Sensation, Perception, and Motor Development
Learning and Conditioning
Learning and Motor Development
Language and Communication
Intelligence and Assessment
Personality, Motivation, and Developmental Theories
Environment and Context
100

This depth cue requires both eyes to calculate distance from slightly different retinal images.


What is binocular disparity?

100

Little Albert’s fear of white rats was learned through this type of conditioning.

What is classical conditioning?

100

Infants use prior probabilities and evidence to predict future events through this kind of learning.


What is rational learning?

100

Children assume that each object has only one label, a bias called this.


What is mutual exclusivity?

100

This refers to the steady rise in average IQ scores over generations.


What is the Flynn effect?

100

In Erikson’s theory, adolescence centers on this conflict.

What is identity versus role confusion?

100

A parent–teacher conference links two of a child's microsystems are part of this ecological level.


What is the mesosystem?

200

Infants perceive moving parts as one object when those parts move together, a cue known as this.

 What is common motion?

200

Giving a child a sticker for raising their hand is an example of this.

What is positive reinforcement?

200

A baby who drops toys repeatedly to test what happens is engaging in this kind of learning.


What is active learning?

200

Inferring word meaning from sentence structure shows this process.


What is syntactic bootstrapping?

200

The first modern intelligence test was created two psychologists and was known by this title. 

What is the Binet-Simon Intelligence Test? 

200

Infants develop basic trust when caregivers are consistent and this.


What is responsive?

200

A parent’s work policy that affects a child indirectly belongs to this level.

What is the exosystem?

300

A ball rapidly growing in size as it approaches the eye triggers blinking through this cue.

 What is optical expansion?

300

A parent who stops nagging once homework begins is using this kind of reinforcement.

What is negative reinforcement?

300

Recognizing that a toy’s shape stays the same even when viewed from a new angle illustrates this.


What is perceptual constancy?

300

Sharing understanding or attention with a caregiver is known as this.

What is intersubjectivity?

300

The most widely used intelligence test for children today is this one.

What is the WISC?

300

A child who avoids challenge to look smart has this kind of mindset.

What is an entity orientation?

300

Sameroff found that multiple combined risk factors create this cumulative effect.


What is cumulative environmental risk?

400

Recognizing an object as the same despite changes in angle or distance reflects this concept.

 What is perceptual constancy?

400

Adding chores after hitting a sibling represents this type of punishment.

What is positive punishment?

400

This depth cue lets infants infer distance from the relative size of objects.

What is relative size?

400

Saying “more juice” instead of “I want more juice” is an example of this stage of speech.


What is telegraphic speech?

400

IQ scores follow this type of statistical distribution.

What is a normal (bell-shaped) distribution?

400

A child who enjoys challenge and improvement shows this kind of mindset.


What is an incremental or mastery orientation?

400

When income inequality rises, IQ differences between groups usually do this.


What is increase (widen)?

500

A baby who tries to sit in a doll-sized chair demonstrates this kind of perceptual-motor error.


What is a scale error?

500

Taking away a toy to reduce misbehavior demonstrates this.

What is negative punishment?

500

When infants infer that an object continues behind a screen, they are demonstrating this.

What is object continuity (or object segregation)?

500

Calling all four-legged animals “doggie” illustrates this semantic error.

What is overextension?

500

IQ is designed to measure general cognitive ability in relation to this.


What is same age peers?

500

To foster mastery orientation, praise should emphasize this.


What is effort?

500

Across nations, lower-income children often score lower on IQ tests due to these disparities.


What are environmental and educational differences?

600

This research method assumes babies will look longer at unexpected or surprising events.

What is the violation-of-expectancy procedure?

600

When behaviors are only occasionally rewarded, they become resistant to extinction because of this schedule.


What is intermittent reinforcement?

600

When researchers show two displays side-by-side, this technique relies on babies’ visual preference.

What is the preferential-looking method?

600

Saying “I jumpted off you's little table" shows this rule-based mistake.


What is overregularization?

600

This type of intelligence involves solving new problems; its counterpart draws on stored knowledge.


What are fluid and crystallized intelligence?

600

Freud’s id operates on this principle and seeks immediate gratification.


What is the pleasure principle?

600

Early, intensive, high-quality child care was shown to have lifelong benefits in this famous study.


What is the Carolina Abecedarian Project?

700

When infants match a sound like /ba/ to a face making that sound, they are showing this ability.
 

What is intermodal perception?

700

A child who imitates a classmate praised for helping others is learning through this process.


What is vicarious reinforcement?

700

Infants who experience more “tummy time” may reach milestones, such as crawling, sooner due to this factor.


What is nurture (experience) influencing motor development?

700

Matching a speaker’s gaze to infer meaning relies on these cues.


What are pragmatic cues?

700

The general factor that explains correlations among many mental tests is called this.


What is g (general intelligence)?

700

Psychoanalytic theory’s key contribution was focusing on these unseen influences.


What are unconscious processes and early experiences?

700

Shared environmental influence on IQ is strongest at this life stage.


What is childhood?

800

Infants’ ability to distinguish non-native speech sounds declines by the end of the first year in a process called this.


What is perceptual narrowing?

800

Bandura’s principle that environment, behavior, and personal factors influence each other is known as this.

What is reciprocal determinism?

800

The ability to integrate sensory and motor information for coordinated movement is part of this developmental domain.

What is motor development?

800

Finding word boundaries in fluent speech relies on infants tracking this pattern.

What are transitional probabilities?

800

This theory arranges abilities into three levels: g, broad abilities, and narrow skills.

What is Carroll’s three-stratum theory?

800

Interpreting an accidental bump as intentional shows this bias.

What is hostile attributional bias?

800

Differences between siblings are explained largely by this kind of environmental influence.


What is nonshared environment?

900

Baillargeon’s rotating-screen experiment showed that infants understand this property of objects earlier than Piaget thought.


What is object permanence (or solidity)?

900

In the Bobo doll experiment, children learned aggressive behavior through this process.

What is observational learning?

900

The drawbridge experiment helped overturn this aspect of Piaget’s stage theory.


What is the timing of object permanence?

900

Humans’ ability to create infinite new sentences from limited rules shows that language is this kind of system.


What is generative?

900

Sternberg’s triarchic theory includes analytical, creative, and this third form of intelligence.


What is practical intelligence?

900

Skinner believed that consistent reinforcement and consequences shape this.


What is behavior?

900

On the WISC, this subtest measures visual–spatial reasoning.

What is Block Design?

1000

The visual cliff experiment was designed to test this kind of perception.

What is depth perception?

1000

According to Skinner, parents should reduce unwanted behavior by consistently doing this.


What is reinforcing desired behavior and using consistent consequences?

1000

Infants use visual feedback to control reaching accuracy through this perceptual–motor loop.

What is visually guided reaching?

1000

The linguist who proposed an innate universal grammar was this person.

Who is Noam Chomsky?

1000

According to Gardner, linguistic, spatial, and musical skills are examples of these.

What are multiple intelligences?

1000

Erikson’s first stage, trust vs. mistrust, occurs during this period.


What is infancy?

1000

Temporarily holding and manipulating information in mind is a function of this.

What is working memory?

1100

Infants begin to become sensitive to these kind of cues around 6 or 7 months of age, which allow them to see depth even with just one eye. 

What are monocular depth cues? 

1100

This perceptual ability allows a child to understand that two objects are at difference distances even though they appear to be the same size. 

What is perceptual constancy?

1100

Understanding that behavior of others is purposive and goal-directed is an aspect of this type of knowledge. 

What is social knowledge?

1100

The best time to expose a child to a second language is during this developmental window.


What is early childhood?

1100

Children from low-SES families show larger summer learning declines due to less of this.

What is access to enrichment and educational opportunities?

1100

The ability of inhibit actions, follow rules, and avoid impulsive reactions is known as this. 

What is self-discipline? 
1100

Understanding and reasoning with language and word meanings demonstrates this ability.


What is verbal comprehension?

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