Thinking & Language
Prosociality
Influence & Reasoning
Emotion
Intelligence
100

This sense of thinking would be responsible for making a "snap" judgement with the availability heuristic.

What is System 1?

100

This evolutionary function of prosociality describes our tendency to help those who share our genes

Kin selection

100

This type of social influence was exemplified in the Milgram shock study (aka changing behavior in response to a command from an authority figure)

What is obedience?

100

This phenomenon describes our tendency to look at others’ facial expressions to determine how we should behave, exhibited by infants in the visual cliff study.

What is social referencing?

100

In Binet & Simon's intelligence test, this type of age is based on how a child performs compared to their peers.

What is mental age?
200
An example of this phenomenon is consuming news only from outlets that confirm and/or align with your existing views
What is confirmation bias?
200

This phenomenon states that people are less likely to help in an emergency situation when more people are present

What is the bystander effect?

200

This type of social influence was exemplified in the Asch line study (aka changing behavior to be consistent with another person/group)

Conformity

200

These 5 emotions were recognized by Paul Ekman as being universally recognized across cultures.

What is happiness, sadness, anger, fear, and disgust?

200

This type of mindset towards intelligence is characterized by the belief that intelligence can change through effort and experience.

What is a growth mindset?

300

"Ba" and "da" are examples of this language component

What are phonemes?

300
This evolutionary function of prosociality explains why we might help someone who didn't directly help us
What is indirect reciprocity?
300

An example of this phenomenon is assuming that the driver who rear-ended you is a careless and distracted person.

What is fundamental attribution error?
300

This emotion theory emphasizes the role of cognitive interpretation in experiencing emotions, supported by the bridge study.

What is the Shachter-Singer theory?

300
This phenomenon played out in the Academic Bloomers study, as the teachers' beliefs about the student impacted the students

 beliefs about themselves.

What is the Pygmalion effect?

400

This phenomenon describes why doctors may be more likely to prescribe antibiotics at the end of the day compared to the beginning

What is decision fatigue?

400

This phenomenon explains why some students expend less effort on group assignments compared to individual assignments.

What is social loafing?

400

An example of a(n) ____ norm is the posted speed limit. 

An example of a(n) ____ norm is that people drive 5-10 mph over the speed limit.

What is an injunctive norm?

What is a descriptive norm?

400

According to the process model, an example of this form of emotion regulation is pretending to be overjoyed when your grandmother gives you socks for your birthday.

What is response modulation?

400

____ intelligence peaks at an older age, while ____ intelligence peaks at a younger age.

What is crystallized intelligence?

What is fluid intelligence?

500

An example of this language error is a child saying "runned" instead of "ran" (aka extending grammar rules to irregular cases)

What is an overregularization error?
500

Prosociality breaks down under this condition which was exhibited by students who were in a rush in the Good Samaritan study.

What is self-focus?

500
This phenomenon describes our tendency to show in-group favoritism towards group members, even if the group was formed based on arbitrary characteristics.

Minimal group paradigm

500

A criticism of this emotion theory is that some physiological responses are “too slow” to occur before the subjective emotional experience.

For example, sometimes your cheeks turn red after you feel embarrassment.

What is the James-Lange Theory?

500

In order for stereotype threat to be activated in a given situation, the stereotype must be both _____ (active in your mind) & _____ (related to the task at hand)

What is salient?

What is relevant?

M
e
n
u