Unit 1
Unit 2
Unit 3
Unit 5
Unit 7
100

Define psychology and trace its historical development

Psychology’s historical development and current activities lead us to define the field as the science of behavior and mental processes

100

Define what the autonomic nervous system does

Controls automatic bodily functions

100

Define sensation and perception

Sensation is the experience of a stimuli and perception is adding meaning to the stimuli

100

Explain the difference between implicit and explicit memory

Explicit memory involves conscious remembering of prior episodes, often by means of intentional retrieval of those episodes, whereas implicit memory involves influences of prior episodes on current behavior without intentional retrieval, and sometimes without conscious remembering of those prior episodes

100

Explain Maslow’s hierarchy of needs

In order for a person to move up the hierarchy of needs they need to satisfy the level of needs that they are currently at
200

What did Dorothea Dix do 

Asylum reforms 

200

What is the difference between sympathetic and parasympathetic 

sympathetic automatically raises your heart rate, and parasympathetic automatically lowers your heart rate

200

What are the effects of sensory restriction research  

Indicates that there is a critical period for some aspects of sensory and perceptual development

200

Explain the relationship between thought and language

 How an individual thinks is directly correlated to their language. Thinking is a cognitive process that allows an individual to make connections and develop meaning for the world around them

200

What is motivation

The reason or reasons one has for acting or behaving in a particular way

300

Who was the father of psychology 

William James 

300

What is a sensory neuron

From sensory organs to brain and spinal cord


300

Explain sensory adaptation 

Getting used to the level of stimuli you are experiencing

300

What is the barnum effect 

The Barnum effect occurs when people accept vague or general descriptions of themselves, which is common when reading horoscopes

300

Explain homeostasis 

The tendency toward a relatively stable equilibrium between interdependent elements, especially as maintained by physiological processes.


400
What are the three major issues of psychology 

the stability of our traits, the rationality of our thoughts and actions, and the relative contributions of biology and experience to intelligence, personality, and behavior

400

Identify three methods used to study the brain

Split brain study, MRI, CAT scan 

400

What causes the blind spot

Where the optic nerve leaves the eye going to the brain causes blindness in a certain area



400

Explain the structure of language

Phonemes are the smallest distinguishable units in a language. Morphemes are the smallest meaningful units in a language. Syntax is a system of rules that governs how words can be meaningfully arranged to form phrases and sentences

400

What was the Masters and Johnson study 

Understanding human sexual response, dysfunction, and disorders through the direct observation of anatomical and physiological sexual responses of human subjects.


500

What approaches did Edward Titchener and William James create

William James was Functionalism, Edward Titchener was Structuralism

500

What is contained in the limbic system 

The amygdala, hypothalamus, hippocampus, pituitary gland

500

Explain the trichromatic and opponent process theories of color vision.

The trichromatic theory of color states that the world is made up of green, red, and blue. Opponent process theory off vision states one member of the color pair suppresses the other color.

500

Explain iconic and echoic memory

Iconic memory is the storage of what we see, while echoic memory is the storage of what we hear

500

What was the Singer-Schachter Two-Factor theory of emotion

Emotion is formed from physiological arousal and a cognitive label.

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