ap psychology barron’s vocabulary review mr. biggs

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AP Psychology Barron’s

VocabularyReview

Mr. Biggs

Ex post facto study

Experimental research is impossible and there are independent variables that cannot be manipulated.

Exam 1

Z scores

A measure of the distance of a score from the mean in units of standard deviation.

Exam 1

Skewed distribution

An unsymmetrical distribution possibly caused by outliers.

Exam 1

Confounding variables

Differences between the experimental and control condition affecting the dependent variable.

Exam 1

Outliers

Extreme scores that cause distributions to be unsymmetrical or skewed.

Exam 1

Histograms

Graphing findings into a bar graph.

Exam 1

Negatively skewed distribution

An unsymmetrical distribution caused by the mean being lower than the median.

Exam 1

Democritus

A philosopher who theorized about the relationship between thought and behavior.

Exam 1

Order effect

Occurs when subjects perform better on a second test because they already took a similar one.

Exam 1

Eclecticism

Belief that most psychologists draw from multiple perspectives.

Exam 1

P value

Percentage possibility that results occurred by chance.

Exam 1

Counterbalancing

Having half of the subjects do something while the others do something else, then switch.

Exam 1

Trephination

Stone Age humans carving holes through the skull to release evil spirits.

Exam 1

Operationalize

The explanation of how a researcher will measure a variable.

Exam 1

Babinski reflex

When a baby’s foot is stroked, he or she will spread their toes.

Exam 2

Myelinated

Motor control develops as neurons in our brain connect with one another.

Exam 2

Generativity versus stagnation

Erikson’s stage where we try to ensure our lives are going the way we want them to go.

Exam 2

Moro reflex

A startled baby flings arms, retracts them and makes themselves as small as possible.

Exam 2

Industry versus inferiority

Erikson’s stage regarding the beginning of our formal education where work is evaluated.

Exam 2

Autonomy versus shame and doubt

Erikson’s stage where toddlers attempt to control themselves and others.

Exam 2

Trust versus mistrust

Erikson’s stage where new babies learn to trust their caregivers.

Exam 2

Intimacy versus isolation

Erikson’s stage where we discover the difference between a platonic and romantic relationship.

Exam 2

Ambivalent attachments

Infants that resist being comforted by their parents.

Exam 2

Newborn senses

Humans are born with their sensory apparatus, but some senses differ from adults.

Exam 2

Deoxyribonucleic acid

The genetic material that makes up chromosomes. (DNA)

Exam 3

Chromosomal abnormality

When chromosomes occasionally combine (or fail to) in an unusual way.

Exam 3

Broca’s area

Area of the brain located in the frontal lobe and motor cortex that controls the muscles involved in producing speech.

Exam 3

Turner’s syndrome

Babies born with only a single X chromosome in the spot usually occupied by the 23rd pair. (webbed neck)

Exam 3

Afferent neurons

Take information from the senses to the brain. (Sensory neurons)

Exam 3

Wernicke’s area

Area of the brain located in the temporal lobe and sensory cortex that interprets written and spoken speech.

Exam 3

Fissures

Another name for the wrinkles of the cerebral cortex.

Exam 3

Interneurons

Take information from the spinal cord and sends them elsewhere in the brain.

Exam 3

Computerized axial tomography

An X-ray scan that can show only the structure of the brain, not the functions or activity.

Exam 3

Soma

Another name for the cell body that contains the nucleus and other parts of the cell.

Exam 3

Klinefelter’s syndrome

Babies born with an extra X chromosome, resulting in an XXY pattern. (extreme introversion)

Exam 3

Neuroanatomy

Refers to the study of the parts and function of neurons.

Exam 3

Pons

Connects the hindbrain to the forebrain and is involved in the control of facial expressions.

Exam 3

Terminal buttons

Another name for the synaptic knobs that are the branched ends of the axon that contain neurotransmitters.

Exam 3

Energy senses

Gathering energy in the form of light, sound waves, and pressure (Not chemical or movement).

Exam 4

Optic chiasm

The spot where the optic nerves cross each other.

Exam 4

Incus

Anvil.

Exam 4

Malleus

Hammer.

Exam 4

Papillae

Bumps on one’s tongue where the taste buds are located.

Exam 4

Stapes

Stirrup.

Exam 4

Lateral geniculate nucleus

The optic nerve sends impulses to a specific region in the thalamus, then routes them to the visual cortex.

Exam 4

Tympanic membrane

Eardrum.

Exam 4

Backmasking

Supposed hidden messages musicians recorded backward in their music.

Exam 4

Organ of corti

Neurons activated by movement of the hair cells on the lower membrane of the cochlea.

Exam 4

Garcia effect

Vomiting after drinking eggnog and later feeling nauseous at the sight of eggnog. (Learned Taste Aversion)

Exam 5

Yerkes-Dodson law

Individuals have different needs for excitement and are motivated by activities that will help achieve that level.

Exam 5

Love needs

Desire to be accepted and belong.

Exam 5

Alarm reaction

GAS theory regarding how an organism readies itself to meet a challenge by activating its sympathetic nervous system.

Exam 5

Readjustment rating scale

Measures stress using life-changing units; scoring high likely leads to stress-related diseases.

Exam 5

General adaptation syndrome

Seyle’s description of the general response animals have to stressful events.

Exam 5

Delayed conditioning

Presenting a CS first and then introducing the UCS while the CS is still evident. (order and timing)

Exam 6

Protected sleep

Belief that our ego protects us from material in the unconscious mind by presenting repressed desires in the form of symbols.

Exam 6

Salient

Stimuli that are easily noticeable.

Exam 6

Activation-synthesis theory

Theory proposing that dreams are the brain’s interpretation of what is happening physiologically during REM sleep.

Exam 6

Paradoxical sleep

Stage of sleep characterized by REM sleep where our brain waves appear as active as when we are awake.

Exam 6

Codeine

Powerful painkiller similar in chemical structure to opium usually prescribed for pain relief.

Exam 6

Equipotentiality

The idea that any animal can be taught any response.

Exam 6

Psilocybin

A naturally occurring hallucinogen found in over one hundred species of mushrooms.

Exam 6

Methadone

Powerful painkiller similar in chemical structure to opium used for the treatment of narcotic withdrawl.

Exam 6

Somnambulism

Sleepwalking.

Exam 6

Blind sight

Ability of blind people to describe the path of a moving object or grasp objects they say they cannot see.

Exam 6

Omission training

The withdraw of a desirable stimulus. (negative punishment)

Exam 6

Monism

The belief that everything (thought and matter) are aspects of the same substance.

Exam 6

Peyote

A small cactus that causes hallucinations when ingested.

Exam 6

Instinctive drift

The tendency for animals to forgo rewards to pursue their typical patterns of behavior.

Exam 6

Second order conditioning

Once a CS elicits a CR, it is possible to use that CS as a UCS in order to condition a response to a new stimulus.

Exam 6

Dualism

The belief that humans consist of two materials: thought (nonmaterial aspects) and matter (substance).

Exam 6

Agonists

Drugs that mimic neurotransmitters.

Exam 6

Role theory

Idea that hypnosis is not an alternate state of consciousness because some people are more easily hypnotized than others.

Exam 6

Anxiolytic

Depressant also known as a tranquilizer.

Exam 6

Divergent thinking

Thinking that searches for multiple possible answers to a question.

Exam 7

Levels of processing model

Two types of processing: shallow (encode by repetition) deep. (encode context and reasons)

Exam 7

Recency effect

Our ability to recall the items at the end of a list.

Exam 7

Anterograde amnesia

Type of memory failure where people cannot encode new memories due to damage to the hippocampus.

Exam 7

Rigidity

Impediment to problem solving where one has the tendency to fall into established thought patterns. (mental set)

Exam 7

Three-box model

Information-processing example that includes: sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory.

Exam 7

Linguistic relativity hypothesis

Theory stating that the language we use might control, and in some ways limit, our thinking.

Exam 7

Recovered memory

Type of memory that may be constructed or false recollections of events.

Exam 7

Cognitive triad

Beck’s theory that depression results from negative ideas about ourselves, our world and our future.

Exam 8

Preventative efforts

Treatment of psychological problems proactively (eg – counseling following a traumatic event).

Exam 8

Neologisms

Disorganized schizophrenics that make up their own words.

Exam 8

Clang associations

Disorganized schizophrenics that string together a series of nonsense words that rhyme.

Exam 8

Paraphilias

Person who has a sexual attraction to an object, person or activity.

Exam 8

Thorazine

Drug treatment for schizophrenics that blocks dopamine receptor sites.

Exam 8

Somatoform disorders

Disorder occurring when a person manifests a psychological problem through a physiological symptom.

Exam 8

Flat affect

Disorganized schizophrenics who consistently have no emotional response at all.

Exam 8

Benzodiazepines

A main type of antianxiety drug that includes Xanax and Valium.

Exam 8

Galen

A Roman who believed psychological illnesses were influenced by biological factors and could be treated.

Exam 8

Extinguished

The thought of a former anxiety arousing stimulus without any current anxiety.

Exam 8

Trephination

A treatment where holes are drilled in a living person’s skull to let harmful spirits escape.

Exam 8

Hypochondriasis

Type of somatoform disorder where people seek medical attention for physical ailments with no apparent causes.

Exam 8

In vivo desensitization

The confrontation of actual items on the anxiety hierarchy.

Exam 8

Tricyclic antidepressants

A common type of drug used to treat unipolar depression that was largely replaced by SSRIs.

Exam 8

Waxy flexibility

Catatonic schizophrenics that allow their body to be moved then hold the new pose.

Exam 8

Psychogenic amnesia

People who cannot remember things and have no physiological basis for the disruption of their memories.

Exam 8

Labels, influence of,

Rosenhan study where healthy people posed as schizophrenics in a hospital and were never discovered.

Exam 8

Voyeur

Person who is sexually aroused by watching others engage in sexual behavior.

Exam 8

Monoamine oxidase inhibitors

A classic antidepressant that prevents the breakdown of monoamines.

Exam 8

Lithium

A light metal (salt) used to treat the manic phase of bipolar disorder.

Exam 8

Tardive dyskinesia

A side effect of antipsychotic drugs characterized by muscle tremors and stiffness.

Exam 8

Insane

A legal term, not a medical term, describing people with psychological disorders.

Exam 8

Masochist

Person who is aroused by having pain inflicted on themselves.

Exam 8

Sadist

Person who is aroused by having pain inflicted on someone else.

Exam 8

Miltown

A commercial name for an antianxiety barbiturate.

Exam 8

Concurrent validity

A measure of how much of a characteristic a person has now.

Exam 9

Split-half reliability

Randomly dividing a test into two different sections and then correlating people’s performances on the two halves.

Exam 9

Power tests

A measure used to gauge the difficulty level of problems an individual can solve.

Exam 9

WPPSI

A measure of intelligence given to children as young as 4.

Exam 9

Construct validity

An existing independent measure containing perfect validity that is compared against current performance.

Exam 9

Test-retest reliability

Comparison of the correlation of a person’s score on one test to the score on a subsequent test.

Exam 9

With-in group differences

Comparison of the differences within a testing group to the differences between testing groups.

Exam 9

Equivalent form reliability

A variety of tests that have been tested to ensure equivalent reliability.

Exam 9

Persona

Jung’s collective unconscious archetype that represents people’s creation of a public image.

Exam 10

Shadow

Jung’s collective unconscious archetype that represents the evil side of personality.

Exam 10

Reality principle

The ego’s negotiation between the desires of the id and the limitations of the environment.

Exam 10

Third force

Humanistic psychology’s focus on free will and an individual’s ability to choose their own destiny.

Exam 10

Somatotype theory

Early biological theory of personality involving three body types found to be not reliable or valid.

Exam 10

Anal expulsive personality

Freudian term describing a messy and disorganized person.

Exam 10

Pleasure principal

The id’s desire for immediate gratification.

Exam 10

Thanatos

Freudian term for death instincts seen in aggression.

Exam 10

Adult genital stage

Psychosexual stage after puberty where Freud theorized people stay for the rest of their lives.

Exam 10

Penis envy

Freudian term describing a girl’s desire for a penis.

Exam 10

Womb envy

Horney’s term describing men’s jealousy of women’s reproductive capabilities.

Exam 10

Eclecticism

Psychologists who accept ideas from many different perspectives on psychological disorders.

Exam 10

LaPiere

Researcher who conducted a study that demonstrated that the relationship between our attitudes and behaviors are imperfect.

Exam 10

Castration anxiety

Freudian term describing a boy’s fear that if they misbehave they will be castrated.

Exam 10

Triadic reciprocity model

Bandura’s term describing personality through traits, environment, and behavior (reciprocal determinism).

Exam 10

Door-in-the-face strategy

A phenomenon where person refuses a large request then will agree to a follow-up request that seems more reasonable.

Exam 10

Person-unstable attribution

Attribution to a person the things observed on a rare occasion.

Exam 10

Collective unconscious

Jung’s term describing certain similarities between all cultures.

Exam 10

Nomothetic approach

Trait theorists that believe that the same basic set of traits can be used to describe all personalities.

Exam 10

Eros

Freudian term most often evidenced as a desire for sex (life instincts).

Exam 10

Barnum effect

Natural curiosity of people that contributes to their willingness to see themselves in vague, stock descriptions of personality.

Exam 10

Libido

Freudian term for energy that directs life instincts relating to sexuality.

Exam 10

Person attribution

Attribution to a person the things observed (dispositional).

Exam 10

Idiographic

Trait theorists that assert that it is impossible to use the same set of terms to classify all people’s personalities.

Exam 10

Person-stable attribution

Attribution to a person the things observed over an extended period of time.

Exam 10

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