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biochemistry

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Advanced Placement Biology/Biochemistry Test? 1. The monomer of a polysaccharide is called a(n) _______________. 2. Fatty acids containing at least one double or triple covalent bonds between its????? carbons is called a(n) _______________ fatty acid. 3. The _______________ structure of a protein describes the overall shape formed????? by?several polypeptide chains?which compose the protein. ?4. The amino acid sequence of a polypeptide chain best describes the?????? _______________ structure of the polypeptide chain. 5. The monomer of a polypeptide is called a(n) _______________. 6. The overall three dimensional shape of a protein best describes its _________________________.. 7. The polysaccharide _______________ is a component of cell walls in plants.

Body Systems

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The Nervous System Function: The function of the nervous system is to control and coordinate functions throughout the body and respond to external and internal stimuli. The nervous system is divided into 2 parts the PNS (peripheral nervous system) and the CNS (central nervous system), and is in control of both. Nerve signals are transmitted through these systems. Interdependence: The nervous system relies on the muscular system to work properly. Organism Comparison: A flatworm?s nervous system is simpler compared to humans. It has nerve cords that control its actions. The Skeletal System

AP Psychology Therapy/Treatment Outline

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Joshua Kohan AP Psychology Therapy/Treatment Outline Therapy Psychotherapy- an emotionally charges, confiding interaction between a trained therapist and someone who suffers from psychological difficulties Eclectic Approach- an approach to psychotherapy that, depending on the client?s problems, uses or integrates techniques from various forms of therapy (also know as psychotherapy integration ? Psychoanalysis Psychoanalysis- Freud believed the patient?s free associations, resistances, dreams, and transferences- and the therapist?s interpretations of them- released previously repressed feelings, allowing the patient to gain self-insight Resistance- blocking from consciousness of anxiety-laden material

AP Psychology Emotion Outline

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Emotion Outline Emotion- a response of the whole organism Physiological arousal Expressive behaviors Conscious experience Emotional Arousal Autonomic nervous system controls physiological arousal Arousal and Performance- Performance peaks at lower levels of arousal for difficult tasks, and at higher levels for easy or well-learned tasks. ? Emotion-Lie Detectors Polygraph- machine that is commonly used in attempt to detect lies; measures several of the physiological responses accompanying emotion (i.e. perspiration, heart rate, blood pressure, breathing changes0 Control Question Up to age 18, did you ever physically harm anyone? Relevant Question Did the deceased threaten to harm you in any way? RELEVANT > CONTROL ! LIE Is 70% accuracy good?

The Story of Psychology

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PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition) David Myers PowerPoint Slides Aneeq Ahmad Henderson State University Worth Publishers, ? 2006 Thinking Critically with Psychological Science Chapter 1 Thinking Critically with Psychological Science The Need for Psychological Science The limits of Intuition and Common Sense The Scientific Attitude The Scientific Method Thinking Critically ? Description The Case Study The Survey Naturalistic Observation Thinking Critically ? Correlation Correlation and Causation Illusory Correlation Perceiving Order in Random Events Thinking Critically ? Experimentation Exploring Cause and Effect Evaluating Therapies Independent and Dependent Variables Thinking Critically ? Statistical Reasoning Describing Data Making Inferences FAQs About Psychology

Special Populations

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Nikki Dyer ADCT 13 Final Paper Endless Battle Aids is a battle that just doesn?t stop, it is however being examined and every day it seems like something new is developing to cure the disease or at least help people who are HIV positive live a healthy and normal life. Aids/HIV first started to appear in the mid to late 1970?s, however no one knew what it was or how to treat and care for it. It wasn?t until the 1980?s that people were showing up with Kaposi?s sarcoma before it was showing up in younger people KS were found more in older people, By the time it was 1981 there were 8 or more cases of aggressive forms of KS appearing in young gay men in New York.

AP Biology Macromolecules

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Macromolecules Macromolecules The topic of macromolecules lends itself well to illustrate three integral themes woven throughout the text and course: There is a natural hierarchy of structural level in biological organization As one moves up the hierarchy, new properties emerge because of interactions among subunits at the lower levels Form fits function. Most macromolecules are polymers Polymer = (Poly = many; mer = part) Large molecule consisting of many identical or similar subunits connected together. Monomer = Subunit or building block molecule of a polymer. Macromolecule = (Macro large) Large organic polymer. Formation of macromolecules from smaller building block molecules represents another level in the hierarchy of biological organization.

Genetics Pierce 1E Test Bank Ch 1

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Introduction to Genetics Chapter 1 Chapter 1 Introduction to Genetics Matching Key advances and evolution of the science of genetics: for questions 1-8, match the scientist?s name to the proposed theory and experimental findings. 1. Matthias Jacob Schleiden (b) a. Theory of evolution through selection 2. Theodor Schwann (b) b. Cell theory 3. Charles Darwin (a) c. Observation of chromosome division and mitosis 4. Walther Flemming (c) d. Germ-plasm theory 5. August Weismann (d) e. Experiments with plants on the principles of heredity 6. Gregor Mendel (e) f. Experiments with fruit flies on transmission genetics 7. Walter Sutton (f) g. Discovery of DNA structure 8. James Watson and Francis Crick (g)

Ap bio chapter 23 notes

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August 2013 Chapter 23 The Evolution of Populations 23.1 Population genetics provides a foundation for studying evolution Darwin and Mendel were contemporaries of the 19th century At the time both were unappreciated for their work Microevolution ? the generation-to-generation change in the population?s frequencies on alleles The Modern Synthesis The turning point for revolutionary theory was the development of population genetics Population Genetics ? Study on how a population changes over time Emphasizes genetic variation and recognizes the importance of quantitative characters Gene Pools and Allele Frequencies A population?s gene pool is defined by it?s allele frequencies (quantity of alleles in a population) Population ? a group of organism that belong to the same species

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