Unit 4: Learning
Unit 5 Cognitive
Unit 6: Developmental
Unit 7: Motivation, Emotion, and Personality
Unit 8: Clinical
100

Learning to link two stimuli in a way that helps us anticipate an event to which we have a reaction

What is Classical conditioning?

100

our tendency to be more confident than correct

What is Overconfidence?

100

the physical, social, and behavioral characteristics that are culturally associated with male and female roles and identity.


What is gender? 

100

refers to the idea that humans are motivated to reduce these drives, such as eating to reduce the feeling of hunger. This restores homeostasis, a steady internal state.

What is Drive-reduction theory?

100

identifies criteria to classify disorders

What is DSM (diagnostic statistic manual)?

200

in the absence of additional conditioning, a conditioned response comes back

What is Spontaneous recovery?

200

only see an object as having its intended use  

What is Functional fixedness?

200

The intensity of an emotional response

What is Temperament?

200

what your body is naturally programmed to be weight wise

What is Body weight set point?

200

A psychologically induced loss of memory for personal information, like one’s identity. Usually the result of a stressful situation

What is Dissociative Amnesia?

300

The reward is given after an unspecified amount of time has passed

What is Variable interval?

300

The tendency to approach problems using a mindset (procedures and methods) that has worked previously.

What is Mental set?

300

process by which certain animals form attachments during critical period very early in life

What is Imprinting?

300

if stimulated causes organism to stop eating

What is Ventromedial hypothalamus?

300

Sufferers not only suffer from a lost sense of identity, they also flee their homes, jobs and families. While most episodes last only a few hours or days, it can last longer.

What is Dissociative fugue? 

400

taking away an unwanted consequence in order to increase a behavior

What is Negative reinforcement?

400

a process by which synaptic connections between neurons become stronger with frequent activation

What is long-term potentiation?

400

causes smoking, drinking, nail biting (oral activity)

What is Oral fixation?

400

Body plus thoughts/label

Singer-Schachter/Two-factor theory

400

A disorder involving excessive worry about health and disease.

What is Hypochondriasis?

500

is when someone only responds to the CS

What is Discrimination?

500

exposed people to a 1/20th of-a-second view of a grid of letters, followed by a tone which told them which row of letters to pull from iconic memory and recall.

What is George Sperling?

500

2-7 years, developing language, begins egocentrism

What is Pre-operational stage?

500

convincing yourself that the opposite of what is actually true

What is Reaction formation?

500

term for schizophrenia symptoms that are erratic and do not it into one of the other categories, but are clear symptoms of the disorder

What is Undifferentiated type?

M
e
n
u