Drugs
Research Methods & Experiments
The Brain
Other
100
When a drug's effect decreases after a person is repeatedly exposed to a psychoactive drug.
What is tolerance?
100

He was involved in an accident in which a rod was pushed through his cheek and brain. He survived, but because of the accident, both his personality and his ability to learn new skills were affected.

Who is Phineas Gage.

100
This region of the brain that is important in motor control, latin for "little brain"
What is the cerebellum
100

When a person's behavior is determined by repressed unconscious conflicts. (Hint: Two meetings ago)

What is psychoanalytic theory?

200
The three major categories of psychoactive drugs. Note: To get full credit, you need all three!
What are depressants, stimulants and hallucinogens?
200

This famous experiment on authority cast students in the roles of prisoners and prison guards.

What is the Stanford Prison Experiment.

200

A hormone that gives you feelings of reward, pleasure, satisfaction, and motivation.

What is dopamine.

200

A social phenomenon in an emergency situation in which the people witnessing the emergency do not offer help because they believe someone else will.

What is the bystander effect?

300
This narcotic drug that leads to physiological dependence and the development of tolerance; derivatives are morphine, heroine, and codeine.
What is opium?
300

An experiment that conditioned a nine-month-old child to have an irrational fear of fuzzy white things. 

What is the Little Albert experiment?

300

Controls decision-making, judgment, creativity, and social appropriateness.

What is the frontal cortex.

300

A pre-conceived notion about social stereotypes. Most commonly seen as implicit racism, homophobia, or sexism.

What is an unconscious bias?
400

A very common legal depressant that induces relaxation, slows brain activity and dilutes the senses. (Hint: Commonly seen at parties!)

What is alcohol?

400

This was implemented to prevent participants from acting differently in a research study because they know they are being observed.

What is a placebo?

400

The brain's ability to reorganize itself after traumatizing events or damage.

What is neuroplasticity?

400

A major controversy that centers around the contributions of genetics and environmental factors to human development.

What is nurture vs. nature debate?

500

This type of aphasia is characterized by the inability to produce language with meaning, but is otherwise fluent.

What is Wernicke's aphasia.

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