This behaviorist performed the Little Albert classical conditioning study (John B. Watson)

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Presentation transcript:

This behaviorist performed the Little Albert classical conditioning study (John B. Watson)

This psychologist studied his own children for the first six years of their lives to create his theory of Cognitive Development (Jean Piaget)

Empathetic technique where a therapist echoes, restates or clarifies the client’s words (active listening)

This is a statistical measure of the extent to which two factors vary together, and thus of how well either factor predicts the other (correlation coefficient)

This structure is linked to memory processing (hippocampus)

Chemical whose excess is linked to schizophrenia; lack of is associated with Parkinson’s (dopamine)

This man showed the importance of attachment, even for animals, whom he could imprint to humans within the first 24 hours of life (Konrad Lorenz)

This person said that Lawrence Kohlberg’s theory of moral development was too male-biased (Carol Gilligan)

The adrenal glands control these two hormones (epinephrine and norepinephrine OR adrenaline and noradrenaline)

This part of the brain makes us distinctly human because of its complex thinking functions (cerebral cortex)

This is a personality disorder where a person exaggerates their own importance (narcissistic personality disorder)

This is four of the five types of schizophrenia (paranoid, disorganized, catatonic, undifferentiated or residual)

When the perception of objects is unchanged despite a change in light, shape, color or size, it is known to have this (constancy)

A type of counterconditioning in which relaxation is continually associated with an increasing level of anxiety-triggering stimuli (systematic desensitization)

This psychologist performed a study on taste aversion in rats (John Garcia)

Natural opiates released in response to pain or vigorous exercise (endorphins)

This psychologist created the Drive- Reduction Theory of motivation (Clark Hull)

She created a theory of Psychological Adjustment (Elizabeth Kubler-Ross)

In this case study of the brain, it was discovered that the frontal lobe houses personality when an accident drove a spike through this man’s brain (Phineas Gage)

This is the part of the brain that controls language reception (Wernicke’s area)

These are three measures of central tendency (mean, median and mode)

This is the order of Freud’s five stages of Psychosexual Development (oral, anal, phallic, latency, genital)

This structure of the brain controls heartbeat, breathing and other involuntary functions (medulla)

Lack of this neurotransmitter is linked to depression (serotonin)

This is the percentage of people who conformed on at least one trial of Asch’s Line Judging Task (65%)

This is the neurotransmitter linked to Alzheimer’s Disease (Acetylcholine or ACh)

He devised the theory of unconditional positive regard (Carl Rogers)

This is the band of fibers in between the two hemispheres (corpus callosum)

This is the current medical book used to diagnose psychological problems (DSM-IV or DSM-IV-TR)

This is how the ego protects itself from its tough job as a mediator between the id and superego (defense mechanisms)