Unit 0
Unit 1
Unit 2
Miscellaneous
Challenge questions(tiebreakers)
100

This term refers to the process of collecting data in a systematic way to answer a specific question or test a hypothesis

What is research?

100

Which part of the brain is primarily responsible for regulating emotions and forming memories?



Amygdala( Think about EMOgdala - full of dark emotions)

100

This refers to the tendency to perceive information in a way that confirms existing beliefs or expectations.

What is perceptual set?

100

This phenomenon describes the tendency to forget information from the middle of a list but remember the first and last items more clearly.

What is the serial position effect?

100

The phenomenon where the left and right hemispheres of the brain communicate across this structure, which is severed in split-brain patients, is known as the corpus callosum.

What is contralateral hemispheric organization?

200

This is the term for a relationship between two variables, where changes in one are related to changes in the other

What is correlation?

200

When you stick your hand in a pot of boiling hot water, your reflexes make you pull your hand away almost immediately. Which of the following most directly correlates to this reaction?



What is a Reflex Arc

200

This principle states that we tend to group things that are similar in appearance together.

What is similarity?

200

This term refers to the phenomenon where memories are altered by the introduction of misleading information, often seen in eyewitness testimony.

What is the misinformation effect?

200

This autoimmune disease, characterized by a breakdown of neuromuscular communication, involves a reduced number of acetylcholine receptors at the neuromuscular junction.

What is myasthenia gravis?

300

This type of study prevents participants from knowing whether they are in the experimental or control group.

What is a single-blind study?

300

Ketamine is a drug that blocks a particular neurotransmitter from activating its receptors. Which of the following would classify ketamine properly? 



what is a Antagonist

300

This cue involves the parallel lines appearing to converge as they move farther away from the observer.

What is linear perspective?

300

This theory suggests that the way we perceive colors is based on the combination of three primary colors: red, green, and blue.

What is trichromatic theory?

300

This cognitive bias involves overestimating the commonality of one's opinions and behaviors, often leading to faulty assumptions about others' preferences and choices. 

What is the false consensus effect?

400

This type of sampling involves choosing participants who are easiest to access, often leading to bias.

What is convenience sampling?

400

Which of the following sleep disorders is when a person’s breathing repeatedly stops and starts during sleep, leading to momentary awakenings?



what is Sleep apnea

400

This is the ability to recall information better when in the same environment or state as when it was learned.

What is context-dependent memory?

400

This term refers to the variables that are manipulated in an experiment to observe their effect on the dependent variable.

What are independent variables?

400

This theory of color vision suggests that the brain perceives color through three opposing color channels, namely red-green, blue-yellow, and black-white.

What is the opponent-process theory?

500

This type of bias occurs when participants respond in a way that they think is socially acceptable rather than how they truly feel.

What is social desirability bias?

500

This can be defined as the ability to perceive and sense the body’s movements and position changes



Kinesthesis

500

This phenomenon refers to the inability to recall information due to the decay of memory traces over time.

Answer: What is the forgetting curve?

500

This concept refers to the statistical process by which researchers repeat a study to verify the results, increasing the confidence in the findings. 

What is replication?

500

This phenomenon involves the tendency for individuals to mistakenly think that their genetic predispositions, such as risk for certain diseases, can be completely overridden by environmental changes. 

What is the nature-nurture fallacy?