Biological Bases of Behavior
Cognition
Development and Learning
Social Psychology and Personality
Mental and Physical Health
100

The part of the neuron where neurotransmitters are released.

What is the synaptic terminal or synapse?

100

The mental grouping of similar objects, events, or ideas.

What is a concept?

100

This parenting style is characterized by high demands but low responsiveness.

What is authoritarian parenting?

100

This occurs when individuals perform worse in groups due to reduced personal accountability.

What is social loafing?

100

This disorder is characterized by repetitive, unwanted thoughts and compulsive behaviors.

What is obsessive-compulsive disorder?

200

This structure regulates hunger, thirst, and body temperature.

What is the hypothalamus?

200

This is the process by which new information is stored in memory.

What is encoding?

200

In operant conditioning, this increases the likelihood of a behavior by removing an unpleasant stimulus.

What is negative reinforcement?

200

This term describes the discomfort felt when a person’s attitudes and behaviors conflict.

What is cognitive dissonance?

200

This is a mood stabilizer often used to treat bipolar disorder.

What is lithium?

300

This neurotransmitter is involved in mood regulation and is linked to depression.

What is serotonin?

300

This phenomenon explains why we are more likely to remember emotionally significant events.

What is flashbulb memory?

300

This concept describes a time during development when a specific skill is most easily learned.

What is a critical period?

300

This theory explains how individuals use situational and dispositional factors to explain others' behavior.

What is attribution theory?

300

This condition involves physical symptoms like blindness or paralysis with no medical cause.

What is conversion disorder?

400

This brain structure processes emotions like fear and aggression.

What is the amygdala?

400

The inability to see a problem from a new perspective is known as this.

What is functional fixedness?

400

This developmental psychologist focused on the stages of psychosocial development.

Who is Erik Erikson?

400

This psychologist identified traits like introversion and extraversion as key to personality.

Who is Hans Eysenck?

400

This is the most common class of drugs used to treat depression.

What are selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors or SSRIs?

500

These types of neurons carry messages from the body to the central nervous system.

What are sensory neurons?

500

This effect explains why repeated testing improves long-term retention.

What is the testing effect?

500

This reflex in newborns is triggered when the sole of the foot is stroked.

What is the Babinski reflex?

500

The bystander effect is less likely to occur when this condition is present.

What is perceived personal responsibility?

500

The state of exhaustion resulting from prolonged stress is known as this stage in the General Adaptation Syndrome.

What is the exhaustion stage?

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