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AP Flashcards

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7417983720Polislungsod estado malaya at sariling mapahalaan0
7417983721Acropolismatataas na lugar templo,pampublikong gusali1
7417983722AgoraGitna na lugar Tipon-tipon ng mga tai sakahan,pagpapastol2
7417983723Monarkiyapamahalaan na pinamumunuan ng Hari/reyna3
7417983724Hoplitesandatahang lakas na binubuo ng mga ordinaryong mamamayan sa Gresya4
7417983725Phalanxstrategy,hile-hilerang sundalo5
7417983726Testudoo tortoise formation6
7417983727Spartamandirigmang polis nanatiling oligarkiya7
7417983728Helotmagsasaka8
7417983729AthensDemokratikong Polis9
7417983730Athenssentro ng kalakalan at kultura ng Greece10
741798373111

AP Flashcards

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6557170651Moodsimilar to tone, it is the primary emotional attitude of a work (the feeling of the work; the atmosphere). Syntax is also a determiner of this term because sentence strength, length, and complexity affect pacing.0
6557170652MoralThe lesson drawn from a fictional or nonfictional story. It can also mean a heavily didactic story.1
6557170653Motifmain theme or subject of a work that is elaborated on in the development of the piece; a repeated pattern or idea2
6557170654Narrationthe telling of a story in fiction, nonfiction, poetry, or drama; one of the four modes of discourse3
6557170655Negative-PositiveSentence that begins by stating what is NOT true, then ending by stating what is true.4
6557170656Non-sequiturLatin for "it does not follow." When one statement isn't logically connected to another5
6557170657Objectivityan impersonal presentation of events and characters. It is a writer's attempt to remove himself or herself from any subjective, personal involvement in a story. Hard news journalism is frequently prized for its objectivity, although even fictional stories can be told without a writer rendering personal judgment.6
6557170658Onomatopoeiathe use of words that sound like what they mean, such as "hiss," "buzz," "slam," and "boom"7
6557170659OversimplificationWhen a writer obscures or denies the complexity of the issues in an argument8
6557170660Oxymorona figure of speech composed of contradictory words or phrases, such as "wise fool," bitter-sweet," "pretty ugly," "jumbo shrimp," "cold fire"9
6557170661Pacingthe movement of a literary piece from one point or one section to another10
6557170662Parablea short tale that teaches a moral; similar to but shorter than an allegory11
6557170663Paradoxa statement that seems to contradict itself but that turns out to have a rational meaning, as in this quotation from Henry David Thoreau; "I never found the companion that was so companionable as solitude."12
6557170664Parallelismthe technique of arranging words, phrases, clauses, or larger structures by placing them side by side and making them similar in form. Parallel structure may be as simple as listing two or three modifiers in a row to describe the same noun or verb; it may take the form of two or more of the same type of phrases (prepositional, participial, gerund, appositive) that modify the same noun or verb; it may also take the form of two or more subordinate clauses that modify the same noun or verb. Or, parallel structure may be a complex bend of singe-word, phrase, and clause parallelism all in the same sentence.Example (from Churchill): "We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields."13
6557170665Parodya work that ridicules the style of another work by imitating and exaggerating its elements. . It can be utterly mocking or gently humorous. It depends on allusion and exaggerates and distorts the original style and content.14
6557170666Pathosan element in experience or in artistic representation evoking pity or compassion. Over-emotionalism can be the result of an excess of pathos.15
6557170667Pedantica term used to describe writing that borders on lecturing. It is scholarly and academic and often overly difficult and distant16
6557170668Personificationthe attribution of human qualities to a nonhuman or an inanimate object17
6557170669Persuasiona form of argumentation, one of the four modes of discourse; language intended to convince through appeals to reason or emotion.18
6557170670Point of Viewthe perspective from which a story is presented; common points of view include the following:19

Technology - AP Spanish Vocabulary Flashcards

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5073072756experimentarto experience, to experiment0
5073072757la experienciaexperience1
5073072758la informáticacomputer science2
5073072759los datosdata3
5073072760el informethe report4
5073072761la encuestasurvey (e)5
5073072762la cuestión, la preguntaissue,question6
5073072763los científicosscientists7
5073072764el accesothe access8
5073072765acceder ato agree to9
5073072766promocionarto promote10
5073072767preverto foresee11
5073072768predecirto predict12
5073072769los gráficosgraphics13
5073072770diseñarto design14
5073072771el diseñothe design15
5073072772las conexionesconnections16
5073072773conectarto connect17
5073072774la brechagap, breach18
5073072775medirto measure19
5073072776las medidasmeasurements20
5073072777incrementar, aumentarto increase21
5073072778el consejoadvice22
5073072779aconsejarto advise23
5073072780fiarse de algoto trust in something24
5073072781fijarse en algoto pay attention25
5073072782los enlaces, los vínculoslinks (2)26
5073072783una gama de productosa range of products27
5073072784la banda anchabroadband28
5073072785las ondaswaves29
5073072786enchufarto plug in30
5073072787el enchufeplug, outlet31
5073072788las pilasbatteries32
5073072789una bateríaa battery / drums33
5073072790avanzarto advance34
5073072791los avancesadvances35
5073072792la clavekey, password36
5073072793probarto taste, to try37
5073072794la pruebaquiz38
5073072795la búsquedathe search39
5073072796la investigaciónresearch40
5073072797los aparatos, depositivos electrónicoselectronic devices41
5073072798la innovacióninnovation42
5073072799innovarto innovate43
5073072800la químicachemistry44
5073072801la físicaphysics45
5073072802el progresoprogress46
5073072803progresarto progress47
5073072804proveerto provide48
5073072805suministrarto supply49
5073072806el hierroiron50
5073072807el cobrecopper51
5073072808el estanotin52
5073072809las estadísticasstatistics53
5073072810las redes socialessocial networks/media54
5073072811las herramientastools55
5073072812almacenar informaciónto store information56
5073072813impulsarto promote (i)57
5073072814empujarto push58
5073072815fomentarto encourage59
5073072816crearto create60
5073072817la creacióncreation61
5073072818un lector electrónicoe-reader62
5073072819la cirugíasurgery63
5073072820los cirujanosthe surgeons64
5073072821el quirófanooperating room65
5073072822realizar una biospiato biopsy66
5073072823un gadgetgadget67
5073072824cargarto charge, to upload68
5073072825descargarto download69
5073072826imprimirto print70
5073072827la impresoraprinter71
5073072828las cámaras de vigilanciasurveillance cameras72
5073072829el hilothread73
5073072830las capacidadescapacities74
5073072831capacitarto prepare, to train75
5073072832capazcapable76
5073072833incapazincapable77
5073072834estar al díato be up to date78
5073072835la genéticagenetics79
5073072836los genesgenes80
5073072837la sabiduríawisdom, knowledge81
5073072838sabioknowledgeable, wise82
5073072839el ingenieroengineer83
5073072840el resultadoresult84
5073072841informarto inform85
5073072842el sondeosurvey86
5073072843brindarto toast87
5073072844ofrecerto offer88
5073072845una señalsignal89
5073072846señalarto signal90
5073072847instruirto instruct91
5073072848las instruccionesinstructions92
5073072849pulsar el botónto push the button93
5073072850las noticiasnews94
5073072851funcionarto function95
5073072852trabajarto work96
5073072853el puntopoint97
5073072854las dificultadesdifficulties98
5073072855dificultarto make difficult99
5073072856facilitarto facilitate100
5073072857en sucesoin event101
5073072858sucederto happen, to occur102
5073072859la clonacióncloning103
5073072860clonarto clone104
5073072861llevar a caboto carry out105
5073072862la ingeniería genéticagenetic engineering106
5073072863tener éxitoto be successful107
5073072864fracasarto fail108
5073072865la robóticarobotics109
5073072866las célulascells110
5073072867aportarto contribute111
5073072868el campo de estudiofield of study112
5073072869el campo de investigaciónfield of research113
5073072870un buscadorsearch engine114
5073072871un portala portal, website115
5073072872un sitioa website116
5073072873enviar un mailto send an e-mail117
5073072874enviar un textoto send a text118
5073072875el usariouser119
5073072876hacer clicto click120
5073072877la dirección electrónicae-mail address121
5073072878el asuntothe issue122
5073072879el informereport123
5073106150acoso cibernéticocyber bullying124
5073110822pantallascreen/monitor125
5073117095sistema operativooperating system126
5073126803cargador de teléfonophone charger127
5073134870las aulasclass rooms128
5073148019clase en líneaonline class129

AP bio test 1 Flashcards

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4785220327DNAgenetic material0
4785220328genesunits of inheritance; encode the information necessary to build all the molecules synthesized within a cell; determines identity and function1
4785225116genomeentire library of genetic instructions that an organism inherits2
4785258390matteranything that takes up space and has mass3
4785258391elementsubstance that cannot be broken down to other substances4
4785259800compoundsubstance consisting of two or more different elements combined in a fixed ratio5
4785267577O, C, H, NWhat four elements make up 96% of all matter (abbreviate elements)6
4785271124essential (elements)organism's needs to live a healthy life and reproduce7
4785277096energycapacity to cause change8
4785278934radioactive isotopenucleus decays spontaneously giving off particles of energy9
4785279988potential energyenergy that matter possesses because of its location or structure10
4785281967chemicalDistribution of electrons in the atom's electron shells (valence electrons) determines ___________________ behavior of an atom11
4785284560H-HWhat is the structural formula of Hydrogen12
4785285660O=OWhat is the structural formula of Oxygen13
4785286528H-O-HWhat is the structural formula of Water14
4785291073nonpolar covalent (because it is the same element & the electronegativity is the same so the electrons are shared equally)What type of bond is O215
4785293592electronegativityatoms in a molecule attract shared electrons to varying degrees (depending on element); attraction of a particular atom for the electrons of a covalent bond16
4785306256nonpolar covalent (bond)TYPE OF BOND: between two atoms of the same element; electrons are shared equally because the two atoms have the same electronegativity17
4785309483polar covalent (bond)TYPE OF BOND: an atom is bonded to a more electronegative atom; the electrons of the bond are not shared equally18
4785312231ionic (bond)TYPE OF BOND: two atoms are so unequal in their attraction for valence electrons that the more electronegative atoms strips an electron completely away from its atom19
4785337924hydrogen (bond)TYPE OF BOND: non-covalent attraction between a hydrogen and an electronegative atom20
4785340077covalentWhat is the strongest bond21
4785342159dynamic equillibriuma state of balance between continuing processes.22
4785349778polar moleculeunequal sharing of electrons23
4785351656cohesionhydrogen bonds hold the substance together (water-water)24
4785351657adhesionclinging of one substance to another (water-roots of leaves)25
4785420415surface tensionmeasure of how hard it is to break the surface of a liquid (related to cohesion)26
4785353202caloriethe amount of heat it takes to raise the temperature of 1g of water by 1°C27
4785357202heat of vaporizationquantity of heat a liquid must absorb for 1g of it to be converted from the liquid to the gaseous state28
4785362301solventdissolving agent29
4785362900solutionliquid that is completely homogenous (mixture of two or more substances)30
4785372817solutesubstance that is dissolved31
4785374592polarityWater is such a fine solvent because of its _________________.32
4785375357hydrophiliclikes water; ionic; polar; can form hydrogen bonds33
4785375966hydrophobicdislikes water; nonionic; nonpolar; cannot form hydrogen bonds34
4785378752H+ and OH-What two ions form when water dissociates35
4785379578acidsubstance that increases the hydrogen ion concentration of a solution36
4785379579basesubstance that reduces the hydrogen ion concentration of a solution37
47853860834how many bonds can carbon form38
4785391758hydrocarbonorganic molecules consisting of only hydrogen and carbon (Ex. butane, Butene, etc.)39
4785402204functional groupchemical groups that affect molecular function by being directly involved in chemical directions40
4785437757hydroxyl (group)41
4785438905carbonyl (group)42
4785453094carboxyl (group)43
4785453095amine (group)44
4785453796sulfhydryl (group)45
4785453797phosphate (group)46
4785453798methyl (group)47
4787460086proteins, lipids, carbs, nucleic acidsName the 4 large molecules of all living things48
4787463127Carbs, proteins, nucleic acidsName the 3 macromolecules49
4787464267macromoleculemade up of a very large number of atoms50
4787465343polymerlong molecule consisting of many similar or identical building blocks linked by covalent bonds51
4787467015monomersrepeating units that serve as the building blocks of a polymer; smaller molecules52
4787468109dehydrationReaction that forms fatty acids53
4787469977hydrolysisbond between monomers is broken by the addition of water54
4787473129hydrolysisLarge molecules (polymers) are converted to monomers in what type of reaction?55
4787475503monosaccharidesWhat are the monomers of all carbohydrates?56
4787477273carbonyl; hydroxylWhat are the 2 functional groups that all sugars have?57
4787478900ketoneKETONE VS ALDEHYDE: carbonyl is within the carbon skeleton58
4787480312aldehydeKETONE VS ALDEHYDE: carbonyl is at the end of carbon skeleton59
4787481141isomerssame molecular formulas but different structure60
4787492289glycogen; celluloseName the 2 categories of polysaccharides61
4787493495hydrophobicWhat characteristics do all lipids share62
4787499918glycerol; fatty acidsWhat are the 2 building blocks of fats?63
4787503678saturated (fats)Solid at room temperature; stack together; (Ex. lard; butter)64
4787507322unsaturated (fats)liquid at room temperature; double bonded; crooked; don't pack together; (Ex. plants; olive oil)65
4787522919energy storagemajor function of fats66
4787522920r groupside chain; differs with each amino acid; variable group67
478752452020How many different R groups are there?68
4787527090peptide (bond)TYPE OF BOND: a bond when two amino acids are positioned so that the carboxyl group of one is adjacent to the amino group of the other; become joined by a dehydration reaction with the removal of a water molecule69
4787532579primary (structure)WHAT STRUCTURE: sequence of amino acids70
4787533634secondary (structure)WHAT STRUCTURE: consists of coils and folds; alpha helices and beta pleated sheets71
4787536580tertiary (structure)WHAT STRUCTURE: r groups; covalent bond; ionic bond; hydrogen bond; hydrophobic amino acids72
4787537992quaternary (structure)WHAT STRUCTURE: multiple polypeptide chains73
4787540496denaturationloss of a protein's native structure; becomes inactive; unraveling of a structure74
4787560273atomsmallest units that retain the properties of a given element75
4787561548protonspositively charged subatomic particles within the nucleus76
4787563228trace elementchemical elements representing less than 0.01% of body weight77
4787567816neutronssubatomic particles within the nucleus carrying no charge78
4787569552electronssubatomic particles with a negative charge79
4787569553isotopeatoms of a given element that differ in the number of neutrons80
4787573567atomic numbernumber of protons within an atom81
4787573568mass numbernumber of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of one atom82
4787580118elementsfundamental forms of matter that occupy space, have mass, and cannot be broken down into something else83
4787584229tracera compound that has a radioisotope attached that is used to determine the pathway or destination of a substance84
4787602581mixturetwo or more elements that may combine in various proportions85
4787603635orbitalsregions of space around an atom's nucleus where electrons are likely to be at any one instant86
4787603636chemical bondunion between the electron structures of atoms87
4787603637compoundstypes of molecules composed of two or more different elements in proportions that never vary88
4787604555moleculeresults when two or more atoms bond together89
4787632791equationThe expression 12H2O + 6CO2 6O2 + C6H12O6 + H2O is known as the chemical ________________ for photosynthesis90
4787646314formulaH2O is the ______________ for water91
4787647559reactantsThe ______________ are to the left of the reaction arrow92
4787647560productsThe _____________ are to the right of the reaction arrow93
4787647561sixIn the expression, one can count six carbon atoms on the left side of the arrow, so one should be able to count _________ carbon atoms on the right side of the arrow.94
4787647562compoundSince water always consists of a ratio of two hydrogen atoms to one oxygen atom, it is called a ______________.95
4787647563mixturein a _____________, the components may vary in their proportions96
4787675141polarityThe _____________ of water molecules allows them to hydrogen-bond with each other97
4787675142hydrophilicWater molecules hydrogen-bond with polar molecules, which are ________________ substances98
4787675143hydrophobicPolarity causes water to repel oil and other nonpolar substances, which are _______________.99
4787675145hydrogenLiquid water changes its temperature more slowly than air because of the great amount of heat required to break the high number of ____________ bonds between water molecules100
4787676226iceBelow 0o C, water molecules become locked in the lattice like bonding pattern of _____________ which is less dense than water101
4787676227cohesionCollective hydrogen bonding creates a high tension on surface water molecules, resulting in _____________, the property of water that explains how long, narrow water columns rise to the tops of all trees102
4787676228solventWater is an excellent ______________, in which ions and polar molecules readily dissolve103
478771734710If neon has an atomic number of 10 and an atomic mass of 20, it has _________ neutrons.104
4787730484buffera control that minimizes unsuitable pH shifts is a ____________105
4787733126temperature_______________-stabilizing is a property of water that protects aquatic organisms during a long, cold winter106
4787744945antiparalleltwo sugar phosphate backbones that run in opposite 5-3 direction107
4787750917glucoseFormula for _____________ is C6 H12 O6108
4787752359ciswhen carbon is on the same level of a molecule109
4787752675transwhen carbon is placed diagonally in a molecule110
4787759042lipidsfunction of cell membrane; storage of energy; not truly a macromolecule because it doesn't follow a pattern111
4787762785simple sugarsWhat are the monomers of carbohydrates112
4787764033nothingWhat are the monomers of fatty acids?113
4787848653polypeptidesunbranched polymers from 20 amino acids114
4787855379acidACID OR BASE: loses the H115

AP Flashcards

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8105672843nares (nostrils)external openings0
8105672844Pharynx (throat)Passageway for air, leads to trachea1
8105672845nasopharynxpart of the pharynx directly behind the nasal passages2
8105672846nasal turbinatesscroll-like cartilages covered with highly vascular mucous membranes3
8105672847ciliated columnar epitheliumwalls of the nasal cavity are composed of these cells4
8105672848meatusesconstricted passageways that produce air turbulence5
8105672849epistaxisnosebleed6
8105672850nasal sinusesair filled spaces in the cranium and maxilla7
8105672851frontal sinusunder the frontal bone8

AP Psychology - Development Psychology Flashcards

Advanced Placement Psychology

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9601078890Developmental Psychologya branch of psychology that studies physical, cognitive, and social change throughout the life span.0
9601078891Zygotethe fertilized egg; it enters a 2-week period of rapid cell division and develops into an embryo.1
9601078892Embryothe developing human organism from about 2 weeks after fertilization through the second month.2
9601078893Fetusthe developing human organism from 9 weeks after conception to birth.3
9601078894Teratogensagents, such as chemicals and viruses, that can reach the embryo or fetus during prenatal development and cause harm.4
9601078895Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS)physical and cognitive abnormalities in children caused by a pregnant woman's heavy drinking. In severe cases, symptoms include noticeable facial misproportions.5
9601078896Habituationdecreasing responsiveness with repeated stimulation. As infants gain familiarity with repeated exposure to a visual stimulus, their interest wanes and they look away sooner.6
9601078897Maturationbiological growth processes that enable orderly changes in behavior, relatively uninfluenced by experience.7
9601078898Cognitionall the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating.8
9601078899Schemaa concept or framework that organizes and interprets information.9
9601078900Assimilationinterpreting our new experience in terms of our existing schemas.10
9601078901AccommodationDevelopment - adapting our current understandings (schemas) to incorporate new information.11
9601078902Sensorimotor Stagein Piaget's theory, the stage (from birth to about 2 years of age) during which infants know the world mostly in terms of their sensory impressions and motor activities.12
9601078903Object Permanencethe awareness that things continue to exist even when not perceived.13
9601078904Preoperational Stagein Piaget's theory, the stage (from 2 to about 6 or 7 years of age) during which a child learns to use language but does not yet comprehend the mental operations of concrete logic.14
9601078905Conservationthe principle (which Piaget believed to be a part of concrete operational reasoning) that properties such as mass, volume, and number remain the same despite changes in the forms of objects.15
9601078906Egocentrismin Piaget's theory, the preoperational child's difficulty taking another's point of view.16
9601078907Theory of Mindpeople's ideas about their own and others' mental states—about their feelings, perceptions, and thoughts, and the behaviors these might predict.17
9601078908Concrete Operational Stagein Piaget's theory, the stage of cognitive development (from about 6 or 7 to 11 years of age) during which children gain the mental operations that enable them to think logically about concrete events.18
9601078909Formal Operational Stagein Piaget's theory, the stage of cognitive development (normally beginning about age 12) during which people begin to think logically about abstract concepts.19
9601078910Autisma disorder that appears in childhood and is marked by deficient communication, social interaction, and understanding of others' states of mind.20
9601078911Stranger Anxietythe fear of strangers that infants commonly display, beginning by about 8 months of age.21
9601078912Attachmentan emotional tie with another person; shown in young children by their seeking closeness to the caregiver and showing distress on separation.22
9601078913Critical Periodan optimal period shortly after birth when an organism's exposure to certain stimuli or experiences produces proper development.23
9601078914Imprintingthe process by which certain animals form attachments during a critical period very early in life.24
9601078915Temperamenta person's characteristic emotional reactivity and intensity.25
9601078916Basic Trustaccording to Erik Erikson, a sense that the world is predictable and trustworthy; said to be formed during infancy by appropriate experiences with responsive caregivers.26
9601078917Self-Conceptall our thoughts and feelings about ourselves, in answer to the question, "Who am I?"27
9601078918Genderin psychology, the biologically and socially influenced characteristics by which people define male and female.28
9601078919Aggressionphysical or verbal behavior intended to hurt someone.29
9601078920X Chromosomethe sex chromosome found in both men and women. Females have two of these; males have one. One chromosome from each parent produces a female child.30
9601078921Y Chromosomethe sex chromosome found only in males. When paired with an X chromosome from the mother, it produces a male child.31
9601078922Testosteronethe most important of the male sex hormones. Both males and females have it, but the additional levels in males stimulates the growth of the male sex organs in the fetus and the development of the male sex characteristics during puberty.32
9601078923Rolea set of expectations (norms) about a social position, defining how those in the position ought to behave.33
9601078924Gender Rolea set of expected behaviors for males or for females.34
9601078925Gender Identityour sense of being male or female.35
9601078926Gender Typingthe acquisition of a traditional masculine or feminine role.36
9601078927Social Learning Theorythe theory that we learn social behavior by observing and imitating and by being rewarded or punished.37
9601078928Adolescencethe transition period from childhood to adulthood, extending from puberty to independence.38
9601078929Pubertythe period of sexual maturation, during which a person becomes capable of reproducing.39
9601078930Primary Sex Characteristicsthe body structures (ovaries, testes, and external genitalia) that make sexual reproduction possible.40
9601078931Secondary Sex Characteristicsnonreproductive sexual characteristics, such as female breasts and hips, male voice quality, and body hair.41
9601078932Menarchethe first menstrual period.42
9601078933Identityour sense of self; according to Erikson, the adolescent's task is to solidify a sense of self by testing and integrating various roles.43
9601078934Social Identitythe "we" aspect of our self-concept; the part of our answer to "Who am I?" that comes from our group memberships.44
9601078935Intimacyin Erikson's theory, the ability to form close, loving relationships; a primary developmental task in late adolescence and early adulthood.45
9601078936Emerging Adulthoodfor some people in modern cultures, a period from the late teens to mid-twenties, bridging the gap between adolescent dependence and full independence and responsible adulthood.46
9601078937Menopausethe time of natural cessation of menstruation; also refers to the biological changes a woman experiences as her ability to reproduce declines.47
9601078938Cross-Sectional Studya study in which people of different ages are compared with one another.48
9601078939Longitudinal Studyresearch in which the same people are restudied and retested over a long period.49
9601078940Crystallized Intelligenceour accumulated knowledge and verbal skills; tends to increase with age.50
9601078941Fluid Intelligenceour ability to reason speedily and abstractly; tends to decrease during late adulthood.51
9601078942Social Clockthe culturally preferred timing of social events such as marriage, parenthood, and retirement.52

AP HUMAN Flashcards

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8083652821British Received Pronunciationthe instantly recognisable accent often described as 'typically British'.0
8083656684Creole Languagea stable natural language developed from a mixture of different languages1
8083659380Denglishused to refer to incorrect English that is influenced by German.2
8083662613Dialecta particular form of a language that is peculiar to a specific region or social group.3
8083666652EbonicsAmerican black English regarded as a language in its own right rather than as a dialect of standard English.4
8083672351Franglaisa form of French using many words and idioms borrowed from English.5
8083672352Ideogramsa written character symbolizing the idea of a thing without indicating the sounds used to say it, e.g., numerals and Chinese characters.6
8083678561Isoglossa line on a dialect map marking the boundary between linguistic features.7
8083682315Isolated Languagea natural language with no demonstrable genealogical (or "genetic") relationship with other languages8
8083684247Language BranchA collection of languages related through a common ancestor that existed several thousand years ago9
8083688531Language ExtinctionA language dying off10
8083690400Language Familya group of languages related through descent from a common ancestral language or parental language11
8083700279Language Groupa group of languages related through descent from a common ancestral language or parental language12
8083700280Linguica Francaa language that is adopted as a common language between speakers whose native languages are different.13
8083703919Literacythe ability to read and write14
8083707930Pidgina grammatically simplified form of a language, used for communication between people not sharing a common language15
8083710443Polyglotknowing or using several languages.16
8083712088Romance Languagesthe modern languages that evolved from Vulgar Latin between the sixth and ninth centuries and that thus form a branch of the Italic languages within the Indo-European language family17
8083712089Spanglisha hybrid language combining words and idioms from both Spanish and English, especially Spanish speech that uses many English words and expressions.18
8083717593Vulgar Latininformal Latin of classical times19

AP Psychology AP Review Flashcards

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9768447507psychologythe study of behavior and mental processes0
9768447508psychology's biggest questionWhich is more important in determining behavior, nature or nurture?1
9768447509psychology's three levels of analysisbiopsychosocial approach (looks at the biological, psychological, and social-cultural approaches together)2
9768447510biological approachgenetics, close-relatives, body functions3
9768447511evolutionary approachspecies - helped with survival (ancestors)4
9768447512psychodynamic approach(Freud) subconscious, repressed feelings, unfulfilled wishes5
9768447513behavioral approachlearning (classical and operant) observed6
9768447514cognitive approachthinking affects behavior7
9768447515humanistic approachbecoming a better human (behavior, acceptance)8
9768447516social-cultural approachcultural, family, environment9
9768447517two reasons of why experiments are importanthindsight bias + overconfidence10
9768447518types of research methodsdescriptive, correlational, and experimental11
9768447519descriptive methodscase study survey naturalistic observation (DON'T SHOW CAUSE/EFFECT)12
9768447520case studystudies one person in depth may not be typical of population13
9768447521surveystudies lots of people not in depth14
9768447522naturalistic observationobserve + write facts without interference15
9768447523correlational methodshows relation, but not cause/effect scatterplots show research16
9768447524correlation coefficient+ 1.0 (both increase) 0 (no correlation - 1.0 (one increases, other decreases)17
9768447525experimental methoddoes show cause and effect18
9768447526populationtype of people who are going to be used in experiment19
9768447527sampleactual people who will be used (randomness reduces bias)20
9768447528random assignmentchance selection between experimental and control groups21
9768447529control groupnot receiving experimental treatment receives placebo22
9768447530experimental groupreceiving treatment/drug23
9768447531independent variabledrug/procedure/treatment24
9768447532dependent variableoutcome of using the drug/treatment25
9768447533confounding variablecan affect dependent variable beyond experiment's control26
9768447534scientific methodtheory hypothesis operational definition revision27
9768447535theorygeneral idea being tested28
9768447536hypothesismeasurable/specific29
9768447537operational definitionprocedures that explain components30
9768447538modeappears the most31
9768447539meanaverage32
9768447540medianmiddle33
9768447541rangehighest - lowest34
9768447542standard deviationhow scores vary around the mean35
9768447543central tendencysingle score that represents the whole36
9768447544bell curve(natural curve)37
9768447545ethics of testing on animalsneed to be treated humanly basically similar to humans38
9768447546ethics of testing on humansconsent debriefing no unnecessary discomfort/pain confidentiality39
9768447547sensory neuronstravel from sensory receptors to brain40
9768447548motor neuronstravel from brain to "motor" workings41
9768447549interneurons(in brain and spinal cord) connecting motor and sensory neurons42
9768447741neuron43
9768447550dendritesreceive messages from other neurons44
9768447551myelin sheathprotects the axon45
9768447552axonwhere charges travel from cell body to axon terminal46
9768447553neurotransmitterschemical messengers47
9768447554reuptakeextra neurotransmitters are taken back48
9768447555excitatory charge"Let's do it!"49
9768447556inhibitory charge"Let's not do it!"50
9768447557central nervous systembrain and spinal cord51
9768447558peripheral nervous systemsomatic nervous system autonomic nervous system52
9768447559somatic nervous systemvoluntary movements53
9768447560autonomic nervous systeminvoluntary movements (sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems)54
9768447561sympathetic nervous systemarousing55
9768447562parasympathetic nervous systemcalming56
9768447563neural networksmore connections form with greater use others fall away if not used57
9768447564spinal cordexpressway of information bypasses brain when reflexes involved58
9768447565endocrine systemslow uses hormones in the blood system59
9768447566master glandpituitary gland60
9768447567brainstemextension of the spinal cord responsible for automatic survival61
9768447568reticular formation (if stimulated)sleeping subject wakes up62
9768447569reticular formation (if damaged)coma63
9768447570brainstem (if severed)still move (without purpose)64
9768447571thalamussensory switchboard (does not process smell)65
9768447572hypothalamusbasic behaviors (hunger, thirst, sex, blood chemistry)66
9768447573cerebellumnonverbal memory, judge time, balance emotions, coordinate movements67
9768447574cerebellum (if damaged)difficulty walking and coordinating68
9768447575amygdalaaggression, fear, and memory associated with these emotions69
9768447576amygdala (if lesioned)subject is mellow70
9768447577amygdala (if stimulated)aggressive71
9768447578hippocampusprocess new memory72
9768447579cerebrumtwo large hemispheres perceiving, thinking, and processing73
9768447580cerebral cortexonly in higher life forms74
9768447581association areasintegrate and interpret information75
9768447582glial cellsprovide nutrients to myelin sheath marks intelligence higher proportion of glial cells to neurons76
9768447583frontal lobejudgement, personality, processing (Phineas Gage accident)77
9768447584parietal lobemath and spatial reasoning78
9768447585temporal lobeaudition and recognizing faces79
9768447586occipital lobevision80
9768447587corpus callosumsplit in the brain to stop hyper-communication (eliminate epileptic seizures)81
9768447588Wernicke's areainterprets auditory and hearing82
9768447589Broca's areaspeaking words83
9768447590plasticityability to adapt if damaged84
9768447591sensationwhat our senses tell us85
9768447592bottom-up processingsenses to brain86
9768447593perceptionwhat our brain tells us to do with that information87
9768447594top-down processingbrain to senses88
9768447595inattentional blindnessfail to "gorilla" because attention is elsewhere89
9768447596cocktail party effecteven with tons of stimuli, we are able to pick out our name, etc.90
9768447597change blindnessgiving directions and person is changed and we don't notice91
9768447598choice blindnesswhen defending the choice we make, we fail to notice choice was changed92
9768447599absolute thresholdminimum stimulation needed in order to notice 50% of the time93
9768447600signal detection theorywe notice what is more important to us (rather hear a baby crying)94
9768447601JND (just noticeable difference)(Weber's law) difference between different stimuli noticed in proportion95
9768447602sensory adaptationtired of noticing (Brain says, "Been there, done that. Next?"96
9768447603rodsnight time97
9768447604conescolor98
9768447605parallel processingnotice color, form, depth, movement, etc.99
9768447606Young-Helmholtz trichromatic theory3 corresponding color receptors (RGB)100
9768447607Hering's opponent-process theoryafter image in opposite colors (RG, YB, WB)101
9768447608trichromatic + opponent-processYoung-Helmholtz -> color stimuli Hering -> en route to cortex102
9768447609frequency we hear mosthuman voice103
9768447610Helmoltz (hearing)we hear different pitches in different places in basilar membrane (high pitches)104
9768447611frequency theoryimpulse frequency (low pitches)105
9768447612Helmholtz + frequency theorymiddle pitches106
9768447613Skin feels what?warmth, cold, pressure, pain107
9768447614gate-control theorysmall fibers - pain large fibers - other senses108
9768447615memory of painpeaks and ends109
9768447616smellclose to memory section (not in thalamus)110
9768447617groupingGestalt make sense of pieces create a whole111
9768447618grouping groupsproximity similarity continuity connectedness closure112
9768447619make assumptions of placementhigher - farther smaller - farther blocking - closer, in front113
9768447620perception =mood + motivation114
9768447621consciousnessawareness of ourselves and the environment115
9768447622circadian rhythmdaily biological clock and regular cycle (sleep and awake)116
9768447623circadian rhythm pattern- activated by light - light sensitive retinal proteins signal brains SCN (suprachiasmatic nucleus) - pineal gland decreases melatonin117
9768447624What messes with circadian rhythm?artificial light118
9768447625The whole sleep cycle lasts how long?90 minutes119
9768447626sleep stagesrelaxed stage (alpha waves) stage 1 (early sleep) (hallucinations) stage 2 (sleep spindles - bursts of activity) (sleep talk) stage 3 (transition phase) (delta waves) stage 4 (delta waves) (sleepwalk/talk + wet the bed) stage 5 (REM) (sensory-rich dreams) (paradoxical sleep)120
9768447627purpose of sleep1. recuperation - repair neurons and allow unused neural connections to wither 2. making memories 3. body growth (children sleep more)121
9768447628insomniacan't sleep122
9768447629narcolepsyfall asleep anywhere at anytime123
9768447630sleep apneastop breathing in sleep124
9768447631night terrorsprevalent in children125
9768447632sleepwalking/sleeptalkinghereditary - prevalent in children126
9768447633dreaming (3)1. vivid bizarre intense sensory experiences 2. carry fear/survival issues - vestiges of ancestors' survival ideas 2. replay previous day's experiences/worries127
9768447634purpose of dreaming (5 THEORIES)1. physiological function - develop/preserve neural pathways 2. Freud's wish-fulfillment (manifest/latent content) 3. activation synthesis - make sense of stimulation originating in brain 4. information processing 5. cognitive development - reflective of intelligence128
97684476351. Can hypnosis bring you back in time? 2. Can hypnosis make you do things you wouldn't normally do? 3. Can it alleviate pain? 4. What state are you in during hypnosis? 5. Who is more susceptible?1. cannot take you back in time 2. cannot make you do things you won't do 3. can alleviate pain 4. fully conscious ((IMAGINATIVE PEOPLE MORE SUSCEPTIBLE))129
9768447636depressantsslows neural pathways130
9768447637alcohol((depressant)) disrupts memory formation (REM) lowers inhibition expectancy effect131
9768447638barbituates (tranquilizers)((depressant)) reduce anxiety132
9768447639opiates((depressant)) pleasure reduce anxiety/pain133
9768447640stimulantshypes neural processing134
9768447641methamphetamine((stimulant)) heightens energy euphoria affects dopamine135
9768447642caffeine((stimulant))136
9768447643nicotine((stimulant)) CNS releases neurotransmitters calm anxiety reduce pain affects (nor)epinephrine and dopamine137
9768447644cocaine((stimulant)) euphoria affects dopamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine138
9768447645hallucinogenexcites neural activity139
9768447646ecstasy((hallucinogen)) reuptake is blocked affects dopamine and serotonin140
9768447647LSD((hallucinogen)) affects sensory/emotional "trip" (+/-) affects serotonin141
9768447648marijuana((hallucinogen)) amplify sensory experience disrupts memory formation142
9768447649learningorganism changing behavior due to experience (association of events)143
9768447650types of learningclassical operant observational144
9768447651famous classical psychologistsPavlov and Watson145
9768447652famous operant psychologistSkinner146
9768447653famous observational psychologistsBandura147
9768447654classical conditioningoutside stimulus148
9768447655Pavlov's experimentStep 1: US (food) -> UR (salivation) Step 2: NS (bell) -> US (food) -> UR (salivation) Later... CS (bell) -> CR (salivation)149
9768447656Watson's experimentwhite 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)150
9768447657generalizationany small, white fluffy creature will make Albert cry now151
9768447658discriminateany large, white fluffy creature won't make Albert cry152
9768447659extinctionstop "treating" with conditioned response153
9768447660spontaneous recoverybring stimulus back after a while154
9768447661operant conditioningcontrol by organism155
9768447662Skinner's experimentoperant chamber / Skinner box (lead to shaping)156
9768447663shapingget animal closer to doing what you want them to do157
9768447664reinforcerswant to continue behavior (positive reinforcement: give money to do laundry) (negative reinforcement: do to avoid nagging)158
9768447665punishmentswant to stop behavior (positive reinforcement: smack) (negative reinforcement: take away phone)159
9768447666fixed ratiohappens a certain number of times (Starbucks punch card)160
9768447667variable ratiohappens an unpredictable number of times (winning the lottery)161
9768447668organism must do these (2 times)fixed ratio and variable ratio162
9768447669fixed intervalhappens at a certain time (mailman comes to the house at 10:00 AM)163
9768447670variable intervalhappens at any time (receive texts from friends)164
9768447671these things happen regardless (2 times)fixed interval and variable interval165
9768447672Which (fixed/variable) conditions better?variable166
9768447673criticisms of Skinnerdoesn't take into account intrinsic motivation167
9768447674intrinsic motivationdoing something for yourself, not the reward168
9768447675extrinsic motivationdoing something for reward169
9768447676Skinner's legacyuse it personally, at school, and at work170
9768447677famous observational experimentBandura's Bobo doll171
9768447678famous observational psychologistBandura172
9768447679mirror neurons"feel" what is observed happens in higher order animals173
9768447680Bobo doll experiment legacyviolent video games/movies desensitize us see good: do good see evil: do evil174
9768447681observational learningbiological behaviors work best175
9768447682habituationget used to it -> stop reacting176
9768447683examples for observational learninglectures and reading177
9768447684serotonin involved with memoryspeeds the connection between neurons178
9768447685LTP((long-term potentiation)) strengthens potential neural forming (associated with speed)179
9768447686CREBprotein that can switch genes on/off with memory and connection of memories180
9768447687glutamate involved with memoryneurotransmitter that enhances LTP181
9768447688glucose involved with memoryreleased during strong emotions ((signaling important event to be remembered))182
9768447689flashbulb memorytype of memory remembered because it was an important/quick moment183
9768447690amygdala (memory)boosts activity of proteins in memory-forming areas to fight/flight184
9768447691cerebellum (memory)forms and stores implicit memories ((classical conditioning))185
9768447692hippocampus (memory)active during sleep (forming memories) ((information "moves" after 48 hours))186
9768447693memorylearning over time contains information that can be retrieved187
9768447694processing stagesencoding -> storage -> retrieval188
9768447695encodinginformation going in189
9768447696storagekeeping information in190
9768447697retrievaltaking information out191
9768447698How long is sensory memory stored?seconds192
9768447699How long is short-term memory stored?less than a minute193
9768447700How many bits of information is stored in short-term memory?7194
9768447701How many chunks of information is stored in short-term memory?4195
9768447702How many seconds of words is stored in short-term memory?2196
9768447703short term memory goes to ______________working memory197
9768447704working memorymake a connection and process information to mean something198
9768447705working memory goes to _________________long-term memory199
9768447706How much is stored in long-term memory?LIMITLESS200
9768447707implicit memorynaturally do201
9768447708explicit memoryneed to explain202
9768447709automatic processingspace, time, frequency, well-learned information203
9768447710effortful processingprocessing that requires effort204
9768447711spacing effectspread out learning over time205
9768447712serial position effectprimary/recency effect206
9768447713primary effectremember the first things in a list207
9768447714recency effectremember the last things in a list208
9768447715effortful processing (4 things)1. recency effect 2. spacing effect 3. testing effect 4. serial position effect209
9768447716semantic encoding (1) meaning (2) how tomake meaning out of something --- chunk, hierarchy, or connect to you210
9768447717if we can't remember a memory...1. change memory to suit us 2. fill in the blanks with logical story211
9768447718misinformation effectnot correct information212
9768447719imagination inflationimagine or visualize something that isn't real213
9768447720source amnesiawhat is the truth? (is it a dream, story, memory, etc.?)214
9768447721primingassociation (setting you up)215
9768447722contextenvironment helps with memory216
9768447723state-dependencyyou may remember something if you go back to the state you were in (go back to high)217
9768447724mood-congruencyemotion will bring back similar emotional memories218
9768447725forgetting curveforget after 5 days forget after 5 years219
9768447726the forgetting curve was created byEbbinghaus220
9768447727proactive interferenceold information interferes with the new221
9768447728retroactive interferencenew information interferes with the old222
9768447729children can't remember before age __3223
9768447730Loftusconnected to abuse cases/childhood224
9768447731prototypesgeneralize225
9768447732problem-solving (4)trial + error algorithms heuristic (representative + availability) insight - "AHA!"226
9768447733against problem-solvingfixation227
9768447734mental setwhat has worked in the past228
9768447735functional fixednessonly way to do this is with this229
9768447736Chomsky (nature or nurture?)"born with language" (nature)230
9768447737Skinner (nature or nurture?)language is learned (nurture)231
9768447738grammar is _________universal232
9768447739phonemessmallest sound unit233
9768447740morphemessmallest meaning unit234

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