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Psychology Semester 2 Review for Final

AB
psychologythe scientific study of mental processes and behavior
theorya general framework for scientific study; smaller aspects can be tested
research psychologistspsychologists who study the origin, cause, or results of certain behaviors
applied psychologistspsychologists who make direct use of the findings of research psychologists; they deal directly with clients
introspectionthe process of looking into yourself and describing what is there
sociocultural approachan approach that views behavior as strongly influenced by the rules and expectations of specific social groups or cultures
biopsychological approachan approach that views behavior as strongly influenced by physiological functions
behavioral approachan approach that views behavior as the product of learning and associations
psychoanalysisa system that views the individual as the product of unconscious forces
humanistic approachan approach that views people as basically good and capable of helping themselves
cognitive approachan approach that emphasizes how humans use mental processes to handle problems or develop certain personality characteristics
eclecticismthe process of making your own system by borrowing from two or more other systems
placeboa "medicine" that has no active ingredients and works by the power of suggestion
closed-ended questionsquestions a person must answer by choosing from a limited, predetermined set of responses
hypothesisa statement of the results that the experimenter expects
subjectspeople or animals on whom a study is conducted
variablesfactors that change in an experiment
independent variablethe factor that the experimenter manipulated or changes in a study
dependent variablethe factor in a study that changes or varies as a result of changes in the independent variable
field studyresearch that takes place outside the laboratory
experimental groupthe group on which the critical part of the experiment is performed
control groupthe group that does not participate in the critical part of the experiment
surveya method of research that involves asking subjects questions about their feelings, opinions, or behavior patterns
samplea group that represents a larger group
representative samplea group that truly reflects a selected characteristic of a larger population
interviewa research method that involves studying people face to face and asking questions
case study methodresearch that collects lengthy, detailed information about a person's background, usually for psychological treatment
psychological testsobjective methods for observation and measurement of subjects in various areas such as intelligence
cross-sectional methoda method of research that looks at different age groups at the same time in order to understand changes that occur during the life span
longitudinal methoda method of research that studies the same group of people over an extended period of time
objectivebased on facts and not influenced by personal beliefs or feelings
American Psychological AssociationA.P.A.
stereotypea fixed set of beliefs about a group that is generalized to all or most group members
biasa prejudice or leaning that may aim to influence judgements in an unfair manner; slant; prejudice
double-blind studya study during which neither participants nor researchers know to which group any subject belongs
brainThe most demanding organ of the body. It uses 20% of all our oxygen, eats up most of the sugar we take in, and operates on 20 watts of electrical power.
adrenalineChemical that prepares the body for emergency activity by increasing blood pressure, breathing rate, and energy level.
fissureA depression marking off an area of the cerebral cortex.
hemisphere1. One half of the cerebral cortex. 2. Each half controls the opposite side of the body.
occipital lobeDivision of the cerebral cortex that interprets visual information
lobesThe major divisions of the cerebral cortex.
frontal lobeDivision of the cerebral cortex that contains the motor strip, prefrontal area, and frontal association area.
parietal lobeDivision of the cerebral cortex that contains the sensory strip.
motor stripThe band running down the side of the frontal lobe that controls all bodily movements (called motor functions).
corpus callosumA large bundle of nerve fibers that transfer information from one half of the cerebral cortex to the other.
temporal lobeDivision of the cerebral cortex responsible for hearing and some speech functions.
prefrontal areaPart of the frontal lobe that enables us to re-experience personal past events.
frontal association area1. Part of the frontal lobe that engages in elaborate associations or mental connections. 2. It plays an important part in integrating personality and in forming complex thoughts.
lower brain1. Part of the brain common to animals and humans. 2. Regulates basic functions such as breathing.
thalamus1. Part of the lower brain. 2. Functions primarily as a central relay station for incoming and outgoing messages from the body to the brain and the brain to the body.
hypothalamus1. Part of the lower brain. 2. Regulates basic needs (hunger, thirst) and emotions.
limbic systemLower brain area whose structures are involved in basic emotions and memory.
amygdalaLimbic system structure involved in emotion, especially aggression.
hippocampusLimbic system structure involved in forming memories.
cerebral cortex1. The outermost layer of the brain. 2. Controls high-level mental processes such as thought.
reticular activating system (RAS)1. The alertness control center of the brain. 2. Regulates the activity level of the body.
neuron1. A nerve cell. 2. Transmits electrical and chemical information (via neurotransmitters) throughout the body.
dendritesParts of neurons that receive information from the axons of other neurons.
axonThe part of the neuron that carries messages away from the cell to the dendrites on another neuron.
synapseThe junction point of two or more neurons; a connection is made by neurotransmitters.
vesiclesBubblelike containers of neurotransmitters, located at the ends of axons.
neurotransmittersChemicals in the endings of neurons that send information across synapses.
acetylcholineNeurotransmitter that regulates basic bodily processes such as movement.
dopamineNeurotransmitter involved in the control of bodily movements.
endorphinsNeurotransmitters that relieve pain and increase our sense of well-being.
central nervous systemThe brain and spinal cord.
spinal cordPart of the body that functions as an automatic "brain" in its own right and as a relay station for impulses to and from the higher brain.
reflexAn automatic behavior of the body involving movement that is activated through the spinal cord without use of the higher brain.
peripheral nervous systemAll the nerves outside the brain and spinal cord.
somatic nervous systemA division of the peripheral nervous system containing sensory and motor nerves.
autonomic nervous system1. The automatic control system of the body. 2. Regulates breathing, heart rate, digestion, and so on.
sympathetic nervous systemA division of the autonomic nervous system that energizes and prepares for emergencies.
parasympathetic nervous system1. A division of the autonomic nervous system that conserves bodily activity. 2. Works in opposition to the sympathetic system to calm us down.
hormonesChemical regulators that control bodily processes such as emotional responses and growth.
glandsUnits of the body that contain the hormones.
endocrine systemSystem that includes all the glands and their chemical messages taken together.
pituitary glandThe master gland; it activates other glands and controls the growth hormone.
growth hormone1. The hormone that regulates the growth process. 2. It is controlled by the pituitary gland.
thyroid glandThe gland that controls and regulates the speed of bodily processes, call metabolism
metabolismThe speed at which the body operates or the speed at which it uses up energy.
cerebellum1. Part of the lower brain. 2. Coordinates and organizes bodily movements for balance and accuracy.
absolute thresholdthe level of sensory stimulation necessary for sensation to occur
binocular disparityThe difference between the image provided by each eye
sensationthe process of receiving information from the environment
perceptionthe process of assembling and organizing sensory information to make it meaningful
white lightlight as it originates from the sun or a bulb before it is broken into different frequencies
corneathe clear outer covering of the eye, behind which is a fluid
irisa colored circular muscle that opens and closes, forming larger and smaller circles to control the amount of light getting into the eye
lensthe part of the eye that focuses an image on the retina
pupilthe opening in the eye
retinathe back of the eye, which contains millions of receptors for light
blind spotthe portion of the retina through which the optic nerve exits and where there are no receptors for light waves
roda visual receptor most sensitive to the violet-purple wave-lengths; very sensitive for night vision; "sees" only black and white
conea visual receptor that responds during daylight; "sees" color
color blindnessinability to perceive certain colors, such as red and green
afterimageimage that remains after stimulation of the retina has ended. Caused by the firing of the cones not used after viewing something steadily in order to bring the visual system back in balance.
auditionthe sense of hearing
pitchhow high or low a sound is
timbrethe complexity of a sound
intensityhow loud a sound is
decibelsa measure of how loud a sound is (its intensity)
eardruma piece of skin stretched over the entrance to the ear; vibrates to sound
cochleaa snail-shaped part of the ear, filled with fluid and small hairs that vibrate to incoming sound
hair cellsreceptor cells for hearing found in the cochlea
ciliahairlike extensions on cells found in the cochlea and the nasal cavity
auditory nervebundle of nerves carrying sound to the brain
cutaneous receptorsnerve receptors in the skin that respond to pressure, temperature, or pain
olfactionthe sense of smell
olfactory bulbsunits that receive odor molecules and communicate their nature to the brain
pheromonesodor chemicals that communicate a message
taste receptorschemical receptors on the tongue that decode molecules of food or drink to identify them
size constancythe ability to retain the size of an object regardless of where it is located
color constancythe ability to perceive an object as the same color regardless of the environment
brightness constancythe ability to keep an object's brightness constant as the object as having the same shape regardless of the angle at which it is seen
space constancythe ability to keep objects in the environment steady by perceiving either ourselves or outside objects as moving
depth perceptionthe ability to see the relation of objects in space
visual cliffan apparatus used to demonstrate depth perception
retinal disparitythe difference between the images provided by the two retinas. When the images are brought together in the brain they provide a sense of depth
texture gradienthow rough or smooth objects appear; used in depth perception
gestaltan organized whole, shape, or form
similaritya perceptual cue that involves grouping like things together
proximitya perceptual cue that involves grouping together things that are near one another
closurethe process of filling in the missing details of what is viewed
illusionsinaccurate perceptions
Müller-Lyer Illusionillusion in which one line in a picture with two equal-length lines seems longer
reversible figureillusion in which the same object is seen as two alternating figures-first one, then the other
subliminal perceptionStimulation presented below the level of consciousness
adaptationthe gradual loss of attention to unneeded or unwanted sensory information
learning curvea gradual upward slope representing increased retention of material as the result of learning
eidetic imageryan iconic memory lasting a minute or so that keeps images "in front of" the viewer so objeccts can be counted or analyzed; also called photographic memory
transfer of traininglearning process in which learning is carried over from one task to another based on similarities between the tasks
positive transfertransfer of learning that results from similarities between two tasks
information processingthe methods by which we take in, analyze, store, and retrieve material
schemaan organized and systematic approach to answering questions or solving problems
elaborationthe process of attaching a maximum number of associations to an item to be learned so that it can be retrieved more easily
mnemonic devicesunusual associations made to aid memory
principle learninga method of learning in which an overall view of the material to be learned is developed so that the material is better organized
forgettingan increase in errors in bringing material back from memory
overlearninglearning something beyond one perfect recitation so that the forgetting curve will have no effect; the development of perfect retention
forgetting curvegraphic representation of the rate and amount of forgetting that occurs
recallthe ability to bring back and integrate many specific learned details
recognitionthe ability to pick the correct object or event from a list of choices
interference theorythe idea that we forget because new and old material conflict with one another
amnesiathe blocking of older memories and/or the loss of new ones
attentionalert focusing on material
short-term memorymemory system that retains information for a few seconds to a few minutes
long-term memorymemory system that retains informtion for hours, days, weeks, months, or decades
consolidationprocess by which a memory solidifies over time, eventually becoming permanent
sensory memory systemsystem that includes direct receivers of information from the environment
iconic memorya very brief visual memory that can be sent to the short-term memory
accoustic memorya very brief sound memory that can be sent to the short-term memory
state-dependent learninglearning that occurs in one chemical state and is best reproduced when the same state occurs again


Teacher
Belleville High School
Belleville, MI

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