Heredity & Environment
Perception
Developmental Psychology
Attribution Theory & Person Perception
Health Psychology
100

The principle that the inherited traits enabling an organism to survive and reproduce in a particular environment will most likely be passed on to succeeding generations.

Natural Selection

100

Failing to see visible objects when our attention is directed elsewhere.

Inattentional blindness

100

Research that compares people of different ages at the same point in time.

Cross-sectional study

100

The tendency for observers, when analyzing others' behaviors, to underestimate the impact of the situation and to overestimate the impact of personal disposition.

Fundamental attribution error

100

The process by which we perceive and respond to certain events that we appraise as threatening or challenging.

Stress

200

A random error in gene replication that leads to change.

Mutation

200

A mental predisposition to perceive one thing and not another.

Perceptual set

200

Research that follows and retests the same people over time.

Longitudinal study

200

The tendency for those acting in a situation to attribute their behavior to external causes, but for observers to attribute others' behavior to internal causes.

Actor-observer bias

200

Selye's concept of the body's adaptive response to stress in three phases - alarm, resistance, exhaustion.

General adaptation syndrome (GAS)

300

The biochemical units of heredity.

Genes

300

An organized whole.  These psychologists emphasized our tendency to integrate pieces of information into meaningful wholes.

Gestalt

300

Agents, such as chemicals and viruses, that can reach the embryo or fetus during prenatal development and cause harm.

Teratogens

300

A generalized (sometimes accurate but often overgeneralized) belief about a group of people.

Stereotype

300

Under stress, people (especially women) may nurture themselves and others and bond with and seek support from others.

Tend-and-befriend response

400

Individuals who developed from a single fertilized egg that split in two, creating two genetically identical organisms.

Identical (monozygotic) twins

400

A cue to nearby objects' distance, enabled by the brain combining retinal images.

Convergence

400

Decreasing responsiveness with repeated stimulation.

Habituation

400

The tendency for people to believe the world is just and that people therefore get what they deserve and deserve what they get.

Just-world phenomenon

400

The hopelessness and passive resignation humans and other animals learn when unable to avoid repeated aversive events.

Learned helplessness

500

The study of the molecular mechanisms by which environments can influence genetic expression (without a DNA change).

Epigenetics

500

An illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on and off in quick succession.

Phi phenomenon

500

An optimal period early in the life of an organism when exposure to certain stimuli or experiences produces normal development.

Critical period

500

The tendency to favor our own group.

Ingroup bias

500

The perception that outside forces beyond our personal control determine our fate.

External locus of control