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Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Psychology: Clinical And Abnormal Psychology
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Subjects
:
gre
,
psychology
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. Sexual force
Conflict (psychoanalytic theory)
Monoamines (examples)
libido
Defense mechanism (+types)
2. Allows client to practice new behaviours and responses
Personal unconscious
Hans Eysenck
Role playing
Abnormal theory (Behavior theory)
3. Female elements of a man
Anima
Stress-inoculation training
Hans Eysenck
catharsis/abreaction
4. Reduces depressive symptoms - by taking opposite action of antimanics; depression appears to be from abnormally low levels of monoamines; increase production and transmission of various monoamines; - Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) - Monoamine oxid
Topographic model of mental life
Modeling
catharsis/abreaction
Antidepressants (+types)
5. Includes elements of cognitive - behavioural - and emotion theory; intertwined thoughts and feelings produce behavior
Rational-Emotive Theory
Anna Freud
Personalizing
Karen Horney
6. Individual theory
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)
Repression or denial
aggression
Alfred Adler
7. Aaron Beck
goal of therapy (Client-centered theory)
Cognitive Theory (originator)
criticism (Rational-Emotive Theory)
Carl Gustav Jung
8. Psychodynamic approach in which unconscious feelings do play a role - examination of a person'S lifestyle and choices (motivations - perceptions - goals - and resources)
criticism (individual theory)
therapy (individual theory)
libido
criticism (Behavior theory)
9. No use of diagnostic tools because Rogers believed client-centered therapy applied to any problem
criticism (Client-centered theory)
Dreams
Abnormal theory (Rational-Emotive Theory)
Systematic desensitization
10. Provides tools and experience that client can use to be more assertive
Assertiveness training
individual theory
Humanistic theory
abnormal theory (Gestalt Theory)
11. Freud; central force that must find a socially acceptable outlet
Thanatos
ruling-dominant type
therapy (Client-centered theory)
aggression
12. Talking therapy - deep questions relating to perception and meaning of existence
Stress-inoculation training
personality typology (psychoanalytic theory)
Free association
therapy (existential theory)
13. Choleric -high in activity but low in social contribution - dominant
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs)
therapy (Gestalt Theory)
abnormal theory (Client-centered theory)
ruling-dominant type
14. Like cognitive and behaviour theory - considered too sterile and mechanistic
Melanie Klein
Persona
Changes in Freud'S psychoanalytic theory
criticism (Rational-Emotive Theory)
15. Applies classical conditioning to relieve anxiety - repeatedly exposed to anxiety-producing stimulus so eventually the overexposure leads to lessened anxiety
Flooding or implosive therapy
abnormal theory (analytical theory)
Screen memory
abnormal theory (Psychopharmacology)
16. Uses social learning principles - exposes client to more adaptive behaviors
Modeling
Unconditional positive regard
therapy (Rational-Emotive Theory)
Anima
17. Emphasized culture and society over instinct; suggested neuroticism expressed as movement toward - against - and away from people
Karen Horney
Reaction formation
hypnosis
Pleasure principle
18. Freud; pathological behaviour - dreams - unconscious behaviour (e.g. hysterical or neurotic women) are symptoms of underlying - unresolved conflict - which are manifested when the ego does not find acceptable ways to express conflict
abnormal theory (analytical theory)
existential theory
psychic determinism
abnormal theory (individual theory)
19. Mistaking isolated incidents for the norm (e.g. 'no one will ever want to be with me')
Free association
Overgeneralization
libido
Hierarchy of needs
20. Victor Frankl
Anna Freud
Hans Eysenck
Antidepressants (+types)
existential theory (originator)
21. Fritz Perls - Max Wertheimer - Kurt Koffka
Psychopharmacology (goal of therapy)
Arbitrary inference
Gestalt Theory (originators)
therapy (Rational-Emotive Theory)
22. Pavlov'S classical counterconditioning principles to create new responses to stimuli
Rational-Emotive Theory
Aversion therapy
neobehaviouralism
Identification
23. Not allowing threatening material into awareness
Repression or denial
Changes in Freud'S view of layout of the mind
abnormal theory (existential theory)
goal of therapy (Rational-Emotive Theory)
24. Ritualistic activity to relieve anxiety about unconscious drives
behavior theory (originators)
Identification
Undoing
ego
25. Uses operant principle of negative reinforcement to increase anxiety - anxiety-reaction created where there was none; usually to treat addiction and fetishes
Self
analytical theory
Aversion therapy
Play therapy
26. Maladaptive cognitions lead to abnormal behaviour or disturbed affect; cognitive triad - types of maladaptive cognitions: arbitrary inference - overgeneralization - magnifying/minimizing - personalizing - dichotomous thinking
criticism (existential theory)
criticism (Behavior theory)
Abnormal theory (Cognitive Theory)
Will to meaning
27. Ego - id - superego
3 components of model of mental life
Role playing
Humanistic theory
Rational-Emotive Theory (originator)
28. Stress-inoculation training
criticism (Cognitive Theory)
Repression or denial
Donald Meichenbaum
Animus
29. Conscious elements were openly acknowledged forces and unconscious elements (drives and wishes) were many layers below consciousness - Freud'S greatest contribution to psychology
Topographic model of mental life
criticism (Cognitive Theory)
goal of therapy (existential theory)
analytical theory
30. Child clients; during play a child may convey emotions - situations - or disturbances conveyed might otherwise go unexpressed
Play therapy
Animus
Topographic model of mental life
Psychopharmacology
31. Imitating a central figure - such as a parent
Stress-inoculation training
goal of therapy (existential theory)
transference
Identification
32. Making too much or little of something (e.g. 'it was luck that I did well')
abnormal theory (individual theory)
Magnifying/minimizing
Systematic desensitization
Aversion therapy
33. Too mystical or spiritual
therapy (Psychopharmacology)
Cognitive Theory
Antabuse ®
criticism (analytical theory)
34. Goal is to increase sense of being and meaningfulness - to alleviate neurotic anxiety
Evidence-based treatment
Self
goal of therapy (existential theory)
Personal unconscious
35. Carl Gustav Jung - the psyche was directed toward life and awareness (rather than sex) - In each personal the psyche contains conscious and unconscious elements (personal and collective unconscious)
behavior theory (originators)
Screen memory
analytical theory
Changes in Freud'S view of layout of the mind
36. Unhealthy individuals are too much affected by inferior feelings to pursue the will to power - make excuses or have a 'yes -but' mentality - if they do pursue goals - these are likely to be self-serving and egotistical
abnormal theory (individual theory)
Gestalt Theory
Screen memory
Thanatos
37. Aim to affect neurotransmitters; commonly dopamine - serotonin - norepinephrine (monoamines)
therapy (Psychopharmacology)
Personalizing
Changes in Freud'S psychoanalytic theory
Sublimation
38. Leader of humanistic movement; hierarchy of needs
goal of therapy (analytical theory)
Abraham Maslow
Abnormal theory (Rational-Emotive Theory)
Psychodynamic theory
39. Client-centered therapist must maintain positivity regardless of choices - feelings or insights to facilitate a trusting and safe environment
Genuineness/congruence
Reaction formation
radical behavioralism
Unconditional positive regard
40. Class of neurotransmitter that dopamine - serotonin - and norepinephrine belongs to
Applied psychology
Monoamines (examples)
Empathy
hypnosis
41. The life instinct - including sex and love
Animus
Goal of therapy (psychoanalytic theory)
eros
abnormal theory (existential theory)
42. Skinner'S operant ideas that behaviour is related only to consequences
criticism (Cognitive Theory)
goal of therapy (analytical theory)
radical behavioralism
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs)
43. Ex. phenelzine (Nardil®)
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs)
abnormal theory (Gestalt Theory)
abnormal theory (analytical theory)
Undoing
44. Initially: an individual'S greatest conflict was that between the libido and the ego - Then: the true conflict is that between Eros and Thanatos ('The aim of all life is death')
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45. Safe outlets for unconscious material and wish-fulfillment - valuable for analysts; manifest content provides information about latent content
Dreams
Aversion therapy
Abnormal theory (Rational-Emotive Theory)
Antimanics
46. Psychopathology is a signal that something wrong in makeup of psyche - clues about how one could be more aware
abnormal theory (existential theory)
criticism (Rational-Emotive Theory)
abnormal theory (analytical theory)
existential theory (originator)
47. The death instinct - including self-destructive behavior
Rationalization
Flooding or implosive therapy
Thanatos
analytical theory
48. To provide relief from symptoms of psychopathology
Donald Meichenbaum
Repression or denial
Psychopharmacology (goal of therapy)
Anxiolytics
49. Analytical theory - Freud'S student - broke from Freud because Freud place too much emphasis on the libido
Rationalization
therapy (individual theory)
abnormal theory (psychoanalytic theory)
Carl Gustav Jung
50. Lessen the unconscious pressures on the individual by making as much of it conscious as possible - allow the ego to be a better mediator of forces
3 components of model of mental life
Goal of therapy (psychoanalytic theory)
Client-centered theory
existential theory