Research & Evidence
Biopsychology
Cognition
Learning
Psychology History
100

This research method involves observing behavior in a natural setting without manipulating variables.

What is Naturalistic Observation?

100

This part of the brain helps regulate balance, coordination, and motor learning.

What is the cerebellum?

100

This type of memory briefly holds sensory information, such as visual images or sounds.

What is sensory memory?

100

In classical conditioning, this stimulus naturally triggers a response without prior learning.

What is an unconditioned stimulus?

100

This Russian physiologist is famous for experiments involving dogs, which helped establish the concept of classical conditioning.

Who is Ivan Pavlov?

200

In an experiment, this procedure involves sorting participants into groups in a way that minimizes the influence of potential confounding variables.

What is random assignment?

200

This neurotransmitter is most associated with mood regulation and is often linked to depression.

What is serotonin? 

200

This memory technique involves grouping information into meaningful units.

What is chunking?

200

Receiving praise for completing homework, which increases the likelihood of repeating the behavior, is an example of this.

What is positive reinforcement?
200

This psychologist is associated with operant conditioning, particularly in regard to schedules of reinforcement.

Who is B.F. Skinner?

300

This type of graph shows the relationship between two variables, but does not prove cause and effect.

What is a scatterplot?

300

This division of the nervous system controls involuntary functions, such as heart rate and digestion.

What is the autonomic nervous system?

300

This phenomenon explains why eyewitness memories can be altered by misleading information after an event.

What is the misinformation effect?
300

Learning that occurs by watching and imitating others is best explained by this theory.

What is social learning theory? 

300

This experiment demonstrated that children could learn aggressive behavior through observation.

What is Bandura's Bobo doll experiment?

400

A researcher finds that as study time increases, test scores also increase. This describes a ___________  _____________[two-word mathematical term].

What is a positive correlation?

400

Light waves are converted into neural impulses by photoreceptors in this part of the eye.

What is the retina?

400

Failing to notice an unexpected object because attention is focused elsewhere is called this.

What is inattentional blindness?

400

In operant conditioning, behaviors are shaped through reinforcement of successive approximations using this technique.

What is shaping?

400

This perspective in psychology emphasized mental processes, such as memory and thinking, partially replacing behaviorism in the 1950s and 60s.

What is the cognitive perspective / cognitive approach?

500

This statistical measure indicates how much scores differ from the mean and reflects the variability of a data set.

What is standard deviation?

500

This hormone, released by the adrenal glands, plays a key role in the body’s fight-or-flight response.

What is epinephrine (adrenaline)?

500

This theory of intelligence argues that intelligence is a single general ability underlying all cognitive skills.

What is Spearman's g factor? (Would also accept the theory of g or general intelligence)

500

When a conditioned response weakens because the conditioned stimulus is no longer paired with the unconditioned stimulus, this process is occuring.

What is extinction?

500

Through her research, this psychologist demonstrated how misleading questions can alter eyewitness memory.

Who is Elizabeth Loftus?

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