Brain Function
Sensation and Perception
Memory
Learning
Social Psychology
100

This division of the nervous system includes the brain and spinal cord.

What is the central nervous system (CNS)?

100

This is the process of detecting physical stimuli through sensory receptors.

What is sensation?

100

This is the shortest stage of memory that holds information for milliseconds.

What is sensory memory?

100

This type of learning involves forming associations between stimuli.

What is classical conditioning?

100

This is changing behaviour to match a group.

What is conformity?

200

This type of neuron carries sensory information from the body to the brain.

What is an afferent (sensory) neuron?

200

This term describes how we interpret and organise sensory information.

 What is perception?

200

This memory model includes sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory.

What is the Multi-Store Model (MSM)?

200

This term describes learning through rewards and punishments.

What is operant conditioning?

200

This type of social influence is based on wanting to be liked or accepted.

What is normative social influence?

300

This neurotransmitter is primarily inhibitory and helps regulate anxiety.

What is GABA?

300

This Gestalt principle refers to seeing objects that are close together as a group.

What is proximity?

300

This component of working memory processes visual and spatial information.

What is the visuospatial sketchpad?

300

In classical conditioning, this is the learned response to a previously neutral stimulus.

What is a conditioned response?

300

This psychologist conducted the line judgment conformity experiments.

Who is Asch?

400

Damage to this brain area is associated with difficulty producing speech.

What is Broca’s area?

400

This illusion demonstrates how context can distort size perception using converging lines.

What is the Müller-Lyer illusion (accept Ponzo if direction matches)?

400

This type of long-term memory involves facts and general knowledge.

What is semantic memory?

400

This schedule of reinforcement provides rewards at unpredictable intervals.

What is a variable schedule (e.g., variable ratio/interval)?

400

This effect explains why people are less likely to help when others are present.

What is the bystander effect?

500

This explains how neurotransmitters affect behaviour by either exciting or inhibiting postsynaptic neurons.

What is synaptic transmission (or excitatory vs inhibitory neurotransmission)?

500

This concept explains how expectations, experience, and culture influence perception.

What is perceptual set?

500

This explains forgetting due to competing information learned before or after.

What is interference (proactive or retroactive)?

500

This explains learning through observing others and modelling behaviour.

What is observational learning (Bandura)?

500

This process explains reduced helping due to shared responsibility.

What is diffusion of responsibility?