies
26. Inherited - automatic species-specific behaviors
Francis Galton
motor neurons
vestibular sense
instinct
27. Ability of the brain to change their experience - both structurally and chemically
retroactive interference
neural plasticity
Psychodynamically
Dementia
28. Occurs when recall is better for a distinctive item - even if it occurs in the middle of a list
Conditioned Stimulus
Interpersonal Attraction
Zajonc & Markus
Von Restorff effect
29. Informing participants about the true nature of a experiment after its completion.
Conditioning
Sublimation
Debriefing
Placebo effect
30. In problem solving - the process of widening the range of possibilities and expanding the options for solutions.
Divergent thinking
Punishment
preconventional level of moral development
aversive conditioning
31. Loss of memory for events and experiences occurring from the time of an amnesia-causing event forward
Group
anterograde amnesia
Puberty
Motivation
32. The more accurate recall of items presented at the end of a series
Lewis Terman
ESP
Opiates (AKA narcotics)
recency effect
33. Process of reconditioning in which a person is taught a new - more adaptive response to a familiar stimulus.
Substance Abuser
Howard Gardner
Counterconditioning
axon terminal
34. Learning; systematic desensitization
Wolpe
Lewis Terman
Broca's area
Rational-emotive therapy
35. Repetitive review of information with little or no interpretation
Opponent-process theory
maintenance rehearsal
Schachter-Singer theory of emotion
Psychoneuroimmunology
36. Bundles of axons
Learning
Psychoneuroimmunology
nerve
Wilhelm Wundt
37. Sleep stage when the eyes move about - during which vivid dreams occur; brain very active but skeletal muscles paralyzed
REM (rapid eye movement) sleep
forebrain
sympathetic nervous system
myelin sheath
38. The study of the lifelong - often age-related - processes of change in the physical - cognitive - moral - emotional - and social domains of functioning; such changes are rooted in biological mechanisms that are genetically controlled - as well as in
Alfred Binet
emotional intelligence
Developmental Psychology
all-or-none principle
39. Memory; studied memorization of meaningless words
gate control theory
Hermann Ebbinghaus
placebo
Free association
40. One of the descriptive methods of research; it requires construction of a set of questions to administer to a group of participants
Psychotic
Survey
Intrinsic motivation
Model
41. In the sexual response cycle - engorgement of the blood vessels - particularly in the genital area - due to increased blood flow
phenotype
Vasocongestion
Concordance rate
menopause
42. 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)
Aristotle
Jean Piaget
Hermann Ebbinghaus
Naturalistic observation
43. Endocrine glands located above the kidney and secretes epinephrine and norepinephrine - which prepare the body for 'fight or flight'
experiment
evolutionary psychology
adrenal glands
Grasping reflex
44. Theory suggesting that there are two routes to attitude change: the central route - which focuses on thoughtful consideration of an argument for change - and the peripheral route - which focuses on less careful - more emotional - and even superficial
Cognitive theories
timbre
efferent neuron nerve
Elaboration Likelihood Model
45. Depth cues that are based on two eyes
binocular cues
developmental psychologist
frequency polygon
Phillip Zimbardo
46. Prejudice against the elderly and the resulting discrimination against them
Ageism
psychoanalyst
Standardization
Wernicke's area
47. Personality theorist; asserted that personality is largely determined by genes - used introversion/extroversion
Judith Langlois
Hans Eysenck
Standard score
Imaginary Audience
48. A type of design that contrasts groups of people who differ on some variable of interest to the researcher.
Ex Post Facto Design
Prototype
Non-rapid Eye Movement Sleep
Rooting reflex
49. Located in left temporal lobe; plays role in understanding language and making meaningful sentences
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
50. Personality categories in which broad collections of traits are loosely tied together and interrelated.
state-dependent learning
Types
flashbulb memories
Aristotle