Growing and Development
Learning
Memory
Social Psychology
Techniques for Memory or Persuasion
100
This is the psychologist who came up with the stages of adolescence that included the Identity-diffusion statues, Foreclosure status, Moratorium status, and the Identity-achievement status. This is also what these stages are called.
What is James Marcia's Stages of Identity Development?
100
This psychologist's studies suggest that exposing children to violence may encourage them to act aggressively in this experiment due to this kind of learning.
Who is Bandura? What is the BoBo doll experiment? What is observational learning?
100
This is a memory retention technique that organizes items into smaller groups that are related.
What is chunking?
100
This is the part of human thinking that helps us understand and predict the behavior of others and ourselves.
What is social cognition?
100
Applying what you are learning to yourself.
What is the self-reference effect?
200
These people studied monkey's responses to a mother with food and a mother with terrycloth. This experiment proved this.
Who are Harry and Margaret Harlow? What is the suggestion that babies have social and physical needs?
200
These are three types of classical conditioning that are stronger or learned more quickly than regular classical conditioning cases.
What is a phobia, a taste aversion, or Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder?
200
These are the lengths of time and capacity of retention in each of the stages of memory. What are milliseconds for sensory, 20-30 seconds for short-term, and days< for long-term? What is all sensations for sensory, 5-9 pieces of information for short-term, and limitless? pieces of information for long-term?
What are milliseconds for sensory, 20-30 seconds for short-term, and days< for long-term? What is all sensations for sensory, 5-9 pieces of information for short-term, and limitless? pieces of information for long-term?
200
These are the components of interpersonal attraction and close relationships.
What is -interpersonal attraction: similarity, self-disclosure, proximity, and mere exposure? -close relationships: intimacy, interdependency, responsiveness, commitment, and passion
200
Going over notes for an hour everyday for a week rather than studying 7 hours all out once.
What is using the spacing effect?
300
These are the three stages of moral reasoning and a description of each.
1) Pre-conventional (self-interest; avoiding punishment and seeking reward; young children) 2) Conventional (social norms; pleasing others; laws; less formal rules; older children, adolescents, many adults) 3) Post-conventional (abstract reasoning; self-chosen ethical principles that are universal and comprehensive; some adults)
300
These are three things that make the most effective punishment (example).
What is swift, consistent, appropriately aversive?
300
These are at least three memory retrieval techniques (and examples).
What is:
300
These are three attributional biases (and examples).
What is fundamental attribution error, self-serving bias, and belief in a just world?
300
Studying in the same place where you learned it or will take the exam.
What is context-dependent retrieval?
400
These are the four attachment styles and a description of each.
What are -secure (explores freely without mother; engage with stranger; upset when mother leaves, then happy when she returns) -ambivalent (stays close to mother; distressed when mother leaves, then ambivalent when she returns) -avoidant (ignores mother; little interest when mother leaves and returns) -disorganized (inconsistent behavior)
400
These are the main parts of classical conditioning (and an example).
What is the unconditioned stimulus, conditioned stimulus, unconditioned response, and conditioned response?
400
This is what the stages of memory look like.
What is:
400
These are the four types of stereotype biases and an example of each.
What is in-group, out-group, illusory correlation, and illusion of out-group homogeneity?
400
Dog commercials
What is an example of using the listener's emotions?
500
These are the stages of death, dying, and bereavement.
What is denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance?
500
These are the similarities and differences between classical and operant conditioning.
What is: Similarities- extinction, spontaneous recovery, generalization, and discrimination Differences- classical: association between US and CS, passive organism, elicited response operant: association between response and reinforcement or punishment, active organism, emitted response
500
These are the types and subtypes of memory (and examples).
What are explicit memory (semantic, episodic) and implicit memory (procedural, priming, classical conditioning)?
500
This is the psychologist behind the prison experiment and the reason why it was cut short.
Who is Zimbardo? What is extreme self-prophecy?
500
Accepting a minor request then being asked for larger request afterward.
What is the foot-in-the-door technique?
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