What is "attachment" in psychology?
A pattern of emotional bonding that shapes how we connect, regulate emotions, and relate to others in relationships.
This theorist conducted maternal-separation, dependency needs, and social isolation experiments on rhesus monkeys.
Harry Harlow
What is object permanence?
The idea that even if something is out of sight, it still exists
What was the Marshmallow Test intended to study?
How people regulate their behavior in the face of temptation, and what that might predict about future functioning.
How many primary attachment styles are commonly discussed?
Four:
1.) secure
2.) anxious
3.) avoidant
4.) disorganized
"Ideal self", "real self", "congruence" and "incongruence" are concepts associated with this theorist's humanistic approach to personality development.
Carl Rogers
What is the inferiority complex?
Refers to a person’s feelings that they lack worth and don’t measure up to the standards of others or of society.
The "Strange Situation" was designed to observe what?
How children respond to separation and reunion with a caregiver
True or False: Attachment styles are fixed for life.
False: they can change with awareness and new experiences
Which theorist developed reciprocal determinism?
Albert Bandura
This is known as a universal version of the personal unconscious, holding mental patterns, or memory traces, which are common to all of us.
The collective unconscious
What are the "Big Five" personality factors?
Openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, neuroticism
Which attachment style often includes both fear of closeness and fear of abandonment?
Disorganized attachment
Who created the "Strange Situation" experiment?
Mary Ainsworth
This theory's perspective is that the development of a healthy personality and a sense of competence depend on the successful completion of each task in a given stage.
Psychosocial theory
Julian Rotter proposed this cognitive factor refers to our beliefs about the power we have over our lives.
Locus of Control: External and Internal
Early attachment patterns are primarily shaped by what?
Caregiver responsiveness and consistency
Which theorist developed birth order theory?
Alfred Adler
What is "womb envy"?
A psychoanalytic concept proposing that men experience unconscious envy of women’s ability to conceive, carry, and nurse children.
Hans and Sybil Eysenck were personality theorists who described two dimensions to account for variations in our personalities. Name the two dimensions they identified.
Extraversion/Introversion and Neuroticism/Stability
What skill is most central to building secure attachment?
Emotional regulation (self-soothing)
Who is considered the founder of attachment theory?
John Bowlby
What is Reciprocal Determinism?
Personality + Environment = Behavior
Name two examples of projective personality assessments.
As a psychiatrist at the Tavistock Clinic, this theorist studied the emotional difficulties of children separated from caregivers during World War II.
John Bowlby
This theorist suggested that normal growth can be blocked by basic anxiety stemming from needs not being met, such as childhood experiences of loneliness and/or isolation.
Karen Horney
Identify the picture below and name the theorist who developed it:

Hierarchy of Needs, developed by Abraham Maslow
Describe the values of a collectivist culture.
Social harmony, respectfulness, and group needs over individual needs.