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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. Inability to understand or use language
Body Language
hypnosis
aphasia
Gestalt psychology
2. A number that expresses the degree and direction of the relationship between 2 variables - ranging from -1 to +1
correlation coefficient
dendrites
Francis Galton
receptor site
3. The field of psychology concerned with the assessment - treatment - and prevention of maladaptive behavior.
Latent Learning
Abnormal psychology
Psycholinguistics
psychometrician
4. Perception; identified just-noticeable-difference (JND) that eventually becomes Weber's law
hypnosis
dopamine
David Weschler
Ernst Weber
5. 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
Critical Period
Howard Gardner
rehearsal
experiment
6. Theory that holds that an observer's perception depends not only on the intensity of a stimulus but also on the observer's motivation - the criteria he or she sets for determining that a signal is present - and on the background noise.
Signal Detection Theory
Behavior therapy
statistics
crystallized intelligence
7. The realization of infants that objects continue to exist even when they are out of sight
Object permanence
Attributions
Primary Reinforcer
ethics
8. The study of language - including speech sounds - meaning - and grammar.
Group Polarization
cohort effect
Opponent-process theory
Linguistics
9. A generalized feeling of fear and apprehension that may be related to a particular situation or object and is often accompanied by increased physiological arousal.
Developmental Psychology
Observational Learning Theory
Size constancy
Anxiety
10. 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
median
positive psychology
retrograde amnesia
11. Subfield concerned with the use of psychological ideas and principles to enhance health - prevent illness - diagnose and treat disease - and improve rehabilitation
Health psychology
serotonin
Teratogen
Cognitive theories
12. The period during which the reproductive system matures; it begins with an increase in the production of sex hormones - which signals the end of childhood
set point
Dissociative identity disorder
anterograde amnesia
Puberty
13. A research method that focuses on a specific group of individuals at different ages to examine changes that have occurred over time
aversive conditioning
Longitudinal Study
Insight therapy
Assessment
14. One of the descriptive methods of research; it requires construction of a set of questions to administer to a group of participants
Social phobia
Survey
Collective Unconscious
Herman von Helmholtz
15. A conceptual framework that organizes information and allows a person to make sense of the world
schema
Actor-observer Effect
Fetus
recency effect
16. The process of dividing the world into 'in' groups and 'out' groups.
Discrimination
Social Categorization
Ideal Self
Shaping
17. In Piaget's view - a specific mental structure; an organized way of interacting with the environment and experiencing it- a generalization a child makes based on comparable occurences of various actins - usally physical - motor actions
set point
Schema
brainstem
Spontaneous Recovery
18. The law that the neuron either fires at 100% or not at all
lens
temporal lobes
all-or-none principle
Object permanence
19. Theorist who both aided in the development of the trichromatic theory of color perception and Place theory of pitch perception.
Conservation
Fulfillment
Herman von Helmholtz
Extinction (operant conditioning)
20. Studies as identical and rhetorical twins to determine relative influence of heredity and environment on human behavior
twin studies
Dependence
William Dement
population
21. Conformity; showed that social pressure can make a person say something that is obviously incorrect ; in a famous study in which participants were shown cards with lines of different lengths and were asked to say which line matched the line on the fi
Solomon Asch
behavioral genetics
forebrain
Interpretation
22. The process of growth and the realization of individual potential; in the humanistic view - a final level of psychological development in which a person attempts to minimize ill health - be fully functioning - have a superior perception of reality -
Self-actualization
neuron
Demand characteristics
Embryo
23. 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).
lens
Genital Stage
Aggression
Hermann Ebbinghaus
24. Emotional intelligence
Adolescence
Abnormal Behavior
Daniel Goleman
Hans Eysenck
25. Loss of memory of events and experiences that preceded an amnesia-causing event
semantic memory
Cognitive Psychology
retrograde amnesia
limbic system
26. Shows brain activity at higher reolution than PET scan when changes in oxygen concentration in neurons alters its magnetic qualities
Aristotle
functional MRI (fMRI)
Trait
Experimental design
27. Behaviorism; Law of Effect-relationship between behavior and consequence
authoritarian parenting
ACTH (arenocorticotropic hormone)
William James
Edward Thorndike
28. 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
Wolpe
Avoidance-avoidance conflict
Drive theory (aka - drive-reduction theory)
Anxiety
29. Ethology (animal behavior); studied imprinting and critical periods in geese
Konrad Lorenz
Denial
Dream analysis
Schema
30. Anxiety disorder characterized by irrational and persistent fear of a particular object or situation - along with a compelling desire to avoid it.
fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)
Specific phobia
Attitudes
Self-efficacy
31. Process of changing from a totally self-oriented point of view to one tha recognizes other people's feelings - ideas - and viewpoints
Decentration
Konrad Lorenz
Unconditioned Stimulus
Groupthink
32. The characteristic of requiring higher and higher doses of a drug to produce the same effect.
Tolerance
semantic memory
shaping
Behavior therapy
33. The spread between the highest and the lowest scores in a distribution
acetylcholine (ACh)
glial cells
vestibular sense
range
34. An operant conditioning procedure in which a person is physically removed from sources of reinforcement to decrease the occurrence of undesired behaviors.
acetylcholine (ACh)
Time-out
David Rosenhan
Symptom substitution
35. In Freud's theory - the source of a person's instinctual energy - which works mainly on the pleasure principle.
correlation coefficient
Stimulus Generalization
Id
Ernst Weber
36. A research approach that follows a group of people over time to determine change or stability in behavior.
midbrain
debriefing
Longitudinal Study
Skinner Box
37. Piaget's thrid stage of cognitive development (lasting from approximately age 6 or 7 to age 11 or 12) - during which the child develops the ability to understand constant factors in the environment - rules - and higher-order symbolic systems
observer bias
Fixed-ratio Schedule
Selye's General Adaptation Syndrome
Concrete operational stage
38. Learning; Positive Psychology; learned helplessness theory of depression; Studies: Dogs demonstrating learned helplessness
Repression
Martin Seligman
Egocentrism
Classical Conditioning
39. People who cannot perceive any color - usually because their retinas lack cones.
Paranoid type of schizophrenia
Group
Monochromats
Extinction (operant conditioning)
40. The entire spectrum of waves initiated by the movement of charged particles.
forensic psychologist
Client-centered therapy
Group Polarization
Electromagnetic Radiation
41. Primary motor cortex; areas of the three boat cortex for response messages from the brain to the muscles and glands
Extrinsic motivation
response bias
motor projection areas
Delusions
42. Any behavior intended to harm another person or thing.
Primary Punisher
Hermann Rorschach
heritability
Aggression
43. Assessing and choosing among alternatives.
audition
Decision making
psychoanalytic
encoding specificity principle
44. Memory a person is not aware of possessing
range
implicit memory
Defense Mechanism
descriptive statistics
45. Automatic behavior that occurs involuntarily in response to a stimulus and without prior learning and usually shows little variability from instance to instance
frontal lobes
Reflex
audition
Vasocongestion
46. Relatively permanent change in an organism that occurs as a result of experiences in the environment
receptor site
Learning
Consciousness
medulla (also medulla oblongata)
47. The light-sensitive cells in the retina- the rods and cones.
Photoreceptors
semantic memory
Psychotic
Dissociative amnesia
48. Part of the brain which controls living functions such as breathing - heart rate - blood pressure - body temperature
medulla (also medulla oblongata)
decay
scientific method
Phineas Gage
49. In psychoanalysis - an unwillingness to cooperate - which a patient signals by showing a reluctance to provide the therapist with information or to help the therapist understand or interpret a situation.
dominant genes
graded potential
Alfred Adler
Resistance
50. Change in behavior that occurs when people believe they are in the presence of other people.
Social Facilitation
Sensorimotor stage
Imaginary Audience
B.F. Skinner