Classical Conditioning
Operant Conditioning
Cognitive Processes
Personality
Biological Influences
100

$100: Stage where a neutral stimulus and unconditioned stimulus are first linked.

What is Acquisition?

100

$100: Adding a desirable stimulus to increase a behavior.

What is Positive Reinforcement?

100

$100: A mental representation of the layout of one's environment.

What is a Cognitive Map?

100

$100: This "Big Five" trait describes individuals who are outgoing, sociable, and derive energy from being around others. 

What is extraversion?

100

$100: Biological predisposition to avoid foods that cause sickness.

What is Taste Aversion?

200

$200: Reappearance of an extinguished conditioned response after a rest period.

What is Spontaneous Recovery?

200

$200: Reinforcing a behavior after an unpredictable number of responses.

What is Variable-Ratio?

200

$200: Learning that occurs but is not apparent until there is an incentive.

What is Latent Learning?

200

$200: To assess personality, the Rorschach test uses these ambiguous stimuli to uncover a subject’s unconscious motives.

What are inkblots?

200

$200: Passive resignation learned when unable to avoid aversive events.

What is Learned Helplessness?

300

$300: Subject in Watson’s experiment who learned to fear white rats.

Who is Little Albert?

300

$300: An event that decreases the behavior that it follows.

What is Punishment?

300

$300: A sudden realization of a problem's solution.

What is Insight?

300

$300: This "Big Five" trait dimension ranges from being organized and disciplined at one end to disorganized and careless at the other. 

What is conscientiousness?

300

$300: Tendency for animals to return to innate behaviors following conditioning.

What is Instinctive Drift?

400

$400: Condition where a CS is paired with a new neutral stimulus to create a second (often weaker) CS.

What is Higher-Order Conditioning?

400

$400: A box containing a bar or key that an animal can manipulate to obtain food.

What is a Skinner Box?

400

$400: Desire to perform a behavior for its own sake.

What is Intrinsic Motivation?

400

$400: Proposed by Abraham Maslow, this term refers to the ultimate psychological need that arises after basic physical and psychological needs are met. 

What is self-actualization?

400

$400: Perception that chance or outside forces determine one's fate.

What is External Locus of Control?

500

$500: Responding to a specific stimulus but not to others that are similar.

What is Discrimination?

500

$500: Innately reinforcing stimuli, such as those that satisfy a biological need.

What are Primary Reinforcers?

500

$500: Diminished intrinsic interest due to excessive extrinsic rewards.

What is the Overjustification Effect?

500

$500: Albert Bandura used this two-word term to describe the interacting influences of behavior, internal cognition, and environment. 

What is reciprocal determinism?

500

$500: The ability to delay immediate gratification for greater long-term rewards.

What is Self-Control?