Sensation versus Perception
Learning
thinking and intelligence
Memory
Miscellaneous
100

The smallest amount of stimulus that can be detected 50 % of the time.  

What does the term absolute threshold refer to?

100

Who proposed the social learning theory? 

Albert Bandura. 

100

this problem-solving method is a step-by-step problem-solving formula that provides a step by step instructions.

What is an algorithm?

100

prefrontal cortex, amygdala, hippocampus, cerebellum. 

Which part of the brain is involved in memory?

100

Pain that signals some type of tissue damage 

what is inflammatory pain

200

What are the 5 senses?

Audition(hearing), Olfaction(smell), Gustation(taste), Somatosensation(touch), and Vision.

200

In classical conditioning, when does the stimulus occur? 

before the response. 

200

These 2 ways of thinking are described as
"thinking outside the box" and the ability to provide a well-established or correct answer to a solution or problem.

What is divergent and convergent thinking?

200

The loss of long-term memory that occurs as a result of disease, physical trauma, or psychological trauma.

What is Amnesia?

200

Short-term memory storage lasts 15 to 30 seconds.

How long does short-term memory last?

300

Which two stimuli occur in the form of waves? 

Visual and auditory

300

who conducted the famous taste aversion study with rats. 

Garcia and Koelling. 

300

What is the decision bias that focuses on information that confirms existing beliefs 

What is hindsight bias? 

300

 Encode, store, and retrieve information over different periods of time.

How does memory function?

300

the processes associated with perception, knowledge, problem solving, judgment, language, and memory.

What is cognitive thinking? 

400

cellphone brightness does not change, but its ability to be detected as a change in illumination varies between two contexts.

What's an example of Weber's law applied to the visual and auditory senses?

400

What occurs when an organism makes a connection between a stimulus and an event that occurs together in the environment? 

Associative learning 

400

 

Charles Spearman, a British Psychologist, believed that "intelligence consisted of being measured and compared among individuals is called...

What is the "G" factor or General Factor?

400

Semantic, Visual, and Acoustic

What are the 3 types of encoding?

400

According to this idea, your genetic potential is a fixed quantity, but whether you reach your full intellectual potential is dependent upon the environmental stimulation you experience, especially in childhood.

What is the idea of Range of Reaction?

500

This field of psychology refers to the form or pattern.

What is Gestalt psychology?

500

This device helps receive incoming sound information and directly stimulates the auditory nerve to transmit information to the brain.

Cochlear implants help?

500

According to Raymond Cattell, these theories are divided into two components.

What are the components, and how do they work?

What is Crystallized intelligence and

Fluid intelligence.

Fluid Intelligence- the ability to see complex relationships and solve problems.

Crystalized Intelligence - acquired knowledge and the ability to retrieve it.

500

a record of an atypical and unusual event that has a very strong emotional association. 

What is flash bulb memory?

500

IQ testing is most evident in?

educational or clinical settings.

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