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Psychology

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Study Guide for DSM-IV-TR Disorders

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Study Guide for DSM-IV Disorders By Karen Smith 2 | P a g e Table of Contents Clinical and Personality Disorders Outline .............................................................................................................................................. 2 Other Conditions That Be a Focus on Clinical Attention................................................................................................................. 11 Axis I Disorders ................................................................................................................................................................................................ 12

Psychology Psych-Outs

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Psych Psych-Outs Helpful Mnemonics for the AP Psychology Exam Glia- Glue of nutrition Neuron (Interpreted Dance)- Dendrites, Soma, Axon, Terminal Buttons, Synapse, Receptor Sites Neural Impulse- (Toilet) Action Potential= Firing or Flushing Refractory Period= Recharging or Refilling of toilet water Resting Potential= Ready to fire All or None Principle- Fires or doesn?t at the same intensity (toilet flushing doesn?t flush faster if you push the handle harder?) Reuptake- Slurp Acetylcholine- Attention Arousal Memory Dopamine- Sell Dope at the Park. Dope makes you feel good, Park Parkinson Disease low levels Norepinephrine- Norma has PMS= mood & arousal Serotonin- Ninja Turtles live in the SEWA Sleep Eating Wakefulness Aggression

A+ psych notes

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Chapter 2: States of consciousness Characteristics of consciousness 3/8/11 VCE Psychology Units 3 & 4 Introducing consciousness ?? Consciousness has many variations ?there are lots of different levels of awareness as well as variations in the way individuals experience them. ?? There is no precise location for each state of consciousness? consciousness should rather be viewed as a continuum. ?? Despite the lack of definition between these states, there are qualities that distinguish between different states of consciousness. 3/8/11 How to measure? ?? Consciousness is referred to as a psychological construct. ?? What is a psychological construct? 3/8/11 Determining state of consciousness Individual information provided Behaviour

Essay jung and freud contrast personality theories

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Compare and contrast two personality theories. On the evidence supplied which do you believe gives a better account of human nature? Two of the pioneers in personality theory were Sigmund Freud and the man who at one time was his student Carl Jung. The empirical evidence of their theories is mostly clinical, from their own observations of people from the standpoint of a physician. As some of Jung?s theory stems from Freud?s concepts, there is some overlap but Freud had a biological focus on personality whereas Jung was mythical with ideas such as the collective unconscious. By comparing and contrasting the two theories, a judgment can be made as to one's preferred personality theory.

COMPLETE AP PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW

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Psychological Statistics

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Part I of the Study Guide for Explaining Psychological Statistics, Third Edition by Barry H. Cohen Chapter 1 Introduction to Psychological Statistics Measurement Scales Nominal B Observations are assigned to categories that differ qualitatively, but have no quantitative order (e.g., depressed, phobic, obsessive, etc.). Ordinal B The values have an order that can be represented by numbers, but the numbers cannot be used mathematically, because the intervals may not be equal (e.g., assigning ranks according to the ability of gymnasts on a team). Interval B One unit on this scale is the same size anywhere along the scale, so values can be treated mathematically (e.g., averaged), but zero on the scale does

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