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PSYC 1000: Final Exam

Psychodynamic
how behavior springs from unconscious drives and conflicts
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Behaviorist
how we learn from observable responses
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Ivan Pavlov and John Watson
(Little Albert) classical conditioning; stimulus-response
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B.F. Skinner
operant conditioning
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Cognitive
study of brain activity linked with cognition, including perception, thinking, memory and language
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Humanistic
significant perspective that emphasizes growth potential of healthy people
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Naturalistic Observation
observing and recording behavior in natural habitat, not manipulating anything
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Case study
one person is studied in depth in hope of revealing universal principle
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Experimental group
group exposed to treatment
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Control group
group not exposed to treatment
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Independent variable
the experimental factor that is manipulated (variable's effect being studied)
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Dependent variable
outcome factor; variable changed in response to manipulation of independent variable
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Limbic system controls...
emotions, instincts, memories
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Cerebellum controls...
balance and coordination
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Thalamus is...
relay station for information
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Hypothalamus 4 F's
feeding, fight or flight and sexual motivation
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Cell body
receives messages from dendrites and controls nucleus
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Dendrite
branch-like fibers that receive messages from other neurons
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Axon
sends messages away to next nerve cell
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Synapse
space between axon and dendrites
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Endorphins
elevate mood, erases pain
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Dopamine
movement
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Reuptake
when excess neurotransmitters are reabsorbed by synapse
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Frontal lobe
executive functioning, emotions, conciousness
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Parietal lobe
spatial processing, somatosensory, strip-part of parietal lobe, sensation of touch
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Occipital lobe
vision
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Temporal lobe
hearing (midbrain), sensory processing (thalamus), four F's (hypothalamus), learning and memory (hippocampus) emotion and memory (amygdala), motor control (basal ganglia), hearing
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Broca's Aphasia
could sing and shout but could not speak, had damage to left hemisphere (Broca's region)
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Right hemisphere
creativity, rhythm, pictures, faces
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Left hemisphere
logical, rational, reason, words
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Insomnia
most common, people have trouble falling asleep or staying asleep
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Narcolepsy
alert and awake to cycling down into REM sleep uncontrollably
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Somnambulism
sleep walking
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Night terrors
don't typically remember episodes; nightmares but magnified
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Sleep apnea
people stop breathing during course of sleep, obesity or alcoholism
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Kohlberg's Moral Development: Preconventional
obeying authority, gaining rewards and avoiding punishment
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Kohlberg's Moral Development: Conventional
moral decisions include internalized values and bases on society's values (fitting in, doing what is "best" for society), usually highest stage
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Kohlberg's Moral Development: Post-conventional
moral decisions based on reflection of one's own justice, relativism
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Piaget- Cognitive Development: Sensorimotor
birth-2 years; develop object awareness/permanence, little capacity for symbolic representation
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Piaget- Cognitive Development: Preoperational
2-7 years; problems with reasoning (glass of water), egocentrism- can only understand their own view points
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Piaget- Cognitive Development: Concrete Operational
7-11 years; develop ability for logical reasoning, problems of preop. stage disappear
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Piaget- Cognitive Development: Formal Operational
12 and up; able to engage in abstract thinking, hypothesizing and philosophical thinking
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Permissive
no consequences for behavior, allow inappropriate decision-making, give too much materially, cannot deal with child's anger at them
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Authoritarian
overly harsh punishment, rigid environment, strict rules without input from child
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Authoritative
reasonable expectations and standards, able to apologize and admit wrong doing when appropriate
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Human egg contains
X chromosome
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Human sperm contains
Y chromosome
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Gender role
society's expectation
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Gender typing
men are aggressive, women are emotional
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Social learning theory
gender differences exist because boys and girls are treated differently from birth
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Traditional approach (top-down processing)
perception constructed by cognition
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Direct approach (bottom-up processing)
perception directs cognition
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Type A personality
ambitious, time conscious, stressed, workaholics
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Type B personality
relaxed, less competitive, slow to anger
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Psychodynamic Theory- Freud
personality is triggered by our unconscious: a force within us of which we are not aware
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Unconscious contains:
all that has happened to us, all inherited materials, deep urges and passions, unresolved issues from childhood
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ID
deepest level of our personality (sexual and aggressive urges), pleasure principle
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Ego
balances ID impulses with reality of society, tries to satisfy ID without upsetting superego
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Superego
represents rights and wrongs as taught by significant people, develops during phallic stage of development (Freud says boys have stronger superego)
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What are the defense mechanisms?
denial, repression, projection, rationalization, regression, reaction-formation, displacement, sublimation
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Denial
denying some reality
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Repression
push pain into unconscious
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Projection
when we blame someone else for what we are really guilty of
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Rationalization
when we make excuses or try to justify things
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Regression
psychologically retreat to earlier, happier time in life
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Reaction-formation
taking some unacceptable urge, impulse or desire and turning it into it's opposite
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Displacement
taking out urges or desires on someone/thing that isn't the cause of urge
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Sublimation
when we take some unacceptable urge, impulse or desire and we channel it into something that is acceptable
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The "Big 5" (OCEAN)
openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, neuroticism
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Informational influence
conforming because you think group has right beliefs/ideas
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Normative influence
influenced by wanting to fit it with peers
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Foot-in-the-door
start off with a really appealing offer, then tack on additional prices
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Door-in-the-face
start off with really expensive or demanding request, then decrease expense or demand
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What was outcome of Milgram's "following orders" study?
people really obey authority figures, we feel compelled to do what they ask
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Bystander effect
the more people that are around the less likely anyone individual is to help
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What were the effects of role playing in Zimbardo's prison study?
long term incarceration can be damaging to roles
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Cognitive dissonance theory
we don't like to feel like hypocrites; we like to believe that our attitudes and behaviors co-exist; creates uncomfortable feeling when you have belief or value and don't live up to it, either change behavior or value
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Self-perception theory
when internal cues are weak or difficult to interpret, people infer what they think/feel based on how they behave and the situation
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