Hormones/
Testosterone
Testosterone/Cortisol & Stress
Prenatal Development/Minor Physical Anomalies
Teratogens + Maternal Stress
Neurons + Neurotransmitters
100

___ is the tendency to resist change in order to maintain a stable, relatively constant internal environment.

What is homeostasis?

100

The ___, ___, and ___ make up the ___ Axis.

What is hypothalamus, pituitary glands, adrenal glands, and HPA?

100

Most physical brain development occurs ___.

What is before birth?

100

___ are environmental factors that can cause birth defects.

What are teratogens?

100

___ facilitates our body’s reward system and enables coordinated movement & attention.

What is dopamine?

200

Name one function of hormones.

What is:

  1. Regulation of:

    • Chemical balance inside our body

    • Metabolism and energy balance

    • Biological clock (circadian rhythm)

    • Contraction of smooth & cardiac muscle fibers

    • Immune system functions

  2. Control of growth and development

  3. Regulation of reproductive systems

200

Stress activates two hormonal systems: the ___ response and the ___ response.

What is acute (fast) and chronic (slow) responses?

200

Weeks ___ to ___ are critical for fetal development.

What is 3 to 20?

200

___ is known as "the man who smiled his way into the execution chamber”. 



Who is Robert Alton Harris?

200

___ are electrical signals, whereas ___ are chemical signals.

What are action potentials and neurotransmitters?

300

Hormones are ____ signals.

What are chemical signals?

300

List one reason why the findings of meta-analyses of testosterone and crime should be interpreted with caution.

What is: 

1. Correlational, not causal (not experiments)

2. May be publication bias (only studies that find significant relationship are published)

3. If real, effects are indirect, not direct



300

___ is the process by which neurons travel from their point of origin in the neural tube to their destination in the brain/spinal cord.



What is neural migration?

300

Maternal smoking increases the risk of ___ and ___.

What is antisocial behavior and aggression?

300

Low levels of serotonin is associated with ___.

What is: 

1. Increased aggression

2. Irritability

3. Hostility

4. Impulsivity

5. Higher risk of ADHD, suicide, alcoholism and personality disorders

400

Testosterone increases in ___ situations.

What is competitive?

400

___ is associated with high cortisol levels.

What is:

1. Social avoidance

2. Anxiety

3. Psychological stress

400

MPAs have been strongly linked with health/behavior because ___.

What is: if there's visible damage on the surface, there's likely to be much more significant damage beneath the surface (i.e. in the brain)?

400

Maternal stress can lead to ___.

What is low birth weight?

400

___ is the chemical that prevents post-synaptic receptors from receiving acetylcholine at neuromuscular junctions.

What is alpha-neurotoxin?

500

Testosterone increases ___, NOT ___.

Social dominance behaviors, aggression

500

Low levels of cortisol are associated with ___.

What is:

1. Increased aggression

2. Increased risk-taking

3. Decreased self-control

4. Decreased fear

5. Increased sensitivity to punishment

 


500

___ motives are related to anger, revenge, impulsivity, or material gain. ___ motives are related to genetic predisposition, childhood environment, or prenatal environment.

What are proximal and distal motives?
500

___ is one type of teratogen.

What is:

1. Physical agents

2. Metabolic conditions

3. Infection

4. Drugs/chemicals

500

Current research is focused on how SSRIs improve ___ by changing how serotonin receptors function among people with depression.

What is neural plasticity?

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