Perspective
Psych as a Science
Critical Thinking
Statistics
100

What are some key parts of the Biological perspective? 

how genetics influence different behaviors, how damage to specific areas of the brain influence behavior and personality

a way of looking at psychological issues by studying the physical basis of animal and human behavior

Pavlov and Skinner

100

Difference between psychiatrist and psychologist.

Psychiatrist: a medical practitioner specializing in the diagnosis and treatment of mental illnesses

Psychologist: a person who studies normal and abnormal mental states, cognitive, emotional, and social processes and behavior by observing, interpreting, and recording how individuals relate to one another and to their environments 

100

What is the definition of Critical Thinking? 

Thinking that does not blindly accept arguments and conclusions. Rather, it examines assumptions, appraises the source, discerns hidden values, evaluates evidence, and assesses conclusions

100

What is a normal curve? 

Also known as normal distribution

a symmetrical bell curve that describes the distribution of many types of date; most scores fall near the mean (about 68% fall within one standard deviation of it) and fewer and fewer near the extremes

200

What are some key parts of the Cognitive perspective? 

how we encode, process, store, and retrieve information

concerned with mental functions such as memory, perception, attention etc. 

"the mental act or process by which knowledge is acquired"

Wundt

200

What is the definition of psychology? 

the scientific study of behavior and mental processes

200

What is the difference between theory and hypothesis? 

Theory: An explanation using an integrated set of principles that organizes observations and predicts behaviors or events

Hypothesis: A testable prediction, often implied by a theory


200

Difference between Descriptive and Inferential Statistics? 

Descriptive Statistics: numbers used to present a collection of data in a brief yet meaningful form

Inferential Statistics: a set of procedures for determining what conclusions can be legitimately drawn from a set of data

300

What are some key parts of Behavioral perspective? 

how we learn observable responses

how environmental factors affect observable behavior 

Pavlov and Skinner


300
Name two advantages and one disadvantage or surveys. 
A survey is a questionnaire or interview administered to a select group of people

Advantages: simple, cheap, easy

Disadvantage: people lie

300

What is intuition? 

An effortless, immediate, automatic feeling or thought as contrasting with explicit conscious reasoning

300

What is a skewed distribution? 

distribution in which the majority of the data fall toward one side of the sale or the other

400

What are some key parts of the Biological perspective?

how genetics influence different behavior

how damage to specific areas of the brain influence behavior and personality 

Darwin

400

What is a hypothesis? 

a testable prediction, often implied by a theory

400

What word matches the definition?: The tendency to believe, after learning an outcome, that one would have foreseen it (I knew it all along phenomenon)

Hindsight Bias

400

What are the measures of central tendency and some examples? 

a way of measuring what the majority of people are scoring

ex: mean, median, mode

500

What is the difference between Functionalism and Structuralism? 

Functionalism: early school of through promoted by James and influenced by Darwin; explored how mental and behavioral processes function- how they enable the organisms to adapt, survive, and flourish 

Structuralism: early school of thought promoted by Wundt and Titchener; used introspection to reveal the structure of the human mind

500

What are some components of an experiment and its definitions? 

Laboratory experiment: a way to study people in a controlled experiment 

Random sample: selected by chance- everyone in the target population has an equal chance of being selected 

Dependent variable: considered to be the effect, it is dependent on the change in the independent variable if there is a cause-effect relationship

Independent Variable: the "treatment" which is being manipulated to see if it causes a change

Double Blind procedure: neither the subjects or the experimenters working with the subjects are aware of who is getting the treatment

Control Group: all things same except for a change in the independent variable

Experimental Group: receives "treatment" 

500

Who is Philip Tetlock? 

University of Pennsylvania psychologist. He collected more than 27,000 expert predictions of world events (Like the future of South Africa or whether Quebec would separate from Canada)

500
What is a t-test? 

a measure of reliability which can take place into account two separate conditions and takes into account both the size of the mean difference as well as the variability into two distributions 

the greater the mean difference and less variability, the less likely the results happen by chance

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