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AP French Review Flashcards

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9540185115à mon avisin my opinion0
9540185116d'aprèsaccording to1
9540185117en réalitéactually2
9540185118en faitas a matter of fact, in fact3
9540185119en effetas a matter of fact, indeed4
9540185120en outrebesides5
9540185121selonaccording to6
9540185122cependanthowever, still, nevertheless7
9540185123pourtantnevertheless, however8
9540185124néanmoinsnevertheless, nonetheless9
9540185125toutefoisnevertheless10
9540185126quand mêmeall the same, just the same, nevertheless11
9540185127d'un côtéon the one hand12
9540185128de l'autre côtéon the other hand13
9540185129d'une parton one side14
9540185130de l'autre parton the other side15
9540185131par contreon the other hand, however16
9540185132de plusbesides, moreover (also)17
9540185133d'ailleursbesides, moreover18
9540185134par ailleurson the other hand19
9540185135par conséquenttherefore20
9540185136malgré celain spite of that21
9540185137malgré toutin spite of everything, after all22
9540185138en revanche,in return, on the other hand23
9540185139pas du toutnot at all24
9540185140au contraireon the contrary25
9540185141effectivementactually/effectively26
9540185142enfinfinally, so27
9540185143sans doutewithout a doubt28
9540185145en premierto start,29
9540185146Cher Monsieur ________________________Dear Mr._______________30
9540185147Chère Madame ______________________Dear Ms._______________31
9540185148Je vous prie d'agréer, [Monsieur/Madame ____________], mes salutations distinguées.Sincerely, (e-mail closing)32
9540185149le tructhe thing33
9540185150lorsquewhen34
9540185151Je vous prie d'accepter, [Monsieur/Madame ____________], mes sentiments respectueux.Sincerely, (e-mail closing)35
9540185152alors...so...36
9540185153appartenirto belong37
9540185154d'accordok38
9540185155Je suis d'accordI agree39
9540185156Je ne suis pas d'accordI don't agree40
9540185157Je voudrais poser une question.I'd like to ask a question.41
9540185158vraimentreally42
9540185159au débutin the beginning43
9540185160au finalin the end44
9540185161bientôtsoon45
9540185162le butthe goal46
9540185163en résuméin summary47
9540185164tout à coupsuddenly48
9540185165à cause debecause of (negative)49
9540185166en d'autres termesin other words50
9540185167en brefin short51
9540185168néanmoinsnonetheless52
9540185169malin comme un singeclever like a monkey53
9540185170prendre le taureau par les cornesto take the bull by the horns54
9540185171parler français comme une vache espagnoleto speak french badly55
9540185172peigner la girafeto do nothing56
9540185173poser un lapin à quelqu'unto stand someone up57
9540185174doux comme un agneauvery gentle (as a lamb)58
9540185175grâce àbecause of (positive), thanks to59
9540185176pendant quewhile60
9540185177aprèsafter61
9540185178ailleurselsewhere62
9540185179bougerto move63
9540185180pendantduring64
9540185181avantbefore65
9540185182pour queso that66
9540185183vachementreally67
9540185184heureux comme un poisson dans l'eauhappy as a fish in water68
9540185185c'est simple comme bonjourIt's as simple as bonjour69
9540185186à tout jamais, pour toujoursforever70
9540185187Bien cordialementCordially (e-mail closing)71
9540185188Sincères salutationsYours truly,72
9540185189donctherefore73

AP Government Flashcards

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5901035665ConservativeStatus Quo, less Gov.0
5901040419ModerateMid-Ground1
5901042871LiberalPeaceful gradual change, reject violent revolution2
5901046543RadicalFar Left, Resorts to extreme methods to bring about change.3
5901066971Political SpectrumTool used to visually compare different political positions by placing them on one or more axis.4
5901085355RightLess Gov intervention, Traditional Values5
5901089177LeftMore Gov Intervention, support change6
5901112512Parliamentary GovernmentExecutive are members of the legislative branch7
5901126290Presidential GovernemtSeparates Power between executive/legislative8
5901128749ReactionaryFar right, Extreme methods9
5901130602Representative DemocracyPeople represented through elected officials.10
5901140465The StateBody of people living in a defined territory, having power to make and enforce law without the consent of any higher authority.11
5901149897MonarchyPower in the hands of royalty12
5901152702DictatorshipRuled by a single leader not elected.13
5901158231Military DictatorshipArmy is in control14
5901161261TheocracyReligious based Government15
5901164784Public PoliciesAll things a government decides to do.16
5901170635Conferred PowerPower which is agreed upon.17
5901180159Four aspects of the State1. Population: must have people 2. Territory: recognized boundaries 3. Sovereignty: Having supreme and absolute authority in it's own territory 4. Government- Different forms18
5901200098Evolutionary theoryDeveloped out of early familiy19
5901204085Divine Right TheoryState created by God and those of royal birth have a divine right to rule.20
5901211765Force TheoryA group claimed control and forced all other to submit.21
5901219930Social or Political Contract theoryPeoples moral and/or political obligations are dependent on an agreement among them to form the society in which they live. *Law and political order are not natural, they are human creations.22
5901237755ConfederateAn alliance of independent states23
5901243906FederalPower is divided between a central gov't and several local gov't.24
5901251787State of NatureSurvival of the Fittest25
5901256273UnitaryAll power belongs to one level of gov't26
5901261329GovernmentAn organization of people set up to protect the community and make rules. -Protects community -Makes laws -Keeps order27
5901294409PoliticsActivities relate to governance of a country or area28
5901299498DemocracyGov elected by the people. Determine either directly or through elected Reps.29
5901303546Direct DemocracyPeople vote Directly on every issue30
5901306947DemocratsGenerally liberal because they support gov reg. of the economy.31
5901310892RepublicansGenerally Conservatives because they advocate a reduction in gov.32
5901317388Current issues (Left)Left: Pro Gun control, Pro Choice, No Censorship, Prisons should Rehabilitate, Pro-privacy, Equal funding for Education.33
5901336056Current issues (Right)Right: Anti-gun Control, Pro-life, Anti Flag burning, Prisons should punish, Prayer in schools, School vouchers.34
5901346699Taxation (Left)Acceptable, Gov have $ to fund programs benefiting society, % taxes preferred over flat rate, rich= more tax35
5901359401Taxation (Right)Taxes infringe on personal freedoms Taxes= bad for free market Taxes= Penalization those who are successful Taxes= Punish Profit Prefers flat tax36
5901383944Business Regulation (Left)Yes on gov. Reg Market no reliable to provide safe work conditions Gov. reg= protect workers+ consumers= Everyone= chance to succeed37
5901403504Business Regulations (Right)Business need free from gov. and supply and demand will guide Gov policies that affect products are bad Trickle down economics is the way to stimulate economy38
5901416572Political Rights (Left)Extend Civil Rights to minority groups, students, prisoners, homosexuals, and poor. Protect individual rights: Free speech, pro-choice, anti-capital punishment, and privacy.39
5901431937Political Rights (Right)Cent gov= diminish Issues dealt best on state and local level No change in family values ( usually christian centered) O.K to censor obscure ideas that shake Status Quo.40
5901444879Distribution of wealth (Left)Disparity between rich and poor no good, taxes= distribute wealth. Gov more involved in ed, Health care, Child C., and Elderly. Pub Project= Stimulate economy41
5901461396Distribution of wealth (Right)Business= right to make profit People are rich or poor b/c of choices they make Prosperous people should no be penalized.42
5901472633Economy (Left)Minimum wage standards Public projects= more jobs Gov provide basic living standards of living to all citizens43
5901482344Economy (Right)Economy works best in free market (Laissez- Faire) Forces of the market= trusted to meet needs of business, consumer, and workers. Gov. programs should not compete with private industry.44
5901497594Foreign Affairs (Left)Spread Democracy + Protect human rights in the world Strong Support of UN.45
5901503940Foreign Affairs (Right)Gov role= pro us business and econ. intervention in other countries. Fix us before we fix others Support tariffs (tax on imports)46
5901622093SCOPE OF THE GOVERNMENT (Left)The government should serve as the equalizers in society and establish a basic standard of living, a minimum wage is an acceptable tool of government intervention. The left accepts government control and regulation of business and an active government that protects political rights.47
5901628166SCOPE OF THE GOVERNMENT (Right)Government should be downsized. Large governments, both federal and state, have the power to control business interests and therefore potentially infringe on the freedoms of individuals. Government programs tend to provide unnecessary services that go beyond the scope of the constitution.48
5901643752Two- Party SystemA system where two major political parties dominate politics within a government49
5901648271Third partyAny political party that is not one of the two major parties in a two-party system50
5901674178PlankEach issue included in a political party's platform. Gives the candidates a clear political position with which they can campaign. They give voters a sense of what the candidates believe in, the issues they think are important, and how - if elected - they will address them.51
5901699577Becoming PresidentStep 1: Formation of a Presidential Exploratory Committee Step 2: Announcement of intention to run for president based on findings of the exploratory committee Step 3: Fundraising and gathering of support and endorsements from the general public as well as other politicians, special interest groups, corporations, etc. Step 4: Campaigning early, especially in states where primaries are important (Iowa, New Hampshire, candidates home state, etc.) Step 5: Continuing to campaign to beat out all other opponents from within your own party Step 6: Attending your party's National Convention and securing the nomination of the party Step 7: Campaigning nationwide against your opponents from other parties Step 8: Winning election and securing enough electoral college votes to be named the next president52
5901830853Three main concepts of Government brought by English ColonistsThe need for an ordered social system, or government. The idea of limited government, that is, that government should not be all-powerful. The concept of representative government—a government that serves the will of the people.53
5901850254Royal ColoniesRuled directly by the English monarchy.54
5901856221Proprietary colonies.Land given to the colonist by the Monarchy55
5901862238Charter ColonistsSelf-governed, and their charters were granted to the colonists.56
5901870958ConfederationA joining of several groups for a common purpose57
5901879936The Albany PlanIn 1754, Benjamin Franklin proposed the Albany Plan, an annual congress of delegates (representatives) from each of the 13 colonies would be formed.58
5901894919Stamp Act CongressIn 1765, a group of colonies sent delegates to the Stamp Act Congress in New York. These delegates prepared the Declaration of Rights and Grievances against British policies and sent it to the king.59
5901904227First Continental CongressThe colonists sent a Declaration of Rights to King George III. The delegates urged each of the colonies to refuse all trade with England until British tax and trade regulations were repealed, or recalled.60
5901913590Second Continental CongressIn 1775, each of the 13 colonies sent representatives to this gathering in Philadelphia. The Second Continental Congress served as the first government of the United States from 1776 to 1781.61
5901931044Declaration of IndependenceJuly 4, 1776, the Second Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence. Between 1776 and 1777, most of the States adopted constitutions instead of charters.62
5902116810Common Features of State ConstitutionsPopular Sovereignty Limited Government Civil Rights and Liberties Separation of Powers and Checks and Balances63
5902125249Popular SovereigntyThe principle of popular sovereignty was the basis for every new State constitution. That principle says that government can exist and function only with the consent of the governed. The people hold power and the people are sovereign.64
5902126847Limited GovernmentThe concept of limited government was a major feature of each State constitution. The powers delegated to government were granted reluctantly and hedged with many restrictions.65
5902126848Civil Rights and LibertiesIn every State it was made clear that the sovereign people held certain rights that the government must respect at all times. Seven of the new constitutions contained a bill of rights, setting out the "unalienable rights" held by the people.66
5902129791Separation of Powers and Checks and BalancesThe powers granted to the new State governments were purposely divided among three branches: executive, legislative, and judicial. Each branch was given powers with which to check (restrain the actions of) the other branches of the government.67
5902165082Articles of Confederation (AC)Approved November 15, 1777 Est. "a firm league of friendship" between the states Needed the ratification of the 13 states March 1, 1781 Second Continental Congress declared the Articles effective68
5902323848Structure of Constitution3 parts; the preamble, the articles(7), and the amendments69
5902340909The Preambleintro, explains purpose of Constitution and purpose of govt70
5902360467Article Iestablishes legislative branch71
5902363649Article IIcreates an executive branch to carry out laws created by Congress72
5902372531Article IIIcreates judicial branch73
5902375945Article IVexplains the relationship of the states to one another and to the national govt74
5902383039Article Vspells out the ways the Constitution can be amended75
5902389141Article VIcontains the supremacy clause, establishing that federal law shall be the supreme law of the land76
5902405218Article VIIaddresses ratification and says that 9 states are needed to ratify the Constitution77
5902433589Connecticut CompromiseTwo houses Senate - equal representation House - proportional representation based on population Combination of Virginia and New Jersey plans78
59024231496 Major Principles of Constitution1. Popular sovereignty- rule by people 2. Federalism- power is divided between national and state govts 3. Separation of powers- limits the central govt by dividing power among the legislative, executive, and judicial branches 4. checks and balances- each branch of govt exercises some control over the others79
5902725678Electoral Collegea compromise, combining features of both congressional selection and direct popular election80
5902746734Electorsindividuals selected in each state to officially cast that state's electoral votes; Wisconsin selects 10 electors81
5902781750Popular Votethe popular vote winner may not win the electoral college; for example: small-state bias caused by each state getting at least three electoral votes regardless of its size82
5902388732The Virginia Plan-Three Separate branches of government: Legislature, Executive, and Judicial -Bicameral legislature (2 parts) -Based on population or the amount of money given to support the central government -Members of House of Reps = based on population -Senate = chosen by House from a list from the State Legislature -Congress would be given powers it had under the Articles of Confederation -Any State law that conflicted with National Law would be vetoed -"National Executive" and "National Judiciary" -Council of Revision -Veto acts passed by Congress (but can be overridden by Congress) -State officers should take an Oath to the Union -Admission process for new States83
5902421162New Jersey Plan-Unicameral (one body) Congress of the Confederation -Each state equally represented -Give them limited and closely monitored powers -Tax and regulate trade -Federal Executive -More than one person -Chosen by Congress/could be removed with a majority vote -Federal Judiciary -Single "supreme Tribunal" -Selected by the Executive Branch84
5902439804Three-Fifths CompromiseAll "free persons" will be counted; 3/5 of all other persons Southerners could count slaves but had to pay taxes on them85
5902479673judicial reviewpower of courts to say that laws and actions of govt are invalid bc they conflict w the constitution's principles86
5902449062The Commerce and Slave Trade CompromisesCongress has the power to regulate foreign and interstate trade -Scared southerners because of slave trade -States cannot enact import/export taxes only federal government can -Could not act on the slave trade for 20 years87
5902210992AC (Power of congress)Make war and peace Send and receive ambassadors Make treaties Borrow money Set up a money system Est. post offices Build a navy Raise an army by asking the states for troops Fix uniform standards of weights and measures Settle disputes among the states88
5902374830James MadisonJames Madison was the co-author of the Articles of Confederation. Kept detailed records of the convention Conventions Floor leader Contributed more to the constitution than any other89
5902359680Constitutional ConventionMid-February of 1787 meeting of all thirteen States, which eventually became the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia.90
5902250761AC (States Obligations)Pledge to obey the Articles and Acts of the Congress Provide the funds and troops requested by the congress Treat citizens of other states fairly and equally Give full faith and credit to public acts, records, and judicial proceedings Submit disputes to congress for settlement Allow open travel and trade b/w and among states Primarily responsible for protecting life and property Accountable for promoting the general welfare of the people.91
5902263137Weaknesses of the Articles-One vote for each state, regardless of size. -Congress powerless to lay and collect taxes, and regulate foreign and interstate commerce. -No executive to enforce acts of congress. -No national court system. Amendment only with consent of all states. -Amendment only with consent of all State. -A 9/13 majority required to pass laws. -Articles only a "firm league of friendship"92
5902859319Lobbyingefforts by individuals or groups to influence governmental decision makers Types of lobbying; -full-time employee -temporary employee -often former legislatives93
5902896954Inside lobbyingappeals directly to lawmakers and their staff -through meetings -by providing research and info -by testifying at committee hearings94
5902917061Outside lobbyingattempt to influence decision makers indirectly, by influencing the public -try to build public support -increase conflict about an issue -lobby other groups and try to form alliances tactics: direct contact, direct mail, and media advertisements95
5902879276Electioneering-efforts to help candidates financially -efforts to help candidates gain voter support96
5903240275Litigationtestifying to influence public policy97
5902949025Types of Interest Groups-economic interests -environmental interests -equality interests -consumer and other public interest lobbies98
5902970107Economic Intereststrade associations; - organized commercial groups, farm organizations - corporations; form own interest groups, hire lobbyists - labor unions, professional associations99
5903171954Environmental Interests- sprang up since 1970 - profound policy impact bc of numbers, not money100
5903000137PACPolitical Action Committees; raise and spend money to influence electoral outcomes101
5903016316Equality Interests14th Amendment guarantees equality Minorities and Equality - social welfare policies Women102
5903076862Consumer and Other Public Interest LobbiesRepresent broad classes of people or the public as a whole -consumer, voters, reformers, etc Public Interest Groups -policies that are in the public's interest Think tanks -conduct research -advocate a strong ideological viewpoint103
5903130558How do interest groups shape public policy?lobbying, electioneering, litigation, going public104
5903598100Law making processhttp://integrationsolutions.westlaw.com/gov/leghist/images/cap.gif105
5903725480Presidential RolesChief of State - the ceremonial head of the government of the United States Chief Executive - given this title by the Constitution Chief Administrator - carry out the laws, head of the federal bureaucracy Chief Diplomat - main architect of America's foreign policy Commander in Chief - head of the nation's armed forces Chief Legislator - can push for laws to be passed Chief of Party - Leader of their political party106
5903735446Presidential QualificationsMust be a natural born citizen Be at least 35 years old Have lived in the U.S. for at least 14 years107
5903821498Who takes over if pres. cannotVice President Speaker of the House President pro tempore Secretary of State108
590383595122nd Amendmentset 2 term limit on109
5903845883Presidential pay$400,000 a year and $50,000 expense account110
5903850074Presidential BenefitsLive in the White House (132 Rooms) Yacht, Automobiles, Air Force One Lifetime pension of $143,800 a year Camp David - Resort in Maryland111
5903871063Presidential powerPower to appoint cabinet members, diplomats and ambassadors, judges Power to make treaties - formal agreement between two or more sovereign state Executive Agreement - pacts between the President and the heads of foreign states Recognition - President can acknowledge the legal existence of a country and its government112
5903900442Presidential Legislative powerRecommend Legislation Veto Bills Can call for a special session of Congress113
5903912996Presidential Judicial powerReprieve - postponement of the execution of a sentence Pardon - legal forgiveness of a crime (only involving a federal offense) Commutation - reduce the length of a sentence or a fine Amnesty - a general pardon offered to a group of violators 1977 - Pardon to Vietnam War draft evaders114
5904017440Main jobs of House and SenateMake Laws Declare War Represent their Constituents115
5904021099House Membership435 members (each state's delegation is determined by its population)116
5904023905Senate Membership100 members (two per state)117
5904034739House Qualifications25 years old U.S Citizens for 7 years Resident of State they're representing118
5904044453Senate Qualifications30 years old U.S citizens for 9 years Resident of State they're representing119
5904060324Terms limit for House2 years entire house elected every two years120
5904066874Terms limit for Senate1/3 of Senate 2 years121
5904099878"Leader" of HouseSpeaker of the House122
5904103464"Leader" of SenateVice President123
5904112946How House is electedDirectly voted by voter per district124
5904117603How Senate is electedDirectly by the voters of a state125
5904130184ReapportionmentApplies only to HOUSE redistribution of seats every 10 years states gain or lose seats based on their population growing or shrinking126
5904140039Thomas PaineAuthor of book "Common Sense"127
5904165331Gerrymanderingan attempt by politicians to create unbalanced districts for their party's political gain128
5904179451Special Powers of HouseBrings impeachment charges May choose the President if there is no majority in the electoral system Must start all revenue bills129
5904182375Special Powers of SenateActs as jury in impeachment trials (2/3 vote needed) May choose the Vice President if there is no majority in the electoral system Must ratify treaties with foreign nations by 2/3 vote Must approves Presidential appointments (majority needed)130
5903159269What makes an interest group successful?access, info, leadership skills, numerical strength, group unity, money131
5903817480CBO- strengthen Congress' role in the budgeting process132
5903334609Pluralist Theory- groups link ppl and govt - competition between interest groups is a central part of American democracy - different groups have strengths in different areas133
5903874760Types of CommitteesStanding committees - handle bills in different policy areas Select - may be temporary and permanent and usually have focused responsibility Joint Committees - draw their membership from both the Senate and the House Conference Committees - are formed when Senate and the house pass different versions of the same bill134
5903364666Elite Theory- reject the pluralists' assertion that competing groups balance power - believe unequal distribution of power in society ensures that interests of some groups will dominate others135
5903387730Hyperpluralist Theory- argue that pluralism in the US is out of control -results in govt that is very subservient to interest groups and tries to appease them all136
59039963594 Models of Representationsdelegate model - assumes that a representative's job is to convey the will of the majority of their constituents to the legislature trustee model - should take the majority view into account but use his or best judgment when voting or acting on behalf of constituents politico model -middle path between trustees and delegate model conscience model - should generally follow what the follow what the public says unless it goes against their deepest values137
5903846588Agenda settingbringing issues to the public's attention and placing them on the national agenda138
5903785963GAOGovernment Accountability Office - broad authority to oversee the operations and finances of executive agencies139
5903803834GPOthecGovernment Printing Office - distributes over 200,000 govt publications in U.S. govt bookstores throughout the nation140
5904187177Types of gerrymanderingPartisan gerrymandering - drawing a district to favor one political party over others Incumbent gerrymandering - a state legislature is so closely divided that neither political party has an advantage Racial gerrymandering - drawing a district to favor one racial group over others Affirmative racial gerrymandering - creation of predominately African American and minority districts whenever possible141
5903432474Free rider problembarrier to collective action bc ppl can reap the benefits of group efforts without participating142
5903443830Single-issue groupsgroups that have a narrow interest, tend to dislike compromise, and often draw membership from people new to politics143
5903586781CRSCongressional Research Service - works for the U.S. Congress and provides nonpartisan an policy and research analysis to committees and members of both houses144
5904139240Edmund Burkecontrasts with the idea of representatives as delegated who feel obligated to vote according to the views of the "folks back home" regardless of their own personal viewpoint145
5903977634Caucusa group of members of Congress sharing some interest or characteristic146
5904273331House Rules Committeethe committee in the House of Representatives that reviews most bills coming from a House committee before they go to the full House147
5904297717Companion legislationsimilar or identical legislation which is introduced in Senate and House148
5904310527Omnibus legislationlarge bills that often cover several topics and may contain extraneous, or pork-barrel projects149
5904270550Who runs for congress?People involved: Law Business Public service150
5904374428legislative oversightcongress' monitoring of the bureaucracy and its administration of policy, performed mainly through hearings151
5904387153power of the pursecongressional exclusive power to authorize expenditures by all avenues of the federal govt152
5904403292advice and consentadvice and consent and confirmation of presidential appointments and treaties153
5904429814Seniority systemgoverns most committee assignments and movement into committee leadership positions154
5904459260Pork barrelfederal projects, grants, and contracts available to state and local govts, businesses, colleges, and other institutions155
5904495519congressional caseworkactivities of members of Congress that help constituents as individuals, particularly by cutting through bureaucratic red tape to get ppl what they think they have a right to get156
5904538465partisan polarizationa vote in which a majority of democratic legislators oppose a majority of republican legislators157
5904571403incumbent advantagesadvertising - gather info through technological sources-thus having the incumbents' personal interests credit claiming - enhancing their standing w constituents through service to individuals and the district weak opponents -no name recognition campaign spending - the candidate who spends the most money tends to win misinformed voters158
5904643550federalista person who advocates or supports a system of government in which several states unite under a central authority159
5904649665anti-federalistsomebody who opposed the U.S. Constitution when it was being drawn up160
5904675460filibusterany member can speak for as long as he or she wants on any given use161
5904719546Amendment 1 freedomsFreedom of Religion, freedom of speech, Freedom of expression, Freedom of the Press, and Freedom of Assembly.162
5904742889bill of rightsthe first ten amendments to the US Constitution163

AP Biology Cells Review Flashcards

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9695635970endergonic reactionreaction where energy is stored in chemical bonds0
9695635971exergonic reactionreaction where energy is released from chemical bonds1
9695635972Prokaryotic CellsBacteria; no nucleus or organelles2
9695635973Eukaryotic cellscomplex; have organelles3
9695635974Ribosome2 subunits of rRNA; responsible for protein synthesis4
9695635975Golgi BodyPart of the endomembrane system; cis face receives materials, so that they can be modified and packaged; trans face releases vesicles5
9695635976Rough ERaids in protein synthesis by altering the structure of proteins; contains ribosomes6
9695635977Smooth ERsite of lipid synthesis; involved in detoxification of cells7
9695635978Vacuolesstorage vesicles found within the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells8
9695635979Central VacuoleWhen filled with water it maintains turgor pressure of plant cells; not found in animal cells9
9695635980Chloroplastsite of photosynthesis; only in plant cells; appear green due to the pigment chlorophyll which reflects green light10
9695635981mitochondriafound in BOTH plant and animal cells; site of cellular respiration whereby ATP is made11
9695635982lysosomea vesicle that contains digestive enzymes to break down cellular food and/or waste12
9695635983nucleushome of the genetic information (DNA)13
9695635984nucleolussite of ribosome synthesis; found in the center of the nucleus14
9695635985chromatinthe form in which DNA is found within the nucleus during the majority of the cell cycle15
9695635986nuclear envelopesurrounds the nucleus and contains pores to allow for communication with the rest of the cell, as well as, allowing for ribosomes to exit the nucleolus16
9695635987animals, plants, fungi, protistaeukaryotic17
9695635988bacteriaprokaryotic18
9695635989bacillus (plural: bacilli)rod shaped bacteria19
9695635990coccus (plural: cocci)round shaped bacteria20
9695635991spirillum (spirilla)spiral shaped bacteria21
9695635992cell membranefound in ALL cell types surrounding the cytoplasm and maintaining selective permeability22
9695635993cell wallFound in plant, fungal, bacterial, and some prostist cells; rigid wall for protection and shape; regulates the cell's volume23
9695635994turgor pressureexerted onto the cell wall in order to maintain rigid, upright, and erect plant cells and leaves (maximizing photosynthesis)24
9695635995photosynthesisuses sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into glucose and oxygen (which is given off as a byproduct)25
9695635996cellular respirationconversion of glucose into ATP, water, and CO2; occurs in the mitochondria26
9695635997cytoskeletoncomposed of protein filaments and microtubules that extend throughout the cytoplasm and allow for cellular movement and structure27
9695635998centriolessmall structures composed of microtubules that organize the cytoskeleton during cell division28
9695635999flagellalong whip-like tails that allow for cell movement; found in sperm cells29
9695636000ciliashort hair-like extensions of the cell membrane that wave back and forth allowing for cell movement; found within cells of the respiratory system30
9695636001pseudopodia"false-feet;" extensions of the cytoplasm that move the cell membrane allowing for slow movement of cells; found in amoeba (protists)31
9695636002catabolic reactionschemical reaction whereby large molecules are broken down (ex: glycogen converted into many glucose monosaccharides)32
9695636003anabolic reactionschemical reaction whereby small molecules come together (as water is removed) to build large molecules (ex: amino acids coming together to create a protein)33
9695636004Gibbs Free EnergyAvailable energy to use for chemical reactions34
9695636005enthalpythe total energy within a system35
9695636006entropya measure of the disorder within a system36
9695636007high entropyA great amount of disorder; low available energy as it has been released from chemical bonds37
9695636008low entropya large amount of stored energy; an anabolic reaction has occurred38
9695636009osmosismovement of water from high to low concentration through aquaporins39
9695636010diffusionmovement of solutes from high to low concentration across the phospholipid bilayer40
9695636011facilitated diffusionmovement of large and/or polar solutes from high to low concentration through a channel or carrier protein within the cell membrane41
9695636012carrier proteinallow for specific molecules to bind and cross the cell membrane42
9695636013channel proteina ligand attaches to its binding site, modifying its shape allowing for the diffusion of molecules across the cell membrane43
9695636014ligandchemical signals that begin the process of signal transduction44
9695636015amphipathicmolecules containing a polar and non-polar region; example: phospholipids45
9695636016phospholipid tailsthe non-polar region of the cell membrane46
9695636017phospholipid headsthe polar regions of the cell membrane (facing the extracellular and intracellular areas)47
9695636018hydrophilicpolar48
9695636019hydrophobicnonpolar49
9695636020cytoplasmgel-like matrix in which organelles are suspended50
9695636021organellescontain their own phospholipid bilayers within the cell51
9695636022passive transportmovement of molecules along or with the concentration gradient (high to low)52
9695636023active transportmovement of molecules against the concentration gradient (low to high)53
9695636024endocytosisa vesicle forms along the cell membrane and pinches off within the cell - allowing for substances to enter54
9695636025phagocytosislarge, solid molecules brought into the cell via cell membrane pockets (called vesicles)55
9695636026pinocytosissmall, liquid molecules brought into the cell via cell membrane pockets (called vesicles)56
9695636027receptor-mediated endocytosisreceptors along the surface of the cell membrane allow for the binding of specific molecules, then causing a vesicle to form around them, bringing them into the cell57
9695636028protein kinase receptorsligand binding causes a change in shape of the receptor protein, causing its catalytic domain to hydrolyze ATP, and then phosphorylate a target molecule. The target molecule then triggers other molecules within the cell to respond58
9695636029Cell signaling pathwayligand binding(Reception) - stimulation of receptor(Transduction) - cellular response59
9695636030Ion channelsallow movement of charged molecules to diffuse across the cell membrane following the binding of a ligand60
9695636031ATPAdenosine triphosphate61
9695636032isotonic environmentsolute concentrations inside and out of the cell are equal62
9695636033hypertonic environmentsolute concentration outside of the cell is higher than inside the cell63
9695636034hypotonic environmentsolute concentration outside of the cell is lower than inside the cell64
9695636035result of a hypotonic environmentcytolysis (splitting of a cell)65
9695636036result of a hypertonic environmentplasmolysis (release of cytoplasm; cell shrinking)66
9695636037equilibriumconcentrations of water inside and outside of cell are equal67
9695636038effect of a cell being in equilibriumwater flows into and out of the cell in equal amounts68
9695636039peripheral proteins involved in cellular recognitionglycoproteins69
9695636040cholesterola lipid that helps to maintain the fluidity of the cell membrane70
9695636049hypertonic71
9695636050hypotonic72
9695636051isotonic73
9695636041responsible for turgor pressurehypotonic environment74
9695636042#2 in the picturegap junctions; tunnels that allow for the transport of molecules between adjacent cells75
9695636043tight junctionsallow for NO transport of molecules between adjacent cells76
9695636044#3 in the picturedesmosomes; anchor adjacent cells together in order to create tissue77
9695636045plasmodesmatacytoplasmic channels that allow for movement of molecules between adjacent PLANT cells78
9695636046autocrine signalssignals that only affect the cell from which it was released79
9695636048paracrine signalsaffect cells nearby; involved in the inflammatory response (ex. when you cut or smash your finger it gets red, due to increased blood flow to the area)80

Ap Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
7218771849AfghanistanAfghani0
7218771850ArmeniaDram1
7218771851AzerbaijanManat2
7218771852BahrainBahrain dinar3
7218771853BangladeshTaka4
7218771854BhutanBhutanese ngultrum5
7218771855BruneiBrunei dollar6
7218771856CambodiaRiel7
7218771857ChinaYuan8
7218771858CyprusEuro9
7218771859GeorgiaLari10
7218771860Hong kongHong kong dollar11
7218771861IndiaIndian rupee12
7218771862IndonesiaRupiah13
7218771863IranRial14
7218771864IraqIraqi dinar15
7218771865IsaraelNew shekel16
7218771866JapanYen17
7218771867JordanJordanian dinar18
7218771868KazakhstanTenge19
7218771869KuwaitKuwaiti dinar20
7218771870KrygyzstanSom21
7218771871LaosKip22
7218771872LebanonLebanese pound23
7218771873MalaysiaRinggit24
7218771874MaldivesMaldivian rufiyaa25
7218771875MongoliaTugrik26
7218771876MyanmarKyat27
7218771877Nagorno-KarabakhArmenian dram28
7218771878NepalNepalese rupee29
7218771879Northern CyprusTurkish lira30
7218771880North koreaNorth korean won31
7218771881OmanRial32
7218771882PakistanPakistani rupee33
7218771883PalestineIsraeli shekel34
7218771884PhilippinesPhilippine peso35
7218771885QatarRiyal36
7218771886Saudi ArabiaSaudi arabia riyal37
7218771887SingaporeSingapore dollar38
7218771888South koreaSouth korean won39
7218771889Sri lankaSri lankan rupee40
7218771890SyriaSyrian pound41
7218771891TaiwanNew taiwan dollar42
7218771892TajikistanSomoni43
7218771893ThailandBaht44
7218771894TurkeyTurkish lira45
7218771895TurkmenistanTurkmen new manat46
7218771896United Arab EmiratesUAE dirham47
7218771897UzbekistanUzbekistan som48
7218771898VietnamVietnamese dong49
7218771899YemenYemeni rial50

APES Friedland Chapter 2 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
9679606062matteranything that occupies space and has mass0
9679606063massa measurement of the amount of matter an object contains1
9679606064atomthe smallest particle than can contain the chemical properties of an element2
9679606065elementa substance composed of atoms that cannot be broken down into smaller, simpler components3
9679606066periodic tablea chart of all chemical elements currently known, organized by their properties4
9679606067moleculea particle that contains more than one atom5
9679606068compounda molecule containing more than one element6
9679606069atomic numberthe number of protons in the nucleus of a particular atom7
9679606070mass numbera measurement of the total number of protons and neutrons in an element8
9679606071isotopesatoms of the same element with different number of neutrons9
9679606072radioactive decaythe spontaneous release of material from the nucleus of radioactive isotopes10
9679606073half-lifethe time it takes for one-half of an original radioactive parent atom to decay11
9679606074covalent bondthe bond formed when elements share electrons12
9679606075ionic bonda chemical bond between two oppositely charged ions13
9679606076hydrogen bonda weak chemical bond that forms when hydrogen atoms that are covalently bonded to one atom are attracted to another atom or another molecule14
9679606077polar moleculea molecule in which one side is more positive and the other side is more negative15
9679606078energythe ability to do work or transfer heat16
9679606079electromagnetic radiationa form of energy emitted by the sun that includes but is not limited to, visible light, ultraviolet light, and infrared energy17
9679606080photona massless packet of energy that carries electromagnetic radiation at the speed of light18
9679606081joulethe amount of energy used when a one-watt electrical device is turned on for one second19
9679606082potential energystored energy that has not been released20
9679606083kinetic energythe energy of motion21
9679606084chemical energypotential energy that is stored in chemical bonds22
9679606085temperaturethe measure of the average kinetic energy of a substance23
9679606086first law of thermodynamicsa physical law which states that energy can neither be created nor destroyed but can change from one form to another24
9679606087second law of thermodynamicsa physical law stating that when energy is transformed, the quantity of energy remains the same, but its ability to do work is diminished25
9679606088energy efficiencythe ratio of the amount of work done to the total amount of energy introduced to the system26
9679606089energy qualitythe ease with which an energy source can be used for work27
9679606090entropydisorder/randomness in a system28
9679606091open systema system in which exchanges of matter or energy occur across system boundaries.29
9679606092closed systemexchange of matter or energy does not occur across system boundaries. Ex: Matter on Earth continuously recycles30
9679606093outputa loss from a system31
9679606094inputan addition to a system32
9679606095system analysislooks at inputs, outputs, and changes in a system under various conditions33
9679606096steady statea state in which inputs equal outputs, so that the system is not changing over time34
9679606097feedbackadjustment to input or output caused by change35
9679606098negative feedback loopsa feedback loop in which a system responds to a change by returning to its original state, or by decreasing the rate at which the change is occurring36
9679606099positive feedback loopsa feedback loop in which change in a system is amplified37
9679606100weightthe force that results from gravity acting on mass38
9679606101surface tensioncohesion of water molecules creates stretchy surface layer39
9679606102capillary actioncohesion and adhesion of water molecules pulls them along a surface or up a tube40
9679606103conservation of mattermatter cannot be created or destroyed, only changed from one form to another41
9679606104organic compounda compound that contains carbon-carbon and carbon-hydrogen bonds42
9679606105inorganic moleculesa compound that does not contain the element carbon or contains carbon bound to elements other than hydroget43
9679606106powerrate at which work is done44
9679606107kinetic energythe energy of motion45
9679606108potential energystored energy that has not been released46
9679606109energy efficiencythe ratio of the amount of energy expended in the four you want to the total amount of energy that is included in the system47
9679606110open Systemexchange of matter or energy occur across system boundaries48
9679606111natural lawphenomenon which has been rigorously tested and to which there are no known exceptions49
9679606112macromoleculescarbohydrates, proteins, lipids, nucleic acids50
9679606113acida substance that contributes hydrogen ions to a solution51
9679606114basea substance that contributes hydroxide ions to a solution52
9679606115pHthe number that indicates the relative strength of acids and bases in a substance53
9679606116chemical reactiona reaction that occurs when atoms separate from molecules or recombine with other molecules54
9679606117carbohydratea compound composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms55
9679606118proteina critical component of living organisms made up of a long chain of nitrogen-containing organic molecules known as amino acids56
9679606119nucleic acidorganic compounds found in all living cells57
9679606120DNAa nucleic acid, the genetic material that contains the code for reproducing the components of the next generation, and which organisms pass on to their offspring58
9679606121RNAa nucleic acid that translates the code stored in DNA, which makes possible the synthesis of proteins59
9679606122lipida smaller organic biological molecule that does not mix with water60
9679606123cella highly organized living entity that consists of four types of macromolecules and other substances in a water solution, surrounded by a membrane61

APES Friedland Chapter 4 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
9679601661climatethe average weather that occurs in a given region over a long period of time0
9679601702weatherthe short term conditions of the atmosphere in a local area, which include temperature, humidity, clouds, precipitation, and wind speed1
9679601662troposhperethe layer of the atmosphere closest to Earth's surface, extending approximately 16 km (10 mi)2
9679601663stratospherelayer of the atmosphere above the troposphere, extending roughly 16 to 50 km (10-30 miles) above the surface of the Earth3
9679601664albedothe percentage of incoming sunlight that is reflected from a surface4
9679601665saturation pointthe maximum amount of water vapor that can be in the air at a given temperature5
9679601666adiabatic coolingthe process in which the decrease of atmospheric pressure allows rising air to expand in volume and lower it's temperature6
9679601667adiabatic heatingthe process in which the increase of atmospheric pressure allows sinking air to decrease in volume and raise it's temperature7
9679601703latent heat releasethe release of energy when water vapor in the atmosphere condenses into liquid water8
9679601704atmospheric convection currentglobal patterns of air movement that are initiated by the unequal heating of the Earth9
9679601668Hadley Cellthe convection currents that cycle between the equator and 30 degrees N and S10
9679601669intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ)the latitude that receives the most intense sunlight, which causes the ascending branches of the two Hadley cells to converge11
9679601670polar cellsa convection current in the atmosphere, formed by air that rises at 60 degrees N and S and sinks at the poles, 90 N and S12
9679601705ferrell cellconvection current in the atmosphere that lies between Hadley cells and polar cells13
9679601671Coriolis Effectthe deflection of an objects path due to Earth's rotation14
9679601672gyreslarge-scale patterns of water circulation that moves clockwise in the N Hemisphere and counterclockwise in the S Hemisphere15
9679601673upwellingupward movement of ocean water toward the surface as a result of diverging currents16
9679601674thermohaline circulationAn oceanic circulation pattern that drives the mixing of surface water and deep water17
9679601675el Nino; ENSOa reversal of wind and water currents in the South Pacific18
9679601676rain shadowa region with dry conditions found on the leeward side of a mountain range as a result of humid winds from the ocean causing precipitation on the windward side19
9679601677terrestrial biomesgeographic regions that have a particular combination of average annual temperature and annual precipitation and contain distinctive plant growth forms that are adapted to that climate20
9679601706aquatic biomean aquatic region characterized by a particular combination of salinity, depth, an water flow21
9679601678tundraa biome that is cold and treeless, with low-growing vegetation22
9679601679permafrostan impermeable, permanently frozen layer that prevents water from draining and roots from penetrating23
9679601680boreal foresta biome; are forests made up primarily of coniferous (cone-bearing) evergreen trees that can tolerate cold winters and short growing seasons24
9679601681temperate rainforesta biome; moderate temperatures and high precipitation typify this biome25
9679601682temperate seasonal foresta biome; warm summers and cold winters with over 1 m (39 inches) of precipitation annually26
9679601683shrubland; Chaparrala biome; is characterized by hot, dry summers and mild, rainy winters27
9679601684Temperate Grassland/cold deserta biome; cold, harsh winters and hot, dry summers characterize this biome28
9679601685Tropical Rainforesta biome; are warm and wet, with little seasonal temperature variation29
9679601686Tropical Seasonal Forests; Savannahsa biome; are marked by warm temperatures and distinct wet and dry seasons30
9679601687Subtropical Desetsa biome; also known as hot deserts; hot temperatures, extremely dry conditions, and sparse vegetation prevail31
9679601688Littoral Zoneis the shallow area of soil and water near the shore where algae and emergent plants such as cattails grow32
9679601689Limnetic Zonea zone of open water in lakes in ponds33
9679601690Phytoplanktonfloating algae34
9679601691Profundal Zoneregion of water where sunlight does not reach, below the limnetic zone in very deep lakes35
9679601692Benthic Zonethe muddy bottom of a lake, pond, or ocean36
9679601707oligotrophicdescribes a lake with a low level of productivity37
9679601708mesotrophicdescribes a lake with a moderate level of productivity38
9679601709eutrophicdescribes a lake with a high level of productivity39
9679601693Freshwater Wetlanda biome; aquatic biomes that are submerged or saturated by water for at least part of each year, but shallow enough to support emergent vegetation40
9679601694Salt Marsha biome; a marsh containing nonwoody emergent vegetation, found along the coast in temperate climates41
9679601695Mangrove Swampsa biome; occur along tropical and subtropical coasts and contains salt-tolerant trees with roots submerged in water42
9679601696Intertidal Zonethe narrow band of coastline between the levels of high tide and low tide43
9679601697Coral Reefsa biome; are found in warm, shallow waters beyond the shoreline, represent Earth's most diverse marine biome44
9679601698Coral Bleachinga phenomenon in which the algae inside the corals die which soon causes the corals to turn white45
9679601710open oceandeep ocean water, located away from the shoreline where sunlight can no longer reach the ocean bottom46
9679601699Photic Zonethe upper layer of water that receives enough sunlight to allow photosynthesis47
9679601700Aphotic Zonethe deeper layer of water that lacks sufficient sunlight for photosynthesis48
9679601701Chemosythesisprocess in which bacteria deep in the ocean use the bonds of methane and hydrogen sulfide to generate energy49

AP Physics Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5400120240Work Energy TheoremThe principle of work and kinetic energy (also known as the work-energy theorem) states that the work done by the sum of all forces acting on a particle equals the change in the kinetic energy of the particle.0
5400130280Potential EnergyThe energy possessed by a body by virtue of its position relative to others, stresses within itself, electric charge, and other factors.1
6194617407Kinetic EnergyEnergy that a body possesses by virtue of being in motion.2
6194624862Electron Charge1.60 × 10^19 coulombs3
6194635183Proton Mass1.67 × 10^27 kilograms4
6194695203λWavelength (lambda)5
6194711502ωOmega6
6194721162Acceleration due to Earth's Gravity9.8 meter/sec7
6194728586Universal Gravitational Constant6.67 × 10^-118
6194741985Speed of light3.0 × 10^8 meter/sec9
6194751579ΩOhm10
6223635644Frictional ForceFriction is the force resisting the relative motion of solid surfaces, fluid layers, and material elements sliding against each other11
6223655225VoltageAn electromotive force or potential difference expressed in volts.12
6223693641WattsThe watt unit is named after James Watt, the inventor of the steam engine. One watt is defined as the energy consumption rate of one joule per second.13
6244014949TorqueTorque, moment, or moment of force is the tendency of a force to rotate an object around an axis, fulcrum, or pivot. Just as a force is a push or a pull, a torque can be thought of as a twist to an object.14
6244022152InertiaA property of matter by which it continues in its existing state of rest or uniform motion in a straight line, unless that state is changed by an external force.15
6244039399Momentumlinear momentum, translational momentum, or simply momentum is the product of the mass and velocity of an object, quantified in kilogram-meters per second.16
6244097700Energy FormulaE = Ek + Ep17
6244102076Spring FormulaF = -kx18
6244146572Kinematicsthe branch of mechanics concerned with the motion of objects without reference to the forces that cause the motion.19
6683498445Pico10^-1220
6683501127Nano10^-921
6683505836Micro10^-622
6683508791Milli10^-323
6683511590Centi10^224
6683532813Conservation of Momentum25
6683557548Coulomb's law26
6683601550Period (T)The length or portion of time27
6683623128Current (I)An electric current is a flow of electric charge. In electric circuits this charge is often carried by moving electrons in a wire. It can also be carried by ions in an electrolyte, or by both ions and electrons such as in a gas (plasma).28

AP BIO UNIT 8 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
9418354070age structureshows the distribution of age groups in a population (pyramid when growing),0
9418354071carrying capacitymax population size that the environment can sustain1
9418354072Decomposerdecay at microscopic level2
9418354073density dependent factorfactor limiting the size of a population whose effect is dependent on the number of individuals in the population (disease: limits growth and larger effect on bigger populations-overcrowding)3
9418354074Detritivorefeed on decaying matter4
9418354075ecological nicheparticular set of abiotic and biotic conditions and resources to which an organism or population responds5
9418354076ecological pyramidshows biomass or bio productivity of each trophic level in a given ecosystem6
9418354077food chain/food webnetwork of links in an ecosystem showing predator and prey7
9418354078GPPgross primary productivity- rate at which plants photosynthesize8
9418354079interspecific competitionindividuals of different species compete9
9418354080intraspecific competitioncompetition between same species10
9418354081K-selectionlarge organisms, stable environment, few offspring, long life, etc.11
9418354082limiting factorenvironmental conditions that limit the growth abundance or distribution of an organism12
9418354083r selectionsmall organisms, unstable envrionment, short life, many offspring13
9418354084trophic levellevel of hierarchy in an ecosystem14
9418354085Biospherepart of the earth inhabited by organisms15
9418354086Open systemexchanges matter and energy with surroundings(ecosystems)16
9418354087Closed systemexchanges energy but not matter (our planet)17
9418354088Isolated systemexchanges neither energy nor matter with surroundings(lab experiments)18
9418354089Systemcomprised of storages and flows19
9418354090Flowsprovide inputs and outputs of energy and matter. May be either transfers or transformations(arrows)20
9418354091Storages(rectangular boxes)21
9418354092Ecological successionchange in ecosystem when one community replaces another due to changing abiotic and biotic factors; Predictable changes that occur in an ecological community over time22
9418354093Primary successionpattern of changes in community when no soil(ice melting to reveal bare rock)(pioneer species, seed dispersal)23
9418354094Secondary successionpattern of changes in the community that occur after a disturbance(farming, logging)(low growing plants-trees)24
9418354095Pioneer speciesestablish and break down rock to create soil(moss, lichen)25
9418354096Introduced speciesnon native, deliberately/accidentally brought into ecosystems by humans26
9418354097Invasive speciesnon native, cause harm to local ecosystem(Kudzu)- habitat degradation and loss of native species and loss of income and crop damage27
9418354098Stable equilibriumecosystems are in a stable equilibrium, steady equ, or one that is growing over time and happen due to stabilizing negative feedback loops. Condition of a system in which there is a tendency to return to the previous equilibrium following disturbance28
9418354099Static equilibriumno change29
9418354100Steady state equilibriumno changes over long term but oscillations in the short term (body temperature in animals)30
9418354101First law of thermodynamicslaw of conservation of energy, enery in an isolated system can be transformed but cannot be created or destroyed31
9418354102Second law of thermodynamicsentropy of a system increases over time. Increase in entropy arising from energy transformations reduces the energy available to do work.32
9418354103Diversityvariation in ecosystems/life33
9418354104Keystone speciesone species that is disproportionally more important in ecosystem, remove it and whole ecosystem falls apart(sea otters, jaguars)34
9418354105Ecosysteman ecological community plus the abiotic envrionment with which it exchanges energy and materials35
9418354106NPPNet Primary Production- measure of the flow of materials and energy into the biotic component, varies among ecosystems and latitudes36
9418354107Greenhouse effectenergy is kept within the atmosphere due to the bouncing effect of infrared wavelengths off the crust and absorbed by greenhouse gases which are warmed (water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide)37
9418354108Sustainabilitythe use and management of resources that allows full natural replacement of the resources exploited and the environment the resources were taken from(natural capital and natural income)38
9418354109Nitrogen cyclebacteria fix nitrogen into nitrate, plants abosrbed nitrate, animals eat plants, as decomposed bacteria convert nitrate to nitrogen39
9418354110threatened speciesspecies at risk of being endangered40
9418354111Pollutionaddition of a substance to an environment through human activity at a rate that is greater than at which it can be rendered harmless by the environment41
9418354112Communitygroup of organism living in same area42
9418354113Biomeflora and fauna occupying a habitat43
9418354114carbon cyclerespiration letting CO2 out and photosynthesis taking it in an\d decomposition of matter/waste lets CO2 out, fossil fuels44
9418354115endangered speciesspecies about to be extinct45
9418354116circadian rhythmcontrols daily cycle of behavior, free run period that is genetically programmed but also entrained to the light dark cycle by the environment46
9418354117Imprintingrapid learning that occurs during brief critical period, est long lasting behavioral response, attachment to parents47
9418354120Symbiosisinteractions between two different organisms (Mutalism +/+) (Parasitism +/-) (Commensalism +/0)48
9418387422Survivorship curve49
9418388645logistic growth vs. exponential growth50

AP Psychology Midterm Flashcards

This set of flash cards will help you understand and appropriately use psychological vocabulary terms frequently found in the multiple choice and free response sections of the AP Psychology exam 2nd Edition)

Terms : Hide Images
5722393417Wilhelm Wundt(1832-1920) set up the first psychological laboratory in an apartment near the university at Leipzip, Germany. Trained subjects in introspection.0
5722393418IntrospectionTechnique used by Wilhelm Wundt who asked subjects to accurately record their cognitive reactions to simple stimuli. Through this process, Wundt hoped to examine basic mental processes.1
5722393420FunctionalismTheory described by William James; Examines how the mental processes described by Wilhelm Wundt function in our lives2
5722393424John Watson(1878-1958) Declared that psychology must limit itself to observable phenomena, not unobervable concepts like the unconscious mind, if it is to be considered a science.3
5722393425Ivan Pavlov(1849-1936) Performed pioneering conditioning experiments on dogs; these experiments led to the development of the classical conditioning model of learning.4
5722393426B.F. Skinner(1904-1990) Expanded the basic ideas of behaviorism to include the idea of reinforcement and punishment- environmental stimuli that either encourage or discourage certain responses; helped establish and popularize the operant conditiong model of learning; skinner's intellectual influence lasted for decades5
5722393428Humanist Perspectivethe humanists, including theorists abraham maslow (1908-1970) and carl rogers (1902-1987), stressed individual choice and free will. this contrsts with the deterministic behaviorists who theorized that all behaviors are caused by past conditioning. Humanists believe that we choose most of our behaviors and that these choices are guided by physiological, emotional, or spiritual needs.6
5722393429Psychoanalytic PerspectiveDescribed by Sigmund Freud; psychoanalysts believe the unconscious mind-a part of our mind that we don't have conscious control over or access to-controls much of our thoughts and actions; psychoanalysts would look for impulses or memories pushed into the unconscious mind through repression;psychoanalysts think we must examine our unconscious mind through dream analysis, word association and other psychoanalytic therapy techniques in order to understand human thought and behavior.7
5722393430Biopsychology Perspectivebiopsychologists explain human thought and behavior strictly in terms of biological processes. neuroscientists believe that human cognition and reactions might be caused by effects of our genes, hormones, and neurotransmitters in the brain or by a combination of all three.8
5722393431Evolutionary Perspectiveevolutionary psychologists examine human thoughts and actions in terms of natural selection. Natural selection in this context refers to the idea that some psychological traits might be advatageous for survival and that these traits would be passed down from the parents to the next generation. similar to the bipsychology perspective9
5722393432Behavioral PerspectiveBehaviorists explain human thought and behavior in terms of conditioning (learning). Behaviorists look strictly at observable behaviors and what reaction organisms get in response to specific behaviors. dominant school of thought in psychology from the 1920s through the 1960s.10
5722393433Cognitive Perspectivecognitive psychologists examine human thought and behavior in terms of how we interpret, process and remember environmental events. cognitive psychologists believe that the rules or methods we us to view the world are important to understanding why we think and behave the way we do.11
5722393434Social-Cultural Perspectivesocial-cultural psychologists look at how our thoughts and behaviors vary from people living in other countries. sociocultural psychologists emphasize the influence culture has on the way we think and act. for example, social-cultural psychologists are interested in the emphasis some cultures place on the value of the group (collectivism) or the individual (individualism)12
5722393438HypothesisA statement that expresses a relationship between two variables.13
5722393439TheoryAims to explain some phenomenon and allows researchers to generate testable hypotheses with the hope of collecting data that supports the theory.14
5722393440Operational DefinitionsAn explanation of how variables are measures.15
5722393441ValidityWhen research measures what the researcher set out to measure; it is accurate. A related concept is reliability.16
5722393442ReliabilityWhen research can be replicated and it is consistent. If the researcher conducted the same research in the same way, the researcher would get similar results.17
5722393445Random SelectionA method of selection a sample from a population. Every member of the population has an equal chance of being selected. It increases the likelihood that the sample represents the population and that one can generalize the findings to a larger population.18
5722393447ExperimentThe only research that can show a casual relationship. Allows the researcher to manipulate the independent variable and control the confounding variables. It compares at least two groups: an experimental group and a control group that differ based on the independent variable.19
5722393448Confounding VariablesAny difference between the experimental and control conditions (such as time of day), except for the independent variable, that might affect the dependent variable. Reduced by Random Assignment.20
5722393449Random AssignmentThe process by which participants are put into either an experimental group or a control group. This is used to reduce the effect of confounding variables.21
5722393450Experimenter BiasThe unconscious tendency for researchers to treat member of the experimental and control groups differently to increase the chance of confirming their hypothesis.22
5722393451Double-Blind ProcedureMethod followed by such that neither the participants nor the researcher are aware of who is in the experimental or control groups while the experiment is going on. This controls experimenter bias and participant bias.23
5722393454CorrelationA statistical measure of a relationship between two variables. Does not mean causation.24
5722393455Scatter PlotA graph of correlated data. The closer the points come to failing on a straight line, the stronger the correlation.25
5722393456Survey MethodOften used to gather opinions or attitudes and for correlation research. Involves asking people to fill out a questionnaire.26
5722393457Naturalistic ObservationResearch method that involves observing participants in their natural habitats without interacting with them. The goal is to get a realistic and rich picture of the participants' behavior. Cannot establish cause and effect relationship between variables.27
5722393458Case StudyA research method used to get a full and detailed picture of one participant or a small group of participants. Clinical psychologists often use this to present informations about a person suffering from a particular disorder. Allows researchers to get the richest possible picture of what they are studying, but the focus on a single individual or small group means that the findings cannot be generalized to a larger population.28
5722393459Descriptive StatisticsWays of describing a set of data. Three common measurements are the mean, median and mode.29
5722393461Normal CurveA bell-shaped curve that represents a distribution of scores that is normally distributed. Approximately 68 percent of scores in this fall within one standard deviation of the mean, approximately 95 percent of scores fall within two standard deviations of the mean and almost 99 percent of scores fall within three standard deviations of the mean.30
5722393462Inferential StatisticsStatistics that can determine whether or not findings can be applied to the larger population from which the sample was selected.Statistics that form conclusions about the effect of the independent variable on variations in the dependent variable.31
5722393463Statistical SignificanceScientists have decided that 5% is the cutoff for statistically significant results. This means that in an experiment design, there must be less than a 5% chance that the results occurred by chance.32
5722393464APA Ethical Guidelines for Human ResearchAny type of academic research must first propose the study to the ethics board or institutional review board (IRB) at the institution. Guidelines include: Coercion, Informed consent, Anonymity/confidentiality, Lack of risk, and Debriefing procedures.33
5722393465APA Ethical Guidelines for Animal ResearchEthical psychological studies for animals must meet the following requirements: Have a clear scientific purpose, Care for and house animals in a humane way, Acquire animal subjects legally, Design experimental procedures that employ the least amount of suffering feasible.34
5722393467neuronsindividual nerve cells that make up our entire nervous system35
5722393468dendritesrootlike parts of the nerve cell that stretch out from the cell body; grow to make synaptic connections with other neurons36
5722393469cell body (soma)contains the nucleus and other parts of the cell needed to sustain its life37
5722393470axonwirelike structure ending in the terminal buttons that extends from the cell body38
5722393471myelin sheatha fatty covering around the axon that speeds neural impulses39
5722393472terminal buttonsalso called: end buttons, terminal branches of axon, synaptic knobs. the branched end of the axon that contains neurotransmitter40
5722393474neurotransmitterschemicals contained in terminal buttons that enable neurons to communicate41
5722393475synapsethe space beween the terminal buttons of one neuron and the dendrites of the next neurons42
5722393476action potentialthe local voltage change across the cell wall as a nerve impulse is transmitted43
5722393477function of acetylcholinemotor movement44
5722393478lack of acetylcholineAlzheimer's disease45
5722393479function of dopaminemotor movement and alertness46
5722393480lack of dopamineParkinson's disease47
5722393481overabundance of dopamineschizophrenia48
5722393482function of endorphinspain control; involved in addictions49
5722393483function of serotoninmood control50
5722393484lack of serotoninassociated with clinical depression51
5722393485afferent neuronsneurons that take information from the senses to the brain52
5722393486interneuronsin the brain or spinal cord, neurons that take messages and send them elsewhere in the brain or spinal cord53
5722393487efferent neuronsneurons that take information from the brain to the rest of the body54
5722393488Central Nervous Systemconsists of the brain and spinal cord; nerves encased in bone55
5722393490Peripheral Nervous Systemconsists of nerves not encased in bone. Divided into two categories: somatic and automatic nervous system56
5722393493Somatic Nervous Systemcontrols voluntary muscle movements57
5722393495Autonomic Nervous Systemcontrols the automatic functions of our body. divided into two categories: sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems58
5722393498Sympathetic Nervous Systempart of the Autonomic Nervous System. mobilizes our body to respond to stress59
5722393501Parasympathetic Nervous Systempart of the Autonomic Nervous System. slowing body down after a stress response60
5722393508electroencephalogram (EEG)detects brain waves, used in sleep research61
5722393509Computerized Axial Tomography (CT)a sophisticated 3D X ray of the brain62
5722393510Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)a sophisticated 3D magnetic field image of the brain63
5722393511Portion Emission Tomography (PET)measures how much of a certain chemical parts of the brain is using64
5722393512Functional MRIcombination of MRI and PET65
5722393514medullapart of hindbrain66
5722393515ponspart of hindbrain67
5722393516cerebellumpart of hindbrain. Coordinates our balance and fine muscle movements68
5722393518reticular formationa netlike collection of cells throughout the hindbrain that controls general body arousal and he ability to focus our attention69
5722393520thalamuspart of forebrain70
5722393521hypothalamuspart of forebrain71
5722393522amygdala and hippocampusamygdala--fear; hippocampus- memory72
5722393523limbic systemmade up of thalamus, hypothalamus, amygdala and hippocampus73
5722393527corpus callosumthe nerve bundle that connects the two hemispheres; cut in split-brain patients. Used in treatment of epilepsy.74
5722393528split-brain patientspatients whose corpus callosums have been cut75
5722393530frontal lobespart of the cerebral cortex76
5722393531Broca's areain the frontal lobe77
5722393532motor cortexin the frontal lobe78
5722393533parietal lobescontains sensory cortex (somato-sensory cortex)79
5722393534sensory cortex (somato-sensory cortex)receives incoming touch sensations from the rest of the body80
5722393535occipital lobesat the very back of the brain81
5722393536temporal lobesunlike occipital lobes, sound from either ear is processed in both temporal lobes82
5722393537Wernicke's arealocated in temporal lobe. Processes the understanding of speech.83
5722393538brain plasticitythe ability of other parts of the brain to take over functions of damaged regions. Declines as hemispheres of the cerebral cortex lateralize.84
5722393544ConsciousnessOur level of awareness about ourselves and our environment. This is not an on/off switch. Psychologists refer to different levels and different states of this.85
5722393546SleepA state of consciousness in which we are less aware of ourselves and our environment than we are in our normal awake state. We cycle through different stages of this during the night. Our brain waves and level of awareness change as we cycle through the stages.86
5722393547Sleep CyclesThis is a typical pattern of sleep. Researchers use EEG machines record how active our brains are during sleep. We cycle through different stages of sleep during the night. Our brain waves slow down and our level of awareness lessens as we cycle down from sleep onset through stages 1 to 4. After a period of time in deep stage 3 and 4 sleep, our brains waves start to speed up, and we go back through stages 3 and 2. as we reach stage 1, our brain produces a period of intense activity, our eyes dart back and forth, and many of our muscles may twitch repeatedly. This is REM-rapid eye movement-sleep.87
5722393549REM SleepSometimes called paradoxical since our brain waves appear as active and intense as they do when we are awake. Purposes of REM sleep are not clear, but dreams usually occur in this stage.This stage sleep deprivation interferes with memory. The more stress we experience during the day, the longer our periods of this will be. Babies spend more total time sleeping than we do and they spend more time in this stage. As we age, our total need for sleep declines as does the amount of time we spend in this stage.88
5722393551InsomniaThe most common sleep disorder. They have persistent problems getting to sleep or staying asleep at night. Usually treated with suggestions for changes in behavior: reduction of caffeine or other stimulants, exercise at appropriate times during the day, and maintaining a consistent sleep pattern. They are advised to use sleeping pills only with caution, as they disturb sleep patterns during the night and can prevent truly restful sleep.89
5722393552NarcolepsyA rare sleep disorder, occurring in less than 0.001 percent of the population. They suffer from periods of intense sleepiness and may fall asleep at unpredictable and inappropriate times. They may suddenly fall into REM sleep regardless of what they are doing at the time. They can be successfully treated with medication and a change in sleep patterns.90
5722393553Sleep ApneaMay be almost as common as insomnia. Causes a person to stop breathing for short periods of time during the night. They body causes the person to wake up slightly and gasp for air, and then sleep continues. This process robs the person of deep sleep and causes tiredness and possible interference with attention and memory. Overweight men are at higher risk for this. Can be treated with a respiration machine that provides air for the sleeper.91
5722393554DreamsA series of story-like images we experience as we sleep. A difficult research area for psychologists because they rely almost entirely on self-report. If people are awakened during or shortly after a REM episode, they often report they were dreaming. Validating theories about the purposes and meanings of dreams is difficult because researchers currently have limited access to dreams. During sleep, people are paralyzed in the dream state so they do act out their dreams.92
5722393555Freudian Dream InterpretationAccording to psychoanalysis, a method to uncover the repressed information in the unconscious mind. Freud said that dreams were wish fulfilling, meaning that we act out our unconscious desires in our dreams. Manifest content is the literal content of our dream. Latent content is the unconscious meaning of the manifest content. The ego protects dreamers from the material in the unconscious mind (protected sleep) by presenting these repressed desires in the form of symbols.93
5722393562Psychoactive DrugsChemicals that change the chemistry of the brain (and the rest of the body) and induce an altered state of consciousness. Some of the behavioral and cognitive changes caused by these drugs are due to physiological processes, but some are due to expectations about the drug. All of these drugs change our consciousness through similar physiological processes in the brain. The brain will produce less of a specific neurotransmitter if it is being artificially supplied by a drug.94
5722393563AgonistsDrugs that mimic neurotransmitters. Fit in the receptor sites on a neuron that normally receive the neurotransmitter. Function as that neurotransmitter normally would.95
5722393564AntagonistsDrugs that block neurotransmitters. Fit into receptor sites on a neuron. Instead of acting like the neurotransmitter, they prevent natural neurotransmitter from using the receptor site.96
5722393565ToleranceThe brain will produce less of a specific neurotransmitter if it is being artificially supplied by a psychoactive drug. This physiological change produces tolerance, a need for more of the same drug in order to achieve the same effect. Will eventually cause withdrawal symptoms in users.97
5722393566WithdrawalOccurs as a consequence of drug use. Symptoms vary from drug to drug. Dependence on psychoactive drugs can be psychological, physical, or both. Psychologically dependent individuals feel an intense desire for the drug; they are convinced they need it in order to perform or feel a certain way. Physically dependent individuals have tolerance for the drug, experience symptoms without it and need the drug to avoid the symptoms.98
5722393567StimulantsSpeed up body processes, including autonomic nervous system functions such as heart and respiration rate. This dramatic increase is accompanied by a sense of euphoria. Caffeine, cocaine, amphetamines, and nicotine are some. All of these produce tolerance, withdrawal effects and other side effects.99
5722393568DepressantsSlow down body processes, including our reaction and judgment, by slowing down brain processes. Common ones include alcohol, barbiturates and anxiolytics. Euphoria accompanies the depressing effects of these, and continued use leads to tolerance and withdrawal symptoms.100
5722393569HallucinogensCause changes in perceptions of reality, including sensory hallucinations, loss of identity and vivid fantasies. Common ones are LSD, peyote, psilocybin mushrooms, and marijuana. May remain in the body for weeks. If an individual ingests the hallucinogen again during this time period, the new dose of the chemical is added to the lingering amount, creating more profound and potentially dangerous effects. This effect is sometimes called reverse tolerance. Effects are less predictable than those of stimulants or depressants.101
5722393570OpiatesCommon ones include morphine, heroin, methadone and codeine, all of which are similar in chemical structure to opium. Act as agonists for endorphins and thus are powerful painkillers and mood elevators. Cause drowsiness and a euphoria associated with elevated endorphin levels. Some of the most physically addictive drugs because they rapidly change brain chemistry and create tolerance and withdrawal symptoms.102
5722393571transductionthe process in which signals are transformed into neural impulses103
5722393572cocktail-party phenomenonwhen your attention involuntarily switches (someone calls your name)104
5722393573corneaa protective covering of the eye105
5722393574pupildilates and becomes smaller to allow the right amount of light into your eye106
5722393575lenscurved and flexible in order to focus the light107
5722393576retinaa screen on the back of your eye108
5722393577conescells activated by color109
5722393578rodscells that respond to black and white110
5722393579fovealocated at the center of your retina and contains the highest concentration of cones111
5722393580ganglion cellstheir axons make up the optic nerve that sends visual impulses to the lateral geniculate nucleus in the thalamus112
5722393582blind spotwhere the optic nerve leaves the retina, calls such because has no rods or cones113
5722393583optic chasmthe place nerves from both eyes join and cross over within the brain114
5722393584feature detectorsdiscovered by Hubel and Weisel, nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of the stimulus, such as shape, angle, or movement115
5722393585trichromatic theorythere are three types of cones in the retina (blue, red and green) that activate in different combinations to produce all the colors of the visible spectrum116
5722393586afterimagean image (usually a negative image) that persists after stimulation has ceased117
5722393587opponent-process theorythe theory that opposing retinal processes (red-green, yellow-blue, white-black) enable color vision. For example, some cells are stimulated by green and inhibited by red; others are stimulated by red and inhibited by green. this is supported by the use of afterimages.118
5722393588amplitudethe height of a sound wave, measured in decibels119
5722393589frequencythe length of the waves and determines pitch, measured in megahertz120
5722393590order of sound in your earear canal -> eardrum/tympanic membrane -> hammer (malleus bone) -> anvil (incus bone) -> stirrup (stapes bone) -> oval window -> cochlea (snail's shell filled with fluid) -> hair at bottom of cochlea -> organ of Corti (neurons activated by the hair) -> auditory nerve121
5722393591place theoryhair cells in the cochlea respond to different frequencies of sound based on where they are located in the cochlea122
5722393592frequency theoryplace theory works for high frequency sounds, but not low frequency. hair cells fire at different rates in the cochlea123
5722393594conduction deafnesssomething goes wrong with the system of conducting sound to the cochlea124
5722393595nerve (sensorineural) deafnesswhen the hair cells in the cochlea are damaged, usually by loud noise125
5722393596gate-control theorywhen a higher priority pain message coincides with a lower priority pain message, only the higher one will be felt126
5722393597papillaethe bumps on your tongue127
5722393598olfactory bulbone of two enlargements at the terminus of the olfactory nerve at the base of the brain just above the nasal cavities128
5722393599vestibular sensehow our body is oriented in space129
5722393600kinesthetic sensethe position and orientation of specific body parts130
5722393601absolute thresholdthe smallest amount of stimulus we can detect131
5722393602subliminalstimuli below absolute threshold132
5722393603difference threshold (just-noticeable difference)the smallest amount of change needed in a stimulus before we can detect a change. computed by Weber's law133
5722393605Weber's lawthe change needed to make a noticeable difference to something is proportional to the original intensity of the stimulus134
5722393606signal detection theorya theory predicting how and when we detect the presence of a faint stimulus ("signal") amid background stimulation ("noise"). Assumes there is no single absolute threshold and detection depends partly on a person's experience, expectations, motivation, and level of fatigue.135
5722393610top-down processinginformation processing guided by higher-level mental processes, as when we construct perceptions136
5722393612perceptual seta predisposition to perceiving something in a certain way137
5722393614bottom-up processing (feature analysis)we use only the features of the object itself to perceive it138
5722393615figure-ground relationshipA Gestalt principle of perceptual organization that states that we automatically separate the elements of a perception into the feature that clearly stands out and its less distinct background.139
5722393616constancythe ability to maintain a constant perception of an object despite changes in direct appearance140
5722393617visual cliff experimentcreated by E.J. Gibson, used to determine when infants can perceive depth141
5722393618Muller-Lyer illusiondemonstrates that some perceptual rules are learned from culture142
5722393622Phi PhenomenonThe perception of movement as a result of sequential presentation of visual stimuli143
5722393624Monocular CuesNot dependent on two eyes144
5722393625Binocular CuesDepend on two eyes145
5722393626LearningA long-lasting change in behavior resulting from experience.146
5722393627AcquisitionAcquiring a new behavior147
5722393628ExtinctionWhen the CS no longer elicits the CR.148
5722393629Spontaneous RecoveryAfter a conditioned response has been extinguished, the response briefly reappears upon presentation of the conditioned stimulus.149
5722393630GeneralizationThe tendency to respond to similar conditioned stimuli150
5722393631DiscriminationTo tell the difference between various stimuli.151
5722393632Classical ConditioningA type of learning in which an organism comes to associate a neutral stimulus to a response. Also called Pavlovian or respondent conditioning. Learning based on association of stimuli.152
5722393633Unconditioned StimulusA stimulus that unconditionally—naturally and automatically—triggers a response.153
5722393634Unconditioned ResponseThe unlearned, naturally occurring response to the unconditioned stimulus154
5722393635Conditioned StimulusAn originally irrelevant stimulus that, after association with an unconditioned stimulus, comes to trigger a conditioned response.155
5722393636Conditioned ResponseThe learned response to a previously neutral but now conditioned stimulus.156
5722393638Second-Order or Higher-Order ConditioningOnce a conditioned stimulus elicits a conditioned response, it is possible to use that conditioned stimulus as an unconditioned stimulus in order to condition a response to a new stimulus157
5722393639Learned Taste AversionNegative reaction to a particular taste that has been associated with nausea or other illness.158
5722393640Operant ConditioningLearning based on association of consequences with one's behavior159
5722393641Law of EffectIf the consequences of a behavior are pleasant, the stimulus-response connection will strengthen and the likelihood of the behavior will increase. If the consequences of a behavior are unpleasant, the stimulus-response connection will weaken and the likelihood of the behavior will decrease.160
5722393643Skinner BoxA contraption used to research animal learning of operant conditioning161
5722393644ReinforcerAnything that makes a behavior more likely to occur162
5722393646Positive ReinforcementThe addition of something pleasant163
5722393647Negative ReinforcementThe removal of something unpleasant164
5722393648PunishmentAnything that makes a behavior less likely165
5722393651ShapingReinforces the steps used to reach the desired behavior166
5722393653Primary ReinforcersReinforcers that are rewarding such as food, water, and rest. Their natural properties are reinforcing.167
5722393654Secondary ReinforcersThing we have learned to value such as praise or the chance to play a video168
5722393657Reinforcement SchedulesDetermines when reinforcement is delivered by ratio or interval schedules. Also determines when reinforcement is delivered by a constant (fixed) or changing (variable) schedules.169
5722393659Fixed Interval (FI)Requires that a certain amount of time elapse before a reward will result.170
5722393660Fixed Ratio (FR)Provides reinforcement after a set number of responses.171
5722393661Variable Interval (VI)Requires varying amount of time elapse before a reward will result.172
5722393662Variable Ratio (VR)Provides reinforcement based on a varying number of responses.173
5722393663Continuous ReinforcementRewarding a behavior each time174
5722393666Observational Learning or ModelingPeople and animals learn many things by observing others and imitating175
5722393667Latent LearningLearning that becomes obvious only once a reinforcement is given for demonstrating it.176
5722393668Insight LearningOccurs when one suddenly realizes how to solve a problem; an "AH-HA" moment.177
5722393669Ivan PavlovA Russian researcher in the early 1900s who was the first research learned behavior and discovered classical conditioning.178
5722393670John WatsonConditioned a little boy, Albert, to fear a white rat by pairing the once likable rat to a loud noise.179
5722393671Edward ThorndikeCreated the law of effect by researching operant conditioning.180
5722393672B.F. SkinnerCoined the term operant conditioning and is the best-known psychologist to research this form of learning.181
5722393673Albert BanduraStated that people profit from the mistakes/successes of others by observing Bobo Dolls where adults demonstrated "appropriate" play with dolls and children mimicked play.182
5722393674Memoryany indication that learning has persisted over time183
5722393676Sensory memorythe split-second holding tank for incoming sensory information184
5722393677Iconic memorytype of sensory memory that is a split-second perfect photograph of a scene185
5722393678Echoic memorytype of sensory memory that is a brief (3-4 sec) perfect memory of sounds186
5722393679Selective attentionthe process by which one can pick out different encoding for encoding187
5722393680Short-term/working memorythe information one is currently working with and is aware of in one's consciousness188
5722393681Chunkingthe grouping of information to aid short-term memory (no more than 7 groups)189
5722393682Mnemonic devicesmemory aids190
5722393683Rehearsalthe repetition of information to aid short-term memory191
5722393684Long-term memorypermanent storage of information192
5722393685Episodic memorytype of long-term memory that involves specific events, stored in a sequential series193
5722393686Semantic memorytype of long-term memory that involves general knowledge, stored as facts, meanings, or categories194
5722393687Procedural memorytype of long-term memory that involves the performance of skills, stored sequentially, but complicated to describe with words195
5722393688Explicit/declarative memoriesthe conscious memories of facts or events that we actively try to remember196
5722393689Implicit/nondeclarative memoriesthe unintentional memories we might not realize we have197
5722393692Shallowly/maintenance processedprocessing that involves meaningless rehearsal that leads to short-term retention198
5722393693Deeply/elaborately processingprocessing information in a meaningful way that increases its likelihood of being stored in memory199
5722393694Retrievalthe gathering of information out of memory so that it can be used200
5722393695Recognitiontype of retrieval that is the process of matching a current event or fact with one already in memory201
5722393696Recalltype of retrieval that retrieves a memory with an external cue202
5722393697Primacy effectthe prediction that we are more likely to recall items presented at the beginning of a list203
5722393698Recency effectthe prediction that we are more likely to recall items presented at the end of a list204
5722393699Serial position effect/curvethe prediction that we are more likely to recall items presented at the beginning or the end of a list, but forget items in the middle205
5722393700Tip-of-the-tongue-phenomenonthe temporary inability to remember information206
5722393702Flashbulb memoriesdetailed snapshots of the moment and circumstances surrounding the moment shocking information was heard207
5722393704State-dependent memoryphenomenon where there is a greater likelihood of recalling events while in a particular state of consciousness208
5722393707Decaya cause of forgetting when we do not use a memory or its connections for a long time209
5722393709Interferencea cause of forgetting where other information in your memory competes with what you want to recall210
5722393710Retroactive interferenceinterference where the learning of new information interferes with the recall of older information211
5722393711Proactive interferenceinterference where older information learned interferes with the recall of the more recent information212
5722393712Hippocampuspart of the brain that encodes new memories213
5722393713Anterograde amnesiathe inability to encode new memories214
5722393714Retrograde amnesiathe loss of all memories before the trauma215
5722393716Phonemesthe smallest units of sound used in a language216
5722393717Morphemethe smallest unit of meaningful sound217
5722393718Syntaxthe arrangement of words in a sentence to make sense218
5722393719Language acquisitionthe process by which humans acquire the capacity to communicate in a language219
5722393723Overgeneralization/overregularizationthe misapplication of grammar rules220
5722393724Nativist theory of language acquisitiontheory that children are born with a language acquisition device: Chomsky221
5722393725Language acquisition devicethe part of the brain that allows rapid language learning: Chomsky222
5722393726Linguistic relativity hypothesistheory that the language we use might control or limit our thinking. Language shapes a culture's concepts and thought processes.Whorf223
5722393730Algorithma rule that guarantees the right solution by using a formula224
5722393731Heuristicrule that is generally, but not always true that we can just to make a judgement in a situation225
5722393732Availability heuristicheuristics that involves judging a situation based on examples of similar situations that initially come to mind226
5722393733Representativeness heuristicheuristics that involves judging a situation based on how similar the aspects are to prototypes the person holds in his/her mind227
5722393734Overconfidencethe tendency to overestimate how accurate our judgements are228
5722393737mental setthe tendency to fall into established thought patterns229
5722393738Functional fixednesstype of rigidity that involves the inability to see a new use for an object230
5722393739Confirmation biasbias where we tend to look for evidence that confirms our beliefs and ignore evidence that contradicts what we think is true231
5722393740Framingthe way a problem is presented232
5722393825Manifest Contentaccording to Freud, the remembered story line of a dream233
5722393826Latent Contentaccording to Freud, the underlying meaning of a dream234
5722393841FloodingA behavioral technique used to treat phobias in which the client is presented with the feared stimulus until the associated anxiety disappears. Clients address their most frightening scenario first.235
5722393842Aversive Conditioninga type of counterconditioning that associates an unpleasant state (such as nausea) with an unwanted behavior (such as drinking alcohol).236
5722393843Token Economyan operant conditioning procedure in which people earn a token of some sort for exhibiting a desired behavior and can later exchange the tokens for various privileges or treats.237
5745012338Linear PerspectiveMonocular Depth Cue used to make judgments of distance238
5745021010Endorphinsincreases feeling of energy and happiness; well being239
5745081063Cognitive Mapmental image of spatial layout240
5745094838meta-analysisanalyzing the results of several other studies compared to your study results.241
5745126017sensory interactionthe combination of senses working together i.e. smell and taste242
5745160949Self-Reference Effectpersonally relevant information leads to better recall in memory243
5745197772Primingis an implicit memory effect in which exposure to one stimulus (i.e., perceptual pattern) influences the response to another stimulus.244
5745234307Supertasterperson who experiences the sense of taste with far greater intensity than average, with some studies shown an increased sensitivity to bitter tastes.245

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