The Brain
Mental Health
Social Psych
Research
Fun Facts
100

 Lobe at the back of the head is the primary center for receiving and processing visual information.

What is the occipital lobe?

100

This term describes "good stress" that can actually motivate a person and promote health.

What is eustress?

100

This phenomenon describes the tendency for people to perform better on simple tasks when others are watching.

What is social facilitation?

100

In an experiment, this is the variable that is being measured by the researcher to see if it changes.

What is dependent variable?
100

While humans do this to cool the brain or show tiredness, it is famously "contagious"—just reading the word or seeing someone else do it can trigger the response.

What is a yawn?

200

This "little brain" located at the rear of the brainstem helps coordinate voluntary movement and balance.

 What is the cerebellum?

200

This is the body's internal 24-hour clock that regulates the sleep-wake cycle.

What is the circadian rhythm?

200

This is changing your behavior, beliefs, or actions to match those of a group or social norm, often due to real or imagined pressure to fit in, be accepted, or follow rules and expectations.

What is conformity?

200

The factor you control or change in an experiment to see its effect on something else

What is independent variable?

200

This psychological theory suggests that the simple act of making a facial expression, like smiling or frowning, can actually cause you to feel that corresponding emotion.

What is facial feedback theory?

300

These are the chemical messengers, such as dopamine and serotonin, that transmit signals across the gaps between neurons

  • What are neurotransmitters?

300

 In therapy, this concept involves showing a client total support and acceptance regardless of what they say or do.

What is unconditional positive regard?

300

 This term refers to the tendency for people in a group to exert less effort when pooling their efforts toward a common goal.

What is social loafing?

300

This term refers to an inert pill or treatment given to a control group that has no actual biological effect.

What is placebo?

300

Although it makes up only about 2% of the average adult's body weight, the human brain consumes roughly this percentage of the body's total energy and oxygen.

What is 20%?

400

 This brain structure, vital for forming new memories, is one of the first areas affected by Alzheimer's disease.

What is the hippocampus?

400

These are healthy strategies, like journaling or exercise, used to manage stressful or difficult emotions

What are coping mechanisms?

400

This theoryvexplains the mental discomfort we feel when our beliefs and actions don't match.

What is cognitive dissonance?

400

This as an ethical guideline requiring researchers to fully inform potential participants about a study's purpose, procedures, risks, and benefits, ensuring their voluntary agreement to participate without coercion, and allowing them to withdraw anytime.

What is informed consent?

400

How much does the human brain weigh?

What is 3 pounds?

500

This almond-shaped cluster in the temporal lobe is heavily involved in processing emotions like fear and aggression.

What is the amygdala?

500

This is a psychological state where a person stops trying to change a bad situation after repeated failures, believing their actions are futile, even when escape or control becomes possible, often leading to depression

What is learned helplessness?

500

This is a phenomenon that occurs when a group of well-intentioned people makes irrational or non-optimal decisions spurred by the urge to conform or the belief that dissent is impossible.

What is groupthink?

500

To prevent experimenter bias and the placebo effect, this research design ensures that neither the participants nor the researchers know who is receiving the actual treatment.

What is double blind?

500

The brain's lifelong ability to reorganize its neural networks, form new connections, and adapt its structure and function in response to new experiences, learning, environmental changes, or injury

What is neuroplasticity?