Research Methods
Nervous System
Social Psychology
Mental Health
100

What is a hypothesis?

An educated guess at what will happen

100

What is a neuron?

A nerve cell

100

What is a stereotype?

A belief or attitude towards people who belong to a certain group, regardless of individual differences in that group.

100

What is mental health?

How you think, feel, and behave about things (can be good/bad)

200

What is a control group?

The group that doesn't receive the treatment/thing you're testing 

200

What are the 4 lobes of the brain?

Temporal, frontal, parietal, occipital 

200

What is the bystander effect?

When people choose not to help because they assume someone else will

200

What is the mental health continuum?

A spectrum on how good/bad your mental health is (left side is good, middle is an issue, right hand side is a disorder)

300

What is the independent variable?

The factor you are testing/changing (i.e.: colour of lemonade)

300

What is a TBI?

Traumatic brain injury

300

What are the three factors of the biopsychosocial model?

Biological factors, psychological factors, social factors

300

What are some symptoms of depression?

Loss of appetite, more tired, hopelessness, more anxiety, no motivation, low self-worth, sleep disturbances, feeling down/sad for a long period, poor concentration

400

What are ethics?

A component of science where scientists and other stakeholders discuss the "rights" and "wrongs" of an issue
400

What is an example of a neurotransmitter?

Dopamine, serotonin, oxytocin, endorphins

400

What is the Halo effect?

"Pretty privilege" - when people are judged/perceived more positively because they are attractive

400

What is the difference between anxiety and fear?

Anxiety: source is unidentifiable, related to future, vague, state of mental uneasiness
Fear: source is identifiable, related to present, definite, emotion of apprehension

500

What is an EV?

Extraneous variable - things that could affect your results

500
What is the "fight, flight, or freeze" response mean and when does it occur?

During a stressful event, your body switches into the sympathetic nervous system and you go into fight or flight. Fight means you "fight" the danger, "flight" means you run away from the danger, "freeze" means you freeze up and don't know how to react.

500

What are the three ABC parts to the tricomponent of attitudes?

Affective, behavioural, cognitive

500

Name a biological, pyschological, and social factor that would contribute to depression

Biological: genetics, brain function, hormones, immune system
Psychological: beliefs, attitudes, personality traits
Social: support, social groups, access to health care, education level