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psych 1 junior college
first midterm
57
Psychology
Not Applicable
09/30/2012

Additional Psychology Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
What is psychology?
Definition
The scientific study of behavior and mental processes
Term
What is psuedoscience?
Definition
Claim presented as scientific but lacks supporting evidence.
Term
Structuralist
Definition
the "WHAT"
Term
Functionalist
Definition
the "HOW" & "WHY"
Term

(six major psychological perspective)

Behaviorist Perspective

Definition
how the environment and experience control behavior
Term

 

Cognitive Perspective

(six major psychological perspectives)

Definition
mental processes in perception, memory, language, & problem solving
Term

Sociocultural

(six major psychological perspectives)

Definition
social and cultural influences on behavior
Term

Psychdynamic Perspective

(six major psychological perspectives)

Definition
unconscious dynamics within the individual
Term

Humanistic Perspective

(six major psychological perspectives)

 

Definition

Human potential

(people are inheritably good)

Term
What is eclectic approach?
Definition
combination of different perspectives
Term
Five basic tenets of the scientific approach.
Definition
Empirical, Replicable, Self-Correcting, Solvable Problems, and Probabilistic
Term

What is determinism?

 

Definition
Everything is caused by some identifiable factors
Term
Three characteristics of a good theory.
Definition
Testable, Parsimony, and Fruitfulness.
Term
What is a hypothesis?
Definition
A prediction or statement about the relation between two (or more) variables.
Term
Operational definition
Definition

A definition of a variable in terms of the actual procedures used by the researcher to measure or manipulate it.

 

Term
What is reliability? Identify two types.
Definition

Reliability is the consistency or dependability of direct and indirect observations.

TWO TYPES: inter-rater & test-retest

Term
What is validity? Identify two types of validity.
Definition

Validity is the extent to which information produced by research or testing accurately measures the psychological variable it was inteneded to measure.

TWO TYPES: content and criterion

Term
Understand how to determine the strength and direction of a correlation coefficient.
Definition
The sign determines the direction (-/+) and the number determines the strength.
Term
Identify examples of positive and negative correlations
Definition

positive correlations= /

negative correlations=\

zero correlations=     -

Term
Understand fundamental difference between correlation and experimental studies.
Definition

Correlation implies a relationship between two variables.

Experiments(CAUSE) tend to refer to how the data was collected.

CORRELATION IS NOT CAUSATION!

Term
Difference between  random assignment and random sampling.
Definition

Random assignment increases INTERNAL validity.

Random sampling increases EXTERNAL validity.

Term
Identify the independent and dependent variable.
Definition

Independent: the alleged cause of events

Dependent:the alleged effect, the outcome, the variable the experimenter measures

Term
Phineas Gage's story; revelance to biological perspective and how is injury affected his psychological functioning.
Definition

Gage's story shows how physical and chemical changes in the body are involved in our our behaviors and mental processes.

He had damage to medial prefrontal lobes. Profound negative changes in emotions/personality, reliability/dependability

Term
What is the central nervous system? the peripheral nervous system?
Definition

CNS: the network of nerves contained within the brain and spinal cord.

PNS:The network of nerves that radiate from the CNS to the rest of the body.

Term

Somatic nervous system

(within the peripheral nervous system)

Definition
Transmits signals from the sensory organs to and from the CNS to the skelatal muscles.
Term

Autonomic nervous system

(within the peripheral nervous system)

Definition
Connects the CNS to the internal muscles, organs, and glands.
Term

Sympathetic Nervous System

(within the peripheral nervous system)

Definition
heightens arousal and energizes the body for action (arousing)
Term

Parasympathetic Nervous System

(within the peripheral nervous system)

Definition
reduces arousal and returns body to its pre-energized state. (calming)
Term
What is the endocrine system and what are the hormones?
Definition
Collection of galnds that regulate aspects of growth, reproduction, metabolism, and behavior by secreting hormones. Hormones are chemical messengers.
Term
Three types of neurons and how they work together.
Definition
sensory, motor, and inter- neurons all work together to send signal s to the brain.
Term
What are the glial cells?
Definition
Nervous systems cells  that provide the structural support, insulation, and nutrients to the neurons
Term
Order with which a neural impulse travels through the neuron.
Definition
Dendrites>cell body(soma)>Axon>Myelith Sheath> Terminal buttons
Term
chemical charge inside the neuronal cell membrane when the neuron is at rest, the charge at threshold, and what is meant by action potential.
Definition

-Neuron at "rest": -70mv

-Neuron at Threshold: -50 mv

-Action potential: an electrical impulse that surges along the axon

Term

Three types of neurotranmitters and their primamry function.

 

Definition

-Acetylcholine: most concentrated in parts of the brain that control motor activity

-Dopamine: Also linked to muscle activity

-Endorphins: A morphine-like neurotransmitter that is produced by the brain

Term

Limbic system 1 of 3

(thalamus, amygdala, hippocampus, hypothalamus)

Definition
plays a role in motivation, emotion, and memory
Term

Brain stem 1 of 3

(medulla, pons, reticular formation, cerebellum)

Definition
primitive "inner core" that controls life support functions
Term

Cerebral cortex (1 of 3)

Definition
outermost covering of the brain, largely responsible for higher-order mental processes
Term
What is absolute threshold? The difference threshold?
Definition

Absolute threshold: The smallest amount of stimulation that can be reliably detected

Difference threshold: The smallest amount of change or difference between two stimuli that can be reliably detected.

Term

Why is signal detection theory  an important approach to measuring thresholds?

 

Definition
Separates true sensitivity to sensory stimuli(sensation) from the decision process
Term
What is transduction?
Definition
the process by which raw energy is converted into sensory neural impulses
Term

THE EYE

Lens

Definition
a transparent structure in the eye that focuses light on the retina
Term

THE EYE

Definition
Clear outer membrane that bends light so it is sharply focused in the eye
Term

THE EYE

Iris

Definition
ring of muscle tissue that gives eyes their color and controls the size of the pupil
Term

THE EYE

Pupil

Definition
the small round hole in the iris through which light passes
Term

THE  EYE

Retina

Definition
the rear multi-layered part of the eye where rods and cones convert light into neural impulses
Term

THE EYE

Rods

Definition
retina cells that are highly sensitive to light. Responsible for vision at low light levels.
Term

THE EYE

Cones

Definition

retina cells that are highly sensitive to color.

Active at higher light levels

Term

THE EYE

Fovea

Definition
The center of the retina where cones are clustered.
Term

THE EYE

Optic Nerve

Definition
the pathway  that carries visual information from the eyeball to the brain.
Term

THE EYE

Blind Spot

Definition
part of retina through which optic nerve passes. Contains only axons- no rods and cones. Not reposnsive to light.
Term
Order which light passes through the eye.
Definition
cornea - aqueous humor - iris - lens - vitreous humor - retina
Term
Two  organizational processes in perception
Definition

 

1.Identification

2.Recognition

or

1.Interpretation

2.Mean-making

 

 

Term
How our attentional processes and the Gestalt laws of grouping influence how we organize stimuli
Definition

We automatically focus on some objects in the perceptual field to the exclusion of others.

 

Term
Two identification and recognition procceses in perception under stand the difference between bottom-up and top-down processing  
Definition

Interpreting and making meaning of the stimuli we have sensed and organized.

Bottom-up processing

Interpretation of stimuli based entirely on

the sensory data available in the environment (data-driven)

 

Term
Understand the difference between bottom-up and top-down processing 
Definition

Bottom-up processing:

Interpretation of stimuli based entirely on

the sensory data available in the environment (data-driven)

 

Top-down processing:

Interpretation of stimuli based upon the context, your past experiences, knowledge, motivation, and cultural background. 

Term
How does top-down processing help us to interpret ambiguity?
Definition
Top-down  processes make use of context and our expectations and our expectations and can helpwith interpretation.
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