People
Theory
Perspectives
Research
Research Methods
100

Who is the psychologist known for Behaviorism?

John Watson

100

"the study of the mind" where different brain areas account for personality traits and are "read" from bumps on the skull

Phrenology

100

stems from Watson's behaviorism; focuses on the scientific study of observable behaviors; elaborated upon by B.F. Skinner

Behavioral Perspective

100

How is descriptive research used?

to describe behavior

100

What is the independent variable?

Variable manipulated by the experimenter to cause a change in the dependent variable

200

Who was William James?

American Psychologist known for using Functionalism to better understand the mind

200

an early school of psychology that used objective introspection to explore the structural elements of the human mind

Structuralism

200

What is the Humanistic Perspective?

the theory that believes that people have free will, the freedom to chose their own destiny and strive for self-actualization

200

In correlational research, what does r show?

Strength and direction of the relationship

200

What is the difference between an experimental group and a control group?

The experimental group received the treatment while the control group does not.

300

"Father of psychology" who founded the first psychology lab and used objective introspection; known for Structuralism

Wilhelm Wundt

300

a school of thought by Sigmund Freud that believed the unconscious mind played a role in the way an individual is

Psychoanalytic Theory

300

theory that focuses on memory, intelligence, perception, thought processes, problem solving, language, and learning

Cognitive Perspective

300

How is Experimental Research able to determine a cause and effect relationship?

Through the manipulation of the independent variable

300

What is the difference between naturalistic observation and laboratory observation?

Naturalistic: no intervention by the researchers, observing people in their natural state

Laboratory: steps taken to control for extraneous variables

400

Brought Structuralism to the US from Germany

Edward Titchener

400

What is Behaviorism?

the use of observable behavior to study the mind

400

focuses on the biological bases of universal mental characteristics that all humans share; mind is a set of information-processing machines that have adapted overtime

Evolutionary Perspective

400

What is the downfall of case studies?

the results cannot be generalized to a population

400

Name the 5 ethical guidelines from the APA that we discussed.

Confidentiality, prevention of both psychological and physical harm, informed consent, right to withdraw, and deception is justified (includes debriefing)

500

Known for Humanism and self-actualization; hierarchy of needs

Maslow

500

What do Structuralism, Functionalism, Gestalt theory, and Psychoanalytic theory have in common?

They all focus on internal forces of the mind.

500

human and animal's behavior is a direct result of events in the body (hormones, heredity, brain chemicals, etc.)

Biopsychological Perspective

500

What are the three things that determine if a study is experimental research?

the independent variable is manipulated, the participants are randomly assigned, and extraneous variables are controlled for

500

What are the five steps to completing a research project?

1. Perceive a research question

2. Form a hypothesis

3. Test a hypothesis

4. Draw conclusions

5. Report results