Types of Studies
Neurotransmitters
The Brain
Sensation & Perception
Cognition
100

Type of research that focuses on one unique individual

What is a case study?

100
This neurotransmitter is essential for the brain's reward system?
What is dopamine?
100

This is a tiny part of the brain that is important for processing emotions, especially fear

What is the amygdala?

100

This part of the eye is important for processing color

What are cones?

100

Your ability to recall important dates like 1776 is what kind of memory?

What is semantic memory?

200

Type of research that uses one group of participants over a long period of time

What is a longitudinal study?

200

This neurotransmitter is crucial for social bonding and trust

What is oxytocin?

200

This thick bundle of nerve fibers connects the left and right hemispheres

What is the corpus callosum?

200

This color theory explains vision through opposing pairs (ie red and green)

What is Opponent-Process Theory?

200

The time in one's life often considered to be the peak of cognitive abilities 

What is middle adulthood?

300

Only type of study in which the researcher manipulates the independent variables

What is an experiment?

300

Sometimes called the "happy chemical;" too little is connected to depression

What is serotonin?

300

This group of structures regulate emotions, behavior, motivation, and memory

What is the limbic system?

300

Your brain's ability to focus on one sound in a noisy environment

What is Cocktail Party Effect?

300

This is the first, fleeting stage of memory that lasts a fraction of a section to a couple of seconds - important for quickly taking in sights, sounds, smells, etc.

What is sensory memory?

400

Type of research that gathers data and then measures the statistical relationship; cannot prove causality

What is correlational research?

400

This neurotransmitter is essential for the body's "fight or flight" response

What is norepinephrine?

400

Located near the junction of the temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes; crucial for language comprehension

What is Wernicke's Area?

400

What is the normal gap in vision where the optic nerve connects to the retina?

What is the blind spot?

400
Means understanding that an object's quality (like mass or volume) stays the same even if its appearance changes (such as cut in pieces or poured in a different cup)

What is Conservation?

500

Combines results of multiple studies on the same topic to find overall patterns

What is meta-analysis?

500

This neurotransmitter is used most often in the classroom when a student is using muscles to write, pay attention, and learn

What is acetylcholine?

500

This neural network controls arousal an alertness - especially for sleep and wake cycles

What is the Reticular Activating System?

500

The ability to notice a change in a stimulus is a constant proportion of the original stimulus intensity. (The stronger the initial stimulus, the bigger the change needed to perceive it)

What is Weber's Law?

500

You have a hard time remembering information you learned from US History last year because you keep confusing dates with what you are learning in your Ancient History class now

What is Retroactive Interference?