Gestalt Psychology
Psychoanalysis and Neofreudians
Humanistic and Cognitive Psychology
Applied Psychology
Miscellaneous
100

Who is considered the founder of Gestalt psychology and what key phenomenon did he discover?

Max Wertheimer — discovered the phi phenomenon (illusion of motion)

100

What are archetypes according to Jung? 

Jung identified the Persona (public mask), Shadow (repressed instincts), Anima/Animus (inner gendered aspects), and Self (central, balanced consciousness).

100

Explain Maslow’s PERMA model (Seligman) and what each component represents.

Positive emotion, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning, Accomplishment

100

Who founded clinical psychology and what did he actually do?

Lightner Witmer — first psychology clinic

100

Who was the first president of the APA and why is this important?

G. Stanley Hall — institutionalized psychology

200

Compare Gestalt psychology with structuralism — what was the main disagreement?

Structuralism breaks experience into parts; Gestalt focuses on wholes

200

What was the case of Anna O. and why is it important?

Early psychoanalysis case; talking cure

200

Explain Piaget’s concept of conservation with an example.

Children understand quantity stays same despite appearance change

200

How did Walter Dill Scott apply psychology to business?

Advertising + suggestibility + personnel selection 

200

Explain the difference between classical and operant conditioning.

Classical: association (Pavlov)
Operant: consequences (Skinner)

300

Explain the Zeigarnik Effect and how it can be applied in education or marketing.

People remember unfinished tasks better; used in ads, cliffhangers, study strategies

300

MBTI is based on which psychologist’s ideas? What are its strengths and weaknesses?

Carl Jung
+ easy to understand
− low scientific validity

300

Who developed person-centered therapy, and what are its two key principles?

Carl Rogers

  • Unconditional positive regard
  • Non-directive therapy (client-centered) 
300

What was the “Case of Peter” and why is it important?

Fear reduced through gradual exposure (early behavior therapy) 

300

Which psychologist demonstrated that memories can be easily altered (false memories)?
Explain how this finding affects the reliability of eyewitness testimony and discuss its consequences in the legal system.

Elizabeth Loftus.
Memory is reconstructive and influenced by external information.
Eyewitnesses may confidently recall events that never happened, leading to false accusations and legal errors.

400

How did Köhler’s ape experiments challenge behaviorism?

Showed insight learning (problem-solving without trial-and-error)

400

Explain the main disagreement between Freud and Jung.

Freud: behavior driven by sexual instincts
Jung: collective unconscious + meaning + future goals 

400

What is the Turing Test and what does the Chinese Room argument criticize?

Turing: if machine seems human → intelligent
Chinese Room: no real understanding, just symbol manipulation

400

Early intelligence testing was widely used in education and society.
What were some major misuses or limitations of IQ tests, and why can they be problematic?

  • Cultural and language bias (tests may disadvantage certain groups)
  • Oversimplification of intelligence (focus only on limited abilities)
  • Used to justify inequality or discrimination
  • Ignored environmental and social factors
    → This led to unfair labeling and misuse in education and policy
400

Name at least three contributions of Francis Galton and explain their impact.

Correlation, mental testing, individual differences, eugenics

500

What is the difference between Gestalt psychology and Gestalt therapy? Briefly describe the main focus of each.

  • Gestalt psychology → focuses on perception and how the mind organizes information into meaningful wholes (e.g., “the whole is greater than the sum of its parts”).
  • Gestalt therapy → a humanistic therapy (Perls) focused on present awareness, personal responsibility, and the “here and now” experience.
500

Name at least three Neo-Freudians and identify one key idea each contributed that differs from Freud.

  • Jung → collective unconscious / archetypes
  • Adler → inferiority complex / social motivation
  • Horney → basic anxiety / cultural factors
  • Erikson → psychosocial development across lifespan
500

Name two key figures in cognitive psychology and explain one major contribution of each.

  • George Miller → “Magical Number 7” (memory limits)
  • Jean Piaget → stages of cognitive development
  • Elizabeth Loftus → false memories
  • Neisser → defined cognitive psychology
500

Name at least one woman in applied psychology and explain her key contribution to the field.

  • Lillian Gilbreth → applied psychology to workplace efficiency (industrial/organizational psychology)
  • Florence Goodenough → developed intelligence testing methods for children
  • Anna Anastasi → major contributions to psychological testing and assessment 
  • Psyche Cattl - extended the Stanford-Binet for younger children
500

Name two psychological experiments that would be considered unethical today. Explain what was done and why it is problematic.

  • Little Albert → conditioned fear in a child (no consent, harm)
  • Stanford Prison Experiment → psychological harm
  • Milgram → extreme stress and deception 
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