Social Cognition
Social Cognition 2
Personality
Disorders 1
Disorders 2
100

"I got the job because I got lucky, not because I did well."

What is low personal control?

100

The way in which individuals process, remember, and use information in social contexts.

What is social cognition?

100
The tendency to experience negative emotions, such as anger, worry, sadness, and pessimism.

What is neuroticism?

100

Cycles of high and low mood.

What is bipolar disorder?

100

Last line of treatment for depression and bipolar disorder. Almost like a hard "reset" for the brain.

What is electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)?

200

The ability to recognize emotions, identify them, and use that information to guide thinking and behavior.

What is emotional intelligence?

200

This is a shortcut that helps us organize social rules and norms...like what happens when you go to a movie theater.

What is a script? (or schema)

200

Josh is a responsive parent, and his child learns to view the world as a safe place where basic needs will be met.

What is Erikson's 1st stage: Trust vs. Mistrust?

200

Dominant-linked disorder involving movement and cognitive symptoms.

What is Huntington's disease?

200

These block the reuptake of neurotransmitters, such as serotonin.

What are Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs)?

300

James yells at his little brother over something silly. You assume it was because James had a bad day at school today, he is still a genuinely good guy.

What is a situational attribution?

300

Older adults pay greater attention to positive information than negative information.

What is the positivity bias?

300

Part of personality that pulls together all aspects of your identity to create a coherent sense of self.

What is the life narrative?

300

Ritualistic behaviors that people engage in to reduce anxiety.

What are compulsions?

300

This type of dementia is usually caused by a series of small mini strokes or CVAs.

What is vascular dementia?

400

Older adults may be aware of beliefs that they have poor memory. Then on memory tests within the lab, they actually perform more poorly than they would have had they not heard about that belief.

What is stereotype threat?

400

Trey & Kory work together to solve a math problem.

What is collaborative cognition?

400

What we could become, what we want to become, and what we are afraid to become.

What are possible selves?

400

Deficits in or disruptions of normal emotions and behaviors, such as social withdrawal or apathy.

What are negative symptoms of Schizophrenia?

400

Too much of this neurotransmitter has been implicated in symptoms of Schizophrenia.

What is dopamine? (Dopamine hypothesis)

500

Remembering where you learned information, such as who told you the rumor about your boss.

What is a source judgment?

500

Overemphasizing dispositional factors when making an attribution about someone else, but overemphasizing situational factors when making attributions about yourself.

What is the correspondence bias?

500

Evaluation of one's life; associated with positive feelings.

What is subjective well-being?

500

These theories of mental disorders focus on genetics, brain changes, and neurotransmitter levels.

What are biological theories?

500

A team of doctors, nurses, physical therapists, and engineers work together to create a safe living environment for an adult diagnosed with Parkinson's disease.

What is the multidimensional approach?