Social
Scientific Foundations
Bio
Sensation and Perception
Learning
100

This social psychology phenomenon describes how people are more likely to agree to a large request after first agreeing to a small one.

What is the Foot-in-the-Door Phenomenon? 

100

This research method involves an in-depth investigation of a single individual, group, or event.

What is a case study?

100

These neurotransmitters help relieve pain and produce feelings of pleasure and well-being.

What are endorphins?

100

This process occurs when sensitivity to a constant, unchanging stimulus decreases over time.

What is sensory adaptation?

100

This type of learning occurs when a stimulus becomes associated with a stimulus that naturally triggers a response.

What is classical conditioning?

200

This occurs when individuals put in less effort when working in a group than working alone.

What is social loafing?

200
This research method involves observing and recording behavior in a natural environment.

What is naturalistic observation?

200
This part of the brain stem controls vital functions such as breathing and heart rate.

What is the medulla?

200

This theory of color vision proposes that the retina contains three types of cones sensitive to red, green, and blue.

What is the trichromatic theory?

200

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

What is the unconditioned stimulus?

300

This occurs when people lose self-awareness and personal responsibility in a group.

What is deindividuation?

300

This type of research follows the same participants over an extended period of time to observe changes.

What is a longitudinal study?

300

This part of the brain is responsible for language comprehension and understanding speech.

What is the Wernicke's area?

300

This perceptual principle involves distinguishing an object from its background.

What is figure ground?

300

This form of learning involves a decreased response to a repeated harmless stimulus.

What is habituation?

400

This group process causes members opinions to become more extreme after discussing them with like-minded individuals.

What is group polarization?

400

This effect occurs when participants show changes simply because they believe they are receiving treatment.

What is the placebo effect?

400

This network of neurons responds to changes in your environment and helps regulate alertness.

What is the reticular formation?

400

This sense helps maintain balance and spatial orientation by detecting head movements and position.

What is the vestibular sense?


400

This learning occurs when someone avoids a food after it has been associated with an illness.

What is taste aversion?

500

This explains why individuals are less likely to help someone in need when other people are present.

What is the bystander effect?

500

This ethical research practice involves misleading participants about the true purpose of a study.

What is deception?

500

This division of the autonomic nervous system prepares the body for fight or flight responses.

What is the sympathetic nervous system?

500

These specialized cells on the tongue detect sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami flavors.

What are taste receptors?

500

This phenomenon occurs when repeated exposure to uncontrollable events leads individuals to stop trying to change their situation.

What is learned helplessness?

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