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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 person's experiences in the environment
Gender
Cognitive Psychology
nurture
industrial/organizational psychologist
2. 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.
descriptive statistics
Gender Identity
Anxiety
Visual cortex
3. Defense mechanism by which anxiety-provoking thoughts and feelings are forced to the unconscious.
Latency Stage
Repression
transfer appropriate processing
schema
4. 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
midbrain
Naturalistic observation
cerebellum
Hermann Ebbinghaus
5. In Freud's theory - the technique of providing a context - meaning - or cause for a specific idea - feeling - or set of behaviors; the process of tying a set of behaviors to its unconscious determinant.
Moro reflex
rods
Gender Identity
Interpretation
6. Noradrenaline; chemical which is excitatory - similar to adrenaline - and affects arousal and memory; raises blood pressure by causing blood vessels to become constricted - but also carried by bloodstream to the anterior pituitary which relaxes ACTH
Drive theory (aka - drive-reduction theory)
Overjustification effect
norepinephrine
Latent Learning
7. In psychology - the techniques used to discover knowledge about human behavior and mental processes
Learning
scientific method
Self-serving Bias
Dream
8. The realization of infants that objects continue to exist even when they are out of sight
Object permanence
Anna Freud
John Garcia
Operant Conditioning
9. Selective reinforcement of behaviors that gradually approach the desired response
Selye's General Adaptation Syndrome
Shaping
anorexia nervosa
Morality
10. An eating disorder characterized by repeated episodes of binge eating (and a fear of not being able to stop eating) followed by purging
standard deviation
Robert Zajonc
Gender Schema Theory
Bulimia Nervosa
11. We determine our emotion based on our physiological arousal - then label that emotion according to our explanation for that arousal
pineal gland
Schachter-Singer theory of emotion
B.F. Skinner
midbrain
12. Pioneer in observational learning (AKA social learning) - stated that people profit from the mistakes/successes of others; Studies: Bobo Dolls-adults demonstrated 'appropriate' play with dolls - children mimicked play
Albert Bandura
top-down processing
Debriefing
Health psychology
13. Studies psychological development across the lifespan
developmental psychologist
Karen Horney
selection studies
range
14. Four distinct stages of sleep during which no rapid eye movements occur.
Non-rapid Eye Movement Sleep
long-term potentiation
optic nerve
Functional fixedness
15. A donut ring-shaped of loosely connected structures located in the forebrain between the central core and cerebral hemispheres; consists of: septum - cingulate gyrus - endowments - hypothalamus - and to campus - and amygdala; associated with emotions
insulin
audition
humanistic psychology
limbic system
16. A cognitive distortion experienced by adolescents - in which they see themselves as always 'on stage' with an audience watching
lens
Imaginary Audience
neural impulse
sensory memory
17. Vermont railroad worker who survived a severe brain injury that changed his personality and behavior; his accident gave information on the brain and which parts are involved with emotional reasoning
Phineas Gage
Language
Cross-sectional Studies
Unconditioned Stimulus
18. The tendency to attribute the behavior of others to dispositional causes but to attribute one's own behavior to situational causes.
Secondary Sex Characteristics
Actor-observer Effect
empiricism
Phineas Gage
19. Framework of basic ideas about people - objects and events based on past experience in long-term memory
schema
recessive gene
nurture
Deviation IQ
20. In problem solving - the process of narrowing down choices and alternatives to arrive at a suitable answer.
retina
Psychoneuroimmunology
Robert Rosenthal
Convergent thinking
21. Early-emerging and long-lasting individual differences in disposition and in the intensity and especially the quality of emotional reactions
Negative Reinforcement
Temperament
Hobson & McCarley
Semantics
22. Learned knowledge and skills such as vocabulary - which tends to increase with age
monocular cues
photoreceptors
crystallized intelligence
Law of Effect
23. Sleep stage when the eyes move about - during which vivid dreams occur; brain very active but skeletal muscles paralyzed
REM (rapid eye movement) sleep
Aversive counterconditioning
measure of central tendency
Self-actualization
24. Established an intelligence test especially for adults (WAIS); also WISC and WPPSI
David Weschler
Stress
Fundamental Attribution Error
just noticeable difference (JND)
25. The number of items a person can reproduce from short-term memory - usually consisting of one or two chunks
Conditioning
Hallucinogens (AKA psychedelic drugs)
memory span
Leon Festinger
26. Learning; Positive Psychology; learned helplessness theory of depression; Studies: Dogs demonstrating learned helplessness
psychobiology
neural plasticity
Martin Seligman
Repression
27. Defense mechanism by which people attribute their own undesirable traits to others.
Concrete operational stage
natural selection
Theory of mind
Projection
28. In humanistic theory - the final level of psychological development - in which one strives to realize one's uniquely human potential-to achieve everything one is capable of achieving
Self-actualization
dualism
Tolerance
school psychologist
29. In Jung's theory - the emotionally charged ideas and images that are rich in meaning and symbolism and exist within the collective unconscious.
long-term memory
Archetypes
Formal operational stage
Mary Ainsworth
30. Type of schizophrenia characterized by severely disturbed thought processes - frequent incoherence - disorganized behavior - and inappropriate affect.
Divergent thinking
Aversive counterconditioning
thalamus
Disorganized type of schizophrenia
31. 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.
Cognitive theories
Deviation IQ
Erik Erikson
Color Blindness
32. Performs initial encoding; provides brief storage; also called sensory register
sensory memory
Non-rapid Eye Movement Sleep
adaptation
Systematic desensitization
33. Conscious experience of emnotion results from one's awareness of physiological arousal
James-Lange theory of emotion
William James
statistics
difference threshold
34. 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
motivated forgetting
Temperament
response bias
35. A type of design that contrasts groups of people who differ on some variable of interest to the researcher
variable
Monochromats
Negative Reinforcement
ex post facto study
36. Intelligence - comparative; Yerkes-Dodson law: level of arousal as related to performance
Zygote
Robert Yerkes
Reliability
encoding specificity principle
37. Three-stage process which describes the body's reaction to stress: 1) alarm reaction - 2) resistance - 3) exahaustion
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38. 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
Reaction Formation
Elizabeth Loftus
observer bias
Psychophysics
39. The space between two neurons where neurotransmitters are secreted by terminal buttons and received by dendrites
aversive conditioning
Abraham Maslow
Displacement
synapse
40. Production of new brain cells; November 1988: cancer patients proved that new neurons grew until the end of life
neurogenesis
Group Polarization
pancreas
cerebellum
41. Rapid voluntary movements of the eyes.
Ivan Pavlov
Trichromats
Saccades
Observational Learning Theory
42. The biologically based categories of male and female
Social Psychology
Sex
Social Influence
Shaping
43. State of physiological imbalance usually accompanied by arousal
Walter B. Cannon
nervous system
Need
cohort effect
44. A chart or array of scores - usually arranged from highest to lowest - showing the number of instances for each score
Psychoanalysis
fluid intelligence
double-blind procedure
frequency distribution
45. A person who overuses and relies on drugs to deal with everyday life
vestibular sense
Substance Abuser
Normal curve
Subgoal analysis
46. 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 -
Stress
Experimental design
Self-actualization
replication
47. Dividing the chromosomes into smaller fragments that can be characterized and ordered so that the fragments reflect their respective locations on specific chromosomes
dependent variable
Developmental Psychology
genetic mapping
Psycholinguistics
48. Focuses on how effective teaching and learning take place
binocular cues
educational psychologist
Working through
psychiatrist
49. Inability to understand or use language
Depressive disorders
Sensorimotor stage
aphasia
Carl Jung
50. A condition or characteristic of a situation or a person that is subject to change (it varies) within or across situations or individuals
Reasoning
Anal Stage
Descriptive Studies
variable