Piaget's cognitive development stage when we learn about the world through sight, touch, taste, and movement.
What is the sensorimotor stage?
According to Freud, this part of the unconscious mind has strong sexual and aggressive urges.
What is the id?
This main symptom of this disorder is an intense, unjustified, maladaptive fear of a specific object or situation.
What is a phobia (or, a specific phobia)?
A form of psychotherapy that focuses on identifying and replacing irrational thinking.
What is cognitive therapy?
The most common method of suicide in Korea.
What is suffocation (or hanging)?
The scientific name for a baby 10 weeks after conception.
What is a fetus?
One of the two psychoanalytic therapy techniques used by Freud to learn about a client's unconscious mind.
What is free association (or what is dream analysis)?
Chronically ill people use this to measure how much mental/emotional energy each daily task will use (it's a metaphor - not a real measurement device).
What is the spoon theory (or what are spoons)?
A type of psychotherapy in which the therapist has a wholistic, BPSS-type perspective on client problems.
What is Christian counseling?
The most common method of non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI).
What is cutting?
The scientific word used by John Bowby, Harry Harlow, and others to describe love.
What is attachment?
What Abraham Maslow saw as the highest motivation (the top of his triangle-shaped "hierarchy of needs").
What is self-actualization?
A state of extreme positivity, optimism, and energy that often leads to impulsive and reckless behavior.
What is mania?
A person's own attempts to decrease their symptoms of anxiety and depression.
What is self-medication?
A diagram about one's family that includes information about relationships, disease, and psychological disorders.
What is a genogram?
The kind of development that describes how a baby learns to intentionally move and control its body.
What is motor development (or physical development)?
The Big 5 Traits include Neuroticism, Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, and ________.
What is agreeableness?
A psychological condition in which a person perceives or believes things that are not real
What is psychosis? (also accept: delusions and hallucinations)
A type of mental health professional who can prescribe drugs.
What is a psychiatrist (or medical doctor)?
The full name of DSM-5.
What is the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th edition)?
The formal operations stage is to cognitive development as the ______ stage is to moral development.
What is post-conventional?
In psychoanalytic theory, the ego uses this principle to satisfy unconsicous impulses without feeling guilt about breaking social rules.
What is the reality principle?
A condition in which the conscious mind is disconnected from particular memories and experiences.
What is dissociation?
If drugs and therapy do not relieve depression, this treatment puts electrodes in the brain that are connected to a low-current pulse generator.
What is deep brain stimulation?
A test used to assess the unconscious mind by having clients write dramatic stories about pictures of ambiguous situations.
What is the Thematic Apperception Test (or, TAT)?