Heredity/Environment (1.1)
Neuron/Neural Firing (1.3)
Body Parts (1.2/1.4)
Sleep (1.5)
Sensation (1.6)
100

The classic dilemma between someone's biology and someone's life experiences (Extra 50 points to name the actual psych terms for these)

What is Nature versus Nurture? (or heredity and environment for +50 points)

100

Four words that can describe neurotransmitters

What are agonists, antagonists, inhibitory, and excitatory?

100

The different nervous systems

What are the central nervous system, peripheral nervous system, including the somatic nervous system and the autonomic nervous system which includes the sympathetic nervous system and the parasympathetic nervous system?

100

The two different theories of why we dream

What are the consolidation theory (Dreams consolidate daily experiences into memories) and activation-synthesis theory (brain making sense of random neural firings)?

100

Weber's Law

What is that the just noticeable difference is not a fixed amount, but is proportional to a signal's intensity?

200

The study of how one's biology and environment interact

What is Behavioral Genetics?

200


What are (from top to bottom) the nucleus, the cell body, dendrites, a glial cell, the axon, and the axon terminal?

200

The difference between the sympathetic and the parasympathetic nervous systems

What is the sympathetic nervous systems is the "emergency response" system, responding to anxiety and causing the fight/flight/freeze response while the parasympathetic system returns one to homeostasis?

200
The effects of sleep deprivation

What are memory impairment, moodiness, disordered eating, and if having chronic sleep deprivation, chronic irritability, minimal motivation, anxiety, and decreased cognitive and immune functions?

200

The difference between cones and rods

What are that cones transmit detail and color while rods transmit shape and movement?

300

Two different types of studies that help determine what aspects of one's behavior are environmental or biological

What are Twin studies and Adoption studies?
300

The stages of a neuron firing

What are starting at resting potential, receiving a signal (acting potential), getting past the threshold, depolarizing to send the signal to the next neuron, and going through a refractory period to repolarize?

300

The location of Broca's and Wernicke's area

What is the frontal lobe and the temporal lobe respectively?
300

The stages of the sleep that the brain proceeds through throughout one sleep cycle

What is stage 1, stage 2, stage 3, stage 2, REM?

300

The different parts of the eye

What are the cornea (outermost part of eye), the iris (the colored part), the lens (focuses light), the retina (detects light), the fovea (where most cones are) and the optic nerve (sends signals to brain from retina)?
400

The difference between sensitive and critical periods

What is sensitive periods are when it is best to progress developmentally but can be accomplished later and critical periods are periods of time where you must progress developmentally and cannot do so outside of that period?

400

All of the neurotransmitters we need to know and one or two keywords to remember their function

Glutamate - Excitatory

GABA - Inhibitory

Norepinephrine - Anxiety

ACh - Muscle movement

Endorphins - Reduce pain

Serotonin - Mood balancer

Dopamine - Pleasure

400

The four lobes of the cerebral cortex and their functions

What are the

Occipital lobes - Visual processing

Temporal lobes - Auditory processing

Parietal lobes - Sensory processing

Frontal lobes - Executive functioning

?

400

The reason that REM sleep is called the paradoxical stage

What is that there is high brain activity but the body is paralyzed?

400

Four different types of visual disorders

What are monochromatism (one working cone), dichromatism (two working cones), prosopagnosia (face blindness), and blindsight (you aren't able to see things, but your brain still responds to stimuli)? 

500

The difference between a genotype, genome, and adaptive trait

What is

- Genotypes are genes being expressed as traits

- A genome is one's full hereditary information

- An adaptive trait is a specific trait beneficial for survival that gets past down

?

500

The operations of the endocrine system (including 5 hormones we need to know)

The hypothalamus sends a signal to the pituitary gland to release either adrenaline (fight/flight), leptin (hunger suppressant), ghrelin (hunger stimulant), melatonin (sleep stimulant), and oxytocin (love)

500

The different parts of the brainstem and their functions

What is 

- Medulla oblongata - maintains heart rate & bodily functions

- Reticular formation - carries messages throughout the brain

- Reward center - responds to dopamine

- Limbic system - Includes the thalamus, hippocampus, amygdala, and hypothalamus to regulate emotions

500

The 5 different sleep disorders we need to know and what they do to someone

What are

- Insomnia - the inability to fall asleep or stay asleep

- Narcolepsy - Suddenly falling into REM sleep during waking hours

- Sleep apnea - Breathing stopping and starting suddenly during sleep

- Somnambulism - Sleepwalking

- REM sleep behavior disorder - Not being paralyzed during REM sleep

?

500

Three different theories of why we hear different pitches outside of detection range

What are

- Place theory - Here different pitches because different places are triggered along cochlea

- Frequency theory - Different frequencies trigger a signal at the same frequency as the sound

- Volley theory - Neural cells alternate as they fire to pick up higher frequencies