genetics + nature/nurture
Pregnancy, newborn, childhood, and adolescence
Piaget, Vygotsky, Erkison
Hearing, touch, taste, and vision
Random
100

What is the difference between nature and nurture? Give an example.

Nature = genetics

Nurture = environment

student example 

100

Give an example of temperament 

student example 

100
What is object permanence, and what stage is it associated with?

the cognitive understanding that objects and people continue to exist even when they cannot be seen, heard, or touched 

sensorimotor stage 

100

Define transduction in sensation

the transformation of stimulus energies, such as sights, sounds, and smells, into neural impulses brain can interpret

100

Describe evolutionary psychology 

a theoretical approach that studies human behavior, cognition, and emotion through the lens of evolutionary biology

200

How do mutations play into natural selection?

Mutations occur randomly. They may manifest in a way that allows a specific organism to survive better, leading to more offspring.

200

define developmental psychology

the scientific study of how and why humans grow, change, and adapt across their lifespan, from conception to death

200

Define Piaget's Stages

Sensorimotor: 0-2, learns through senses and actions 

Preoperational: 2-7 years; develops language and uses symbols; difficulty understanding conservation and logic 

Concrete operational: 7-11; thinks more logically about concrete events; understands conservation 

Formal Operational: 12+; develops abstract and hypothetical thinking; thinks about future and moral issues 

200

give an example of subliminal stimulation

student examples

200

explain the differences between longitudinal studies and cross-sectional studies. Give examples

Longitudinal studies track the same subjects over an extended period to analyze changes over time and establish causality, whereas cross-sectional studies analyze data from different individuals at a single, specific point in time to identify trends 

student examples

300

Claire shares 50% of her DNA with her sister. What kind of siblings are they?

Trick question! They can be fraternal twins or regular siblings.

300

Explain the differences between zygote, embryo, and fetus

A zygote is the single-celled, fertilized egg; an embryo (weeks 3–8) is the rapidly dividing, implanted cell cluster forming organs; and a fetus (week 9–birth) is the developing human focused on growth and refinement 

300

What is scaffolding according to Vygotsky?

peer/mentor/parent providing support to help a learner master a task they cannot yet do independently. 

300

What is the fovea?

Central focal point in retina around which eye’s cones cluster

300

Katie whispers while she is in a library. What is this an example of?

injunctive norms

400

Maddie's grandmother went through an extreme period of stress while she was pregnant. This caused both Maddie and her mother to suffer from higher levels of anxiety. Maddie jokes the stress turned on her own stress. This is an example of...

epigenetics 

400

Define and give an example of a teratogen

any agent—including drugs, chemicals, infections, or environmental conditions—that can disrupt fetal development, causing birth defects, structural abnormalities, or functional impairments during pregnancy 

student example

400

Choose two of Erikson's phases to give scenarios for

student examples 

400

What is the optic nerve?

Nerve that carries neural impulses from eye to brain

400

Give the exact definition of DNA

Complex molecule containing the genetic information that makes up the chromosomes

500

Explain the Human Genome Project


  • Determined the sequence of the 3 billion DNA base pairs that make up the human genome
  • Identified and mapped the locations of all the 20,000 to 25,000 human genes
500

Define every pareting style

Authoritative: demanding, sensitive, and responsive 

Authoritarian: stern, punitive, demanding 

Permissive: doesn't enforce limits, sensitive, responsive 

uninvolved: doesn't enforce limits, stern, and punitive 

500

What are Erikson's stages of development?

Stage 1: 0-1, trust vs. mistrust 

stage 2: 1-3, autonomy vs. shame/doubt 

stage 3: 3-6, initiative vs. guilt 

stage 4: 7-11, industry vs. inferiority 

stage 5: 12-1, identity vs. confusion 

stage 6: 19-29, generativity vs. stagnation 

stage 7: 30-64, generativity vs. stagnation 

stage 8: 65+, integrity vs. despair 

500

Define a monocular cue

Depth cue, such as interposition or linear perspective, available to either eye alone

- light and shadow

- Relative motion

- Relative size

- Linear perspective

- Interposition

- Relative height

500
Define and give an example of a schema according to Piaget

a cognitive framework or mental structure that helps individuals organize and interpret information about the world, acting as a "filing system" for knowledge 

student example 

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