Research Methods
The Brain
Neurons & Systems
Sensation & Perception
Consciousness & Nature
100

A researcher randomly assigns participants to a caffeine group or a sugar pill group to test memory. This type of study is known as this.

What is an Experiment?

100

This structure at the back of the brainstem coordinates movement and balance.

What is the Cerebellum?

100

The central nervous system consists of the spinal cord and this.

What is the Brain?

100

These receptor cells in the retina detect black, white, and gray, and are necessary for peripheral and twilight vision.

What are Rods?

100

This sleep stage is associated with vivid dreaming.

What is REM (Rapid Eye Movement)?

200

In a study testing if caffeine improves memory, the type of pill given (caffeine vs. sugar) is this variable.

What is the Independent Variable?

200

Phineas Gage’s famous accident resulted in a personality change because of damage to these lobes.

What are the Frontal Lobes?

200

This bushy, branching extension of a neuron receives messages and conducts impulses toward the cell body.

What is a Dendrite?

200

Transduction in the ear occurs when fluid moves over hair cells inside this coiled, snail-shaped structure.

What is the Cochlea?

200

This biological clock regulates roughly 24-hour patterns of alertness and body temperature.

What is the Circadian Rhythm?

300

This technique is used to minimize preexisting differences between the control and experimental groups by giving everyone an equal chance of being in either.

What is Random Assignment?

300

Known as the "master gland," this endocrine gland regulates growth and controls other glands.

What is the Pituitary Gland?

300

Multiple Sclerosis is a disease that involves the degeneration of this insulating layer around the axon.

What is the Myelin Sheath?

300

This is the process of changing physical energy, like light or sound, into neural impulses that the brain can read.

What is Transduction?

300

If identical twins reared apart are more similar than fraternal twins reared together, it suggests a strong influence of this.

What is Genetics (or Nature)?

400

To measure "memory," a researcher decides to count "the number of words recalled from a list of 20." This specific, measurable description is called this.

What is an Operational Definition?

400

The somatosensory cortex, which processes touch and movement sensations, is located in these lobes.

What are the Parietal Lobes?

400

This division of the autonomic nervous system arouses the body and mobilizes energy in stressful "fight-or-flight" situations.

What is the Sympathetic Nervous System?

400

This phenomenon explains why you stop noticing a strong smell in a room after about 15 minutes.

What is Sensory Adaptation?

400

REM sleep is often called "Paradoxical Sleep" because the brain is active, but the body is essentially in this state.

What is Paralyzed?

500

To avoid the placebo effect and researcher bias, studies are often designed so neither the participants nor the researchers know who is receiving the treatment.

What is a Double-Blind Procedure?

500

This area is often called the "executive center" or "CEO" of the brain because it handles judgment and planning; it is the last to fully develop in adolescents.

What is the Prefrontal Cortex?

500

Because SSRIs block the reabsorption of serotonin, enhancing its effects, they are classified as this type of drug molecule

What is an Agonist?

500

This specific sense allows us to know the position and movement of our individual body parts.

What is Kinesthesis?

500

Scientists who study the relative power of heredity and environment on behavior are known by this title.

Who are Behavior Geneticists?

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