The two disciplines that were studying mental processes & behaviors before psychology became a science
What are philosophy & physiology?
This approach to psychology believed that the only way to be objective and scientific was to focus on observable behaviors
What is the behavioralist approach or behaviorism?
Psychology, like all human endeavors, has a history of systematic ____
What is prejudice?
A specific statement about the expected outcome of a study
What is a hypothesis?
Only type of research one can assume causality with
What is a true experiment?
A visual representation of a correlation
What is a scatterplot?
What the "E" stand for in the acronym WEIRD
What is educated?
Neurotransmitter whose messages (or effects) decrease the likelihood of the receiving neuron firing are called this
What is inhibitory or an inhibitory message?
The somatic nervous system is responsible for _____ movements.
What is voluntary?
Drugs that block neurotransmitters' effects
What is an antagonist?
The oldest part of the human brain
What is the hindbrain?
The endocrine system communicates using _____ that are released into the bloodstream.
What are hormones?
The five pillars of the Introductory Psychology Initiative stands on this foundation [two words]
What is research methods?
James & Thordike's approach to psychology
What is functionalism?
Harvard refused to give this person a doctorate even though they had competed all the doctorate requirements
Who is Mary Whiton Calkins?
The second step in the scientific method
What is generate a hypothesis or hypothesis?
Research that uses preexisting groups
What is a quasi-experiment?
You'll be reminded of this analysis when you think of beer
What is a t-test?
The best way to avoid a biased sample and have a stronger case for generalizability
What is random sampling?
These cells function as the backroom janitorial, maintenance & administrative staff for the neurons
What are glial cells?
The automatic, involuntary responses to stimuli that are controlled by the spinal cord
What is a reflex or reflexes?
When the work of a neurotransmitter is completed in the synapse, it's reabsorbed into the neuron that released it
What is reuptake?
This system is involved in processing emotion, motivation & memory
What is the limbic system?
The major/master/commander gland.
What is the pituitary gland?
This group calls itself "the leading scientific & professional organization representing psychology" in North America [three words - not the acronym - the full name
What is the American Psychological Association?
Was considered a pioneer of therapy & counseling
Who is Sigmund Freud or Freud?
Laura King is part of and has published over 100 articles & book chapters based on this community
What is the LGBTQ+ or LGBTQ community?
What must a discipline use to be considered a science [two words]
What is the scientific method?
The most common research methodology
What are surveys?
This scatterplot represents what type [direction] of correlation
What is negative?
Reliability refers to whether the measurement was _______
What is consistent?
The three types of neurons
What are motor, sensory & interneurons?
This nervous system consists of neurons that form the communication network between the central nervous system and the body parts
What is the peripheral nervous system?
The sacs that release neurotransmitters into the synaptic gap
What are vesicles or synaptic vesicles?
Part of brain that controls breathing, heart rate & blood pressure
What is the medulla oblongata?
Gland whose hormones control metabolism
What is the thyroid gland?
"A degree in psychology is a degree without _____"
What are limits?
Taught the first psychology course in the United States
Who is William James or James?
First Latina women to earn a PhD in psychology in the United States
Who is Martha Bernal or Bernal?
The first step in building a construct
What is operationalization?
The influencing variable at the beginning of a study
What is the independent variable?
What one would use to analyze differences in three or more groups
What is an ANOVA or ANalysis Of VAriance?
A study high in internal validity helps one rule out ________ explanations
What is alternate?
These speed up and regulate the pace of neural messages [red arrows - three words]
What are the nodes of Ranvier?
That people's brains process information, function & lead to behaviors differently
What is neurodiversity?
Neurotransmitters & dendrite receptors act like a system of [three words]
What are locks and keys?
The two cortexes these figures are meant to represent?
What are the motor and somatosensory areas or cortexes?
Brain structure connects the nervous system to the endocrine system
What is the hypothalamus?
Zora Neale Hurston noted that "research is formalized ______. It is poking and prying with a purpose"
What is curiosity?
This allowed psychology to become what it is today and is it's most fundamental principle [two words]
What is the scientific method?
The person Watson, Crick & Wilkins stole the discovery of the double helix structure of DNA from in 1962
Who is Rosalind Franklin or Franklin?
This/these makes psychology a challenging discipline to do research in
What are ethics?
Two ways one could set up a true experiment
What are "between" & "within" participants designs?
When variables appear to be related but it's actually a meaningless pattern
What is a spurious or false correlation?
The three questions you should ask when evaluating research
What are "who were the participants", "was everything in the study done correctly" & "is this study CRAAP"? [or some semblance of the above which I say is OK]
Neurons operate on this principle ________________ [three words]. Meaning it either fires or not.
HINT: Action potential
What is all-or-none?
This division or nervous system is important in supporting homeostasis
What is the parasympathetic division or nervous system?
Optimal behavioral functioning usually involves the ____ ____ amount of the ____ ____ neurotransmitters at the ____ ____ moments. [Answer is the same two words for each set of blanks]
HINT: Goldilocks
What is "just right"?
The only sense that does not pass through the thalamus
What is smell or olfactory?
This chemical is both a neurotransmitter and a hormone
What is oxytocin?