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CAT Scan MRI Functional MRI PET Scan EEG
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What type of psychologist is this
What type of psychologist is this? Is she a basic or applied psychologist?
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What type of psychologist does this sound like?
Explore how behaviors, feelings, and beliefs are influenced by others Study conformity, attitudes, leadership, prejudice, group behavior, etc. Work in the business setting, government, and universities
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Who am I? Study thought processes including intelligence, problem solving, attention, decision making, language, etc. Work in educational settings and the business world
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Who first attempted to understand human consciousness by asking subjects to describe their own conscious experiences?
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A fulfilling life, and nurturing talent and abilities is the focus of this field in psychology
Martin Seligman
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Prenatal nutrition is to________ as DNA is to________
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What type of culture does the following describe: Individual needs are sacrificed for the good of the group.
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The shared attitudes, beliefs, norms and behaviors of a group communicated from one generation to the next
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Describe this correlation
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What the small jar represents (each member has an equal chance of being chosen)
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What does this describe?
Possibility that the differences in results between the experimental and control groups could have occurred by chance is no more than 5 percent Must be at least 95% certain the differences between the groups is due to the independent variable
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25 divided by 72 x the perfect score of 100 will calculate this
Percentage
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If your 85% test score was better than 24 students of the 30 being tested what is your percentile rank?
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This is manipulated in the experimental group, but not present in the control group.
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This can be reduced by naturalistic observation.
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What is one or two words to describe each?
Mean Median mode
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A specification of the exact procedures used to make a variable measurable
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Name four different types of studies
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Information Processing
somatosensory cortex Frontal Lobe - Higher Order Thinking, Reasoning, Problem Solving, Mathematical Reasoning Motor cortex Parietal Lobe - Information Processing Occipital Lobe – Vision Wernicke’s Area Broca’s Area Cerebellum - (little brain) Voluntary movement and balance Includes Thalamus,Medulla, Reticular formation Brainstem
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Curare is a poison that fills the _________ _____of dendrites that receive acetylcholine (Ach) resulting in paralysis. Curare is a/an _____________.
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ANS: receptor sites/antagonist
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4. The chemical messengers released into the spatial junctions between neurons are called:
a. genes. b. hormones. c. neurotransmitters. d. synapses.
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6. The somatic nervous system is a component of the _____ nervous system.
a. autonomic b. central c. peripheral d. sympathetic
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7. Which nervous system is responsible for maintaining and controlling the internal organs that keeps you alive such as your heart, lungs, and digestive system? a. autonomic b. parasympathetic c. somatic d. endocrine The correct answer is: a. autonomic
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8. You come home one night to find a burglar in your house
8. You come home one night to find a burglar in your house. Your heart starts racing and you begin to perspire. These physical reactions are triggered by the: a. limbic system. b. parasympathetic nervous system. c. somatic nervous system. d. sympathetic nervous system.
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9. A patient with damage to Broca’s area of the brain would probably have difficulty:
a. expressing thoughts in spoken language. b. expressing thoughts in written language. c. recognizing a family member’s face. d. understanding what someone else says.
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a. amygdala. b. cerebellum. c. medulla. d. reticular formation.
4. To demonstrate that brain stimulation can make a rat violently aggressive, Professor Brown should electrically stimulate the rat’s: a. amygdala. b. cerebellum. c. medulla. d. reticular formation.
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5. The corpus callosum is a band of neural fibers that:
a. controls the glands and muscles of the internal organs. b. directs the muscle movements involved in speech. c. enables the left hemisphere to control the right side of the body. d. transmits information between the cerebral hemispheres.
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The two speech centers of the brain are both located in the ______ _____________.
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2. Sydney, in having her hearing tested, is asked to signify when she hears a sound through the headphones. Sydney’s hearing test is similar to determining: a. pitch. b. top-down processing. c. absolute threshold. d. the kinesthetic sense.
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b. difference thresholds. c. sensory adaptation.
3. Patients’ negative expectations about the outcome of a surgical procedure can increase their experience of pain after the operation. Their past experiences with surgery and expectations about how painful their recovery will be affects how they interpret pain sensations. This example best illustrates: a. accommodation. b. difference thresholds. c. sensory adaptation. d. top-down processing.
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10. During an essay exam at school, you write so much that your hand begins to hurt. After the test is over you rub your hand and the pain lessens. Gate-control theory would explain that the pain lessened because: a. other touch sensations (like rubbing) close the gate on the pain sensations. b. rubbing your hand deactivates the pain receptors in your hand, forcing them not to fire messages to the brain. c. rubbing your hand releases painkillers in the brain. d. vigorously rubbing your hand activates the warmth receptors in the hand, which lessens the pain.
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3. The Gestalt principle that explains the tendency to fill in gaps in order to perceive disconnected parts as a whole object is called: a. closure. b. constancy. c. top-down processing. d. proximity.
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4. A View-Master toy which gives a child the illusion of a three-dimensional picture works using the principal of: a. a visual cliff. b. retinal disparity. c. monocular cues. d. interposition.
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a. interposition. b. constancy. c. relative motion. d. relative size.
6. If an object of known size appears small, your brain assumes it to be far away from you. This rule describes the monocular depth cue: a. interposition. b. constancy. c. relative motion. d. relative size.
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10. A mental predisposition to perceive something one way and not another way is the definition of a: a. perceptual set. b. binocular cue. c. perceptual constancy. d. gestalt.
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What is the name of the monocular depth cue that explains why the blue circle appears closer?
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3. The Gestalt principle that explains the tendency to fill in gaps in order to perceive disconnected parts as a whole object is called: a. closure. b. constancy. c. top-down processing. d. proximity.
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1. Human sperm cells are _____ than egg cells, and sperm cell production begins _____ in life than does the production of egg cells. a. smaller; later. b. smaller; earlier. c. larger; later. d. larger; earlier.
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5. According to Piaget, schemas are:
a. problem-solving strategies that are typically not developed until the formal operational stage. b. mental plans or rules we use to organize our experiences. c. fixed sequences of cognitive developmental stages. d. children’s ways of coming to terms with their sexuality.
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6. Nageeb thought all nurses were young females until a middle-aged male nurse took care of him. Nageeb’s altered conception of a “nurse” illustrates the process of: a. imprinting. b. attachment. c. assimilation. d. accommodation.
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9. A mother who is slow in responding to her infant’s cries of distress is most likely to encourage:
a. conservation. b. habituation. c. insecure attachment. d. object permanence.
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a. authoritarian parents. b. authoritative parents.
10. Jason’s parents use a moderate discipline system and are always communicating the reasons for the rules with him. They expect him to behave maturely and are very responsive. Jason’s parents would most likely be described as: a. authoritarian parents. b. authoritative parents. c. permissive parents. d. egocentric.
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