Scientific Method
Nervous System
Learning
Memory
Social Psych
100

This variable is the one that the experimenter changes or manipulates.

What is the Independent Variable?

100

This major branch includes the brain and spinal cord.

What is the Central Nervous System (CNS)?


100

In classical conditioning, this is the naturally occurring, automatic response.

What is the UCR (Unconditioned Response)?


100

This memory store briefly holds sensory information for less than a second.

What is sensory memory?

100

Attributing someone’s behaviour to external circumstances is called this type of attribution.

What is an external attribution?


200

This type of variable must be kept constant to ensure a fair test.

What are control variables?


200

This type of neuron carries messages from the body to the brain and spinal cord.

What is a sensory neuron?


200

This type of learning occurs by watching others.

What is observational learning?

200

 Short-term memory typically lasts how long without rehearsal?

What is 18–30 seconds?

200

This common supermarket strategy places essential items like milk and bread at the very back of the store to increase this shopper behaviour.

What is impulse buying / spending more time in the store?

300

Write the correct phrase in this hypothesis format

“If… then… because..."

300

The correct direction of a nerve impulse is:
________ → cell body → axon → axon terminals.

What are dendrites?


300

Reinforcement ______ behaviour; punishment ______ behaviour.

What is increases; decreases?


300

This memory strategy involves linking unrelated words into a story.

What is narrative chaining?


300

Thinking someone acted a certain way because of their character is this type of explanation.

What is an internal attribution?


400

This model requires students to make a claim, provide supporting data, and link it with scientific principles.

What is CER (Claim, Evidence, Reasoning)?


400

This part of the nervous system connects the CNS to the rest of the body.

What is the Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)?


400

The four stages of observational learning are attention, retention, reproduction, and this final step.

What is motivation?


400

Retrieving information without any cues is called ______.
Identifying information with cues is called ______.

What are recall and recognition?

400

In the ABC model of attitudes, the “B” stands for this part of an attitude.

What is behaviour / behavioural component?

500

During a memory experiment, all students were given the same lighting, instructions, and time limit. This demonstrates this principle.

What is controlling variables / ensuring experimental fairness?

500

These neurons send messages from the CNS to the muscles and glands.

What are motor neurons?

500

This term describes explaining someone’s behaviour as caused by their personality or motivation rather than the situation.

What is internal attribution?

500

This memory store has unlimited capacity and potentially permanent duration.

What is long-term memory?

500

These quick, automatic thinking strategies help us make fast decisions but often lead to biased judgments.

What are heuristics (mental shortcuts)?