General Psychology
Cognition and Neuroscience
Psychopathology
Social Psychology
Miscellaneous
100

This personality test is based on four ranging scales: introversion to extroversion, sensing to intuition, thinking to feeling, and judging to perceiving. 

What is MBTI?

100

This region of the brain is known for its association to fear.

What is the Amygdala?
100

This mental disorder is characterized by extreme highs and lows, ranging from weeks to months. It causes fluctuations in energy levels, mood, productivity, risk-taking behavior, etc..

What is Bipolar Disorder?

100

This is the technique that involves saying “yes” to a small favor, making it more likely that you will say “yes” to a bigger favor in the future.

Foot-in-the-door
100

This area of psychology focuses on improving our work life conditions.

What is Industrial/IO Psychology?

200

This renowned psychologist is known as the "founder of psychoanalysis." While their theories have been heavily scrutinized, many of their principles remain prevalent to this day.

Who is Sigmund Freud?

200

This region of the brain is associated with learning and memory. It is known for memory consolidation and turns short-term memories into long-term ones.

What is the Hippocampus?

200

This mental disorder is marked by perceived grandiosity and self-inflation, often causing a disregard for others or a general lack of empathy.

What is Narcissistic Personality Disorder?

200

This experiment suggests that children can learn aggressive behavior just by observing their peers' behavior.

What is Bandura's Bobo Doll Experiment?
200

This is the tendency to seek out information that fits your beliefs, and ignore information that disproves those beliefs.

What is Confirmation Bias?

300

This personality test ranges on five scales: openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism. 

What is the Big Five personality assessment?

300

This type of memory is associated with making contextual associations.

What is Semantic Memory?

300

This is the minimum amount of symptoms that you must have in order to receive an Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) Diagnosis.

What is two?

300

This experiment was used to investigate how people's opinions can alter when put in a group setting.

What is Asch's Conformity Study?

300

This is a popular, long-standing debate about how we are conditioned and what factors influence our disposition.

What is Nature versus Nurture?

400

This experiment conducted at Yale University was used to challenge standards of authority. However, the experiment's procedure would be considered unethical under today's guidelines.

What is Milgram's Obedience Experiment?

400

This brain region is associated with relaying motor and sensory information.

What is the Thalamus?

400

This mental disorder is characterized by a tendency to act provocatively in hopes of receiving attention from others.

What is Histrionic Personality Disorder?

400

This experiment revealed findings about child-mother attachment. It asked mothers to leave their children in a room alone with a stranger to see how they would respond.

What is Bandura's Strange Situation Experiment?

400

This is what occurs when behaviors and beliefs conflict in some sort of way.

What is Cognitive Dissonance?

500

This is the peak of Maslow's hierarchy of needs.

What are Self-Actualizing Needs?

500

These two pathways in the brain are associated with visual processing. They are often referred to as the "what" and "where" pathways.

What are the Dorsal and Ventral pathways?

500

This mental disorder is characterized by an intense fear or anxiety of being in situations that do not allow for an escape.

What is Agoraphobia?

500

This is the term used for when individuals tend to conform in the presence of others.

What is Groupthink?

500

This excitatory neurotransmitter gets inhibited when we drink alcohol, and because of its inhibition, we feel sedative (calming) effects.

What is glutamate?