Term
Mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating |
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Definition
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Term
Mental groupings of similar objects, events, and people |
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Definition
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Term
What does the concept dog include? |
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Definition
Properties that are common to all or most dogs - a furry, four-legged, medium sized animal that barks. Collies, cocker spaniels, and German shepherds are common examples. Of course, individual dogs vary in size, coat, color, temperament, and many other features. But the concept dog allows us to distinugish at a glance an indivdual animal from members of other categories, such as cat |
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Term
________ provide a way of grouping or categorizing experiences so that encounters with something new need not be suprising |
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Definition
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Term
Can we change our concepts over time? |
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Definition
yes, we do this through our experiences |
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Term
Give an example of how a concept can change |
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Definition
Before you got to college you thought of professors as monotonous, old guys with classes, leather patches on tweed jackets, but now that we are in college our concept has changed to one that is more varied |
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Term
How can concepts be organized into hierarchies? |
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Definition
With the narrowest category at the bottom and the most general at the top |
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Term
Give an example of how concepts can be organized into heirarchies |
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Definition
Mammals - dogs - working dogs - hounds - beagles |
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Term
T/F Concepts are clear cut and easily defined |
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Definition
False They are often fuzzy and overlap with each other |
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Term
Give an example of how concepts can be fuzzy |
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Definition
Most people can tell a mouse from a rat, but few can give you an accurate list of the critical differences between mice and rates |
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Term
If we cannot explain the difference between a mouse and a rat, how can we use these fuzzy concepts in our thinking? |
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Definition
One possibility is that we construct a model, or prototype |
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Term
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Definition
mental image or best example of a category |
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Term
Give an example of a prototype |
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Definition
Bird --> there are certain birds that are prototypical (crow, sparrow), not many of us think of penguin or ostritch when we think "bird" |
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Term
NOTE A prototype doesn't have all the characteristcs of the concept, but the most general |
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Definition
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Term
NOTE: Our brains are constantly processing vast amounts of info in very little time. Our cognitive system is frugal in its processing. IT specializes in mental shortcuts. With relatively little effort, we form impressions, make jusdgements, invent explanations for behavior. |
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Definition
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Term
How do we form impressions, make judgements, etc in so little time with little effort? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
simple, efficient, thinking strategies (like guesstimating) |
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Term
Give an example to show that our snap judgements are adaptive |
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Definition
if you are walking through the woods and you see a snake that is red, yellow, and black, you can't think of the helpful poem, so you just run in the opposite diection, you made a quick snap decision that aided in your survival |
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Term
NOTE: Your brain's purpose is to keep you alive, not to make you right (eg in the snake example) |
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Definition
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Term
Does our haste mean we sometimes make mistakes? |
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Definition
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Term
Juding the likelihood of things in terms of how well they seem to represent, or match, particular prototypes; may lead one to ignore other relavent info |
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Definition
representativeness heuristic |
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Term
What is an example of representativeness heuristic? |
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Definition
A panel of psychologists interviewed a sample of 30 engineers and 70 lawyers and summarized their impressions in thumbnail descriptions. The following description was drawn at random:
“Twice divorced, Frank spends most of his free time hanging around the country club. His clubhouse bar conversations often center around his regrets at having tried to follow in his father’s footsteps. The long hours he had spent at academic drudgery would have been better invested in learning how to be less quarrelsome in his relations with other people. “
Do you think Frank is most likely a lawyer or an engineer?
Based on the math alone you should think he is a lawyer because there were more
But if the numbers were reversed it wouldn’t phase you, math doesn’t matter |
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Term
Estimating the likelihood of events based on their avaliability in memory; if instances come readily to mind, we presume such events are common |
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Definition
the availavility heuristic |
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Term
For the most part does the availability heuristic produce correct answers? |
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Definition
yes
you can think of more instances because there are more to think of |
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Term
What is the probelm with the availability heuristic? |
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Definition
biases can increase or decrease the availability to some kinds of objects of events without altering their actual overall frequency |
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Term
Give an example of how the availability heuristic fails to work |
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Definition
When you ask a college psych major how many students are psych majors they are over to overestimate the number of students because many of your own aquaintances are psych majors |
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Term
Tendency to be more confident than correct - to overestimate the accuracy of one's beleif's and judgements |
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Definition
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Term
Overconfidence is also senn in the planning fallacy, which is .... |
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Definition
our tendency to believe thatwe can get more done in a given amount of time that we actually can |
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Term
Does planning fallacy occur even if one has experienced negative conseqeunces previously from doing so? |
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Definition
yes, we don't use our past to help us plan |
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Term
Give an example of planned fallacy |
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Definition
In a study by Buehler, 37 students were asked to predict completion times for their senior theses; the average estimate was 33.9 days
only 29.7% completed the task in the time predicted
the average was 55.5 days |
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Term
A flexible system of symbols that allows us to communicate our ideas, thoughts, and feelings to others |
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Definition
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Term
_________ has long been considered a defining feature of human cognition |
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Definition
language
also body beautification |
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Term
T/F All animals communicate |
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Definition
True
Humpback whale songs, honeybees dance |
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Term
T/F Humans are the only animals who use language |
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Definition
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Term
How does human language differ from non-human animal communication? |
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Definition
nonhuman animals communicate primarily through signs
language uses displacement
language is productive |
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Term
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Definition
general communications about animal's current state (mating calls or signs of distress) |
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Term
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Definition
yes, but we are not liminted to sings in order to communicate with each other |
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Term
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Definition
communicating about something beyond here and now
humans can talk about things in the future, past, palces far away, etc
animals can't do this |
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Term
Our ability of displacement underlies __________ |
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Definition
critcal thinking (if I do thinks, what is likely to occur?) |
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Term
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Definition
ability to add new communication
animals canoot change their signs, but humans can (make new words, etc) |
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Term
the basic sound units of a language that indicate changes in meaning |
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Definition
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Term
Howmany phonems are there in the English language? |
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Definition
45 (others have up to 85) |
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Term
NOTE: Which sounds are meaningful depends on the language |
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Definition
In English, s and z are phonemes
Sip and Zip mean different things
But when a Spanish person hears these two phonemes they can't hear a difference |
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Term
The smallest meaningful units of speech, such as simple words, prefixes, and suffixes |
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Definition
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Term
We can use phonemes to produce different morphemes.
What can we make out of the phonemes D,N,E? |
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Definition
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Term
Just as there are rules for joining phonemes and morphemes, there are also rules for structuring sentences and their meaning. These rules are what lingusists call grammar = |
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Definition
the language rules that determine how sounds and words can be combined and used to communicate meaning within a language |
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Term
The two major components of grammar are: |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
rules for arranging words into grammatical phrases and sentences |
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Term
T/F In most languages the order of words in the sentences makes it have meaning |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
criteria for assigning meaning to morphemes and words |
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Term
What are the two layers of analysis of semantics? |
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Definition
surface strucure
deep structure |
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Term
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Definition
the actual words and phrases you used in the sentence
What the sentence is made up of |
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Term
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Definition
the underlying meaning of the sentence |
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Term
NOTE: You can get across the same deep structure by using different surface strctures)
Give an example of this. |
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Definition
The ocean is unusually calm tonight
The ocean is calmer tonight than it is on most nights |
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Term
What are the stges of language development? |
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Definition
prelinguistic stage cooing stage babbling stage one word stage two word stage |
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Term
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Definition
only way to communication is to cry when you are a baby
3 basic cries: hunger, anger, pain |
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Term
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Definition
vowel-like sounds infants product beginning around 2-3 months |
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Term
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Definition
4-6 months vowel-consonant combination that infants begin to produce (mama, dada, baba) |
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Term
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Definition
begins around 1 year
true, real words
baby starts to realize that sound is related to meaning, now they are trying to get across messages |
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Term
What is a very common mistake in the one-word stage? |
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Definition
overextension
overly broad use of a word to include objects that do not fit word's meaning |
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Term
Give an example of overextension |
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Definition
all animals are doggies
all men are daddy |
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Term
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Definition
starts around 2 years
most kids are using short but understandable sentences by linking together 2 words
leave out all the niceties, but getting message across
telegraphic speech
overgeneralization |
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Term
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Definition
two or three word sentences of young children that contain only most necessary words |
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Term
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Definition
applying rules of grammar to cases that are exception to the rule |
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Term
Give an example of overgeneralization |
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Definition
To indicate more than one, you add s
They might say mans, instead of men
they are leaning because no one has said mans to them, but they are applying the rule
they have not learned the exceptions to the rules yet |
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Term
General capacity to profit from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to changes in the envrioment |
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Definition
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Term
What are the theories for general intelligence? |
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Definition
spearman's two-factor theory thurstone and group factors |
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Term
Spearman's Two-Factor Theory |
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Definition
He suggested that there is a general intelligence factor, it is a singular concept, which he called g
that's why researcher saw agreements between different cognitive tests - they were all measuring different aspects of g
intelligence test scores also included measurement error and S - specific factor related to test
there is a general intelligence level |
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Term
Thurstone and Group Factors |
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Definition
Thurstone said that there were aspects of intelligence that were at least partly independent of g. He called them group factors. So while two people could have the same level of g, they perform very differently on a number of specific factors |
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Term
What were Thurstone's 7 group factors? |
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Definition
verbal comprehension word fluency number space associative memory perceptual speed reasoning |
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Term
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Definition
general vocab, language abilities
can you get meaning from reading passages? size of vocab |
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Term
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Definition
ability to quickly generate/manipulate a large number of words with specific characteristics |
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Term
Give examples of word fluency |
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Definition
rhyming words homonyms animals that start with G |
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Term
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Definition
quickly perform math operations (adding numbers in your head) |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
ability to read a map roatating 3-D objects in your head |
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Term
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Definition
quickly memorise information, rote memory |
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Term
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Definition
how quickly you can process visual information |
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Term
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Definition
rational, scientific thought |
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Term
NOTE: Thurstone thought that simply thinking of intelligence as this g, this single construct, would make you overlook important distinctions that certain people have different levels of abilities in these certain areas |
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Definition
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Term
What are the two contemporary intelligence theories? |
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Definition
Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intellgences
Sternberg's Triarchic Model |
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Term
Why was Howard Gardner dissatisfied with traditional IQ test? |
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Definition
becyase he said that they only assessed intelligence in two areas - lingusihtic and logical-mathematical |
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Term
What other 6 areas of intelligence did Gardner add in his Theory of Multiple Intelligences? |
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Definition
Linguistic intelligence logial-mathematical spatial musical body-kinesthetic naturalist interpersonal intrapersonal |
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Term
|
Definition
verbal abilties (reading comprehension) |
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Term
Logical-Mathematical Intelligence |
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Definition
math abilties (understanding mathematical concepts) |
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Term
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Definition
abiltiy to form spatial images and find ones way around enviroments |
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Term
Give an example of spatial intelligence |
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Definition
sailors who cna sail around islands by bodily influences |
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Term
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Definition
ability to percieve and create pitch and rhythm |
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Term
Body-Kinesthetic Intelligence |
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Definition
gift of fine motor movement
(doctors, dances, atheletes) |
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Term
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Definition
ability to understand natural phenomena (Jane Goodall, farmers) |
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Term
Interpersonal Intelligence |
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Definition
understanding others
(politicians, therapists) |
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Term
Intrapersonal Intelligence |
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Definition
understanding yourself, your own motivations |
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Term
Why is Gardner's concept unique? |
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Definition
Because he claims independent existance for different intelligences in the human neural system
He points to the existance of sevants for proof of his assertion |
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Term
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Definition
a condition in which a person otherwise limited in mental ability has an exceptional specific skill (Rain Man) |
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Term
Sternberg's Triarchi Model arranges abilties into 3 main components: |
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Definition
Analytical Intelligence Creative Intelligence Practical Intelligence |
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Term
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Definition
General learning and comprehension abilties |
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Term
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Definition
ability to select, encode, and combine info in meaningful ways to create new insights, theories, and ideas (thinking outside the box when give the same info you come up with new ideas) |
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Term
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Definition
adaptive behavior in the real world
street smakrs, can you get your goals accomplished, can you size up situations accurately? |
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Term
What caused people to want to measure intelligence? |
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Definition
in the early 1900's the ministry of public instruction in Paris wanted to provide extensive education for all intelligent kids and more practical, less academic kinds of schooling for less intelligent kids
They wanted to be fair so they needed a way to accurately measure intelligence |
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Term
Who did Paris turn to, to make them an intelligence test? |
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Definition
Alfred Binet - professor at the University of Sorbonne |
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Term
What did Benit and Simon want to measure? = |
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Definition
child's mental age
chronological age that most typically corresponds to a given level of performance |
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Term
How did Benet come up with the mental age of a certain child? |
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Definition
Give the kid a certain set of questions that should be answerable by his/her age group
this made the results easier to understand |
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Term
Revisions of Benit's test were made by _______ |
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Definition
Lewis Terman - Stanford University
The name of the test was changed to Stanford-Benit test |
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Term
The Standford-Benit test was the first intelligence test to use: = |
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Definition
intelligence quotient (IQ)
calculated by dividing mental age by chronological age and multplying by 100 |
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Term
What is the problem with age-related IQ? |
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Definition
one's mental age does not increase steadily throughout the lifetime (not much different between the intelligence of you when you were 40 vs 50) |
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Term
Now what kind of IQ is used? |
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Definition
deviation IQ
score is compared to standard scoes with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 15 |
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Term
NOTE: An additional problem with Stanford-Benit test is that it was expensive, took a long time because it was only one person at a time, and it took a long time for people to learn how to administer the test |
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Definition
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Term
When was group intelligence testing first used? |
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Definition
During a war in which soilders needed to be tested to see if they should go to officer school or general infantry |
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Term
American Psychological Association appointed a committee, headd by __________, to come up with a way to classify soliders |
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Definition
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Term
What two tests did Yerks come up with? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
written test that could be given to large groups, provided rough estimate of intelligence |
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Term
What was the problem with Army Alpha? |
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Definition
not all of the troops could take it bc some were illerterate and some didn't speak English |
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Term
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Definition
non-verbal tests for illiterates and those who don't speak English; administered in groups |
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Term
What was the problem with Army Beta? |
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Definition
USELESS
designed for people who couldn't speak english, but the instructions were in English |
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Term
What are the two modern test of mental abilities? |
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Definition
aptitude test achievement test |
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Term
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Definition
designed to predict a person's future performance; the capacity to learn
ACT |
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Term
|
Definition
measure what you know about a specific area
Psych exam |
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Term
NOTE: Achievement tests are more the result of educational experiences, whereas aptitude is more reflective of underlying mental abilties |
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Definition
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|
Term
(Achievement/aptitude) is better for IQ |
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Definition
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|
Term
What 3 things should tests always have? |
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Definition
standardization reliability validity |
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|
Term
What is involved in standardization of tests? |
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Definition
norms and representative samle |
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Term
NOTE: Every tests must have norms (average scores to compare the indivdual to) |
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Definition
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|
Term
To establish norms the test is given to a ________________ = |
|
Definition
representative sample
a large sample of people who are like the target group the test is intended for |
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Term
How should testing procedures be standardized? |
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Definition
Given same instructions testing in quiet conditions same amount of time
want everyone to have the same advantages |
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Term
Yeilding the same results at different testing occasions |
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Definition
|
|
Term
NOTE: The longer the test, the more reliable the rest = suffcient sample of items |
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Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
your test needs to measure what is claims to measure
test what it claims to test |
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Term
|
Definition
extent to which a test samples the behavior that is of interest |
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Term
Example of content validity |
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Definition
on the next psych test there should only be psych questions, no math questions |
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Term
|
Definition
success with which a test predicts the behavior it is designed to predict |
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Term
Example of predictive validity |
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Definition
do the SAT and ACT really predict how well you will do in college? |
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Term
Differences in the extent to which the person being tested has had the opportunity to know and become familaiar with the specific subject matter or process required by the test item |
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Definition
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Term
T/F Most researchers in the intelligence field agree that intelligence is influenced both by fnese and by envriomental influences |
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Definition
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|
Term
A self-confriming concern that on will be evaluated based on a negative stereotye |
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Definition
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Term
Give an example of how stereotype threat can influence testing |
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Definition
When women are told that girls do worse in math than boys right before a math test they do worse, they are trying to get out of that negative stereotype and they are focusing on that and the test ... bad results |
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Term
A need or desire that energizes and directs behavior towards a goal |
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Definition
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Term
What are the theories of motivation? |
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Definition
instincts drive-reduction theory optimum arousal theory Maslow's hierarchy of needs |
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Term
Early in the 20th century, pyschologists were inclined to attribute behaviors to _________ |
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Definition
|
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Term
|
Definition
complex behaviors that is rigidly patterned throughout a species an is unlearned, non-chosen behavior that is true for all species |
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Term
Example of animals instincts |
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Definition
flying salmon swimming up-stream spiders spinning webs |
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Term
In the 1920's the theory of instinct as a theory of motivation fell out of favo for what three reasons? |
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Definition
human beahvior is learned (motivated to be here)
human behavior is rarely rigid, inflexible, unchaning, and found throuoit the species, as in the case with instincts
saying that every human behavior has a corresponding instinct explains nothing |
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Term
What is the drive-reduction theory? |
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Definition
a physiological need creates an aroused tension state (drive) that motivates an organism to satify the need |
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Term
Give an example of s physiological need? |
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Definition
need for food need for water |
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Term
A state of tension or arousal that motivates behavior |
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Definition
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|
Term
NOTE: In the drive-reduction theory what you are attempting to do is return your body to homeostasis - a tendency to maintain a balanced or constant internal state |
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Definition
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|
Term
The drive-reduction theory also says that we are pulled by incentives, which are: |
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Definition
positive or negative enviromental stimuli that also serve to motivate our behavior |
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Term
Give an example of an incentive |
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Definition
money is an incentive, whereas being hungry and eating is a drive |
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Term
T/F Drives are unlearned and incentives are person-specific and the result of learning. What is appealing or repellent to you might not be for another person |
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Definition
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Term
Theory of motivation in which each individual has an optimal level of arousal |
|
Definition
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Term
What three things does the optimum arousal theory depend on? |
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Definition
individual = some people want to go sky diving, some people don't see the need - some want to have a higher level of arousal, where others want a lower
situation = in class you want a medium level of arousal, in tiger stadium you want a high level of arousal
timing = have a cup of coffee in the morning to get a high level of arousal, stop drinking caffeine around 4pm so arousal is low enough to go to sleep |
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Term
What is Maslow's Hierarchy of needs? |
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Definition
often depicted as a pyramid of five levels: the four lower levels are grouped together as deficiency needs, while the top is termed as being needs
higher needs can only be met once all the lower needs have been entirely satisfied |
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Term
What are the deficiency needs? |
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Definition
physiological safety love/belonging esteem |
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Term
|
Definition
achieve homeostasis; need food, water, air, etc |
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Term
|
Definition
need to feel safe and secure in our enviroment, don't want to feel anxious about being attacked |
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Term
Most of the time we put bodily needs before our safety needs, but it some situations it is opposite. Give an example of this |
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Definition
War in Bosnia Two groups are trying to wipe each other out, war took place in cities, people chose to live in suburban areas to be safe, but now they don't live by food, which is a boidly need |
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Term
|
Definition
emotional-based relationsips in general
the need to feel loved and accepted by people |
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Term
|
Definition
the need for the respect of and recognition by others and the need for self-respect |
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Term
If you want to be happy you need to meet deficiency needs, but if you want to grow as a person you need to meet the ________ needs |
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Definition
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|
Term
What are the two being needs? |
|
Definition
self-actualization self-transcendence |
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Term
What is self-actualization? |
|
Definition
inborn need to make the most of unique abilities in ourselves, make the most of our skill sets |
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Term
What is self-transcendce? |
|
Definition
spiritual needs; once we are the best we can be, we might need to make a spiritual connection |
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|
Term
Which being need is no longer considered part of the hierarchy? |
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Definition
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|
Term
What parts of the body are involved in hunger? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
A classic experiment performed in the early 1900s by W.B. Cannon and A.L. Washburn supported the notion that hunger was caused by: |
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Definition
the feeling of an empty study |
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|
Term
Describe Washburn and Cannon's experiment |
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Definition
Washburn fasted on the days of the experiment and inserted a narrow rubber tube into his esophagus. At the end of the tube was a small balloon that could be inflated in his stomach just enough to register a change when the stomach walls contracted. |
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Term
Why isn't Washburn and Cannon's findings totally correct? |
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Definition
stomach sensations are only part of why we feel hungry
people without a stomach still get hungry
sometimes you have food in your stomach and you are hungry and sometimes you don't have food in your stomach and you aren't hungry |
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Term
What is the glucostatic theory of hunger? |
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Definition
it proposes that hunger arises when glucose "thermostats" in the nervous system (glucostats) detect low levels of glucose in the bloodstream. |
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Term
Both the liver and the hypothalamus contain glucoreceptors - |
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Definition
cells that monitor glucose levels |
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Term
Explain the experiment done for the glucostatic theory of hunger |
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Definition
Rat and human studies
in the rat studies they inject small amounts of glucose into the bloodstream. The rats that got the glucose delayed eating vs the rats who didn't get the injection
humans: same injection, but ask them when they get hungry; the ones who got the injection were not hungry as fast |
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Term
The "on" switch for hunger in the hypothalamus seems to be in the ____________, the "off" switch seems to be in the ______________ |
|
Definition
lateral hypothalamus ventromedial hypothalamus |
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|
Term
When the lateral hypothalamus is active you feel: hungry/not hungry |
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Definition
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|
Term
Whethe ventromedial hypothalamus is activated you feel: hungry/ not hungry |
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Definition
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|
Term
If you were to lesion the lateral hypothalamus, what would happen? |
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Definition
you would never get hungry - can lead to under-eating or starvation |
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|
Term
If you were to lesion the ventromedial hypothalamus, what would happen? |
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Definition
you would never be full - lead to insatisfiabliity or obese animals |
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Term
NOTE: Electrical stimulation of the lateral hypothalamus also produces eating even when the animals was full.
Electrically stimulating the ventromedial hypothalamus inhibited eating even if the animals was starved |
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Definition
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Term
More than 90% of people afflicted with eating disorders are: |
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Definition
adolescent and young adult women |
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Term
Why are young women particulary culnerable to eating disorders? |
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Definition
they have a tendency to go on a strict diet to achieve an ideal figure |
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Term
Self-starvations and dramatic weight loss (15% below your normal weight) |
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Definition
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Term
NOTE: Many people with anorexia nervosa look emaciated but are convinced they are overweight. Their brain is not functioning right, so they are no longer perceiving reality as it is |
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Definition
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Term
Physical Effects of Anorexia Nervosa |
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Definition
• Loss of menstrual periods • Dry, brittle bones due to significant bone density loss (osteoporosis) • Dry, brittle nails and hair; or hair loss • Lowered resistance to illness • Hypersensitivity to heat and cold (loss the fat) • Bruises easily • Appears to need less sleep than normal eaters • Digestive problems such as bloating or constipation • Muscle loss and weakness • Severe dehydration, which can result in kidney failure • Fainting, fatigue, and overall weakness • Eventual growth of a downy layer of hair (lanugo) all over the body, including the face (the body is trying to stay warm) • In severe cases: heart trouble, low blood pressure, low heart rate, low body temperature, poor circulation, anemia, stunted growth, and even death |
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Term
What percentage of those with anorexia die? |
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Definition
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Term
Involves eating massive amounts of food and then eliminating the food by self-induced vomitting, use of strong laxatives, fasting, or excessive exercise |
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Definition
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Term
NOTE: Stomach acid is very strong, you can tear your espophagus from throwing up so much; bulimia is often first noticed by the dentist becuase the enamel on the teeth is gone |
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Definition
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Term
T/F People with bulimia have normal or above normal body weight |
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Definition
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Term
What are the types of causes for eating disorders? |
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Definition
biological, social, psychological/emotional |
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Term
What are the biological causes for eating disorders? |
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Definition
higher levels of the neurotransmitter serotonin make you withdraw socially and have less desire for food
high levels of seretonin may be a cause for anorexia
genetically passed down (through genes and learned behaviors) |
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Term
What are the social causes of eating disorders? |
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Definition
particular professions and sports emphasize thinness and low body weight
some cultures value thinness as a key element of attractiveness, esp for women
families that emphasize overachievement of physical fitness often product family members with eating disorders |
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Term
NOTE 69% of the playboy centerfolds and 60% of the Miss America contestants weigh 15% less than they should |
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Definition
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Term
What are the psychological and emotional causes of eating disorders? |
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Definition
personality traits associated with anorexia = perfectionism, obsessiveness, approval-seeking, low self-esteem, withdrawal, irritability, and black-or-white thinking
the feelings of being overwhelmed and powerless in teen years makes us want to control something in our life |
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Term
T/F Anorexia is the deadliest mental disorder |
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Definition
true
beats out mental depression and schizophrenia |
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Term
An enduring attraction towards members of one's own sex, members of the opposite sex or members of both sexes |
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Definition
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Term
T/F Heterosexual and homosexual behaviors are distinct in pattern and can be easily defined. You are the way you are for your entire life |
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Definition
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Term
Today it is more acceptable to view sexual orientation as a continum from exclusive heterosexulaity to exclusive homosexuality. Who pioneered this? |
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Definition
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Term
How does Alfred Kinsey describe sexual orientation? |
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Definition
as a continum on a 6-point scales, with 0 meaning exclusive heterosexuality and 6 meaning exclusive homosexuality |
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Term
If you give a gay man, male hormones, does it make him less gay? |
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Definition
no, it just increases their sexual desire |
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Term
The critical period during gestation may contribute to sexual orientation. 2-5 months. Exposure of the fetus to hormone levels characteristic of females might cause the individual, male or female, to be attracted to: |
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Definition
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Term
What did neuroscientist Simon LeVay find out about the part of the hypothalamus that governs sexual behavior? |
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Definition
it is twice as large in heterosexual men than it is in homosexual |
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Term
What did researches Allen and Gorski find that backs up biological causes for homosexuality? |
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Definition
the section of the anterior commissure (connecting the right and left hemispheres of the brain) is 1/3 larger in homo men than in hetero men |
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Term
When using twin studies for biological cause of homosexuality, what was found? |
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Definition
identical twins = if one of the twins was gay, 2/3 of other one was gay
dizygotic twins = 1/3 had same homosexual sexual orientation
can't say that there is a gfay gene, or that it is soley genetics bc then it would have been 100% |
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Term
NOTE: A person's sexual ortientation is most likely determined by a combination of genetic, hormonal, cognitive, and enviromental factors
so really no one knows what cuases a person to be homosexual |
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Definition
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Term
Emotions are a mix of what 4 things? |
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Definition
physiological arousal expressive behaviors conscious awareness, including thoughts and feelings how you feel (sense of happiness) |
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Term
What are the theories of emotion? |
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Definition
James-Lange Theory The Canon-Bard Theory Schacter and Singer's Two Factor Theory |
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Term
The theory of emotion that says stimuli in the enviroment cause physiological changes in our bodies that we interpret as emotions |
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Definition
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Term
Give an example of the James-Lange Theory of emotion |
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Definition
If you are walking in the woods and you see a bear, your body will respond in predictable ways: heart will beat faster, pupils will dilate, breathing will become faster and more shallow, and you will sweat. Since these changs in your body occur, you must be scared. |
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Term
What problems does the James-Lange theory have? |
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Definition
People with spinal cord injuries, where info about sensation passes to the brain goes, according to this theory shluld not be able to express emotion, but they can
most bodily changes are associated with different emotions that are very similar (anxious or in love) |
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Term
The Canon-Bard Theory of emotion says when a person faces an event that effects them the message collected from the sensory system travels to the thalamus in the brain, here the message divides: |
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Definition
one part goes to the cerebral cortex, which gives rise to the emotional expierence
the other part goes to the hypothalamus which gives rise to the boidly changes |
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Term
NOTE: In the James-Lange Theory and the Canon-Bard Theory we experience the emotion and boidly changes at the same time, there is not a lag time between the two |
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Definition
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Term
What is the Schacter and Singer's Two Factor Theory? |
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Definition
our envrioment as well as thought processes contribute to the typw of emotional experirnce that we have in any situation
First there is some trigger in the envrioment, this triggers bodily changes
as the patterns of bodily change are similar the person must make an appraisal of the situation and figure out which particular emotion they are feeling |
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Term
Behavior such as facial expression, bodily posture, and eye gaze. It is behavior other than spoken or written cmmunication that creates or represents meaning |
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Definition
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Term
Nonverbal cues are irrepressible, meaning they are hard to control. Give an example of this. |
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Definition
if you are trying to figure out if someone is lying, dont pay attention to what they are saying, rather pay attention to their non-verbal communication. Because the nonverbal cues are so hard to hide, they are very useful in gauging another persons moods and intentions |
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Term
T/F The meaning of gestures in culturally dependent |
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Definition
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Term
What is the most universal way of conveying emotion, other than speaking? |
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Definition
facial expressions - they are so universal that people who are blind from birth show common facial expressions associated with joy, sadness, fear, and anger |
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Term
How did Darwin explain the universaily of expressions? |
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Definition
they helped us survive in our evolutionary past, before we developed language |
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Term
NOTE: Similar facial expressions across cultures point to human genetic similarities acorss cultures |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
our faical ecpressions can influence our emotional experience |
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Term
Give an example of facial feedback |
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Definition
pen in the mouth example: teeth vs. lips |
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Term
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Definition
manipulating behaviors such as posture can also affect our emotion |
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Term
Give an example of behavior feedback |
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Definition
if you make me walk to CEBA hunched over and shuffling, you will feel worse |
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Term
NOTE: words used to name or describe an emotion may influence how that emotion is experienced. For example, the Tahitian language has not direct translation for the concept of sadness. Instead, Tahitians experience sadness in terms of physical illness. The sadness we feel over the departure of a close friend would be experienced by a Tahitian as, say, exhaustion. |
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Definition
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Term
|
Definition
emotions shared by peple throughout the world, regardless of culture |
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Term
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Definition
fear anger plesure (sadness, disgust, surprise) |
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Term
What are the 4 criteria for primary emotions? |
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Definition
be evident in all cultures contribute to survival be associated with a distinct facial expressions be evident in non-human primates |
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Term
Is love a primary emotions? |
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Definition
no - it does not make a faical expression |
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Term
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Definition
emotions found throughout one or more cultures, but not through all cultures. They may be thought of as combinations of primary emotions |
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Term
Interdisciplinary field that integrates behavioral and medial knowledge and apllies that knowledge to health and diease |
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Definition
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Term
application of psychological concepts and research to illness prevention and treatment, and to health advancement |
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Definition
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Term
A process by which we percieve and response to certain events that we interprent as challenging or threatening |
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Definition
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Term
What are the events called that cause stress, that we see as challenging or threatening? |
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Definition
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Term
NOTE: When talking about stress, interpretation is important to keep in mind. What is stressful to one person may not be stressul for another person |
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Definition
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Term
What is a stress reaction? |
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Definition
physical and emotional response you have to stressorsl how you react to stress |
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Term
Give examples of physcial stress reactions? |
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Definition
lose sleep hives sweat increase heart rate blood pressue spikes secrete more stomach acid - ulcers |
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Term
Give examples of emotional stress reactions? |
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Definition
fel angry or overwhelemed |
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Term
T/F Stress can be beneficial or harmful? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
pleasent or curative stress |
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Term
What can eustress do for you? |
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Definition
can help you give you a competitve edge in performace related activities like athletics, giving a speech, acting |
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Term
Give an example of when eustress is good? |
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Definition
you are nervous (stressed) about the test so you study to prepare, if you had no stress, you wouldn't study at all |
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Term
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Definition
unpleasent or disease-producing stress |
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Term
NOTE: Stess is a psychobiological process, with both physiological and psychological components and consequences |
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Definition
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Term
An early contribution to the understnading of stress was psychologist _________'s description of the fight or flight response |
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Definition
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Term
What is the flight or fight response? |
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Definition
organism prepares for danger with sympathetic activation |
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Term
In the beginning the fight or flight response helps you, but if the danger does not go away (such as stress from school or job), the organism is perpetually aroused. What can happen because of this? |
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Definition
leads to deteriorating health |
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Term
Who did stress experiements witha wide range of stressful events from injections to fatigue to extreme cold to reveal that the body responds to stressful conditions? |
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Definition
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Term
What did Hans Selye develop? |
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Definition
general adaption syndrome |
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Term
What are tthree parts to the genderal adaption syndrome? |
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Definition
alarm reaction stage of resistance (adaption) stage of exhaustion |
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Term
Describe stage 1: alarm reaction |
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Definition
immediate reaction to a stressor |
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Term
NOTE: Even in the first stage of general adaption syndrome, your immune system is negatively impacted |
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Definition
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Term
Describe stage 2: Stage of Resistance |
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Definition
if the stress continues, the body starts to adapt to the circumstances |
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Term
Give an example of stage of resistance |
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Definition
if the source of stress is starvation, your stomach will shrink, your body will start to raid your fat source, and your body will use all the nutrients it can get from the food you do eat |
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Term
Describe stage 3: stage of exhaustion |
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Definition
body's resistance to stress may gradually be reduced, or may collpase quickly |
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Term
Unpredictable, large-scale events, like an earthquake or tsunami |
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Definition
|
|
Term
What are significant life changes? |
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Definition
anytime we have to adjust to new life cirumstanes
most people seek order, continuity, and predictability in their lives
therefore when they experience change, good or bad, it can be stressful |
|
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Term
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Definition
minor, irritating incidents that occur everyday
they are not huge on their own, but if you experiences lots in a short period of time your stress levels go up |
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Term
Unpleasent tension, anxiety, and heightened sympathetic activity resulting from a blocked goal |
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Definition
frustration
you have something you want to accomplish, but something else is preventing you from getting it done |
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Term
A researcher named ________ listed 5 sources of frustration that are especially common in American life: |
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Definition
Morris
delays lack of resources losses failure discrimination |
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Term
NOTE: Our culture holds that success or failure depends on an individual's talent and effort, not luck, good fortune, or simply being in the right place at the right time |
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Definition
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Term
Once of the most thoroughly researched links between personality and health is between heart disease and the ________ personality |
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Definition
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Term
|
Definition
impatient hard-driving ambitious compeptive hostile sucess-oriented angry all of this puts stress on the heart |
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Term
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Definition
more relaced easy-going less easily angered much less likely to suffer heart disease |
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Term
Some say there is a type c personality, which is: |
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Definition
inward type A, outward type B
these people die of cancer |
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Term
Recent research suggest that the type A pattern has components that may be related to _______ |
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Definition
|
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Term
|
Definition
a combination of defensiveness and negative emotions; implicated in narrowing of arteries leading to the heart |
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Term
T/F The relation between stress and increased risk of infection is well established |
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Definition
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Term
|
Definition
protects the body from any foreign materials that may enter it |
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Term
|
Definition
alleviating stress using emotional, cognitive, or behavioral methods |
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Term
What are the two types of coping? |
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Definition
problem focused coping emotion focused coping |
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Term
|
Definition
attempting to alleviate stress directly by changing the soruce of stress or the way we interact with the stressor |
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Term
Give example of problem focused coping |
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Definition
her mother in law is mean to her and says mean things that make her want to kill her, but she can just pretend she is old and doesn't know what she is talking about - changes the way she itneracts with the stressor |
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Term
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Definition
attempting to alleviate stress by avoiding/ignoring stressor and attending to emotioanl needs realted to stress reaction; try to make yoruself feel better |
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Term
Give an example of emotion-focused coping |
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Definition
there is a test after spring break, stressed about it, well it is later, don't need to worry about hat now |
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Term
Researchers have found that there is a correlation between a person’s perception of the degree of control she feels she has over the situation at hand and the use of problem- vs emotion-focused coping.
The more control one feels one has, the more likely they are to use which method? |
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Definition
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Term
When is emotional-focused coping useful? |
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Definition
when there are situation that are beyond our control that we are stressed about
also helps us to manage our negative emotional states (saddness, anxiety, depression) |
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Term
What factors help us to cope effectively? |
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Definition
percieved control explanatory style social support |
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Term
NOTE: When compared to people with few relationships, people with more social ties are less likely to die prematurely, and more likely to survive for a longer period of time if diagnosed with a disease like leukemia |
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Definition
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Term
Why is social support so beneficial? |
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Definition
it seems we take better care of ourselves when we have a good support system. We eat better, exercise more, sleep better, smoke less, and more effective in coping with stress |
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Term
A study by ______________ found that the surviving spouses of people who had committed suicide or died in car accidents who talked to their friends about their grief had fewer health problems than did surviving spouses who didn’t share their grief with others. While the conversations may be painful, talking about our troubles seems to be helpful in the long term. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
coronary heart disease chancers of all types chronic bronchitis emphysema increases ulcers in stomach and mouth |
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|
Term
Effects of anti-smoking laws |
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Definition
make people less likely to quit nobody likes being told what to do |
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Term
Why do people smoke in the first place? |
|
Definition
start young when we are stupid and want to impress our friends and peers
presented in media outlets as cool and socailly acceptable
personal fable - no one is like us, nothing bad is going to happen to me |
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|
Term
T/F The addictiveness of nicotine is compareable to heroine and cocaine |
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Definition
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|
Term
NOTE: Seconds after you inhale, nicotine hits the brain where it causes the release of neurotransmitters that increase alertness and make you feel good |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Nicotine Withdrawal Symptoms |
|
Definition
cravings to smoke irritable, cranky insomina fatigue inability to concentrate headache cough sore throat constipation, gas, stomach pain dry mouth sore tounge and or gums postnasal drip tightness in chest |
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Term
T/F Your cough gets better when you stop smoking? |
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Definition
false the hairs in the throat wake up and start to move the tar out of the lungs |
|
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Term
|
Definition
consuming five or more drinks in a row for boys an hour or more than 4 in a row for girls |
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|
Term
How long does it take your body to deal with 1 serving of alcohol? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a body mass indx of 30 or more |
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|
Term
What is body mass index? (BMI) |
|
Definition
your weight in kilograms divided by your height in meters squared |
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Term
|
Definition
doesn't take into accound muscle mass |
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|
Term
What percent of americans are overweight? Obese? |
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Definition
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|
Term
Being significantly overweight increases your risk of developing: |
|
Definition
diabetes high blood pressure heart disease arthritis certain forms of cancer shortens life span |
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|
Term
Beyond the health consequences, what are the social consequences to obesity? |
|
Definition
seen by others as lazy, sloppy, lcking in self-discipline, less sincere, obnoxious, and less friendly
less likely to get hired for a job, less likely to get married |
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Term
|
Definition
beware of the binge don't starve all day and eat one big meal at night eat healthy foods be realistic and moderate take steps to boost your metabolism minimize exposure to tempting foods begining only if you are motivated and self-diciplined |
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