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AP Statistics Summer Vocab Flashcards

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10155696469What is statistics?The study of variability0
10155696470What is variability?"Differences... how things change. There is variability everywhere.. We all look different, act different, have different preferences... Statisticians look at these differences."1
10155696471What are 2 branches of AP STATS?Inferential and Descriptive2
10155696472What are DESCRIPTIVE STATS?"Tell me what you got! Describe to me the data that you collected, use pictures or summaries like mean, median, range, etc..."3
10155696473What are INFERENTIAL STATS?"Look at your data, and use that to say stuff about the BIG PICTURE... like tasting soup... a little sample can tell you a lot about the big pot of soup (the population)"4
10155696474Compare Descriptive and Inferential STATS"Descriptive explains you about the data that you have, inference uses that data you have to try to say something about an entire population...."5
10155696475What is data?"Any collected information. Generally each little measurements. Like, if it is a survey about liking porridge the data might be "yes,yes, no, yes, yes" if it is the number of saltines someone can eat in30 seconds, the data might be "3, 1, 2, 1, 4,3 , 3, 4""6
10155696476What is a population?"the group you're interested in. Sometimes it's big, like "all teenagers in the US" other times it is small, like "all AP Stats students in my school""7
10155696477What is a sample?"A subset of a population, often taken to make inferences about the population. We calculate statistics from samples."8
10155696478Compare population to sample"populations are generally large, and samples are small subsets of these population. We take samples to make inferences about populations. We use statistics to estimate parameters"9
10155696479Compare data to statistics"Data is each little bit of information collected from the subjects.... They are the INDIVIDUAL little things we collect... we summarize them by, for example, finding the mean of a group of data. If it is a sample, then we call that mean a ""statistic"" if we have data from each member of population, then that mean is called a ""parameter"" "10
10155696480Compare data to parameters"Data is each little bit of information collected from the subjects.... They are the INDIVIDUAL little things we collect... we summarize them by, for example, finding the mean of a group of data. If it is a sample, then we call that mean a ""statistic"" if we have data from each member of population, then that mean is called a ""parameter"" "11
10155696481What is a parameter?"A numerical summary of a population. Like a mean, median, range... of a population "12
10155696482What is a statistic?"A numerical summary of a sample. Like a mean, median, range... of a sample. "13
10155696483We are curious about the average wait time at a Dunkin Donuts drive through in your neighborhood. You randomly sample cars one afternoon and find the average wait time is 3.2 minutes. What is the population parameter? What is the statistic? What is the parameter of interest? What is the data?"The parameter is the true average wait time at that Dunkin Donuts. This is a number you don't have and will never know. The statistic is "3.2 minutes." It is the average of the data you collected. The parameter of interest is the same thing as the population parameter. In this case, it is the true average wait time of all cars. The data is the wait time of each individual car, so that would be like "3.8 min, 2.2 min, .8 min, 3 min". You take that data and find the average, that average is called a "statistic," and you use that to make an inference about the true parameter. "14
10155696484Compare DATA-STATISTIC-PARAMETER using categorical example"Data are individual measures... like meal preference: "taco, taco, pasta, taco, burger, burger, taco"... Statistics and Parameters are summaries. A statistic would be "42% of sample preferred tacos" and a parameter would be "42% of population preferred tacos." "15
10155696485Compare DATA-STATISTIC-PARAMETER using quantitative example"Data are individual measures, like how long a person can hold their breath: "45 sec, 64 sec, 32 sec, 68 sec." That is the raw data. Statistics and parameters are summaries like "the average breath holding time in the sample was 52.4 seconds" and a parameter would be "the average breath holding time in the population was 52.4 seconds" "16
10155696486What is a census?"Like a sample of the entire population, you get information from every member of the population "17
10155696487Does a census make sense?"A census is ok for small populations (like Mrs. Irvine's students) but impossible if you want to survey "all US teens""18
10155696488What is the difference between a parameter and a statistic?BOTH ARE A SINGLE NUMBER SUMMARIZING A LARGER GROUP OF NUMBERS.... But pppp parameters come from pppp populations... sss statistics come from ssss samples19
10155696489"If I take a random sample of 20 hamburgers from FIVE GUYS and count the number of pickles on a bunch of them... and one of them had 9 pickles, then the number 9 from that burger would be called ____? ""a datum, or a data value. "20
10155696490"If I take a random sample 20 hamburgers from FIVE GUYS and count the number of pickles on a bunch of them... and the average number of pickles was 9.5, then 9.5 is considered a _______? "statistic. (it is a summary of a sample.)21
10155696491"If I take a random sample of 20 hamburgers from FIVE GUYS and count the number of pickles on a bunch of them... and I do this because I want to know the true average number of pickles on a burger at FIVE GUYS, the true average number of pickles is considered a ______? ""parameter, a one number summary of the population. The truth. AKA the parameter of interest. "22
10155696492What is the difference between a sample and a census?"With a sample, you get information from a small part of the population. In a census, you get info from the entire population. You can get a parameter from a census, but only a statistic from a sample. "23
10155696493The Five Ws"Who, what, when, where and why. Provides a context to data."24
10155696494"If you are tasting soup.. Then the flavor of each individual thing in the spoon is the ________, the entire spoon is a ______.. The flavor of all of that stuff together is like the _____ and you use that to __________ about the flavor of the entire pot of soup, which would be the__________. ""If you are tasting soup. Then the flavor of each individual thing in the spoon is DATA, the entire spoon is a SAMPLE. The flavor of all of that stuff together is like the STATISTIC, and you use that to MAKE AN INFERENCE about the flavor of the entire pot of soup, which would be the PARAMETER. Notice you are interested in the parameter to begin with... that is why you took a sample. "25
10155696495What are random variables?"If you randomly choose people from a list, then their hair color, height, weight and any other data collected from them can be considered random variables. "26
10155696496What is the difference between quantitative and categorical variables?"Quantitative variables are numerical measures, like height and IQ. Categorical are categories, like eye color and music preference "27
10155696497What is the difference between quantitative and categorical data?"The data is the actual gathered measurements. So, if it is eye color, then the data would look like this ""blue, brown, brown, brown, blue, green, blue, brown... etc."" The data from categorical variables are usually words, often it is simpy ""YES, YES, YES, NO, YES, NO"" If it was weight, then the data would be quantitative like ""125, 155, 223, 178, 222, etc.."" The data from quantitative variables are numbers. "28
10155696498What is the difference between discrete and continuous variables?"Discrete can be counted, like ""number of cars sold"" they are generally integers (you wouldn't sell 9.3 cars), while continuous would be something like weight of a mouse... 4.344 oz. "29
10155696499What is a quantitative variable?"Quantitative variables are numeric like: Height, age, number of cars sold, SAT score "30
10155696500What is a categorical variable?"Qualitative variables are like categories: Blonde, Listens to Hip Hop, Female, yes, no... etc. "31
10155696501What do we sometimes call a categorical variable?qualitative32
10155696502What is quantitative data?The actual numbers gathered from each subject. 211 pounds. 67 beats per minute.33
10155696503What is categorical data?"The actual individual category from a subject, like ""blue"" or ""female"" or ""sophomore"" "34
10155696504What is a random sample?"When you choose a sample by rolling dice, choosing names from a hat, or other REAL RANDOMLY generated sample. Humans can't really do this well without the help of a calculator, cards, dice, or slips of paper. "35
10155696505What is frequency?How often something comes up36
10155696506data or datum?"datum is singular.. Like ""hey dude, come see this datum I got from this rat!"" data is the plural.. ""hey look at all that data Edgar got from those chipmunks over there!!"" "37
10155696507What is a frequency distribution?"A table, or a chart, that shows how often certain values or categories occur in a data set. "38
10155696508What is meant by relative frequency?The PERCENT of time something comes up (frequency/total)39
10155696509How do you find relative frequency?just divide frequency by TOTAL....40
10155696510What is meant by cumulative frequency?"ADD up the frequencies as you go. Suppose you are selling 25 pieces of candy. You sell 10 the first hour, 5 the second, 3 the third and 7 in the last hour, the cumulative frequency would be 10, 15, 18, 25 "41
10155696511Make a guess as to what relative cumulative frequency is..."It is the ADDED up PERCENTAGES.. An example is selling candy, 25 pieces sold overall..., with 10 the first hour, 5 the second, 3 the third, and 7 the fourth hour, we'd take the cumulative frequencies, 10, 15, 18 and 25 and divide by the total giving cumulative percentages... .40, .60, .64, and 1.00. Relative cumulative frequencies always end at 100 percent. "42
10155696512What is the difference between a bar chart and a histogrambar charts are for categorical data (bars don't touch) and histograms are for quantitative data (bars touch)43
10155696513What is the mean?the old average we used to calculate. It is the balancing point of the histogram44
10155696514What is the difference between a population mean and a sample mean?"population mean is the mean of a population, it is a parameter, sample mean is a mean of a sample, so it is a statistic. We use sample statistics to make inferences about population parameters. "45
10155696515What symbols do we use for population mean and sample mean?"Mu for population mean (parameter), x-bar ̅ for sample mean (statistic) "46
10155696516How can you think about the mean and median to remember the difference when looking at a histogram?"mean is balancing point of histogram, median splits the area of the histogram in half. "47
10155696517What is the median?"the middlest number, it splits area in half (always in the POSITION (n+1)/2 ) "48
10155696518What is the mode?"the most common, or the peaks of a histogram. We often use mode with categorical data "49
10155696519When do we often use mode?"With categorical variables. For instance, to describe the average teenagers preference, we often speak of what "most" students chose, which is the mode. It is also tells the number of bumps in a histogram for quantitative data (unimodal, bimodal, etc...). "50
10155696520"Why don't we always use the mean, we've been calculating it all of our life ? ""It is not RESILIENT, it is impacted by skewness and outliers "51
10155696521"How are mean, median and mode positioned in a skewed left histogram? "goes in that order from left to right. Mean-median-mode52
10155696522"How are mean, median and mode positioned in a skewed right histogram? "goes in the opposite order.. Mode-median-mean53
10155696523Who chases the tail? of a histogram that is"The mean chases the tail, the mean chases the tail, high-ho the derry-oh the mean chases the tail and outliers."54
101556965245-number summary"Minimum, 1st quartile, Median, 3rd quartile, maximum"55

AP US Government & Politics - AP Exam Prep Flashcards

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6485730149Lemon TestUsed to determine the constitutionality of a government action under the Establishment Clause; a precedent and three-prong test articulated in Lemon v. Kurtszman that government action toward religion is permissible if it is secular in purpose, neither promotes nor inhibits the practice or religion, and does not lead to "excessive entanglement with religion"0
6712095401committee clearanceThe ability of a congressional committee to review and approve certain agency decisions in advance without the necessity of passing a law1
6704670010Title IXMajor anti-gender discrimination law that applies to universities and schools that accept federal funding; controversial because many universities cut male sports programs so as not to violate the law2
6702216662caseworkAssistance given to individual constituents by congressional members, like helping an elderly person figure out how to get Medicare benefits; presents a major advantage to incumbents over challengers3
6702223648McCain-FeingoldLegislation that sought to limit the amounts and types of money spent by and for candidates for elected office; placed limits on soft money; tried to deal with the issue of negative ads by requiring candidates to say that they approve the message; criticized by some as an unconstitutional limit on free speech and expression4
6702253176horse-race journalismThe tendency of the media to cover campaigns by emphasizing how candidates stand in the polls instead of where they stand on the issues5
6702259707selective attentionPaying attention only to those news stories with which one already agrees6
6702274725free ridersPeople who benefit from an interest group without making any contributions; labor unions and public interest groups often have a free-rider problem because people can benefit from the group's activities without joining7
6702207113fiscal policyThe federal government efforts to keep the economy stable by spending, borrowing, or increasing or decreasing taxes8
6702211415monetary policyGovernment policy that attempts to manage the economy by controlling the money supply and thus interest rates.9
6692760725Franking privilegeBenefit allowing members of Congress to mail letters and other materials to constituents postage-free; enables members to familiarize voters with their names and positions; provides an advantage to incumbents over their challengers10
6692797885EntitlementsPrograms such as unemployment insurance, disaster relief, or disability payments that provide benefits to all eligible citizens; Social Security and Medicare serve as examples11
6692691965Incorporation (selective incorporation)Application of portions of the Bill of Rights to the states under the Fourteenth Amendment; Examples include Gideon v. Wainwright and Gitlow v. New York12
6485730037Affirmative ActionA policy designed to correct the effects of past discrimination; requirement by law that positive steps be taken to increase the number of minorities in businesses, schools, colleges, and labor. *Supreme Court Cases:* Regents of the University of California v. Bakke (1978) Gratz v. Bollinger (2003)13
6702505291voting eligibilityOriginally left to individual states by the Framers but gradually addressed by the federal government through amendment and basic legislation (Amendments 15, 19, 24, 26; the Voting Rights Act)14
6485730038Agenda SettingThe process of forming the list of matters that policymakers intend to address.15
6485730039AmbassadorA personal representative appointed by the head of a nation to represent that nation in matters of diplomacy.16
6485730040Amicus Curiae BriefFriend of the court; interested groups may be invited to file legal briefs supporting or rejecting arguments of the case.17
6485730041Anti-FederalistsOpposed the adoption of U.S. Constitution because it gave too much power to the national government at the expense of the state governments and it lacked a bill of rights. *Key Individuals:* Patrick Henry George Mason Richard Henry Lee18
6485730043Appellate JurisdictionThe authority of a court to review decisions of inferior (lower) courts19
6485730044AppropriationsMoney used by Congress or a state legislature for a specific purpose.20
6485730045ApportionmentDistribution of representatives among the states based on the population of each state.21
6485730046Articles of ImpeachmentThe specific charges brought against a president or a federal judge by a simple majority of the House of Representatives.22
6485730047Articles of ConfederationThe first national constitution of the United States that created a government lasting from 1781 to 1789; produced a government that was too weak; replaced by the current Constitution23
6485730048Bills of AttainderA law that punishes a person accused of a crime without a trial or a fair hearing in court24
6485730049BipartisanPolitics that emphasizes cooperation between the major parties25
6485730050Blanket PrimaryA nominating election in which voters may switch from one political party's primary to another on an office-to-office basis; see *Direct Primary*.26
6485730051Block GrantsFederal grants to the states and local communities that are for general use in a broad area, such as community development; fewer "strings attached" in terms of how the money may be spent27
6485730052BriefLegal document submitted to the court setting forth the facts of a case and supporting a particular position.28
6485730053BureaucracyA system of departments and agencies formed to carry out the work of government; comprised of unelected officials29
6485730054CabinetHeads of government departments, selected by the President and approved by a majority of the Senate; appointed to advance and administer public policy and to provide advice and information to the President30
6485730055Categorical GrantsFederal grants to states and local communities that are earmarked for specific purposes only, such as pollution control, schools, or hospitals; recipients are usually required to put up matching funds; also known Grants-in-Aid31
6485730056CaucusLocally held party meeting in a state to select delegates who, in turn, will nominate candidates to political offices32
6485730057Caucus (Congressional)An association of congressional members who advocate a political ideology, regional, ethnic, or economic interest.33
6485730058Checks and BalancesSystem of overlapping the powers of the legislative, executive, and judicial branches, to permit each branch to limit the actions of the others and thus no branch of government may dominate the other34
6485730059Civil Rights Act of 1964The legislative act that removed racial barriers in all places vested with a public interest35
6485730060Civil Service SystemEstablished under the *Pendleton Act* of 1883; instituted a merit system through which many federal employees would be selected on the basis of their knowledge and qualifications, rather than who they know; forms the basis for America's modern bureaucracy36
6485730061Clear and Present Danger TestA doctrine adopted by the Supreme Court of the United States to determine under what circumstances limits can be placed on First Amendment freedoms of speech, press or assembly. *Supreme Court Cases:* Schenck v. United States (1919) Abrams v. United States (1919) Gitlow v. New York (1925)37
6485730062Closed PrimaryForm of the direct primary in which only declared party members may vote38
6485730063ClotureProcedure that may be used to limit or end floor debate in the Senate; requires a three-fifths vote of the Senate39
6485730064Coattail EffectInfluence that a popular candidate for a top office (e.g., President or governor) can have on the voters' support of other candidates of his/her party on the same ballot40
6485730065Commerce PowerExclusive power of Congress to regulate interstate and foreign trade; has lead to a significant expansion in the role of federal government41
6485730066Concurrent JurisdictionPower shared by federal and state courts to hear certain cases.42
6485730067Concurrent PowersThose powers which are exercised independently by both the national and state governments. Those powers shared by both levels of governments, i.e., state and national. *Examples:* Maintain law & order Levy tax Provide for the general welfare43
6485730068Concurring OpinionWritten explanation of the views of one or more appellate judges who support a decision reached by majority of the court but disagree with the grounds for that decision.44
6485730069Conference CommitteeTemporary joint committee created to reconcile any differences between the two houses' versions of a bill.45
6485730070Congressional Budget OfficeAdvises Congress on the probable consequences of its decisions, forecasts revenues, and is a counterweight to the president's *Office of Management and Budget*.46
6485730071Congressional DistrictingThe process by which state legislatures draw congressional districts for states with more than one representatives; see *Gerrymandering*.47
6485730072Congressional OversightPower exercised by Congress to gather information useful for the formation of legislation, review the operations and budgets of executive departments and independent regulatory agencies, conduct investigations through committee hearings, and bring to the public's attention the need for public policy.48
6485730073Consent of the GovernedA derivative of the doctrine of natural rights; a philosophy, later adopted by Jefferson when he drafted the Declaration of Independence that puts the authority of the government in the people's hands.49
6485730074ConservativeA person who believes government power, particularly in the economy, should be limited in order to maximize individual freedom50
6485730075ConstituentsAll persons represented by a legislator or other elected officeholder.51
6485730076ConstitutionBody of fundamental law, setting out the basic principles, structures, processes, and functions of a government and placing limits upon its actions; may be written or unwritten.52
6485730077Cooperative FederalismFederal & state governments help each other perform governmental duties; e.g. After hurricanes, federal and state agencies work together to provide relief; can cause confusion and/or conflict among among different levels of government53
6485730078Court PackingThe act of placing members of the same political party on the bench so that opinion of the court will be consistent with that of the political party; associated with *Franklin Roosevelt*.54
6485730079Critical (Realigning) ElectionsMarks a significant change in the way that large groups of citizens vote, shifting their political allegiance from one party to the other *Examples:* 1800, 1828, 1860, 1896, 1932, 196455
6485730080DealignmentMarks a period when a significant number of voters choose to no longer support a particular political party as may be witnessed in a Crtitical Election56
6485730081De Facto SegregationSegregation that exists "in fact," not as a result of laws or governmental actions, i.e., administered by the public; see de jure segregation, segregation.57
6485730082DeficitYearly shortfall between revenue and spending.58
6485730083Deficit SpendingGovernment practice of spending more than is taken in from taxes.59
6485730084De Jure SegregationSegregation that exists as a result of some law or governmental action. *Examples:* Jim Crow Laws60
6485730085DelegateRole played by elected representatives who vote the way their constituents would want them to, regardless of their own opinions.61
6485730086Delegated PowersPowers which are granted to, and exercised ONLY by the national government. The delegated powers are specifically listed in the U.S. Constitution at Articles I, II, III; also known as *Expressed Powers*.62
6485730088DeregulationA policy promoting cutbacks in the amount of Federal regulation in specific areas of economic activity.63
6485730089DesegregationThe removal of racial barriers either by legislative acts or by judicial action64
6485730090DevolutionAn effort to shift responsibility of domestic programs to the states in order to decrease the size and activities of the federal government; associated with Ronald Reagan65
6485730091Discretionary SpendingSpending set by the government through annual appropriations bills, including operating expenses and salaries of government employees.66
6485730092Dissenting OpinionWritten explanation of the views of one or more judges who disagree with a decision reached by a majority of the court.67
6485730093District CourtsLowest level of federal courts; where federal cases begin and trials are held; exercise original jurisdiction68
6485730094Divided GovernmentOne party controls the executive, and the other party controls one or both houses of Congress.69
6485730095Division of PowersBasic principle of federalism; the constitutional provisions by which governmental powers are divided between state and national government70
6485730096Double JeopardyThe constitutional prohibition against a person being put on trial more than once for the same offense. *Constitutional Connection:* Fifth Amendment71
6485730097Dual FederalismFederal and state governments each have defined respinsibilities within their own sphere of influence; also called *Layer Cake Federalism*.72
6485730098Due ProcessThe constitutional guarantee (clause) that "no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law." *Constitutional Connections:* Fifth Amendment Fourteenth Amendment73
6485730099Elastic ClauseFound in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution, it gives Congress the power to make "all laws necessary and proper" to carry out the other defined powers of Congress; also known as the *Necessary and Proper Clause*.74
6485730100Electoral CollegeGroup of persons chosen in each State and the District of Columbia every four years who make a formal selection of the President and Vice President.75
6485730101Elite TheoryA perspective holding that society is ruled by a small number of people who exercise power in their self-interest; see also *Pluralism*.76
6485730102Entitlement ProgramsGovernment benefits that certain qualified individuals are entitled to by law, regardless of need. *Examples:* Social Security Medicare77
6485730103Enumerated PowersPowers that are granted specifically to the three branches of the federal government under the Constitution; also known as Expressed Powers; powers given to the national government alone78
6485730104Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)Regulates air and water pollution, pesticides, radiation, solid waste, and toxic substances. It is the main environmental regulatory agency.79
6485730105Equal Protection ClauseSection of the *Fourteenth Amendment* that guarantees that all citizens receive "equal protection of the laws"; has been used to bar discrimination against blacks and women.80
6485730106Establishment ClausePart of the *First Amendment* prohibiting either the establishment of a religion or the sanctioning of an existing religion by the government; see also *Free Exercise Clause*. *Supreme Court Cases:* Engel v. Vitale (1962) Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971) Lee v. Weisman (1992)81
6485730107Exclusionary RuleHolds that evidence gained by illegal or unreasonable means cannot be used at the court trial of the person from whom it was seized; see also *Inevitable Discovery*. *Constitutional Connection:* Fourth Amendment *Supreme Court Cases:* Mapp v. Ohio (1961)82
6485730108Executive AgreementPact made by the president with the head of a foreign state; a binding international agreement with the force of law but which (unlike a treaty) does not require Senate consent.83
6485730109Executive Office of the PresidentA collection of agencies that help the president oversee department and agency activities, formulate budgets and monitor spending, craft legislation, and lobby Congress. *Includes:* National Security Council, Council of Economic Advisers Office of Management and Budget Office of National Drug Control Policy84
6485730110Executive OrderA directive, order, or regulation issued by the president; based on constitutional or statutory authority and have the force of law.85
6485730111Executive PrivilegeThe right of the president to withhold information from Congress or refuse to testify; limited by the Court in certain circumstances, such as a criminal investigation *Supreme Court Cases:* U.S. v. Nixon (1974)86
6485730112Ex Post Facto LawCriminal law applied retroactively to the disadvantage of the accused; prohibited by the United States Constitution; a law that would allow a person to be punished for an action that was not against the law when it was committed87
6485730113Expressed PowersPowers that Congress has that are specifically listed in the Constitution; also known as the *Enumerated Powers*.88
6485730114Federal BudgetA detailed financial document containing estimates of federal income and spending during the coming fiscal year. *Key Agencies:* Office of Management and Budget Congressional Budget Office Budget Committees Ways & Means Committee (House) Appropriations Committee (House)89
6485730115Federal Election Campaign Acts (FECA)A law passed in 1974 for reforming campaign finances; created the Federal Election Commission, provided public financing for presidential primaries and general elections, limited presidential campaign spending, required disclosure, and attempted to limit contributions.90
6485730116FederalismA form of government in which power is divided between the federal, or national, government and the states.91
6485730117Federalist PapersA series of articles written by John Jay, Alexander Hamilton, and James Madison urging the adoption of the Constitution. *Key Ideas:* Federalist 10 - Factions (parties), Tyranny of the Majority Federalist 39 - Federalism Federalist 51 - Checks and Balances Federalist 70 - Presidency Federalist 78 - Judicial Review92
6485730118FilibusterA procedural practice in the Senate whereby a senator refuses to relinquish the floor and thereby delays proceedings and prevents a vote on a controversial issue; see also *Cloture*.93
6485730119Fiscal FederalismThe national government's use of fiscal policy to influence states through the granting or withholding of appropriations.94
6485730120Foreign PolicyThe actions and stands that a nation takes in every aspect of its relationships with other countries; everything a nation's government says and does in world affairs.95
6485730121Free Exercise ClausePart of the *First Amendment* guaranteeing to each person the right to believe whatever that person chooses in matters of religion. *Supreme Court Cases:* Wisconsin v. Yoder (1972) Employment Division v. Smith (1990)96
6485730122Full Faith and Credit ClauseA clause in Article IV of the Constitution which requires that each state respect the laws, records and court decisions of another state.97
6485730123General ElectionRegularly scheduled election at which the voters choose public officeholders.98
6485730124GerrymanderingThe process in which state legislatures create congressional districts, many of which are oddly shaped and favor the political party in power in the state making the changes.99
6485730125Grass RootsOf or from the common people, the average voter; used to describe opinion and pressure on public policy.100
6485730126GridlockDescribes people's perception that Congress and the president are in a state of disagreement that results in little legislation passing.101
6485730127Hatch Act (1939)Law that prohibits government employees from engaging in political activities while on duty.102
6485730129ImpeachmentAn action by the House of Representatives to accuse the president, vice president, or other civil officers of the United States of committing "Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors."103
6485730130Implied PowersPowers of the national government that flow from its enumerated powers and the *"Elastic Clause"* of the Constitution; powers not specifically mentioned in the Constitution104
6485730131ImpoundmentPresidential refusal to allow an agency to spend funds that Congress authorized and appropriated; essentially ended under the *Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974*.105
6485730133IncumbentsThose elected officials who are running for new terms of office.106
6485730132Incorporation DoctrineThe selective application of the protections of the federal Bill of Rights to the states; the legal concept under which the Supreme Court has nationalized the Bill of Rights by making most of its provisions applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment. *Supreme Court Cases:* Gitlow v. New York (1925)107
6485730134Independent Executive AgencyThe government not accounted for by cabinet departments, independent regulatory agencies, and government corporations; its administrators are typically appointed by the president and serve at the president's pleasure. *Examples:* NASA108
6485730135Independent Regulatory AgenciesFederal regulatory agencies that are are administratively independent of both the president and Congress. *Examples:* Federal Trade Commission Securities and Exchange Commission109
6485730136Informal AmendmentA change made in Constitution not by actual written amendment. *Methods:* Legislation passed by Congress Actions taken by the President Decisions of the Supreme Court Activities of political parties Custom110
6485730137Inherent PowersThe powers of the national government in foreign affairs that the Supreme Court has declared do not depend on constitutional grants but rather grow out of the very existence of the national government.111
6485730138InjunctionCourt order that requires or forbids some specific action.112
6485730139Interest GroupA private organization that tries to persuade public officials to act in ways that benefit its members; an organization of people sharing a common interest or goal that seeks to influence the making of public policy through lobbying, grassroots organizing, etc.113
6485730140Iron TriangleThe three-way alliance among legislators, bureaucrats, and interests groups to make or preserve policies that benefit their respective interests.114
6485730141Joint CommitteeLegislative committee composed of members of both houses of Congress. *Examples:* Joint Committee on the Library Joint Committee on Printing115
6485730142Issue NetworkA network of policy experts or advocates including members from interest groups, congressional staffs, universities, think tanks, and the media all working to shape public policy116
6485730143Judicial ActivismA philosophy of judicial decision-making whereby judges allow their personal views about public policy guide their decisions; judges look beyond the text of the Constitution and consider current considerations and values (the spirit of the times)117
6485730144Judicial RestraintA judicial philosophy in which judges play minimal policy-making roles, leaving that duty strictly to the legislatures; judges primarily limit their attention to the actual text of the Constitution118
6485730145Judicial ReviewAuthority of the courts to review the constitutionality of acts by the executive, the legislature, or the states; established in Marbury v. Madison119
6485730147Judiciary CommitteeKey Senate committee that is responsible for recommending presidential judicial appointments to the full Senate for approval.120
6485730148JurisdictionAuthority vested in a particular court to hear and decide the issues in any particular case.121
6485730150LibelPublication (written) of statements that wrongfully damage another's reputation; see slander. *Constitutional Connection:* First Amendment *Supreme Court Cases:* New York Times v. Sullivan (1964)122
6485730151LiberalA person whose views favor more government involvement in business, social welfare, minority rights, & increased government spending123
6485730152Line Item VetoPresidential power to strike, or remove, specific items from a bill without vetoing it in its entireity; passed by Congress in 1996 and declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1998. *Supreme Court Cases:* Clinton v. City of New York124
6485730153Literacy TestA test administered as a precondition for voting, often used to prevent African Americans from exercising their right to vote; suspended in most states under the *Voting Rights Act of 1965125
6485730154LobbyistA person who is employed by and acts for an organized interest group or corporation to try to influence policy decisions and positions in the executive and legislative branches.126
6485730155LogrollingThe exchange of political favors between legislators for support of a bill; an agreement by two or more lawmakers to support each other's bills127
6485730156Loose ConstructionThe belief, first expressed by Alexander Hamilton, that the government can do anything that the Constitution does not specifically prohibit; justified through the Elastic Clause128
6485730157Majority OpinionA court opinion reflecting the views of the majority of the judges; sets forth the decision of the court and an explanation of the rationale behind the court's decision.129
6485730158Motor Voter Act of 1993Signed into law by President Clinton, it enables people to register to vote at motor vehicle departments; intended to increase voter turnout130
6485730159National Nominating ConventionsA national gathering of delegates to choose a political party's presidential nominee, write a platform of policy positions, and transact other national party business131
6485730160Natural RightsPart of Locke's philosophy; rights that are God given such as life, liberty, and property.132
6485730161New DealLegislation that provided a safety net for all members of society, such as Social Security, under Franklin Delano Roosevelt during the Great Depression.133
6485730162New Jersey PlanOffered at the Constitutional Convention at Philadelphia; urged the delegates to create a legislature based on equal representation by the states; advanced the interests of small states; presented less of a departure from the Articles of Confederation134
6485730163Office of Management and Budget (OMB)Its director, appointed with the consent of the Senate, is responsible for the preparation of the massive federal budget, which must be submitted to the Congress in January each year; oversees congressional appropriations135
6485730164PartisanPolitical opposition drawn along party lines136
6485730165PatronageDispensing government jobs to persons who belong to the winning political party137
6485730166Party CaucusAlso known as the party conference, it is a means for each party to develop a strategy or position on a particular issue.138
6485730169Party MachineThe party organization that exists on the local level and uses patronage as the means to keep the party members in line. Boss Tweed and Tammany Hall are examples.139
6485730170Party PlatformsVoted on by the delegates attending the National Convention, they represent the ideological point of view of a political party.140
6485730172Pendleton ActKnown as the Civil Service Act of 1883, it set up merit as the criterion for hiring, promoting, and firing federal employees.141
6485730173Political Action CommitteesA committee set up by a corporation or interest group to raise and funnels money to political candidates; donation amounts received and contributed and are strictly limited by FEC rules142
6485730174Political PartyA group of people joined together by common philosophies and common approaches with the aim of getting candidates elected in order to develop and implement public policy; characterized by an organization that is responsible to the electorate and has a role in government.143
6485730175Political SocializationThe factors that determine voting behavior such as family, religion, and ethnic background144
6485730176PolicyA course of action decided upon by government, or by any organization, group, or individual, that involves a choice among competing interests145
6485730177Poll TaxThe requirement of a person to pay for the right to vote; restricted by the 24th Amendment146
6485730178Pork Barrel LegislationThe practice of legislators obtaining funds through legislation that favors their home districts.147
6485730179PrecedentJudicial use of prior cases as the test for deciding similar cases148
6485730180President Pro TemporeOfficer of the Senate selected by the majority party to act as chair in the absence of the vice president; customarily awarded to a Senator from the majority party with the most seniority149
6485730181Presidential PrimaryElections held in individual states to determine the preference of the voters and to allocate the number of delegates to the party's national convention.150
6485730182Price SupportsThe government's price guarantees for certain farm goods. The government subsidizes farmers to not grow certain crops and also buys food directly and stores it, rather than let the oversupply in the market bring the prices down.151
6485730183Prior RestraintCensorship enacted before the speech, publication, etc., is released to the general public; unconstitutional in that it conflicts with the First Amendment as confirmed by the Supreme Court in the case of Near v. Minnesota.152
6485730184Probable CauseA set of facts and circumstances that would induce a reasonably intelligent and prudent person to believe that a particular person had committed a specific crime; reasonable grounds to make or believe an accusation.153
6485730185Prohibited PowersExpressly bar government from specific actions, e.g. state governments cannot coin money, no ex post facto laws or grant titles of nobility.154
6485730186RatificationThe procedure followed by the states to approve the Constitution and/or its formal amendments.155
6485730187ReapportionmentThe process in which a state legislature redraws congressional districts based on population increases or declines.156
6485730188ReferendumThe process whereby a legislative proposal is voted upon by popular vote.157
6485730189Reserved PowersPowers retained by the states, as dictated by the 10th Amendment.158
6485730190Rule of FourIn order for a case to be heard by the Supreme Court, four justices must agree to hear the case.159
6485730191SeditionConduct/language inciting rebellion against authority of the state.160
6485730192Select CommitteesSpecially created congressional committees that conduct special investigations. The Watergate Committee and Iran-Contra investigators were select Senate committees.161
6485730193Senatorial CourtesyAn unwritten tradition whereby the Senate will not confirm nominations for lower court positions that are opposed by a senator of the president's own party from the state in which the nominee is to serve.162
6485730194Separate But EqualThe judicial precedent established in the Plessy v Ferguson decision that enabled states to interpret the equal protection provision of the Fourteenth Amendment as a means of establishing segregation; overturned in the case of Brown v. Board of Education163
6485730195Separation of Church and StateAlso known as the "establishment clause," it is part of the First Amendment to the Constitution prohibiting the federal government from creating a state supported religion.164
6485730196Separation of PowersOriginally developed by Montesquieu in The Spirit of Natural Laws written during the Enlightenment and James Madison in Federalist No. 48, this important doctrine resulted in the establishment of three separate branches of government: the legislative, executive, and judicial branches, each having distinct and unique powers.165
6485730197Speaker of the HouseThe representative from the majority party in the House of Representatives who presides over House meetings, recognizes speakers, refers bills to committees, answers procedural questions, and declares the outcome of votes.166
6485730198Standing CommitteesCommittees that deal with proposed bills and also act in an oversight function. They are permanent, existing from one Congress to the next, such as the House Ways and Means and Senate Appropriations.167
6485730200Strict ConstructionistsIndividuals who believe in a conservative interpretation of the Constitution.168
6485730199Stare DecisisJudicial precedent. . . "let the decision stand"; originated in England in the twelfth century when judges settled disputes based on custom and tradition.169
6485730201Super DelegatesDemocratic members of Congress and party officials selected by their colleagues to be delegates at the party's presidential nominating convention; unlike others, these are not committed to a particular candidate and can exercise their judgement when deciding how to vote at the convention;170
6485730202Supremacy ClauseClause that states that "the Constitution and the laws of the United States... shall be the supreme law of the land."171
6485730203Unitary systemA system of government in which power is concentrated in the central government.172
6485730204Virginia PlanOffered at the Constitutional Convention at Philadelphia, it urged the delegates to create a legislature based on the population of each state; Madison's plan for a bicameral legislature, with the executive and judiciary chosen by the legislature173
6485730205Voting Rights Act of 1965Invalidated the use of any test or device to deny the vote and authorized federal examiners to register voters in states that had disenfranchised blacks; contributed to the establishment of racially gerrymandered congressional districts in the 1980s and 1990s.174
6692588112American Disabilities ActCongressional mandate that all businesses be physically accessible to persons with disabilities; gave Americans with disabilities protection against discrimination175
6485730206War Powers ActLimits the ability of the president to commit troops to combat; Congress must be notified within 48 hours of deployment and can ultimately require a withdrawal of troops if so desired176
6485730207WatergateThe illegal entry and phone monitoring of the Democratic headquarters by members of the Republican Party.177
6485730208WhipsAlso known as assistant floor leaders, they check with party members and inform the majority leader of the status and feelings of the membership regarding issues to be voted on; responsible for keeping party members in line and having an accurate count of who will be voting for or against a particular bill178
6485730209Writ of CertiorariLatin for "to be made more certain," the process in which the Supreme Court accepts written briefs on appeal based on the "rule of four" justices voting to hear the case.179
6485730210Writ of Habeas CorpusCourt order requiring jailers to explain to a judge why they are holding a prisoner in custody.180
6692225450Warren CourtRendered an array of decisions that supported civil rights, civil liberties, voting rights, and personal privacy181
6692585295Attorney GeneralHead of the Justice Department and the chief law enforcement officer of the United States182
6702836162No one candidate with an electoral vote majorityThe House of Representatives chooses a President from among the top three (3) electoral vote recipients; each state has one vote, regardless of how many representatives it has been assigned183

AP Flashcards

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7288083329MorfologiLæren om ordet og dets opdeling i morfemer0
7288084203RodmorfemOrdets kerne1
7288085696PræfiksForstavelse foran rodmorfemet2
7288086359Suffiksendelse efter rodmorfem3
7288089215DenotationOrdets grundbetydning4
7288089929KonnotationEn medbetydning5
7288093439RealplanDet der bliver beskrevet af billedplan6
7288101547GambitHvordan man holder en samtale kørene7

AP Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
6069566408Civil rightsPolicies designed to protect people against arbitrary or discriminatory treatment by government officials or individuals0
6069576951Equal protection of the lawspart of the fourteenth amendment emphasizing that the laws must provide equivalent "protection" to all people.1
606961999513 Amendmentabolished slavery2
6069626809Plessy v. Fergusonsumpreme court ruled that segregation public places facilities were legal as long as the facilites were equal3
6069637132Brown v. Bordthe law that made racial discrimination against any group in hotels, motels, and restaurants illegal and forbade many forms of job discrimination4
6069644763Civil right acts of 1964the law that made racial discrimination against any group in hotels, motels, and restaurants illegal and forbade many forms of job discrimination5
6069654968Suffragethe right to vote6
6069692445Poll taxesrequired citizens of a state to pay a special tax in order to vote7
6069695875White primarythe practice of keeping blacks from voting in the southern states' primaries through arbitrary use of registration requirements and intimidation.8
606970809824 amendmentProhibits poll tax in federal elections9
6069721972Voting right act of 1965a law designed to help end formal and informal barriers to African-American suffrage10
606985924819 amendmentgranted women the right to vote in 192011
6069859387Equal right amendmentconstitutional amendment passed by Congress but never ratified that would have banned discrimination on the basis of gender12
6069935894Reed v. Reedthe landmark case in 1971 in which the supreme court for the first time upheld a claim of gender discrimination. ,m13
6069953830Americans with Disabilitiesa law passed in 1990 that requires employers and public facilities to make "reasonable accomodations" for people with disabilities and prohibits discrimination against these individuals in employment14
6069967141Regret of the UniversityCourt ruling that colleges and universities could legitimately consider race as a factor in the admissions process15
6070017129Affirmative actionprograms intended to make up for past discrimination by helping minority groups and women gain access to jobs and opportunities16

ap Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
8274111704transductionthe translation of incoming stimuli into neural signals(neural impulses from the sense travel first to the thalamus and then on to different cortices of the brain.. the sense of smell is the one exception to this rule)0
8274116547sensory adaptationdecreasing responsiveness to stimuli due to constant stimulation (for example we eventually stop perceiving a persistent scent in a room)1
8274120407sensory hibituation (perceptual adaptation)our perception of sensation is partially determined by how focused we are on them (for example no longer hearing traffic from the nearby freeway after having lived in a place for years)2
8274125352cocktail-party phenomenonif you are talking with a friend and someone across the room say your names, your attention will probably involuntarily switch across the room3
8274125353sensationoccurs when one of our senses are activated by something in our enviornment..occurs before the process of perception4
8274128349perceptionthe brain's interpretation of sensory messages (occurs after the process of sensation).. the process of understanding and interpreting sensations5
8274128350energy sensesthe senses of vision, hearing, and touch (gather energy in the form of light, sound waves, and pressure, respectively6
8274131873chemical sensesthe sense of taste and smell.. these senses work by gathering chemicals)7
8274131874visiondominate sense in human beings. sighed people use vision to other info about their environments8
8274136007corneaprotective covering on the front of the eye (helps focus light)9
8274136008pupilopening in the center of the eye, similar to the shutter of a camera, (muscles (iris) that control the pupil open it to let more light in and also make it smaller to let less light in)10
8274139132lensfocuses light that enters the pupil, curved and flexible in order to focus the light, as the light passes through the lens, the images are flipped upside down and inverted, the focused inverted image projects on the retina11
8274139133retinalike a screen on the back of your eye, as light passes through the lens, the image is flipped upside down and projected on the retina... special neurons in the retina are activated by light and send impulses along the optic nerve to the occipital lobe of the brain12
8274141642optic nervenerve leading from the retina that carries impulses to the occipital lobe of the brain (the optic nerve is divided into two parts, impulses for the left of each retina go to the left hemisphere of the brain, and those from the right of each retina go to the left side of the brain13
8274141643occipital lobelocation of the visual cortex, part of the brain that processes vision and sensations, receives impulses via the optic nerve14
8274146107feature detectorsperception researches Hubel and Wiesel discovered that groups of neuron in the visual cortex respond to different types of visual images,15
8274146108visible lightcolor is perceived due to a combination of different factors which include.. light intensity (energy it contains and how bright) and also light wavelength (determines hue)16
8274149996rods and conesspecial neurons in the retina that are activated by light (cones = color) (rods = light)17
8274153656bipolar cells and ganglion cellsthey make up different layers of the retina....light activates rod and cone cells... rods and cones send signal to the next layer of the cells in the retina: bipolar cells...bipolar cells send signals to the next layer of cells in the retina: ganglion cells...ganglion cells send signals to the brain through the optic nerve18
8274153657foveaindentation at the center of the retina, where cones are concentrated.. when the light is focused onto your fovea you see the color..peripheral vision, especially at extremes, relies on rods and is mostly in black and white...fovea vision, focusing light on the fovea, results in the sharpest and clearest visual perception19
8274157832blind spotthe spot on the retina where the optic nerve leaves the retina and there are no rods or cones.. we cannot detect objects in our blind spot, but our brains and the movement of our eyes accomadate for the blind spot, so we usually dont notice it20
8274159976trichromatic theorya theory of color vision (the other theory is an oppenent-process theory)... we have three types of cones in the retina : ones that can detect blue red and green21
8274163740color blindnessinduviduals with dichromatic color blindness cannot see either red/green/blue/or yellow shade... momochromatic color blindness see only shades of gray22
8274167430opponnent- process theory23
8274167431hearing24
8274167432sound waves25
8274170845cochlea26
8274170846pitch theorys27
8274175199nerve deafness28
8274175200touch29
8274179096gate-control theory30
8274182604taste (gustation)31
8274186481smell (olfacation)32
8274186482vestibular sense33
8274191591kinesthetic sense34
8274191592absolute threshold35
8274197102subliminal messages36
8274197103difference threshold37
8274201232webers law38
8274201233signal detection theory39
8274211568top-down processingwhen we use top down, we perceive by filling gaps in what we sense (occurs when you use your background knowledge to fill in gaps in what you perceive..our experiences create a schema, mental representations of how we expect the world to be. our schema influence how we perceive the world... schemas can create a perceptual set, which is a predisposition to perceiving something in a certain way)40
8274215918perceptual setour experience creates schemata, mental representations of how we expect the world to be. our schemata influence how we perceive the world (schema can create a perpetual set, which is a predisposition to perceiving something in a certain way.. for example, you may perceive a could as being shaped like a heart around valentines day)41
8274218645bottom up processingopposite of top-down processing (intead of using our experience to perceive an object, we use only the features of the object itself to build a complete perception ( we startour perception at the bottoms with the induvidual charateristic of the image and pull all those charteristics together into our final perception. our minds build the pictyure from the bottom up using basic charateristics)42
8274218646gestalt rulesdeveloped by a group of researchers from the early 20th century who described the principled that govern how we perceive groups of objects(based on an observation that we normally perceive groups, not as isolated elements(believed to be innate and inevitable))43
8274221437constancyevery object we see changes minutely from movement to movement due to our changing angle of vision, variations in light, and so on (our ability to maintain a constant perception of an object despite these changes(types include size, shape,brightness constancy))44
8274221438size constancyobjects close to our eyes will produce bigger images on our retinas, but we take distance into account in our estimations of size (ex. we keep a constant size in mind for an object and know that it does not grow or shrink in size as it moves closer or farther away)45
8274227047shape constancyobjects viewed from different angles will produce different shapes on our retinas, but we know the shape of an object remains constant (ex. the top of a coffee mug viewed from a certain angle will produce an elliptical image on our retinas, but we know the top is circular due to shape and constancy)46
8274232964bright constancywe perceive objects as being a constant color even as the light reflecting off the object changes (ex. we will perceive a brick wall as a brick red even as the daylight fades and the actual colo reflected from the wall turns gray)47
8274236763depth cuesmonocular- depth cues that do not depend on having two eyes (ex. shading,texture gradient, linear perspective) binocular- cues that depend on having two eyes (ex. retinal disparity and convergence)48
8308195077step one of visionlight is reflected off objects49
8308195078step two of visionreflected light coming from the object enters the eye through the cornea and pupil, is focused by the lens, and is projected on to the retina where specialized neurons are activated by the different wavelengths of light50
8308199897step three of visiontransduction occurs when light activates the special neurons in the retina and sends impulses along the optic nerve to the occipital lobe of the brain51
8308202708step four of visionimpulses from the left side of each retina go to the left hemisphere of the brain, and those from the right side of each retina go to the right side of the brain52
8308205560step five of visionvisual cortex receives the impulses from the retina, which activate feature detectors for verticle lines, curves, motion, among others, (we perceive a combination of this feature)53

Chapter 12 AP Government Flashcards

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582353127422nd AmendmentLimits the number of times a person can be elected president (2 terms)0
582353127525th AmendmentAddresses succession to the presidency and establishes procedures both for filling a vacancy in the VP office, as well as responding to presidential disabilities.1
5823531276ImpeachmentPolitical equivalent of indictment in criminal law, prescribed in the constitution. HoR can issue an impeachment (which has to be carried out by Senate) with a majority vote for any grave offense (not based on policy or anything like that).2
5823531277Watergate1972; 5 people broke in to Democratic National Committee HQ and were caught. Media started investigation of gov. after tip off from insider, "Deepthroat". Two top aids to Nixon indicted; Nixon had tapes proving his involvement in cover up (not the break in in the 1st place tho) which he refused to give up, but Nixon v. US forced him to give them up and he later resigned.3
5823531278National Security PowersPresident serves as Commander in Chief of any army related thing. Can make treaties (subject to 2/3 agreement of congress). Nominate ambassadors(with approval of majority of Senate).4
5823531280Administrative Powers"Chief Executive" Ensure laws to be faithfully executed; Nominates officials; Can request a written opinion of administrative officials; Fills administrative vacancies.5
5823531281Judicial PowersCan grant reprieves and pardons for federal offenses (except impeachment); Can nominate federal judges (who have to get approved by majority of Senate)6
5823531282Budgeting and Accountancy Act of 1921Before this, Congress prepared the budget and the president approved revenue and appropriations bills (which is very decentralized) Now, the president is responsible with the help of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).7
5823531283Executive OrdersCarry the force of law, but don't have to go through congress. Can be implemented statues, treaties, or constitution. (ex. Truman desegregated army, Kennedy created Peace Corps, etc.)8
5823531284Vice PresidentThe President of the Senate (though really his only rile ere is to break ties) Is sometimes selected by President to "balance the ticket" (ex. young candidate will choose an older VP to add experience, a mainline party member might choose a more moderate VP to appeal to undecided people)9
5823531285CabinetA group of presidential advisers that are not mentioned in the constitution, but every president has still had one. There are 15 of them and they are all given a specific department as they are experts in that (ex. State, Treasury, Defense, Justice, etc.)10
5823531286National Security CouncilCoordinates the president's foreign and military policy advisers. Formal members: President, Vice President, Secretary of State, and Secretary of Defense. Managed by the president's national security assistant.11
5823531287Council of Economic AdvisersThree-member body appointed by the president to advice the president on economic policy.12
5823531288Office of Management and BudgetAn office that grew out of the Bureau of the Budget, created in 1921. Consists of a handful of political appointees and hundreds of skilled professionals. It performs both managerial and budgetary functions.13
5823531289Chief of StaffThe person who is named to direct the White House Office (like managing cleaning staff and all that good stuff) and advise the president.14
5823531290HierarchicalThere is a key person at the top (the president in this sense), and he makes sure the "underlings" are doing their jobs.15
5823531291Wheel and SpokesThe President is surrounded by many aides and they all talk through issues as a group. The president usually follows his advisers.16
5823531292First LadyOften becomes a spokesperson on the national scene. Earlier on, they'd take very political stances (Roosevelt and new deal); but now, they focus mainly on single non-partisan issues (Obama fought against obesity)17
5823531293Chief LegislatorGives state of union speech once a year; Can sign a bill making it a law; Can veto a bill sending it back to congress; Or can just not sign the bill (could become law if nothing is done for 10 working days, or rejected if congress adjourns within those 10 days).18
5823531294VetoThe constitutional power of the president to send a bill back to congress with his/her reasons for rejecting it. Can be overridden by 2/3 vote in either house tho. Is highly effective -- only 4% of vetoes are overridden.19
5823531295Pocket VetoA type of veto that occurs when the president doesn't sign or veto a bill, but congress leaves session before the 10 days are up -- this effectively kills the bill.20
5823531296Line-Item VetoA bill is taken all or nothing. The president cannot rule out specific part of the bill he doesn't like (however, most governors do have this power).21
5823531297Presidential CottailsPhenomenon in which voters cast votes for congressional candidates of the president's party because they support the president.22
5823531298Approval RatingSurvey given to random portion of population of USA to determine how much people approve of president, congress, etc. President needs public support to get things done, so this is a pretty important thing.23
5823531299Electoral MandateThe perception that the voters strongly support the president and his policies. An election win pushes congress to follow the lead of the president with new legislation and things of the sort.24
5823531300Honeymoon PeriodThe time following an election win where a president can (hopefully) push for legislation quickly.25
5823531301Chief DiplomatThe president acts as the face of the country in foreign affairs. He negotiates treaties, which must be approve by 2/3 of senate. He can also make executive agreements, which are (normally noncontroversial) agreements between countries that don't have to be approved by the senate.26
5823531302Executive Agreement(Normally) Noncontroversial agreements between countries that don't have to be approved by the senate.27
5823531303Commander in ChiefPresident is in charge of 1.4 million people in the armed forces. He makes military decisions (such as with the Whiskey Rebellion, the Cuban Missile Crisis, etc.) Congress must be the ones to declare war, but the president can still send troops wherever as most short term commitment of troops is allowed.28
5823531304War Powers ResolutionWas made because Congress never declared war on Korea or Vietnam but war happened anyway. Passed in 1973 States: President must consult with congress when possible before using military force (w/in 48hrs); Troops must be withdrawn after 60 days unless war is declared or an extension is granted by congress; Congress can pass a resolution at any time to end conflict that cannot be vetoed (legislative veto)29
5823531306CrisisA sudden, unpredictable, and potentially dangerous event requiring the president to play the role of crisis manager. (Ex. Hurricane Katrina, 9/11, Haiti Earthquake, etc.)30

AP Psychology Parts of the Brain Flashcards

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5195219867amygdala- above brainstem and hippocampus, within temporal lobe - processes emotions, fight-or-flight response, reward/ fear processing, learning - if damaged - inability to create fear responses, risky behavior, deficits in recognizing emotion0
5195219868primary motor cortex (M1)- between premotor cortex and parietal lobe - critical to initiating motor movements, coordination and initiation of motor movement - if damaged - speech impairments, distortions of body image, motor learning deficits1
5195219869somatosensory cortex- parietal lobe, right of primary motor cortex - receives tactile information from the body, sensory processing and integration - if damaged - difficulties in perceiving touch and recognizing one's own body, failure to recognize objects by touch2
5195219870temporal lobe- below frontal and parietal lobe -contains auditory cortex which makes us capable of hearing -perception, face/ object recognition, memory aquisition, emotional reactions - if damaged - inability to recognize specific categories, long/ short term memory loss, aggression3
5195219871thalamus- above amygdala and hippocampus, in temporal lobe - receives sensory cortex and sends them to appropriate areas of forebrain - if damaged - loss of alertness, amnesia, aphasia, sleepiness, impaired movements and posture4
5195219872visual cortex- in occipital lobe, above cerebellum - receives visual input from retinas - if damaged - loss of vision, partial/ complete blindness5
5195219873Wernicke's areabetween primary auditory cortex and angular gyrus, in temporal lobe - language comprehension - if damaged - inability to comprehend written or spoken language6
5195219875association areas- frontal lobe - integrates information from different receptors/ sensory areas that relay information to past experiences - if damaged - process of information slows down7
5195219876cerebral cortex- gray wrinkled surface of a thin layer packed of neurons - all thinking activities (determining personality, planning, intelligence, organization); divided into 4 lobes - if damaged - sensory and motor problems8
5195219877medulla- above spinal cord, part of brain stem, below pons - basic bodily functions such as breathing, heart rate, blood pressure, digestion, circulation ,etc. - if damaged - death, drooling, breathing assistance, drooling9
5195219878neurotransmitter- chemicals in terminal buttons that travel in the synaptic gap between neurons - brain chemicals that communicate information throughout our body and brain10
5195219879types of neurotransmitters- acetylcholine - dopamine - serotonin - norepinephrine11
5195219880motor cortex- frontal lobe, edge of back frontal lobe touching parietal lobe - generate neural impulses that control the execution of movement - if damaged - loss of muscle function, paralysis12
5195219881pituitary gland- next to optic nerve and hypothalamus - releases growth hormones - if damaged - production of hormones is irregular or stops13
5195219882reticular formation- part of brain stem between temporal lobe and cerebellum - if damaged - lack of sleep, over sleeping, loss of focus, never wake up14
5195219883sensory cortex- parietal lobe next to motor cortex, above temporal lobe - receives all sensory output from the body - if damaged - temporary loss of senses, problem interpreting tactile information15
5195219884auditory cortex- temporal lobe, beside ears - process auditory information - if damaged - loss of hearing16
5195219885pineal gland- above brain stem and pons, almost directly above cerebellum - produces melatonin; affects sleep patterns - if damaged - hypertension, epilepsy, sexual dysfunction17
5195219886longitudinal fissure- between the 2 hemispheres of the brain - separates the 2 hemispheres18
5195219887glial cells- on neuron - insulation to neurons - if damaged - DNA damage, cell loss19
5195219888cranium- skull - protects brain - if damaged - head injury, skull fracture20
5195219889spinal cord- spine - connects peripheral nervous system to brain, information is sent through and to the brain - if damaged - changes in strength and sensation, disrupted signals, paralyzed21
5195219893serotonin-mood and motivation - shapes personality - low in depressed people - too much: shivering, diarrhea, fever, muscle rigidity, seizures - too little: highly emotional, distressed, insomnia, rage, irritability, anxiety, depression22
5195219894dopamine- reward and pleasure - regulate movement and emotional responses - deficiency results in Parkinson Disease and prone to addiction - "risk takers" - too much: agitation ,anxiety, feelings of pleasure, high energy and libido, reward seeking, linked with schizophrenia too little: depression, muscle rigidity23
5195219895norepinephrine- secreted in response to stress - affects attention and responding reactions - "stress hormone" - too much: emotional, anxiety, depression - too little: loss of alertness, memory problems, lack of arousal and interest24
5195219896acetylcholine (ACh)- movement and memory - too much: muscle contractions - too little: immobility25
5195219897GABA- Gamma Amino Butyric Acid - anxiety and excitation - prevalent inhibitory in neurons of CNS - too much: anxiety, shortness of breath, numbness - too little: anxiety disorders26
5195219898glutamate- learning and memory - too much: over excitation ,restlessness, nervousness, insomnia27
5195219901brain stem- above spinal cord, includes pons; medulla; midbrain - alertness, sleep, balance, startle response, basic vital life functions - if damaged - organ failure, difficulties balancing and moving28
5195219902Broca's area- left frontal lobe, directly above temporal cortex - language production, comprehension of syntax - if damaged - broca's aphasia, repetitive speech29
5195219903cerebellum- behind brainstem, below occipital lobe - monotors and regulates motor control, automatic muscle movements, balance, timing - if damaged - inability to walk, dizziness, slurred speech30
5195219904corpus callosum- between 2 hemispheres - connects right and left hemisphere and allows information to pass through - split brain, memory impairments31
5195219905frontal lobe- front of brain, consists of prefrontal cortex; orbitofrontal cortex; motor and premotor; broca's area - planning, solving, decision making, motor control - if damaged - paralysis, inability to express language, atypical social skills32
5195219906hippocampus- 2 arms surrounding thalamus -memory - if damaged - severe memory impairment, inability to form new memories33
5195219907hypothalamus- above brainstem, next to thalamus - hunger thirst, body temperature, sleep - if damaged - hypothermia, excessive sleep, weight gain/ loss34
5195219908limbic system- includes amygdala, hippocampus, hypothalamus - emotional control center of the brain - if damaged - sense of smell impairments, uncontrolled emotions35
5195219909occipital lobe- way back of brain - interpret messages from out eye in our visual cortex - if damaged - total/ partial loss of vision, hallucinations, color blindness36
5195219910parietal lobe- above temporal lobe, behind frontal lobe - receives and processes sensory information ( pain, touch, pressure), spatial attention - if damaged - difficulty reading, recognizing people; objects; or pain, lack of coordination37
5195219911pons- part of brain stem, above medulla, below thalamus - facial expressions, bridge of information, hearing, taste - if damaged - loss of taste, inability to form facial expressions38
5195219912prefrontal cortex- front of frontal lobe - planning, reasoning judgement, social skills - if damaged - inability to inhibit social behaviors39
5195219913premotor cortex- between prefrontal lobe and motor cortices - planning and executing motor movements - if damaged - impaired self-initiated movements and learning in association a motor response to visual cue40
5195219914dendritesa branched fiber that extends outward from the main cell body and carries information into the neuron41
5195219915cell bodycontains nucleus, connected to dendrites and axon42
5195219916nucleusbrain of the cell (h)43
5195219917axonextended fiber that conducts information from the cell body to the terminal buttons; travels in the form of an electric charge (action potential)44
5195219918neural impulseelectrical signal traveling along an axon45
5195219919nodes of ranvierallows an action potential to propagate quickly down an axon, small gaps form on axons between myelin sheath46
5195219920myelin sheathinsulating covering that surrounds an axon with multiple spiral layer of myelin47
5195219921axon terminalsbulb like structures at the end of an axon, which contains neurotransmitters that carry the neuron's message into the synapse (j)48
5195219922synapsegap that serves as a communications link between neurons49
5195219923all or none principleneuron either fires completely or doesn't fire at all50
5195219924EEG- electroencephalogram - detects brain waives - generalize brain function - widely used in sleep and dreaming research51
5195219925CAT- computerized axial tomography - 3D picture - X-Ray - look for tumor - would not get any information about how active parts of the brain are52
5195219926MRI- magnetic resonance imaging - similar to CAT scan - more detailed picture - uses magnetic field to measure the density and location of brain material - gives information about the structure of the brain53
5195219927PET- position emission tomography - see what areas of the brain are most active during certain task - how much of a certain chemical parts of the brain are using54
5195219928Functional MRI- combines MRI and PET scan - shows details of brain structure with information about book flow in brain55
5195219929CNS- central nervous system - brain and spinal cord56
5195219930PNS- peripheral nervous system - somatic and autonomic - neurons throughout your body57
5195219934efferent neurons- motor - sends information to body parts for movement58
5195219935afferent neurons- sensory - information to CNS from body parts59
5195219936agonistblocks re-uptake, excites, mimics60
5195219937antagonistprevents release, blocks, inhibits61
5195219939resting potentialneuron ready to fire62
5195219940excitatory neurotransmitterneurotransmitters makes the receiving neuron MORE likely to generate an action potential63
5195219941inhibitory neurotransmitterneurotransmitters makes the receiving neuron LESS likely to generate an action potential64
5195219942lesionnatural or man made destruction of brain tissue65
5195219943plasticitythe ability for a brain hemisphere to adapt and do functions the other side did66
5195219944glutamate- excitatory neurotransmitter - memory67
5195219946endocrine systemsystem of glands that secrete hormones into the bloodstream ( controlled by hypothalamus)68

AP Human Geography Agriculture Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
9493360839AgribusinessSystem of food production involving everything from the development of the seeds to the marketing and sale of food products at the market.0
9493360840Cash CropsPlanting large amounts of profitable crops for mass production and sell.1
9493360841Commercial AgricultureAgriculture undertaken primarily to generate products for sale off the farm.2
9493360842GMOsFoods that\have their genes altered in a laboratory for specific purposes, such as disease resistant, increased productivity, or nutrients value3
9493360843Intensive Subsistence FarmingA form of subsistence agriculture in which farmers must expend a relatively large amount of effort to produce the maximum feasible yield from a parcel of land.4
9493360844MonocultureDependence on a single agricultural commodity.5
9493360845MechanizationIn agriculture, the replacement of human labor with technology or machines.6
9493360847Plantation AgricultureRaising a large amount of a 'cash crop' for local sale or export.7
9493360848TranshumanceMovement of animal herd to cooler highland areas in the summer to warmer lowland areas in the winter.8
9493360849Von Thunen ModelTheory that a commercial farmer wull decide which crops to grow and which livestock to raise depending on the proximity to market.9
9493360850Green RevolutionAn outgrowth of the 3rd agricultural revolution, this effort began in the 1940s and developed new strains of hybrid seeds and fertilizers that dramatically increased the crop output possible from each farm.10
9493360854NomadismDry Areas Same climate as livestock ranching(commercial farms in MDCs) Marginalized land11
9493360855Mixed livestock and grainRaise domesticated animals and growing feed12
9493360856Commercial Grain FarmingWheat belt Bread-basket US Corn belt13
9493360857Mediterranean AgricultureAn agricultural system practiced in the Mediterranean-style climates of Western Europe, California, and portions of Chile and Australia, in which diverse specialty crops such as grapes, avocados,14
9493360858Agrarianrelating to land; relating to the management or farming of land15
9493360859Agricultural IndustrializationThe use of machinery in agriculture, like tractors etc. - makes it easier for farmers to have higher crop yields.16
9493360860Agricultural LandscapeThe land that we farm on and what we choose to put were on our fields.17
9493360863Dairy Farmsspecialized in dairy products, N. America, Europe, NOT Africa, South America, Asia18
9493360864DesertificationDegradation of land, especially in semiarid areas, primarily because of human actions like excessive crop planting, animal grazing, and tree cutting.19
9493360866Feedlota plot of land on which livestock are fattened for market20
9493360867Food DesertAn area in a developed country where healthy food is difficult to obtain21
9493360869Hunting and Gatheringthe killing of wild animals and fish as well as the gathering of fruits, roots, nuts, and other plants for sustenance22
9493360871Livestock Ranchingan extensive commercial agricultural activity that involves the raising of livestock over vast geographic spaces typically located in semi-arid climates like the American West23
9493360875PastoralismA type of agricultural activity based on nomadic animal husbandry or the raising of livestock to provide food, clothing, and shelter.24
9493360876Organic AgricultureApproach to farming and ranching that avoids the use of herbicides, pesticides, growth hormones, and other similar synthetic inputs.25
9493360877PesticidesChemicals used on plants that do not harm the plants, but kill pests and have negative repercussions on other species who ingest the chemicals.26
9493360878Plant Domesticationgenetic modification of a plant such that its reproductive success depends on human intervention27
9493360883Carl SauerDefined the concept of cultural landscape as the fundamental unit of geographical analysis.28
94933608842nd Agriculture RevolutionInnovations led to agricultural surpluses, food surpluses, let people move from farms to factories, growth of cities increased.29
9493360887SpecializationThe concentration of the productive efforts of individuals and firms on a limited number of activities30
9493360888Slash and Burn Agriculturea farming technique in which trees are cut down and burned to clear and fertilize the land31
9493360890Township and Range SystemA rectangular land division scheme designed by Thomas Jefferson to disperse settlers evenly across farmlands of the U.S. interior.32
9493360891Third Agriculture Revolution'green revolution' rapid diffusion of new ag techniques between 1970's and 1980's, especially new high-yield seeds and fertilizers33
9493360892Soil Erosionthe wearing away and removal of rock and soil particles from exposed surfaces by agents such as moving water, wind, or ice34

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