12195202145 | psychology | the study of behavior and mental processes | 0 | |
12195202146 | psychology's biggest question | Which is more important in determining behavior, nature or nurture? | 1 | |
12195202147 | psychology's three levels of analysis | biopsychosocial approach (looks at the biological, psychological, and social-cultural approaches together) | 2 | |
12195202148 | biological approach | genetics, close-relatives, body functions, brain functions | 3 | |
12195202149 | evolutionary approach | species - helped with survival (ancestors) | 4 | |
12195202150 | psychodynamic approach | (Freud) subconscious, repressed feelings, unfulfilled wishes | 5 | |
12195202151 | behavioral approach | learning (classical and operant) observed | 6 | |
12195202152 | cognitive approach | thinking affects behavior | 7 | |
12195202153 | humanistic approach | becoming a better human (behavior, acceptance) | 8 | |
12195202154 | social-cultural approach | cultural, family, environment | 9 | |
12195202155 | two reasons of why experiments are important | hindsight bias + overconfidence | 10 | |
12195202156 | types of research methods | descriptive(observational), correlational, and experimental | 11 | |
12195202157 | descriptive methods | case study survey naturalistic observation (DON'T SHOW CAUSE/EFFECT) | 12 | |
12195202158 | case study | studies one person in depth may not be typical of population | 13 | |
12195202159 | survey | studies lots of people not in depth | 14 | |
12195202160 | naturalistic observation | observe + write facts without interference | 15 | |
12195202161 | correlational method | shows relation, but not cause/effect scatterplots show research | 16 | |
12195202162 | correlation coefficient | + 1.0 (both increase) 0 (no correlation - 1.0 (one increases, other decreases) | 17 | |
12195202163 | experimental method | does show cause and effect | 18 | |
12195202164 | population | type of people who are going to be used in experiment | 19 | |
12195202165 | sample | actual people who will be used (randomness reduces bias) | 20 | |
12195202166 | random assignment | chance selection between experimental and control groups | 21 | |
12195202167 | control group | not receiving experimental treatment receives placebo | 22 | |
12195202168 | experimental group | receiving treatment/drug | 23 | |
12195202169 | independent variable | drug/procedure/treatment | 24 | |
12195202170 | dependent variable | outcome of using the drug/treatment | 25 | |
12195202171 | confounding variable | can affect dependent variable beyond experiment's control | 26 | |
12195202172 | scientific method | theory hypothesis operational definition revision | 27 | |
12195202173 | theory | general idea being tested | 28 | |
12195202174 | hypothesis | measurable/specific | 29 | |
12195202175 | operational definition | procedures that explain components | 30 | |
12195202176 | mode | appears the most | 31 | |
12195202177 | mean | average | 32 | |
12195202178 | median | middle | 33 | |
12195202179 | range | highest - lowest | 34 | |
12195202180 | standard deviation | how scores vary around the mean | 35 | |
12195202181 | central tendency | single score that represents the whole | 36 | |
12195202182 | bell curve | (natural curve) | 37 | |
12195202183 | ethics of testing on animals | need to be treated humanly basically similar to humans | 38 | |
12195202184 | ethics of testing on humans | consent debriefing no unnecessary discomfort/pain confidentiality | 39 | |
12195202185 | sensory neurons | travel from sensory receptors to brain | 40 | |
12195202186 | motor neurons | travel from brain to "motor" workings | 41 | |
12195202187 | interneurons | (in brain and spinal cord) connecting motor and sensory neurons | 42 | |
12195202379 | neuron | 43 | ||
12195202188 | dendrites | receive messages from other neurons | 44 | |
12195202189 | myelin sheath | protects the axon | 45 | |
12195202190 | axon | where charges travel from cell body to axon terminal | 46 | |
12195202191 | neurotransmitters | chemical messengers | 47 | |
12195202192 | reuptake | extra neurotransmitters are taken back | 48 | |
12195202193 | excitatory charge | "Let's do it!" | 49 | |
12195202194 | inhibitory charge | "Let's not do it!" | 50 | |
12195202195 | central nervous system | brain and spinal cord | 51 | |
12195202196 | peripheral nervous system | somatic nervous system autonomic nervous system | 52 | |
12195202197 | somatic nervous system | voluntary movements | 53 | |
12195202198 | autonomic nervous system | involuntary movements (sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems) | 54 | |
12195202199 | sympathetic nervous system | arousing | 55 | |
12195202200 | parasympathetic nervous system | calming | 56 | |
12195202201 | neural networks | more connections form with greater use others fall away if not used | 57 | |
12195202202 | spinal cord | expressway of information bypasses brain when reflexes involved | 58 | |
12195202203 | endocrine system | slow uses hormones in the blood system | 59 | |
12195202204 | master gland | pituitary gland | 60 | |
12195202205 | brainstem | extension of the spinal cord responsible for automatic survival | 61 | |
12195202206 | reticular formation (if stimulated) | sleeping subject wakes up | 62 | |
12195202207 | reticular formation (if damaged) | coma | 63 | |
12195202208 | brainstem (if severed) | still move (without purpose) | 64 | |
12195202209 | thalamus | sensory switchboard (does not process smell) | 65 | |
12195202210 | hypothalamus | basic behaviors (hunger, thirst, sex, blood chemistry) | 66 | |
12195202211 | cerebellum | nonverbal memory, judge time, balance emotions, coordinate movements | 67 | |
12195202212 | cerebellum (if damaged) | difficulty walking and coordinating | 68 | |
12195202213 | amygdala | aggression, fear, and memory associated with these emotions | 69 | |
12195202214 | amygdala (if lesioned) | subject is mellow | 70 | |
12195202215 | amygdala (if stimulated) | aggressive | 71 | |
12195202216 | hippocampus | process new memory | 72 | |
12195202217 | cerebrum | two large hemispheres perceiving, thinking, and processing | 73 | |
12195202218 | cerebral cortex | only in higher life forms | 74 | |
12195202219 | association areas | integrate and interpret information | 75 | |
12195202220 | glial cells | provide nutrients to myelin sheath marks intelligence higher proportion of glial cells to neurons | 76 | |
12195202221 | frontal lobe | judgement, personality, processing (Phineas Gage accident) | 77 | |
12195202222 | parietal lobe | math and spatial reasoning | 78 | |
12195202223 | temporal lobe | audition and recognizing faces | 79 | |
12195202224 | occipital lobe | vision | 80 | |
12195202225 | corpus callosum | split in the brain to stop hyper-communication (eliminate epileptic seizures) | 81 | |
12195202226 | Wernicke's area | interprets auditory and hearing | 82 | |
12195202227 | Broca's area | speaking words | 83 | |
12195202228 | plasticity | ability to adapt if damaged | 84 | |
12195202229 | sensation | what our senses tell us | 85 | |
12195202230 | bottom-up processing | senses to brain | 86 | |
12195202231 | perception | what our brain tells us to do with that information | 87 | |
12195202232 | top-down processing | brain to senses | 88 | |
12195202233 | inattentional blindness | fail to "gorilla" because attention is elsewhere | 89 | |
12195202240 | sensory adaptation | tired of noticing (Brain says, "Been there, done that. Next?" | 90 | |
12195202243 | parallel processing | notice color, form, depth, movement, etc. | 91 | |
12195202259 | consciousness | awareness of ourselves and the environment | 92 | |
12195202265 | purpose of sleep | 1. recuperation - repair neurons and allow unused neural connections to wither 2. making memories 3. body growth (children sleep more) | 93 | |
12195202274 | depressants | slows neural pathways | 94 | |
12195202275 | alcohol | ((depressant)) disrupts memory formation (REM) lowers inhibition expectancy effect | 95 | |
12195202289 | famous classical psychologists | Pavlov and Watson | 96 | |
12195202290 | famous operant psychologist | Skinner | 97 | |
12195202291 | famous observational psychologists | Bandura | 98 | |
12195202292 | classical conditioning | associating outside stimulus to response | 99 | |
12195202293 | Pavlov's experiment | Step 1: US (food) -> UR (salivation) Step 2: NS (bell) -> US (food) -> UR (salivation) Later... CS (bell) -> CR (salivation) | 100 | |
12195202294 | Watson's experiment | white rat was given to Little Albert Step 1: US (noise) -> UR (cry) Step 2: NS (rat) -> US (noise) -> UR (cry) Later... CS (rat) -> CR (cry) | 101 | |
12195202295 | generalization | any small, white fluffy creature will make Albert cry now | 102 | |
12195202296 | discriminate | any large, white fluffy creature won't make Albert cry | 103 | |
12195202297 | extinction | stop "treating" with conditioned response | 104 | |
12195202298 | spontaneous recovery | bring stimulus back after a while | 105 | |
12195202299 | operant conditioning | control by organism | 106 | |
12195202300 | Skinner's experiment | operant chamber / Skinner box (lead to shaping) | 107 | |
12195202301 | shaping | get animal closer to doing what you want them to do | 108 | |
12195202302 | reinforcers | want to continue behavior (positive reinforcement: give money to do laundry) (negative reinforcement: do to avoid nagging) | 109 | |
12195202303 | punishments | want to stop behavior (positive reinforcement: smack) (negative reinforcement: take away phone) | 110 | |
12195202304 | fixed ratio | happens a certain number of times (Starbucks punch card) | 111 | |
12195202305 | variable ratio | happens an unpredictable number of times (winning the lottery) | 112 | |
12195202307 | fixed interval | happens at a certain time (mailman comes to the house at 10:00 AM) | 113 | |
12195202308 | variable interval | happens at any time (receive texts from friends) | 114 | |
12195202311 | criticisms of Skinner | doesn't take into account intrinsic motivation | 115 | |
12195202312 | intrinsic motivation | doing something for yourself, not the reward | 116 | |
12195202313 | extrinsic motivation | doing something for reward | 117 | |
12195202314 | Skinner's legacy | use it personally, at school, and at work | 118 | |
12195202315 | famous observational experiment | Bandura's Bobo doll | 119 | |
12195202316 | famous observational psychologist | Bandura | 120 | |
12195202317 | mirror neurons | "feel" what is observed happens in higher order animals | 121 | |
12195202318 | Bobo doll experiment legacy | violent video games/movies desensitize us see good: do good see evil: do evil | 122 | |
12195202319 | observational learning | biological behaviors work best | 123 | |
12195202322 | serotonin involved with memory | speeds the connection between neurons | 124 | |
12195202327 | flashbulb memory | type of memory remembered because it was an important/quick moment | 125 | |
12195202329 | cerebellum (memory) | forms and stores implicit memories ((classical conditioning)) | 126 | |
12195202331 | memory | learning over time contains information that can be retrieved | 127 | |
12195202332 | processing stages | encoding -> storage -> retrieval | 128 | |
12195202333 | encoding | information going in | 129 | |
12195202334 | storage | keeping information in | 130 | |
12195202335 | retrieval | taking information out | 131 | |
12195202336 | How long is sensory memory stored? | seconds | 132 | |
12195202337 | How long is short-term memory stored? | less than a minute | 133 | |
12195202338 | How many bits of information is stored in short-term memory? | 7 | 134 | |
12195202339 | How many chunks of information is stored in short-term memory? | 4 | 135 | |
12195202340 | How many seconds of words is stored in short-term memory? | 2 | 136 | |
12195202341 | short term memory goes to ______________ | working memory | 137 | |
12195202342 | working memory | make a connection and process information to mean something | 138 | |
12195202343 | working memory goes to _________________ | long-term memory | 139 | |
12195202344 | How much is stored in long-term memory? | LIMITLESS | 140 | |
12195202345 | implicit memory | naturally do | 141 | |
12195202346 | explicit memory | need to explain | 142 | |
12195202347 | automatic processing | space, time, frequency, well-learned information | 143 | |
12195202348 | effortful processing | processing that requires effort | 144 | |
12195202349 | spacing effect | spread out learning over time | 145 | |
12195202350 | serial position effect | primary/recency effect | 146 | |
12195202351 | primary effect | remember the first things in a list | 147 | |
12195202352 | recency effect | remember the last things in a list | 148 | |
12195202353 | effortful processing (4 things) | 1. recency effect 2. spacing effect 3. testing effect 4. serial position effect | 149 | |
12195202354 | semantic encoding (1) meaning (2) how to | make meaning out of something --- chunk, hierarchy, or connect to you | 150 | |
12195202358 | source amnesia | what is the truth? (is it a dream, story, memory, etc.?) | 151 | |
12195202359 | priming | association (setting you up) | 152 | |
12195202360 | context | environment helps with memory | 153 | |
12195202362 | mood-congruency | emotion will bring back similar emotional memories | 154 | |
12195202363 | Ebbinghaus forgetting curve | initial rapid rate of forgetting that levels off- relearning | 155 | |
12195202365 | proactive interference | old information interferes with the new | 156 | |
12195202375 | Skinner (nature or nurture?) | language is learned (nurture) | 157 |
AP Psychology AP Review Flashcards
Primary tabs
Need Help?
We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.
For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.
If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.
Need Notes?
While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!