Abnormal Psychology
Grab Bag Final Review
Final Review:
One of These Things is Not Like the Other*
Final Review: No, We're Not Talking About Your Mother
Final Review: By Any Other Name
100

To discriminate, to separate, or to educate: it’s the best way to minimize stigma.

What is to educate?

Know sources of positive and negative sources of stigma and how to deal with it systemically.

100

Containing beta waves, it's the stage of sleep that is--paradoxically--most like wakefulness.

What is REM?


Know the stages of sleep, their EEG wave types, how they oscillate over the course of the night, and how they compare to wakefulness.

100

psychiatrist
medical psychologist
life coach
psychiatric nurse practitioner
physician

What is a life coach?

--does not require a graduate degree nor a license
--cannot prescribe medication

100

He was the Russian physiologist known for his discovery of how we associate stimuli with our involuntary actions as responses.

Who is Ivan Pavlov?

100

Statistical average.

What is the mean?

200

It’s the full name of the resource manual that contains every current mental health diagnosis, their symptomological criteria, and their prevalence rates.

What is the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (of Mental Disorders)?

Know the DSM-5-TR as the latest edition, what it contains, at how it works.

200

They're the substances or agents that can cause birth defects or increase the risk of miscarriage, stillbirth, or preterm labor.

What is a teratogen?

200

postconventional.
preconventional.
conventional.
periconventional.

What is periconventional?

--According to Lawrence Kohlberg, is not a level of moral reasoning. 

200

Unfortunately a proponent of eugenics, his positive contributions to the then burgeoning field of psychology include widescale measurement of humans to begin comparing abilities, which he termed "anthropometrics."

Who is Sir Francis Galton?

200

In experimental design: response variable, regressand, predicted variable, measured variable, outcome variable, or target.

What is the dependent variable?

300

They’re the normally present and adaptive behaviors that are now absent during an active illness of schizophrenia.

What are negative symptoms?

Know positive vs. negative symptoms and what defines each.

300

They're the type of tests that test if you've mastered a certain domain of knowledge, usually if you have collected said knowledge or skill from a past experience.

What is an achievement test?

Know aptitude vs. achievement vs. intelligence tests.

300

House-Tree-Person.
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI).
Rorschach Inkblot Test (RIT)
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT).

What is the MMPI?

--is not a projective personality test.

300
He is responsible for the psychoanalytic theory of personality, understanding the formation of the id, ego, and superego.

Who is Sigmund Freud?

300

In the study of the "Big Five": Normal Reactions; or Emotional Stability (its reciprocal).

What is neuroticism? 

400

It’s the mood disorder that is consistent with the highest number (yet not the highest proportion) of deaths by suicide.

What is Major Depressive Disorder?

Know MDD vs. Bipolar Disorder and correct/incorrect terms for death by suicide.

400

It's the schedule of reinforcement found in the glitzy slot machines of Las Vegas and, as research shows, when the schedule is based on the number of requisite responses (vice the time of the response), the most effective schedule as to reinforcement because it resists extinction.

What is a variable ratio schedule?

400

died by suicide.
suicide attempt.
suicidal thoughts.
committed suicide.

What is commited suicide?


--is not a recommended term around suicide.

400

He theorized intelligence as being based on based on a model of multiple levels, all which influence each other--The Hierarchical Model--which is today's prevailing understanding of g, s, and our differing abilities on different tasks.

Who was Philip Vernon?

400

Infant "personalities" -- their general emotional reactivity.

What is temperament?

500

It’s the personality disorder characterized by a pathological extreme shallowness, emotional immaturity, and use of flirtation and flattery as a way of meeting the need to be the center of attention.

What is Histrionic Personality Disorder?

Know the PDs discussed in class (Narcissistic, Borderline, Histrionic, Antisocial).

500

It's the first of four Piagetian stages, in which humans experience their world and build cognition through kinesthetics, haptics, olfaction, etc.

What is the sensorimotor period?

Know the four stages, in order, and what corresponds to each stage.

500

agreeableness.
conscientiousness.
openness to new experiences.
emotional stability.

What is openness to new experiences?


--Does not tend to increase throughout lifespan in our culture.

500

They were the scientists responsible for discovering more about the action potential along the neuronal axon based on their foundational experiments using the giant squid.

Who were (Alan) Hodgkin and (Andrew) Huxley? 

500

In the study of the "Big Five": Extraversion.

What is emotional dominance?