Chap 1 intro to CT
Chap 2 Deductive Reasoning, Prediction, and Making Assumptions
Chap 3 Inductive Reasoning in Psychology and Everyday life
Chap 4 Critical Thinking and Scientific Reasoning
Chap 5 Pseudoscience, Science, and Evidence-Based Practice
Chap 6 Errors in Attention, Perception, and Memory that Affect Thinking
Chap 7 Can the mind leave the Body? The Mind-Brain Question/ Misc.
100

A set of general principles that attempts to explain and predict behavior or other phenomena.

What is a Theory?

100

It follows correct logical form, is valid. Both premises are true and lead to a true conclusion.

What is a sound argument?

100

Explanation of an event that seems reasonable, given what we already know about science and human behavior.

What is plausible?
100

A characteristic or event of interest that can take on different values.

What is a variable?

100

The study of the conformation of the skull as indicative of mental facilities and traits of character

What is phrenology?

100

How we focus and divide our cognitive resources among different tasks and inputs.

What is attention?

100

Small gland near the center of the brain that helps regulate circadian rhythm by releasing melatonin.

What is the pineal gland?

200

Persistent, mistaken idea or belief that is contradicted by established scientific evidence.

What is Misconception?

200

Specific prediction made from a general theory.

What is a Hypothesis?

200

Offering a consensus of opinion or a popular view as evidence for accepting a claim.

What is common sense belief?

200

Values of two variables are simply related or change together in a consistent way.

What are associations or correlations?

200

Claims presented so that they appear scientific even though they lack support or plausibility.

What is pseudoscience?

200

The organization, identification, and interpretation of sensory information in order to represent and understand the presented information or environment.

What is perception?

200

A person’s current, subjective state of awareness.

What is consciousness?
300

A reason or evidence in support of a claim or conclusion.

What is an Argument?

300

Assuming all individuals of a certain group share the same characteristic.

What is a stereotype?

300

Provide a quantitative estimate of the size of an effect across studies.

What is a meta-analysis?

300

Look for evidence that supports what you believe and ignore evidence that tells you otherwise.

What is confirmation bias?

300

The ability to find patterns in ambiguous and random displays, when they don’t exist.

What is visual pareidolia?

300

A knowledge structure that organizes prior knowledge and can help us acquire new information, but which can have selective effects on learning and memory.

What is a schemata?

300

The brain's chemical messengers.

What are neurotransmitters?

400

A statement asserting that someone or something has a particular characteristic or property.

What is a Claim?

400

A thinking error associated with deductive reasoning that leads to an invalid argument.

What is a Fallacy?

400

Assumes that we experience the world as it is and that our experience directly informs us about what is real.

What is naive realism?

400

You must be able to collect evidence that will dis-confirm the hypothesis.

What is falsifiable?

400

A person recovers spontaneously over time without the treatment.

What is spontaneous remission?

400

You think about the meaning of new information and its relation to knowledge already stored in your memory.

What is Elaborative rehearsal?

400

The refusal to reject or revise one's faulty belief when confronted with evidence that clearly refutes that belief.

What is belief perseverance?


500

Rapidly respond to questions without deliberation, using knowledge of patterns and experiences.

What is Intuitive - experiential (TYPE 1 thinking)?

500

Making a claim puts the burden of proof on the claimant, when enough evidences supports the claim the burden of proof shifts to those who believe the claim is false.

What is shifting the burden of proof?

500

People rapidly generalize from the evidence, perhaps not considering all of it or only superficially analyzing and evaluating it before drawing a conclusion.

What is a hasty generalization?

500

Not influenced by personal feelings or opinions in considering and representing facts.

What is Objective?

500

The effectiveness of treatments demonstrated by clinical research studies.

What is efficacy?

500

Your feelings and view of the world can distort your memory of past events.

What is bias?

500

Psychological discomfort arising from holding two or more inconsistent attitudes, behaviors or cognitions.

What is cognitive dissonance?

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