Week 1: Psychology Introduction
Week 2/3: Biological psychology
Week4: Sensation
Week 5: Perception
Week 6/7: Consciousness, sleep and dreams
100

Who is usually marked as the "founding father" of modern psychology?

Wilhelm Wundt 


100

What is the difference between the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous system?

Sympathetic = activates body in heightened or threatening situations 

Parasympathetic = wants to reduce the sympathetic nervous systems activations. Brings body back to homeostasis

100

What is the difference between sensation and perception?

Sensation are automatic messages we receive from the senses (it is a non-negotiable element of the nervous system). Perceptions are how we make sense of the sensory information.

100

Touching a hot stove and moving your hand away is a type of processing

Bottom-up processing

100

When does most dreaming occur?

REM sleep

200

The study of the evolution of behaviour and mind, using principles of natural selection.

Evolutionary psychology

200

Afferent is to sensory as efferent is to __

Motor


200

What sense is associated with olfaction?

Sense of smell

200

What is a psychological response to vision?

Seeing colour! The reality of seeing a certain colour is a psychological experience. 

Colour helps us interpret the world. We use categories to do this.

200

Which level of consciousness is associated with automatic bodily functions like breathing and heart rate?

Non-conscious 

300

A historically significant perspective that emphasised the growth potential of healthy people.

Humanistic psychology

300

Which part of the endocrine system is under the influence of the hypothalamus and regulates growth and controls endocrine glands?

Pituitary gland

300

FREE POINTS

haha

300

Your ability to read a battered old sign that has some letters missing is a result of ___ processing.

Top down processing

300

What are some examples of an 'altered state of consciousness'

Sleeping, hypnosis, meditation
400

Which behaviourists studied how consequences shape behaviour?

John B. Watson & B. F. Skinner

400

Depolarised = more likely to fire an action potential

hyperpolarised = less/no chance of firing an action potential

True or false?

True 

Depolarising a neuron makes it more excitatory, whereas polarised neurons are more inhibitory.



400

Converting physical energy into a neural signal

Transduction process

400

When adding sugar to coffee, a person can perceive a change in sweetness when the amount of sugar is increased by 1 teaspoon (for example) 

Just noticeable difference

400

A benefit of hypnosis

- Used as a memory aid 

- Used to manage pain

- Used in research to get insights about cognitive processes

500

Is nature or nurture currently winning the debate? 

NEITHER - they are both just as important

500

Explain what a PET scan can help with (brain imaging technique)

PET scans can help show where certain chemical changes in the brain occur as someone performs a specific task. E.g., can show what area of the brain lights up when someone looks at a scary video.

500

A theory suggesting that the spinal cord can either let pain impulses travel upwards to the brain or block their progress

The gate theory of pain

500

What is an example of how perceptions differ between culture or experiences?

Interpretation of colour - we all have different categories of colour


500

Your heart rate drops too low and your body wakes you up because it thinks you are dying

Hypnic jerk

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