History of Psychology
Contemporary Fields in Psychology
Careers in Psychology
Scientific Method
Approaches to Research
Statistical Thinking
Attitudes and Persuasion
Group Behavior
Prejudice, Discrimination and Aggression
100

This perspective of Psychology focuses on unconscious desires and childhood experiences. 

Psychoanalytic perspective

100

This domain of psychology focuses on studying the mind, and its relationship to our actions and experiences.

 Cognitive Domain/Cognitive psychology

100

If you want to work as a college professor in psychology, you will most likely get this type of degree.

PhD

100

A type of evidence that is objective and tangible. 

Empirical Evidence

100

Type of research in which scientists passively observe and measure phenomena.(hint: does NOT equal causation)

Correlational research

100

The part of a research article that gives a concise summary of the work and findings.

Abstract

100

The belief that people get the outcome they deserve (good things happen to good people, and bad things happen to bad people).

 Just-world hypothesis

100

When a witness does not help a victim/person struggling, increases as there are more people in the area

Bystander effect

100

Seeking out information that is consistent with a belief and ignoring information that challenges it.

Confirmation bias

200

Edward Titchener was a student of this man, whose ideas he built on in order to develop Structuralism.

Wilhelm Wundt

200

This domain of psychology focuses on things such as learning and behaviorism across the lifespan.

 Developmental domain/ Developmental psychology

200

If you become a researcher, you will make observations, develop hypotheses, test conduct experiments, and draw conclusions from the results, which are all step in this method of research.

Scientific method

200

The second stage of the scientific method. A testable prediction that is logically concluded from a theory.

Hypothesis

200

This group within the experimental set-up is not exposed to any experimental manipulation.

Control group
200

A larger collection of individuals that we would like to generalize our results to.

Population

200

Valuing goals/achievements as higher when more effort is put in.

Justification of effort

200

Decreased individual work in a group setting.

Social loafing

200

the ___-___ is the group that people identify with vs the ___-___, which is the group people view as fundamentally different.

 in-group vs out-group?

300

In the structural model of personality, Sigmund Freud thought that personality consisted of these 3 parts.

 Id, Ego, and Superego


300

An individual's consistent patterns of thought and behavior.

Personality

300

If you want to have a career providing psychological treatment, rather than conducting research, you may want to pursue this type of doctoral degree.

 PsyD (Doctorate of Psychology)

300

A term used to refer to the ability of an experiment to be repeated by another researcher.

Verifiability

300

A unaccounted for variable that causes the systematic movement of the variables of interest.

Confounding variable

300

The standard cutoff for the p-value.

<.05

300

An attitude one may not express outwardly but believes.

Implicit attitude

300

Improved performance when an audience is watching.

Social facilitation

300

The phenomena where an individual holds an exception of themselves, and behaves in a way that makes it come true. 

Self-fulfilling prophecy

400

Under the Humanistic view, which emphasized the potential for good in humans, Carl Rogers developed this kind of therapy.

Client-centered therapy

400

Clinical psychologists refer to this when they are diagnosing their clients or patients.

DSM-V (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders)

400

Human Resources, Marketing, and Sales are some of the top occupations that hire individuals with this level of degree in Psychology.

 Bachelors of Arts (BA)

400

If deception occurs in a study on human participants, a ______ after the conclusion of the study is required.

de-briefing

400

Occurs when people's expectations influences their experience in a situation. A common example is feeling effects with sugar pills.

Placebo effect

400

Use of a probability-based method to select a subset of individuals for the sample from the population.

Random sampling
400

The _____ Attitude change approach hypothesizes that the biggest influences on persuasiveness are the source, the content, and the characteristics of the audience. 

Yale
400

Assessing the risk and reward to helping in any given situation.

 Cost-benefit analysis

400

Aggression that is motivated by a goal, with no intent to harm.

Instrumental aggression

500

As a result of the ___ revolution, the focus on strictly observable behaviors shifted to other types of Psychology. 

Cognitive revolution

500

This model suggests that health/illness is determined by an interaction of three factors.

Biopsychosocial model

500

Of all the types of psychologists mentioned in your textbook, this type is one the most likely to appear in a courtroom.

Forensic Psychologist

500

A clear and easy to follow ______ section of a research paper is vital for other researchers to repeat the experiment.

Methods section

500

All your variables must have a ___ ___, which is clear and concise and determines how you will measure your variable. Also allows different researchers to replicate your study. 

Operational definition

500

The expected amount of random variation in a statistic, often defined for 95% confidence level.

Margin of error

500

The route of persuasion that is indirect and utilizes cues and association.

Peripheral Route

500

The predisposition to help people who have helped us.

Reciprocal altruism

500

Which theory proposes that when we are prevented from achieving a goal, humans become aggressive?

Frustration aggression theory