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The Brain
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Theories of Intelligence
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Statistics
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Research Methods
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Perception
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Sleep
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$100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Brain Parts Theories of Intelligence Statistics Research Methods Perception Sleep
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“Executive control center”; judgment, planning, reasoning
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Frontal Lobe
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Contains the auditory cortex
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Temporal Lobe
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Controls the muscles needed for speech; Expressive language
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Broca’s Area
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Lobe that controls voluntary movements
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Motor cortex (in back of frontal lobe!)
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Parts of the limbic system
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Hypothalamus: hunger, thirst, body temperature Amygdala: fear and aggression, threat detection center Hippocampus: new memories (explicit)
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Famous for his theory on multiple intelligence; Identified at least 8
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Howard Gardner
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Intelligence proposed by Charles Spearman; A common level of intelligence that underlies all of our intelligence behavior
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General (g) intelligence
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What is emotional intelligence?
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The ability to perceive, understand, manage, and use emotions
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Proposed a triarchic theory of intelligence
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Robert Sternberg; Analytical, creative, and practical intelligences
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List Gardner’s intelligence types
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Linguistic, logical-mathematical, musical, spatial, bodily- kinesthetic, intrapersonal, interpersonal, naturalist
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The three measures of central tendency
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Mean, median, and mode
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What is the range of the following score distribution: 5, 10, 20, 30
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25
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In a normal curve, where are the mean, median, and mode located?
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In the middle! For IQ, would be 100
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A measure of how tightly clustered a group of scores is around their mean; Square root of variance
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Standard Deviation
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What is a z score?
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Used to compare scores from different distributions; Converts scores into distance standard deviation “points”
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Type of research in which humans or animals are studied in their natural context
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Naturalistic observation
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Studies one individual in depth through tests, interviews, observations
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Case Study
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In using surveys, a representative sample is one that is…
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Representative of your entire population
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Name that type of research. Comparing hours slept per night and GPA
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Correlational
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What is the difference between a longitudinal study and a cross sectional study?
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Longitudinal: same group over time Cross sectional: studying same thing in different age groups
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Group of psychologists who stressed that the whole is different than the sum of its parts; Studied organizational principles
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Gestalt
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The understanding that an object’s shape remains the same even though the angle of view makes the shape appear changed
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Size constancy
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What is relative size?
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Smaller objects are further away, larger objects are clower
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Appearance of motion created by lights turning off and on in a sequence
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Phi Phenomenon
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Name and explain your two binocular depth cues
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Convergence: tension in eyes increase as objects come closer Retinal disparity: slightly different image projected onto the retina due to the separation of your eyes
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Machine used to measure sleep waves
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EEG
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Body rhythm that occur on a 24 hour cycle
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Circadian rhythms
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What are sleep spindles?
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Bursts of activity that occur during Stage 2
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Cluster of neurons in the hypothalamus that receive information from the retina about light
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Suprachiasmatic Nucleus
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Chemicals involved in sleep
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Adenosine: triggers sleepiness Melatonin: High levels help us get ready for sleep
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