| A | B |
| Does the experiment provide the same results every time it is conducted | reliability |
| Autistic individuals do not have this. | What is theory of mind |
| Affects movement, attention, memory, learning, emotion. Plays a role in both schizophrenia and Parkinson’s disease | Dopamine |
| Nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features in the scene, such as shape, angle etc. | feature detectors |
| Describes the strength of a relationship and cannot prove causation | correlational method |
| Published the first intelligence test used with Parisian children | Alfred Binet |
| His theory focused on the Structure of the mind and Internal thought processes. He used a method called Introspection to test his theory | Wilhelm Wundt |
| When the caregiver is present the child clings to them and do not explore their environments | insecure attachment |
| We learn to associate two stimuli and thus learn to anticipate events | classical conditioning |
| Pavlov’s dogs began salivating to similar tones once conditioned to the CS | generalization |
| Increases in this decreases neural activity | GABA |
| The fatty tissue that wraps around the axon and speeds the electrical charge | myelin sheath |
| “The whole is the sum of its parts” | gestalt psychology |
| When we recall best the last and the items on a list | serial position effect |
| Once someone feels stupid and believes that they are incompetent that belief often persists and can have damaging consequences | Belief Perseverance |
| You get caught lying and your palms begin to sweat as you experience guilt | Cannon-Bard theory |
| Any encoding that requires attention and conscious effort | effortable processing |
| We are more likely to buy a sweater that is marked down from 150.00 to 100.00 than the exact sweater priced 100.00 | framing |
| “We come pre-wired to learn language” | Said by Chomsky |
| The part of the brain that receives information from all the senses and routes it to higher brain regions | thalamus |