Attributing it All
Persuasion Nation
Social Influence Showdown
The Self and Personality
Emotions and Motivations
Helping or Harming
Potpourri (PSYCH!)
Old Unit Review
Potpourri
400

This is the tendency to overestimate dispositional factors and underestimate situational factors when explaining others' behavior.

What is the fundamental attribution error?

400

This persuasion technique involves getting someone to agree to a small request before making a larger one.

What is foot-in-the-door technique?

400

This occurs when people adjust their behavior or thinking to match a group standard.

What is conformity?

400

Freud proposed that this part of the mind operates on the pleasure principle.

What is the id?

400

What is the James-Lange theory of emotion?

This theory states that physiological arousal precedes the experience of emotion.

400

This effect explains why people are less likely to help in an emergency when others are present.

What is bystander effect?


Trashketball

400

These are five of the universally common emotions experienced across cultures.

What are anger, disgust, sadness, happiness, surprise, and fear?

400

This is the body’s natural 24-hour cycle.

What is circadian rhythm?

400

In The Avengers, what is the name of Thor's hammer?

What is Mjolnir?

500

This occurs when people attribute their successes to internal factors but their failures to external factors.

What is self-serving bias?

500

When someone initially refuses a large request but then agrees to a smaller request, they have fallen for this technique.

What is door-in-the-face technique?

500

Stanley Milgram conducted the famous  study involving fake electric shocks, which demonstrated this idea.

What is obedience?

500

This defense mechanism involves shifting aggressive impulses to a less threatening target.

What is displacement?


Trashketball

500

This hormone is released by the stomach helps to signal hunger to the brain.

What is ghrelin?

500

The theory that we help others because we expect the favor to be returned.

What is the social-reciprocity norm?


Trashketball

500

This hormone is secreted by fat cells and signals to the brain satiety (the feeling of fullness).

What is leptin?

500

Tendency to ignore environmental changes due to inattention.

What is change blidness?

500

This U.S. state was the first to ratify the Constitution.

What is Delaware?

600

This belief leads people to assume that bad things happen to bad people and good things happen to good people.

What is just-world phenomena/hypothesis?

600

This term describes when people develop a preference for things simply because they are exposed to them repeatedly.

What is mere-exposure effect?

600

When group members strive for agreement and avoid critical thinking, this phenomenon occurs.

What is groupthink?

600

According to humanistic psychology, this term describes a person’s ability to achieve their fullest potential.

What is self-actualization?

600

This law states that performance is best at moderate levels of arousal.

What is the Yerkes-Dodson Law?

600

This term describes reduced self-awareness and increased impulsive behavior in group settings.

What is deindividuation?

600

This defense mechanism involves attributing one's own unacceptable feelings or impulses to others.

What is projection?


Trashketball

600

This brief electrical impulse travels down the axon of a neuron, initiating communication with other neurons. It is triggered when a neuron reaches a certain threshold and is characterized by a rapid depolarization and repolarization of the cell membrane.

What is an action potential?


Trashketball

600

This is the highest number in the Fibonacci sequence below 100.

What is 89?

700

When we explain our own behavior as being influenced by the situation but attribute others’ actions to their personality, we are demonstrating this bias.

What is actor-observer bias?

700

This occurs when our initial positive impression of someone or something (like attractiveness or charisma) leads us to assume they possess other positive qualities, even if unrelated.

What is the halo effect?

700

The reduced effort people put in when working in a group compared to working alone.

What is social loafing?

700

This theory by Bandura suggests that personality is shaped by an interaction between behavior, environment, and cognition.

What is reciprocal determinism?

700

This theory explains that people are motivated by the desire to return to homeostasis.

What is drive-reduction theory?

700

When individuals in a group shift toward a more extreme position than they initially held.

What is group polarization?
700

This is the mental discomfort (tension) that occurs when actions or attitudes are in conflict. 

What is cognitive dissonance?

700

This lobe is responsible for auditory processing and language comprehension.

What is the temporal lobe?

700

Name all seven of Snow White's little friends. 

Who are Doc, Grumpy, Happy, Sleepy, Bashful, Sneezy, and Dopey?


Trashketball

800

This is the tendency to persist in one’s beliefs even after being presented with contradicting evidence.

What is belief perseverance?

800

Candidate A provides statistics and logical arguments, while Candidate B appeals to emotions. What persuasion routes are they using?

Candidate A = Central route, Candidate B = Peripheral route.

800

This is when the presence of others improves performance.

What is social facilitation?

800

These are the Big Five Personality traits.

What are openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism?

800

The brain structure most involved in regulating hunger and motivation.

What is the hypothalamus?

800

A cooperative goal that requires groups to work together can reduce prejudice and is called this.

What are superordinate goals?

800

This theory of emotion proposes that positive emotions tend to expand awareness and encourage new actions and thoughts while negative emotions reduce awareness and narrow action.

What is the broaden-and-build theory?

800

This is known for reducing pain and producing feelings of pleasure, often referred to as the body's natural painkiller.

What are endorphins?

800

This is the highest seeded team (lowest number) to have lost this weekend in the Men's NCAA Tournament.

What is St. John's?