What is Psychology
Parts of the Brain
Functions of the Brain
Conditioning
Conditioning pt.2
100

What is Psychology

Uses the empirical approach (emphasize the use of observational study and the experimental method to receive information)

The study of behavior and mental processes

100

What makes up the CNS

Brain and Spinal Cord

100

The system located below the cerebral hemispheres is associated with emotions and drives

Limbic System

100

What is operant conditioning?

  • A type of learning in which behavior is strengthened or weakened by its consequences.
  • B.F. Skinner's experiments with operant conditioning
  • Components of operant conditioning (Reinforcement, Punishment, Positive Reinforcement, Negative Reinforcement, Positive Punishment, Negative Punishment)
100

What is learning?

Process of acquiring through experience new and
relatively enduring information or behaviors

200

Explain the difference between a random sample and a random assignment

random sampling refers to how you select individuals from the population to participate in your study. Random assignment refers to how you place those participants into groups

200

What is a neuron

Basic units of the nervous system responsible for transmitting electrochemical signals. Neurons consist of a cell body, dendrites (receiving inputs), and an axon (transmitting outputs).

200

Oldest part and central brain core, responsible for automatic survival functions

Brain Stem

200

Who completed the experiment where they rang a bell just before feeding dogs, causing them to eventually salivate at the sound of the bell alone  

Ivan Pavlov

200

What is classical conditioning?

A type of learning in which a neutral stimulus becomes associated with a meaningful stimulus and acquires the capacity to elicit a similar response

300

Explain the difference between nature vs nurture, and why we care

Nature: The genetic makeup of an individual, including biological predispositions for physical, emotional, and intellectual traits 

Nurture: The influence of learning and environmental factors on an individual, including exposure, experience, and learning 


A philosophical discussion about the relative importance of genetics and environment in shaping human traits 


300

What parts of the brain are in the limbic system?

Amygdala: Two bean-sized neural clusters, Involved in our experience of emotion and tying emotional meaning to our memories
• Hypothalamus: Below the thalamus, Directs maintenance activities
• Hippocampus: The neural center in the limbic system that processes explicit memories for storage

300

What is lateralization and what part of the brain enables lateralization?

A tendency for the brain's left and right hemispheres to serve different functions

Corpus Callosum - a wide band of axon fibers that
transmits information between the cerebral
hemispheres 

300

What is generalization?

The tendency to have conditioned responses triggered by related stimuli

300

What is Latent learning 

Learning that occurs, but it may not be evident until there is a reason to demonstrate it

400

Responsible for the first Psychological Lab in Germany

Wilhelm Wundt

400

What is the function of the midbrain

Connects the hindbrain and the forebrain, Found atop the brainstem; controls some motor movement, and transmits auditory and visual information

400

Involved in language, motor control, reasoning, and emotion

Frontal lobe

400

Adding a desirable stimulus to increase the likelihood of a behavior occurring again

Positive Reinforcement
400

What role does punishment serve?

gives something undesirable/taking something desirable to decrease frequency of behavior

500

What is the Placebo Effect?

a phenomenon where a person experiences improvement in their health or symptoms after receiving an inactive treatment

500

List the parts of the hindbrain and their functions

Brainstem: The oldest part and central brain core, responsible for automatic survival functions
Medulla: Brainstem base, controls basic automatic survival processes like breathing, blood pressure, and heart rate
Pons: hindbrain structure that connects the brain and spinal cord; involved in regulating brain activity during sleep
Cerebellum: Little brain at the brainstem rear, Controls balance, coordination, movement, and motor skills, processes sensory input

500

Receives sensory input for touch and body position, Processes various sensory and perceptual information

Parietal lobe

500

A reinforcement schedule in which reinforcement is delivered after an unpredictable amount of time has elapsed

Variable Interval Schedule

500

What is Successive approximations?

Responses that are increasingly closer to the final desired behavior are rewarded; all other responses are ignored