AP Psychology Review PDF
AP Psychology Review PDF
AP Psychology Review PDF
* Cognition ...........................................................7-9%
* Personality .......................................................7-9%
* Practice Test -
* ESSAY QUESTIONS
HISTORY AND METHODS
Psychology is the science of behavior and mental processes
A Brief History-
Wilhelm Wundt- founded first research lab in 1879- birth of scientific psychology
3. You are at a lecture about the history of psychology and the speaker states that Wilhelm
Wundts theory of structuralism was the first scientific psychological theory. On what
historical fact might the speaker be basing her or his argument?
A. Wundt was internationally known at the time, and this led credence to his theory in the
scientific community.
B. Wundt studied under Ivan Pavlov for his graduate training, and Pavlov required scientific
methods to be used.
C. Structuralism was based on the results of his introspection experiments, so it is, at least in
part, empirical.
D. Structuralism was based on careful anecdotes gathered from Wundts extensive clinical
career.
E. Wundt was the first person to study psychology in an academic setting
4. In order to summarize or organize a series of observations in some meaningful way
psychologists may develop
A. hypotheses
B. experiments
C. surveys
D. theories
5. In the simplest experiment, the two groups of subjects are treated exactly alike except for the
__ variable.
A. independent
B. dependent
C. extraneous
D. control
A. was revolutionary because it was the first comprehensive explanation of human thought
and behavior.
B. Resulted from discoveries about the human brain obtained by cadaver dissection.
C. Is outdated and has no relevance for modern psychology.
D. Focused entirely on human males sex drive.
E. Depends on the idea that humans can remember events but not be consciously aware of
the memory.
7. The conditions that a researcher wishes to prevent from affection the experiment are called
A. constants
B. dependent variables
C. extraneous variables
D. independent variables
8. In what way might a behaviorist disagree with a cognitive psychologist about the cause of
aggression?
A. A behaviorist might state that aggression is caused by memories or ways we think about
aggressive behavior, while a cognitive psychologist might say aggression is caused by a
past repressed experience.
B. A behaviorist might state that aggression is a behavior encouraged by our genetic code,
while a cognitive psychologist might state that aggression is caused by memories or ways
we think about aggressive behavior.
C. A behaviorist might state that aggression is caused by past rewards for aggressive
behavior, while a cognitive psychologist might believe aggression is caused by an
expressed desire to fulfill certain life needs.
D. A behaviorist might state that aggression is caused by past rewards for aggressive
behavior, while a cognitive psychologist might believe aggression is caused by memories
or ways we think about aggressive behavior.
E. A behaviorist would not disagree with a cognitive psychologist about aggression because
they both believe that aggressive behavior is caused by the way we cognitively process
certain behaviors.
9. A researcher wants to determine the effect of sleep deprivation on human problem solving.
Subjects in an appropriate control group for such an experiment would be described as
having
10. Which type of variable is measured in both the experimental and control groups of an
experiment?
11. Dr. Marco explains to a client that his feelings. Of hostility toward a coworker are most likely
caused by the way the client interprets the coworkers actions, and the way he thinks that
people should behave at work, Dr. Marco is most likely working from what perspective?
A. behavioral
B. cognitive
C. psychoanalytic
D. humanist
E. social-cultural
12. In the traditional learning experiment the effect of practice on performance is investigated.
Performance is the ___ variable
A. independent
B. extraneous
C. control
D. dependent
A. observer bias
B. that it sets up an artificial situation
C. that replies may not be accurate
D. the self-fulfilling prophecy
A. description of behavior
B. prediction of behavior
C. depiction of behavior
D. understanding behavior
15. Control is an important goal of psychology. For most psychologists, control means
16. Professor Ma wants to design a project studying emotional response to date rape. He
advertises for participants in the school newspaper, informs them about the nature of the
study, gets their consent, conducts an interview, and debriefs them about the results when the
experiment is over. If you were on the IRB, which ethical consideration would you most
likely have the most concern about in Professor Mas study?
A. Coercion D. anonymity
B. Deception E. clear scientific purpose
C. confounding variables
The human brain consists of three major divisions; hindbrain, midbrain, and forebrain
Brain Structure
1. Hindbrain- structures in the top part of the spinal cord, controls basic biological functions that keep us
alive. Medulla- controls blood pressure, heart rate, and breathing; Pons- connects the hindbrain with the
mid and forebrain, also involved in the control of facial expressions; Cerebellum- portion of the lower
brain that coordinates and organizes bodily movements for balance and accuracy.
2 Midbrain-between the hind and forebrain, coordinates simple movements with sensory
information.
3 Forebrain- controls what we think of as thought and reason. Thalamus- portion of the lower brain
that functions primarily as a central relay station for incoming and outgoing messages from the body to the
brain and the brain to the body Hypothalamus- portion of the lower brain that regulates basic needs (hunger,
thirst) and emotions such as pleasure, fear, rage, and sexuality
Amygdala and Hippocampus- two arms surrounding the thalamus, important in how we process and perceive
memory and emotion
NOTE: The three parts above are grouped together and called the limbic system because they all deal with
aspects of emotion and memory.
What is a neuron?
A neuron is a nerve cell. The brain is made up of about 100 billion neurons.
Neurons are similar to other cells in the body in some ways such as:
1. Neurons have specialized projections called dendrites and axons. Dendrites bring
information to the cell body and axons take information away from the cell body.
2. Neurons communicate with each other through an electrochemical process.
3. Neurons form specialized connections called "synapses" and produce special chemicals
called "neurotransmitters" that are released at the synapse.
It has been estimated that there are 1 quadrillion synapses in the human brain. That's 1015 or
1,000,000,000,000,000 synapses! This is equal to about a half-billion synapses per cubic
millimeter. (Statistic from Changeux, J-P. and Ricoeur, P., What Makes Us Think?, Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 2000, p. 78)
How big is the brain? How much does the brain weigh?
The adult human brain weighs between 1300 g and 1400 g (about 3 lbs). A newborn human
brain weighs between 350 and 400 g. For comparison:
Neuroanatomy
Neuron a nerve cell, which transmits electrical and chemical information throughout the body
dendrite- part of the neuron that receives information from the axons of other nerve cells
Axon- part of the neuron that carries messages away from one neuron to the dendrites of another
Cell body, or soma- contains the nucleus and other parts of the cell needed to sustain its life
Myelin sheath- a fatty covering around the axon that speeds neural impulses
Terminal buttons- the branched end of the axon that contains neurotransmitters
Vesicles bubblelike containers of neurotransmitters, located at the end of an axon
Neurotransmitters- chemicals in the endings of nerve cells that send information across the
synapse Acetylcholine neurotransmitter that regulates basic bodily processes such as
movement
Dopamine a neurotransmitter involved in the control of bodily movements ( involved in
Parkinsons disease, and Alzheimers)
Endorphins neurotransmitters that relieve pain and increase our sense of wellbeing
Serotonin- mood control
Synapse- the junction point of two or more neurons; a connection is made by neurotransmitters.
Action potential
All-or-none principle
Afferent neurons, or sensory neurons
Interneurons
Efferent neurons, or motor neurons
Sympathetic nervous system- speeds things up- prepares body for fight or flight
Cerebral cortex- covers the lower brain and controls mental processes such as thought
Frontal lobes- contains the motor strip and frontal association area
Frontal association area plays an important part in integrating personality and in forming complex thoughts
Motor strip- band running down the side of the frontal lobe that controls all bodily movements
Temporal lobes- area responsible for hearing and some speech functions
Lobe- major division of the brain
Hemispheres- one-half of the two halves of the brain; controls the opposite side of the body
Brain lateralization
Corpus callosum - bundle of nerve fibers that transfers info. From one hemisphere to the other
Fissure- a lengthy depression marking off an area of the brain
Reticular activating system- the alertness control center of the brain that regulates the activity level of the
body
Split-brain
Brain plasticity
Endocrine system system of all the glands and their chemical messages taken together
Hormones chemical regulators that control bodily processes such as emotional responses, growth, and
sexuality
Pituitary gland the master gland of the body that activates other glands and controls the growth hormone
Growth hormone hormone that regulates the growth process
Thyroid gland controls and regulates the speed of bodily processes called metabolism
Metabolism the speed at which the body operates of the speed at which it uses up energy
Adrenal glands glands that release the hormone that causes excitement in order to prepare the body for
an emergency
Adrenaline chemical that prepares the body for emergency activity by increasing blood pressure,
breathing rate, and energy level
1. Blindness could result from damage to which cortex and lobe of the brain?
3. Deafness can result from damage to the inner ear or damage to what area of the brain?
A. Connections between the auditory nerve and the auditory cortex in the frontal lobe.
B. Connections between the auditory nerve and the auditory cortex in the temporal lobe.
C. Connections between the areas of the sensory cortex that receive messages from the ears
and the auditory cortex.
D. Connections between the hypothalamus and the auditory cortex in the temporal lobe.
E. Connections between the left and right sensory areas of the cerebellum.
4. According to the theory of evolution, why might we call some parts of the brain the old brain
and some parts the new brain?
A. Old brain parts are what exist in very young children, and the new brain develops later
B. The old brain developed first according to evolution..
C. The old brain becomes more active as we grow older.
D. The new brain deals with new information, while the old brain deals with information
gathered when we were children.
E. The old brain is most affected by age deterioration (dementias) while the new brain
remains unaffected.
5. Which chemicals pass across the synaptic gap and increase the possibility the next neuron in
the chain will fire?
A. synaptic peptides
B. inhibitory neurotransmitters
C. adrenaline-type exciters
D. excitatory neurotransmitters
E. potassium and sodium
6. You eat some bad sushi and feel that you are slowly losing control over your muscles. The
bacteria you ingested from the bad sushi most likely interferes with the use of
A. Serotonin D. thorazine
B. Dopamine E. adrenaline
C. acetylcholine
7. The three major categories researchers use to organize the entire brain are the
8. A spinal reflex differs from a normal sensory and motor reaction in that
9. Antidepressant drugs like Prozac are often used to treat mood disorders. According to what
you know about their function, which neurotransmitter system do these types of drugs try to
affect?
A. serotonin
B. adrenaline
C. acetylcholine
D. endorphins
E. morphine
A. An electric charge is created in the neuron, the charge travels down the cell, and
chemicals are released that cross the synapse to the next cell.
B. A chemical change occurs within the cell, the change causes an electric charge to be
produced, and the charge jumps the gap between the nerve cells.
C. The electric charge produced chemically inside a group of neurons causes chemical
changes in surrounding cells.
D. Neurotransmitters produced in the hindbrain are transmitted to the forebrain, causing
electric changes in the cerebral cortex.
E. Neural transmission is an electrochemical process both inside and outside the cell.
11. Dr. Dahab, a brain researcher, is investigating the connection between certain environmental
stimuli and brain processes. Which types of brain scans is he most likely to use?
13. When brain researchers refer to brain plasticity , they are talking about
14. Mr. Spam is a 39-year-old male who has been brought into your neurology clinic by his wife.
She has become increasingly alarmed by her husbands behavior over the last four months.
You recommend a CAT scan to look for tumors in the brain. Which two parts of the brain
would you predict are being affected by the tumors? List of symptoms: vastly increased
appetite, body temperature fluctuations, decreased sexual desire, jerky movements, poor
balance when walking and standing, inability to throw objects, and exaggerated efforts to
coordinate movements in a task
A. motor cortex and emotion cortex
B. motor cortex and hypothalamus
C. hypothalamus and cerebellum
D. cerebellum and medulla
E. thalamus and motor cortex
15. In most people, which one of the following is a specific function of the left hemisphere that is
typically not controlled by the right hemisphere?
A. producing speech
B. control of the left hand
C. spatial reasoning
D. hypothesis testing
E. abstract reasoning
ENERGY SENSES
VISION
Pupil -small opening in the iris through which light enters the eye.
Iris -colored part of the eye.
Lens -transparent part of the eye inside the pupil that focuses light onto the retina
Retina -lining of the eye containing receptor cells that are sensitive to light
Step 3: Transduction
Transduction process by which sensory signals are transformed into neural impulses
Receptor cell -Specialized cell that responds to a particular type of energy.
Rods -Receptor cells in the retina responsible for night vision and perception of brightness.
Cones -Receptor cells in the retina responsible for color vision
Fovea -Area of the retina that is the center of the visual field
Optic nerve - The bundle of axons of ganglion cells that carries neural messages from each eye to the brain.
Blind spot - Place on the retina where the axons of all the ganglion cells leave the eye and where there are no
receptors Optic chiasm -Point near the base of the brain where some fibers in the optic nerve from each eye
cross to the other side of the brain
Trichromatic theory -Theory of color vision that holds that all color perception derives from three different
color receptors in the retina
Opponent-process theory - Theory of color vision that holds that three sets of color receptors respond in an
either/or fashion to determine the color you experience
Colorblindness -Partial or total inability to perceive hues.
HEARING
The ears contain structures for both the sense of hearing and the sense of
balance. The eighth cranial nerve (vestibulocochlear nerve made up of
the auditory and vestibular nerves) carries nerve impulses for both
hearing and balance from the ear to the brain.
Amplitude the height of the wave , determines the loudness of the sound, measured in decibels
Frequency - The number of cycles per second in a wave; in sound, the primary determinant of pitch
Hertz (Hz) - Cycles per second; unit of measurement for the frequency of waves
Pitch - Auditory experience corresponding primarily to frequency of sound vibrations, resulting in a higher or lower
tone Decibel -The magnitude of a wave; in sound the primary determinant of loudness of sounds
PITCH THEORIES- As with color vision, two different theories describe the two processes involved in hearing
pitch: place theory and frequency theory.
Place theory -Theory that pitch is determined by the location of greatest vibration of the basilar membrane
Frequency theory -Theory that pitch is determined by the frequency wigh which hair cells in the cochlea
fire
DEAFNESS
Hearing Loss
People can lose all or some of their ability to hear because of loud noises, infections, head
injuries, brain damage and genetic diseases. Hearing loss is common in older people. There are
several types of hearing loss:
Conductive Hearing Loss: occurs when sound vibrations from the tympanic membrane to
the inner ear are blocked. This may be caused by ear wax in the auditory canal, fluid
buildup in the middle ear, ear infections or abnormal bone growth.
Sensorineural Hearing Loss: occurs when there is damage to the vestibulocochlear
(auditory) nerve. This type of hearing loss may be caused by head injury, birth defects,
high blood pressure or stroke.
Presbycusis: occurs because of changes in the inner ear. This is a very common type of
hearing loss that happens gradually in older age.
Tinnitus: people with tinnitus hear a constant ringing or roaring sound. The cause of this
ringing cannot always be found. Some cases of tinnitus are caused by ear wax, ear
infections or a reaction to antibiotics, but there are many other possible causes of this
disorder.
TOUCH
When our skin is indented, pierced, or experiences a change in temperature, our sense of touch is activated
by this energy.
Gate control theory - Theory that a neurological gate in the spinal cord controls the transmission of pain
messages to the brain
CHEMICAL SENSES
TASTE (GUSTATION)
Taste buds
Papillae-
Humans sense four different tastes: sweet, salty, sour, and bitter
All other tastes come from a combination of these four basic tastes. Actually, a fifth basic
taste called "Umami" has recently been discovered. Umami is a taste that occurs when
foods with glutamate (like MSG) are eaten. Different parts of the tongue can detect all
types of tastes. Morever, the simple tongue "taste map" that is found in many textbooks
has been criticized for several reasons.
I
The actual organ of taste is called the "taste bud". Each taste bud (and there about about
10,000 taste buds in humans) is made up of many (between 50-150) receptor cells. Receptor
cells live for only 1 to 2 weeks and then are replaced by new receptor cells. Each receptor
in a taste bud responds best to one of the basic tastes. A receptor can respond to the other
tastes, but it responds strongest to a particular taste.
SMELL (OLFACTION)
Semicircular canals - Structure in the inner ear particularly sensitive to body roataion.
Vestibular sacs - Sacs in the inner ear that are responsible for sensing gravitation and forward, backward,
and vertical movement
Golgi tendon organs -Receptors that sense movement of the tendons, which connect muscle to bone.
PERCEPTION
THRESHOLDS
Absolute threshold -The least amount of energy that can be detected as a stimulation 50 percent of the time
Difference threshold -The smallest change in stimulation that can be detected 50 percent of the time
just-noticeable difference the smallest amount of change needed in a stimulus before we detect a change
Webers Law -The principle that the just noticeable difference for any given sense is a constant proportion of the
stimulation being judged.
PERCEPTUAL THEORIES
Signal detection theory- investigates the effects of the distractions and interference we experience while perceiving
the world.
Response criteria
False positive
Schemata
Perceptual set
Backmasking
Bottom-up Processing, also called feature analysis we use only the features of the object itself to build a
complete perception
GESTALT RULES
Proximity
Similarity
Continuity
Closure
CONSTANCY- Tendency to perceive objects as stable and unchanging despite changes in sensory stimulation
Size constancy - Perception of an object as the same size regardless of the distance from which it is viewed
Shape constancy - Tendency to see an object as the same shape no matter what angle it is viewed from
Brightness constancy - Perception of brightness as the same, even though the amount of light reaching the retina
changes
DEPTH CUES
interposition - Monocular distance cue in which one object, by partly blocking a second object, is
perceived as being closer.
Linear perspective - Monocular cue to distance and depth based on the fact that two parallel lines seem to
come together at the horizon
Relative size-
Texture gradient-
Shadowing-
Retinal disparity - Binocular distance cue based on the difference between the images
Convergence- cast on the two retinas when both eyes are focused on the same object
Stereoscopic vision - Combination of two retinal images to give a three-dimensional perceptual
experience.
A. we are conditioned from birth to make strong connections between smells and events.
B. The nerve connecting the olfactory bulb sends impulses directly to the limbic system
C. The receptors at the top of each nostril connect with the cortex
D. Smell is a powerful cue for encoding memories into long-term memory
E. Strong smells encourage us to process events deeply so they will most likely be remembered
3. In a perception research lab, you are asked to describe the shape of the top of a box as the box is slowly rotated.
Which concept are the researchers most likely investigating?
A. the lack of receptors at the spot where the optic nerve connects to the retina
B. the shadow the pupil makes on the retina
C. competing processing between the visual cortices in the left and right hemisphere
D. floating debris in the space between the lens and the retina
E. retinal damage from bright light
A. energy senses; they send impulses to the brain in the form of electric energy
B. chemical senses; they detect chemicals in what we taste and smell
C. flavor senses; smell and taste combine to create flavor.
D. Chemical senses; they send impulses to the brain in the form of chemicals.
E. Memory senses; they both have powerful connections to memory
6. What is the principal difference between amplitude and frequency in the context of sound waves ?
A. absolute threshold.
B. Focal length of the eye.
C. Level of subliminal messages.
D. Amplitude of sound waves.
E. Just-noticeable difference.
9.If you had sight in only one eye, which of the following depth cues could you NOT use?
A. texture gradient
B. convergence
C. linear perspective
D. interposition
E. shading
10. Which of the following sentences best describes the relationship between sensation and perception?
12. Color blindness and color afterimages are best explained by what theory of color vision?
A..trichromatic theory
B. Visible hue theory
C. Opponent-process theory
D. Dichromatic theory
E. Binocular disparity theory
13. You are shown a picture of your grandfathers face, but the eyes and mouth are blocked out. You still recognize
it as a picture of your grandfather. Which type of processing best explains this example of perception?
A. bottom-up processing
B. signal detection theory
C. top-down processing
D. opponent-process theory
STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS
We spend about 8 hours/day, 56 hours/week, 224 hours/month and 2,688 hours/year doing
it...that's right...SLEEPING. One third of our lives we are apparently doing nothing. But is
sleep really doing nothing? It looks like it...a person's eyes are closed; muscles are relaxed;
breathing is regular; there is no response to sound or light. However, if you take a look at
what is happening inside the brain, you will find quite a different situation - the brain is
very active.
Scientists can record brain activity by attaching electrodes to the scalp and then connecting
these electrodes to a machine called an electroencephalograph. The encephalogram (or
EEG) is the record of brain activity recorded with this machine. The wavy lines of the EEG
are what most people know as "brain waves".
Conscious level The information about yourself and your environment you are
currently aware of.
Nonconscious level Body processes controlled by your mind that we are not usually
aware of
Preconscious level Information about yourself or your environment that you are not
currently Thinking about but you could be.
Subconscious level Information that we are not consciously aware of but we know
must exist due to behavior.
Unconscious level. Psychoanalytic psychologists believe some evens and feelings
are unacceptable to our conscious mind and are repressed into the unconscious mind.
Many psychologists object to this concept as difficult or impossible to prove.
Mere-exposure effect - prefer stimuli we have seen before over novel stimuli
Priming - respond more quickly and/or accurately to questions they have seen before
Blind sight - person being blind being able to grasp an object they cannot see
SLEEP CYCLE
Circadian rhythm
Sleep stages
REM rapid eye movement
SLEEP DISORDERS
Freudian Theory - believes that dreams reveal information in the unconscious mind
Activation-synthesis Theory - dreams are nothing more than the brains interpretation of
what is happening physiologically during REM sleep
HYPNOSIS
Role Theory - says hypnosis is not an alternate state of consciousness, points out that
some people are more easily hypnotized than others.
CONSCIOUSNESS QUIZ
3. Which of the following is the best analogy for how psychologists view consciousness?
4. During the normal nights sleep, how many times do we pass through the different stages of
sleep?
A. 2
B. 2-3
C. 4-7
D. 8-11
E. 11-15
7. Hilgards experiment that demonstrated the presence of a hidden observer is evidence for
which theory?
A. role theory of hypnosis
B. levels theory of consciousness
C. recuperative theory of sleep
D. dissociation theory of hypnosis
E. state theory of hypnosis
A. depressant
B. mood-elevator
C. hallucinogen
D. stimulant
E. mood depressant
10. Night terrors and somnambulism usually occur during which stage of sleep?
A. serotonin
B. endorphins
C. dopamine
D. GABA
E. Acetylcholine
A. are meaningless by-products of how our brains process information during REM sleep.
B. Are symbolic representations of the information we encode during the day.
C. Are processed by one level of consciousness but other levels remain unaware of the
dreams.
D. Occur as the brain deals with daily stress and events during REM sleep.
E. Occur only after stressful events, explaining why some people never dream.
A. preconscious level
B. subconscious level
C. unconscious level
D. autonomic level
E. nonconscious level
15. Professor Bohike shows a group of participants a set of geometric shapes for a short period of
time. Later, Professor Bohike shows the same group a larger set of shapes that includes the
first set of geometric shapes randomly distributed among the other new images. When asked
which shapes they prefer, the participants choose shapes from the first group more often than
the new images, even though they cannot remember which images they had seen previously.
This experiment demonstrates which concept?
A. priming
B. mere-exposure effect
C. shaping
D. primary-attribution error
E. primacy
16. Mr. Spam is a 39-year-old male who has been brought into your neurology clinic by his wife.
She has become increasingly alarmed by her husbands behavior over the last four months.
You recommend a CAT scan to look for tumors in the brain. Which two parts of the brain
would you predict are being affected by the tumors?
LEARNING
Learning- a relatively permanent change in behavior due to experience.
Ivan Pavlov
Unconditioned stimulus
Unconditioned response
Conditioned stimulus
Conditioned response
Acquisition phase
Delayed conditioning
Simultaneous conditioning
Backward conditioning
Generalization
Discrimination
Extinction
Spontaneous recovery
First-order conditioning
Second-order conditioning
Equipotentiality
Salient
Contiguity model the Pavlovian model, the more times two things are paired, the
greater the learning that will take place
Edward Thorndike
Law of effect
Instrumental learning
B.F. Skinner
Skinner box
Positive reinforcement
Negative reinforcement
Omission training
Punishment
Escape learning
Avoidance learning
Shaping
Chaining
Primary reinforcers
Secondary reinforcers
Premack principle the reinforcing properties of something depend on the situation
Instinctive drift
What determines when reinforcement is delivered the number of responses made (ratio)
or the passage of time (interval)
Observational learning
Latent learning
studied by Edward Tolman
is hidden learning
experiment with maze running rats, ones that didnt initially get a reward didnt seem
to learn, but when they started being rewarded their performance changed drastically
Abstract learning
involves understanding concepts such as tree or same
Skinner box pigeons picking out certain shapes
Insight learning
Wolfgang Kohler did studies with chimpanzees
Insight learning occurs when one suddenly realizes how to solve a problem
Chimps using boxes to reach banana
What Is Learning?
Classical (or respondent) conditioning and instrumental (or Operant) conditioning are two
basic types of learning.
In classical conditioning, a previously neutral stimulus begins to elicit a response through
association with another stimulus. In operant conditioning, the frequency and pattern of
voluntary responses are altered by their consequences.
delay of reinforcement greatly reduces its effectiveness, but long chains of responses may
be built up so that a single reinforcer maintains many responses.
Superstitious behaviors often become part of response chains because they appear to be
associated with reinforcement.
Reward or reinforcement may be given continuously (after every response) or on a
schedule of partial reinforcement. Partial reinforcement produces greater resistance to
extinction.
The four most basic schedules of reinforcement are fixed ratio, variable ratio, fixed
interval, and variable interval. Each produces a distinct pattern of responding.
Stimuli that precede a reinforced response tend to control the response on future
occasions (stimulus control). Two aspects of stimulus control are generalization and
discrimination.
In generalization an operant response tends to occur when stimuli similar to those
preceding reinforcement are present.
In discrimination, responses are given in the presence of discriminative stimuli associated
with reinforcement (S+) and withheld in the presence of stimuli associated with
nonreinforcement (S-)
Operant principles can be readily applied to manage behavior in everyday settings. When
managing ones own behavior, self-reinforcement, self-recording, feedback, and
behavioral contracting are all helpful.
Four strategies that can help change bad habits are reinforcing alternate responses,
promoting extinction, breaking response chains, and avoiding antecedent cues.
In school, self-regulated learners typically do all of the following: They set learning
goals, plan learning strategies, use self-instruction, monitor their progress, evaluate
themselves, reinforce successes, and take corrective action when required.
Many animals are born with innate behavior patterns far more complex than reflexes.
These are organized into fixed action patterns (FAPs), which are stereotyped, species-
specific behaviors.
Learning in animals is limited at times by various biological constraints and species-
typical behaviors.
According to prepared fear theory, some stimuli are especially effective conditioned
stimuli.
Many responses are subject to instinctive drift in operant conditioning. Human learning
is subtly influenced by many such biological potentials and limits
Quiz Conditioning/Learning
1. Just before something scary happens in a horror film, they often play scary sounding music.
When I hear the music, I tense up in anticipation of the scary event. In this situation, the
music serves as a
A. US.
B. CS
C. UR
D. CR
E. NR
2. Try as you might, you are unable to teach your dog to do a somersault. He will roll around
on the ground, but he refuses to execute the gymnastic move you desire because of
A. equipotentiality D. Chaining.
B. preparedness. E. Shaping.
C. Instinctive drift
3. Which of the following is an example of a generalized reinforcer?
A. chocolate cake
B. water
C. money
D. applause
E. high grades
4. In teaching your cat to jump through a hoop, which reinforcement schedule would facilitate
the most rapid learning?
A. continuous
B. fixed ratio
C. variable ratio
D. fixed interval
E. variable interval
5. The classical conditioning training procedure in which the US is presented first is known as
A. backward conditioning.
B. Forward conditioning.
C. Simultaneous conditioning.
D. Delayed conditioning.
E. Regular conditioning.
6. Tina likes to play with slugs, but she can find them by the shed only after it rains. On what
kind of reinforcement schedule is Tinas slug hunting?
A. continuous
B. fixed interval
C. fixed ratio
D. variable interval
E. variable ratio
7. Just before the doors of the elevator close, Lola, a coworker you despise, enters the elevator.
You immediately leave, mumbling about having forgotten something. Exiting the elevator is
an example of
A. positive reinforcement
B. a secondary reinforcer.
C. Punishment.
D. Negative reinforcement.
E. Omission training.
9. Many psychologists believe that children of parents who beat them are likely to beat their
own children. One possible explanation for this phenomenon is
A. modeling.
B. Latent learning.
C. Abstract learning.
D. Instrumental learning.
E. Classical conditioning.
10. When Tito was young, his parents decided to give him a quarter every day he made his bed.
Tito started to make his siblings beds also and help with other chores. Behaviorists would
say that Tito was experiencing
A. internal motivation.
B. Spontaneous recovery.
C. Acquisition.
D. Generalization.
E. Discrimination.
A. to clean and feed itself by watching its mother perform these activities.
B. To associate its handlers presence with feeding time.
C. To press a bar when a light is on but not when its cage is dark.
D. The layout of amaze without hurrying to get to the end.
E. To press a lever when he sees pictures of dogs but not cats.
12. With which statement would B.F. Skinner most likely agree?
A. Pavlovs dog learned to expect that food would follow the bell.
B. Baby Albert thought the white rat meant the loud noise would sound.
C. All learning is observable.
D. Pigeons peck disks knowing that they will receive food.
E. Cognition plays an important role in learning.
13. Before his parents will read him a bedtime story, Charley has to brush his teeth, put on his
pajamas, kiss his grandmother goodnight, and put away his toys. This example illustrates
A. shaping.
B. Acquisition.
C. Generalization.
D. Chaining.
E. A token economy.
15. Lily keeps poking Jared in Mr. Claytons third-grade class. Mr. Clayton tells Jared to ignore
Lily. Mr. Clayton is hoping that ignoring Lilys behavior will
A. punish her.
B. Extinguish her behavior.
C. Negatively reinforce the behavior.
D. Cause Lily to generalize.
E. Make the behavior latent
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MEMORY
Several different models, or explanations, of how memory works have emerged from memory
research. Two of the most important models: the three-box/information processing model and
the levels of processing model. Neither model is perfect.
Three Box model proposes the three stages that information passes through before it is stored:
Sensory memory
- split-second holding tank
- the information your senses are processing right now is held in sensory memory
- less than a second
- George Sperling did experiments, showed iconic memory a split-second perfect
photograph of a scene
- Other experiments indicate echoic memory split-second memory for sounds
- Most of the information in sensory memory is not encoded
- Selective attention determines which sensory messages get encoded
Short-term/Working Memory
- memories we are currently working with
- temporary, they usually fade in 10 to 30 seconds
- capacity is limited on average to around seven items
- Events are encoded as visual codes, acoustic codes, or semantic codes
- Capacity can be expanded through chunking
- Mnemonic devices- memory aids, really examples of chunking
- Rehearsal or simple repetition can hold information in short-term memory
Long-term Memory
- permanent storage
- capacity is unlimited
- memories can decay or fade
- stored in three different formats
Episodic memory memories of specific events stored in a sequential series of events
Semantic memory general knowledge of the world stored as facts, meanings, or
categories rather than sequentially
Procedural Memory memories of skills and how to perform them, These are
sequential but might be very complicated to describe in words.
This theory explains why we remember what we do by examining how deeply the
memory was processed or thought about. Memories are neither short- nor long-term. They are
deeply (or elaboratively) processed or shallowly (or maintenance) processed.
RETRIEVAL
- getting information
- two different kinds: recognition and recall
There are several factors that influence why we can retrieve some memories and why we forget
others.
- Primacy effect more likely to recall items presented at the beginning of a list
- Recency effect- ability ot recall the items at the end of a list
- Context - semantic network theory
- Flashbulb memories
- Mood-congruent memory- ability to recall a memory is increased when current mood
matches mood when stored
- State-dependent memory-
Constructive Memory false memories, leading questions can easily influence us.
FORGETTING
One cause is decay, because we do not use a memory or connection to a memory for a long time.
Relearning effect indicates that it isnt entirely gone
Operant or instrumental conditioning - type of learning in which behaviors are emitted to earn
rewards to avoid punishments
Conditioned response - after conditioning, the response an organism produces when only a
conditioned stimulus is presented
Operant behavior - behavior designed to operate on the environment in a way that will gain
something desired or avoid something unpleasant
Reinforcer - a stimulus that follows a behavior and increases the likelihood that the behavior
will be repeated
Punisher - a stimulus that follows a behavior and decreases the likelihood that the behavior will
be repeated
Law of effect - Thorndikes theory that behavior consistently rewarded will be stamped in as
learned behavior
Positive reinforcer - Any event whose presence increases the likelihood that ongoing behavior
will recur
Negative reinforcer - Any event whose reduction or termination increases the likelihood that
ongoing behavior will recur
Response acquisition - building phase of the conditioning during which the likelihood or
strength of the desired response increases
Intermittent pairing - pairing the conditioned stimulus and the unconditioned stimulus on only
a portion of the learning trials
Skinner box - box that is often used in operant conditioning of animals. It limits the available
responses and thus increases the likelihood that the desired response will occur
Stimulus discrimination - learning to respond to only one stimulus and to inhibit the response
to all other stimuli
Response generalization - giving a response that is somewhat different from the response
originally learned to that stimulus
Primary reinforcer - reinforcer that is rewarding in itself, such as food, water, and sex
Secondary reinforcer - reinforcer whose value is learned through association with other primary
or secondary reinforcers
Blocking - prior conditioning prevents conditioning to a second stimulus even when the two
stimuli are presented simultaneously
Schedule of reinforcement - in partial reinforcement, the rule for determining when and how
often reinforcers will be delivered
Fixed-ratio schedule - reinforcement schedule in which the correct response is reinforced after a
fixed number of correct responses
Cognitive learning - learning that depends on mental processes that are not directly observable
Cognitive map - a learned mental image of a spatial environment that may be called on to solve
problems when stimuli in the environment change
Learning set - ability to become increasingly more effective in solving problems as more
problems are solved
Social learning theory - view of learning that emphasizes the ability to learn by observing a
model or receiving instructions, without firsthand experience by the learner
Token economy a behavioral technique in which rewards for desired acts are accumulated
through tokens, which represent a form of money
Cognitive approach a way of learning based on abstract mental processes and previous
knowledge
Learning curve a gradual upward slope representing increased retention of material as the
result of learning
State-dependent learning- the fact that material learned in one chemical state is best reproduced
when the same state occurs again
Transfer of training- a learning process in which learning is moved from one task to another
based on similarities between the tasks
Positive transfer a transfer of learning that results from similarities between two tasks
Negative transfer an interference with learning due to differences between two otherwise
similar tasks
Information processing the methods by which we take in, analyze, store, and retrieve material
Principle learning a method of learning in which an overall view (principle) of the material to
be learned is developed so that the material is better organized
Chunking putting things into clusters or chunks so that items learned are in groups, rather
than separate
Forgetting an increase in errors when trying to bring material back from memory
Overlearning the process of learning something beyond one perfect recitation so that the
forgetting curve will have no effect; the development of perfect retention.
Forgetting curve graphic representation of speed and amount of forgetting that occurs
Recall the ability to bring back and integrate many specific learned details
Recognition the ability to pick the correct object or event from a list of choices
Interference theory the belief that we forget because new and old material conflict with one
another
Amnesia the blocking of older memories and/or the loss of new ones
Short-term memory the memory system that retains information for a few seconds to a few
minutes
Long-term memory the memory system that retains information for hours, days, weeks,
months, decades
Sensory memory system direct receivers of information from the environment for example,
iconic, acoustic
Iconic memory a very brief visual memory that can be sent to the STM
Acoustic memory a very brief sound memory that can be sent to the STM
Eidetic imagery an iconic memory lasting a minute or so that keeps images in front of the
person so objects can be counted or analyzed, also called photographic memory
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COGNITION
LANGUAGE
Elements
-phonemes
-morphemes
-syntax
Language Acquisition-
First stage babbling
- babbling appears to be innate
- babies in this stage are capable of producing any phoneme from any language
- babbling progresses into utterances of words as babies imitate the words they hear caregivers
say
Benjamin Whorf, linguistic relativity hypothesis the language we use might control,
and in some ways limit, our thinking
Use of the heuristics can lead to specific problems in judgments. Overconfidence, belief
bias, belief perseverance
Creativity
- little correlation between intelligence and creativity
- difficult to define, originality, appropriateness, novel, somehow fits the situation
- convergent thinking- thinking pointed toward one solution
- divergent thinking- thinking that searches for multiple possible answers to a question -
divergent thinking is more closely associated with creativity.
COGNITION QUIZ
1. Mr. Krohn, a carpenter is frustrated because he misplaced his hammer and needs to pound in the last nail in
the bookcase he is building. He overlooks the fact that he could use the tennis trophy sitting above the
workbench to pound in the nail. Which concept best explains why Mr. Krohn overlooked the trophy?
A. representativeness heuristic
B. retrieval
C. functional fixedness
D. belief bias
E. divergent thinking
3. Which example would be better explained by the levels of processing model than the information-processing
model?
A. Someone says your name across the room and you switch your attention away from the conversation you
are having.
B. You forget part of a list you were trying to memorize for a test.
C. While visiting with your grandmother, you recall one of your favorite childhood toys
D. You are able to remember verbatim a riddle you worked on for a few days before you figured out the
answer.
E. You pay less attention to the smell of your neighbors cologne than to the professors lecture in your college
class.
4. Contrary to what Whorfs linguistic relativity hypothesis originally predicted, what effect does recent
research indicate language has on the way we think?
A. Since we think in language, the language we understand limits what we have the ability to think about.
B. Language is a tool of thought but does not limit our cogniton.
C. The labels we apply affect our thoughts.
D. The relative wods in each langage afect our ability to think because we are restricted to the words each
langage uses.
E. The linguistic relativity hypothesis predicts that how quickly we acquire language correlates with our
cognitive ability
A. Judging that a young person is more likely to be the instigator of an argument than an older person, because
you believe younger people are more likely to start fights.
B. Breaking a math story problem down into smaller, representative parts, in order to solve it.
C. Judging a situation by a rule that is usuly, but not always true.
D. Solving a problem with a rule that guarantees the right, more representative answer.
E. Making a judgment according to past experiences that are most easily recalled, therefore representative of
experience.
6. Which of the following is the most complete list of elements in the three-box/information processing model?
7. Which of the following is an effective method for testing whether a memory is actually true or whether it is a
constructed memory?
8. One of the ways memories are physically stored in the brain is by what process?
10. According to the three-box/information-processing model, stimuli from our outside environment is first stored
in
A. working memory.
B. The hippocampus.
C. The thalamus.
D. Sensory memory.
E. Selective attention.
11. Which of the following is the best example of the use of the availability heuristic?
A. .Sensory memory stores all sensory input perfectly accurately for a short period of time.
B. Sensory memory encodes only sensations we are attending to at the time.
C. Sensory memory receives memories from the working memory and decides which memories to encode in
long-term memory.
D. Sensory memory records all incoming sensations and remembers them indefinitely.
E. Sensory memory records some sensations accurately, but some are recorded incorrectly, leading to
constructive memory.
A. memories retrieved by recognition are held in working memory, and recalled memories are in long-term
memory.
B. Memories retrieved by recognition are more deeply processed.
C. The process of recall involves cues to the memory that causes interference.
D. Memories retrieved by recognition are more recent than memories retrieved by recall.
E. The process of recognition involves matching a person, event, or object with something already in memory
14. Which of the following would be the best piece of evidence for the nativist theory of language
acquisition?
A. A child who acquires language at an extremely early age through intense instruction by her or his parents.
B. Statistical evidence that children in one culture learn language faster than children in another culture.
C. A child of normal mental ability not being able to learn language due to language deprivation at a young
age.
D. A child skipping the babbling and telegraphic speech stages of language acquisition.
E. A child deprived of language at an early age successfully learning language later.
15. A friend mentions to you that she heard humans never forget anything; we remember everything that ever
happens to us. What concept from memory research most directly contradicts this belief?
A. sensory memory
B. selective attention
C. long-term memory
D. constructive memory
E. recovered memory
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DEVELOPMENT
DEVELOPMENT
I. Development involves the processes and stages of growth from conception across the life
span. It encompasses changes in physical, cognitive, and social behaviors.
III. Methods
C. Teratogens are disease agents, drugs, and other environmental agents that can cause birth
defects during the prenatal period
V. Infancy
A. Physical development
1. Growth rate declines throughout infancy but is faster than during any other
postnatal period.
2. Maturation and learning combine to determine skill development and replace reflexes.
B. Social development
1. Harry Harlow's surrogate mother research with monkeys demonstrated the importance of
contact comfort.
2. Attachment style
a. Secure attachment means the infant seeks proximity, contact, and interaction with the
caregiver after separation.
b. Insecure attachment means the infant cannot be calmed or ignores the caregiver after
separation.
3. Stranger anxiety peaks at about 6 months; separation anxiety peaks at about 18 months.
D. Cognitive development
1. Infants show a preference for face-like patterns
2. Visual cliff experiments suggest that infants perceive depth by the time they are able to
crawl.
B. Social development
1. Interaction with the environment provides a sense of gender identity.
2. A greater sense of independence develops as peer relationships begin to become more important.
C. Cognitive development continues at a rapid rate. There are advances in the areas of
1. Leaming
2.Language .
3. Thinking skills
II. Adolescence
Adolescent development relates to many important societal problems, such as suicide, teen
pregnancy, and eating disorders.
A. Physical changes
3. Career selection
C. Cognitive changes vary significantly with some people showing declines and others not.
1. Reaction time appears to decline.
2. Some adults show a decline in memory.
II.Later years
A. Physical changes
1, There is a general decline in muscle tone
and sensory abilities
2.Senile dementia and Alzheimer's disease
are two disorders that may develop.
Social issues include:
1. Retirement
2. Social isolation, which may be caused by loss of spouse and others, lack of mobility and declining
health C. Cognitive declines are likely to continue. .
Piaget and Kohlberg
a. Circular reactions are repetitive motions babies engage in as they gradually learn to explore their
environment nonreflexively.
:b. object perman.ence is the understanding that objects continue to exist even when --hidden from view.
2. Developmental achievements
a. Symbolic representation and language
b. Readiness for operational thought
a. Conservation is the principle that matter does not increase or decrease because of a change in form.
b. Reversibility is the understanding that mathematical operations can be undone.
c. CIass inclusion is the ability to understand the hierarchical nature of classification groups.;
E. Critique of Piaget
1. Development may be more gradual than Piaget's stages imply.
2.The nature of Piaget's tasks may have underestimated cognitive skills of children.
II. Kohlberg's theory of moral development
A. Preconventional level
1. Stage 1, characterized by avoidance of punishment
2. Stage 2, characterized by a desire to further one's own interests
B. Conventional level
1. Stage 3, characterized by living up to the expectations of others
2. Stage 4, characterized by a sense of conscience and "doing one's duty"
C. Postconventional level
1. Stage 5, characterized by an understanding that values and rules are relative but generally need to be
upheld
2. Stage 6, characterized by universal ethical principles
D. Critique of Kohlberg
1. Development may be more gradual and less sequential than Kohlberg's stages imply.
2. Gilligan and others have criticized the theory for undervaluing traditional female traits, which focus on
interpersonal issues.
A. Erikson was trained in the Freudian tradition, and the first four stages borrow from Freud's
psychosexual stages.
B. The developmental task of each stage involves resolving the tension between two opposite outcomes.
DEVELOPMENT
Developmental Psychology- Study of the changes that occur in people from birth through
old age.
Cross sectional study- Method of studying developmental changes by examining groups
of subjects who are of different ages.
Cohort- Group of people born during the same period in historical time
Longitudinal study- Method of studying developmental changes by examining the same
group of subjects two or more times, as they grow older.
Biographical or retrospective study- Method of studying developmental changes by
reconstructing subjects past through interviews and investigating the effects of events that
occurred in the past on current behaviors.
Prenatal- Development from conception to birth
Embryo-Developing human between 2 weeks and 3 months after conception
Fetus- Developing human between 3 months after conception and birth
Placenta- Organ by which an embryo or fetus is attached to its mothers uterus and that
nourishes it during prenatal development.
Critical period- Time when certain internal and external influences have a major effect on
development; at other periods, the same influences will have little or no effect
Neonate - Newborn baby
Rooting reflex- Reflex that causes a newborn to turn its head toward something touching
its cheek and to grope around with its mouth
Swallowing reflex- Reflex that enables the newborn baby to swallow liquids without choking
Grasping reflex- Reflex that causes newborn babies to close their fists around anything
that is put in their hands
Stepping reflex- Reflex that causes newborn babies to make little stepping motions if they are
held upright with their feet just touching a surface
temperament- Term used by psychologists to describe the physical/emotional
characteristics of the newborn child and young infant; also referred to as personality
Maturation- Automatic biological unfolding of development in an organism as a function
of the passage of time
Developmental norms-Ages by which an average child achieves various developmental
milestones
Sensorimotor stage- In Piagets theory, the stage of cognitive development between birth and 2
years of age, in which the indiv. Develops object permanence and acquires the ability to form
mental representations
Object permanence -The concept that things continue to exist even when they are out of sight
Mental representation- Mental image or symbol used to think about or remember an object, a
person, or an event
Preoperational stage- In Piagets theory the stage of cognitive devel. Between 2 and 7, in which
the individual becomes able to use mental representations and language to describe remember
and reason
Egocentric- Unable to see things from anothers point of view
Formal operations- In Piagets theory, the state between 11 and 15, in which the indiv.becomes
capable of abstract thought
Holophrase- One-word sentences, commonly used by children under 2
Language acquisition device- An internal mechanism for processing speech that is wired In to
all humans
Imprinting- Form of primitive bonding seen in some species of animals the newborn animal
has a tendency to follow the first moving thing it sees after it is born or hatched
Attachment- Emotional bond that develops in the first year of life that makes human babies
cling to their caregivers for safety and comfort
Autonomy- Sense of independence; desire not to be controlled by others
Socialization- Process by which children learn the behaviors and attitudes appropriate to their
family and their culture
solitary play- A child engaged in some activity alone; the earliest form of play
Parallel play- Two children playing side by side at the same activities, paying little or no
Attention to each other; the earliest kind of social interaction between toddlers
Cooperative play- Two or more children engaged in play that requires interaction
Sex role awareness- A little girls knowledge that she is a girl and a little boys knowledge that
he is a boy
Gender constancy- The realization by a child that gender cannot be changed
Sex role awareness- Knowledge of what behavior is appropriate for each gender
Sex-typed behavior- Socially prescribed ways of behaving that differ for boys and girls
Puberty- Onset of sexual maturation, with accompanying physical development
Menarche- First menstrual period
Imaginary audience- Elkinds term for adolescents; delusion that they are constantly being
observed by others
Personal fable- Elkinds term for adolescents; delusion that they are unique, very important and
invulnerable
Identity formation- Eriksons term for the development of a stable sense of self necessity
to make the transition from dependence on others to dependence on oneself
Identity crisis- Period of intense self-examination and decision making part of the process of
identity formation
Peer group- A network of same-aged friends and acquaintances who give one another
emotional and social support
Clique- Group of adolescents with similar interests and strong mutual attachment
Anorexia nervosa- A serious eating disorder that is associated with an intense fear of weight
gain and a distorted body image
Bulimia- An eating disorder characterized by binges of eating followed by self induced vomiting
midlife crisis- A time when adults discover they no longer feel fulfilled in their jobs or personal
lives and attempt to make a decisive shift in career or lifestyle
Midlife transition- According to Levinson, a process whereby adults assess the past and
formulate new goals for the future
Menopause- Time in a womans life when menstruation ceases
Alzheimers disease- A disorder common in late adulthood that is characterized by progressive
losses in memory and changes in personality. It is believed to be caused by a deterioration of the
brains structure and function.
DEVELOPMENT QUIZ
2. You read in your philosophy class textbook that humans are born Tabula Rasa or blank
slates. As a student of psychology, which of the following responses would you have?
A. The statement is incorrect. Humans may be bon without reflexes and instincts, but we
are born with the ability to learn them.
B. The statement is correct. Humans are born without instincts or other mechanisms in
place to help us survive.
C. The statement is correct. Humans are born with a certain number of neurons, but most
develop later as we learn.
D. The statement is incorrect. Humans are born with a set of reflexes that help us survive.
E. The statement is impossible to prove since we cannot infer what babies know or do not
know due to their lack of language.
3. Which of the following statements is most true about how a newborns senses function?
A. A newborns senses function the same as an adults since the sensory apparatus develops
in the womb.
B. All of our senses function normally when we are newborns except taste due to lack of
stimulation in the womb.
C. All of our senses function normally when we are newborns except touch due to lack of
stimulation in the womb.
D. A newborns senses function at a very low level but develop very quickly with
experience.
E. Most senses function normally, but sight develops slowly with experience.
4. Most prenatal influences on humans are genetic or hormonal in origin except for
A. teratogens.
B. Stress on the mother.
C. Parents level of education about fetal development.
D. Family history of mental illness.
E. Operant conditioning occurring before birth.
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MOTIVATION AND
EMOTION
Darwins theory of natural selection caused many psychologists to try and explain all human
behaviors through instincts, most agree that our behavior is motivated by other biological and
psychological factors.
Drive reduction theory behavior is motivated by biological needs. A need is one of our
requirements for survival, a drive is our impulse to act in a way that satisfies this need
Arousal Theory- states that we seek an optimum level of excitement or arousal, most of us
perform best with an optimum level of arousal.
Yerkes-Dobson law high level of arousal may cause us to perform well at easy tasks but
poorly on difficult tasks.
Incentive Theory sometimes behavior is pulled by a desire, incentives are stimuli that we are
drawn to due to learning
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs Abraham Maslow pointed out that not all needs are created
equal
Psychological factors
Eating Disorders different cultures have drastically different rates of eating disorders,
rates are highest in the U.S. The three most common are:
Bulimia Bulimics eat large amounts of food in a short period of time and then
get rid of the food by vomiting, excessive exercise, or the use of laxatives. (Binge then Purge)
Bulimics are obsessed with food and their weight, the majority of bulimics are women
Obesity People with diagnosed obesity are severely overweight, often over 100 pounds,
and the excess weight threatens their health. Obese people typically have unhealthy eating habits
rather than the food obsessions of the other two disorders. Some people may also be genetically
predisposed to obesity
Social Motivation
and master skills, sometimes regardless of the benefits of the skills or knowledge.
Studies involve looking at differences in how people set and meet personal goals
and go about acquiring new knowledge or skills.
Extrinsic/Intrinsic Motivation-
Extrinsic motivators are rewards that we get for accomplishments from outside
ourselves Ex. Grades, salary, etc.
Knowing what type of motivation an individual responds best to can give managers
insight into what strategies will be most effective. Extrinsic motivators are effective for a
short period of time but studies show that if we want a behavior to continue, intrinsic
motivation is most effective.
Management Theory studies of management styles show two basic attitudes that affect how
managers do their jobs:
Cannon-Bard They doubted this order, they demonstrated that similar physiological changes
correspond with drastically different emotional states. Biological change and the cognitive
awareness of the emotional state occur simultaneously
Two Factor Theory Stanley Schacter explains emotional experiences in a more complete way
than either previous. He pointed out that both our physical responses and our cognitive labels
combine to cause any particular emotional response. Emotion depends on the interaction
between two factors, biology and cognition.
STRESS stress and emotion are intimately connected concepts. The term stress can refer to
either certain life events (stressors) or how we react to these changes in the environment (stress
reactions)
Measuring stress Thomas Holmes and Richard Rahe designed one of the first instruments to
measure stress. Their social readjustment rating scale (SRRS) measured stress using life-change
units (LCUs). Any major life change increases the score on the SRRS, a person who scored very
high on the SRRS is more likely to have stress-related diseases than a person with a low score.
General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS) Hans Seyle describes the general response in humans
and animals to stressful events. There are three stages:
Alarm reaction Heart rate increases, blood is diverted away from other body functions to
muscles needed to react. The organism readies itself to meet the challenge through activation of
the sympathetic nervous system.
Resistance The body remains physiologically ready. Hormones are released to maintain this
state of readiness. If the resistance stage lasts too long, te body can deplete its resources.
Exhaustion The parasympathetic nervous system returns our physiological state to normal.
We can be more vulnerable to disease in this stage especially if our resources were depleted by
an extended resistance stage.
Various studies show that a perceived lack of control over events exacerbates the harmful effects
of stress, control over events tends to lessen stress.
1. How would drive reduction theory explain a person accepting a new hob with a higher
salary but that requires more work and responsibility?
A. Money is a more powerful incentive for this individual than free time.
B. This person seeks a higher activity level and takes the job in order to satisfy this drive.
C. For this person, money is a higher level need than free time.
D. The person takes the job to satisfy the secondary drive of increased salary.
E. Humans instinctively seek greater resources and control over their environment.
2. Which aspects of hunger are controlled by the lateral and ventromedial hypothalamus?
A. contraction and expansion of the stomach, indicating too much or too little food.
B. Body temperature and desire to eat.
C. Desire to eat and physiological processes needed for eating, and digestion (such as
salivation).
D. The binge and purge cycle in bulimics.
E. The desire to eat and the feeling of satiety or fullness, that makes us stop eating.
3. All of the following are identified by researchers as important factors in the causes of eating
disorders EXCEPT
4. Research is dispelling many popular myths about the so-called causes of homosexuality, all
of the following are factors research has eliminated as possible causes EXCEPT
5. What is the principle difference between how achievement motivation theory and arousal
theory explain human motivation?
6. Which of the following are reasons why intrinsic motivation might be more advantageous
than extrinsic motivation?
A. Intrinsic motivation might be more enduring since extrinsic motivations are usually
temporary.
B. Intrinsic motivations are easier and more convenient to provide.
C. Intrinsic motivations are higher on Maslows hierarchy of needs, so we are motivated to
meet them before extrinsic needs.
D. Intrinsic motivations are more likely to be primary drives. Extrinsic motivations are
secondary drives.
E. Intrinsic motivations are more effective with a wider range of individuals.
7. Which sentence most closely describes the difference between theory X and theory Y types
of management?
A. Theory X managers are more active in work groups. Theory Y managers are more hands-
off, letting groups work out problems on their own.
B. The management theories differ in regard to what tasks they delegate to workers.
C. Theory Y managers regard employees as intrinsically motivated,.
D. Management theory X is dominant in collectivist cultures. Theory Y is more prevalent in
individualist cultures.
E. Theory Y is used with workers who have high optimum levels of arousal. Theory X is
used with those whose arousal levels are low.
8. What does Schacters two-factor theory state about the relationship between emotion and
physiological reaction?
A. Emotions are caused by physiological reactions. For example, we feel excited because
our heart begins to race.
B. Physiological reactions are caaused by emotions. For example, our experience of fear
causes our breathing rate to increase.
C. A combination of physiological reactions and our cognitive interpretation of an event
produces emotion.
D. Physiological reactions and emotional response occur simultaneously.
E. Cognitive emotions occur independently of physiological states and are unrelated.
9. Excessive time spent in the resistance phase of Seyles general adaptation syndrome can
contribute to
11.The balanced physiological state we are driven to attain by satisfying our needs is called
A. equilibrium
B. homeostasis
C. self-actualization
D. primary satisfaction
E. secondary satisfaction
13. Which of the following factor does research indicate may influence sexual orientation?
A. parenting styles
B. degree of masculinity or femininity expressed in childhood
C. traumatic childhood experiences
D. genetic influences
E. being raised by homosexual parents
15. A high score on Holmes and Rahes social readjustment rating scale correlates with
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PERSONALITY
Personality is the unique attitudes, behaviors, and emotions that characterize a person.
PSYCHODYNAMIC THEORIES
Sigmund Freud- personality was essentially set in early childhood, psychosexual stages
Three parts to personality- id, ego, superego
Id contains instincts and energy. Two types of instincts:
Eros- life instinct; often evidenced as a desire for sex
Thanatos the death instinct;; seen in aggression
Defense Mechanisms-
Personal unconscious- similar to Freuds idea, contains painful memories and thoughts
the person does not wish to confront, complexes
Collective unconscious- passed down through the species, explains certain similarities we
see between all cultures, contains archetypes (universal concepts we all share
Alfred Adler ego psychologist, downplayed the importance of the unconscious, Thought
people are motivated by the fear of failure, inferiority; and the desire to achieve, superiority.
Also known for his work on the importance of birth order.
TRAIT THEORIES
Trait theorists believe we can describe peoples personalities by specifying their main
characteristics or traits.
Nomothetic approach. Theorists that believe that the same basic set of traits can be
used to describe all peoples personalities
Hans Eyesenck- believed could classify all people along introversion-extraversion scale and
a stable-unstable scale
Raymond Cattell- 16PF (personality factor) 16 basic traits in all people in varying degrees
A number of contemporary trait theorists believe that personality can be described using the big
five personality traits- extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, openness to experience,
emotional stability
The number of traits is derived from factor analysis- a statistical technique that allows
researchers to use correlations between traits.
Idiographic theorists- argue that each person should be seen in terms of the few traits that best
characterize their uniqueness
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INTELLIGENCE
Intelligence is often defined as a measure of general mental ability. Of the
standardized intelligence tests, those developed by David Wechsler are among
those most widely used. Wechsler defined intelligence as the global capacity to
act purposefully, to think rationally, and to deal effectively with the environment.
While psychologists generally agree with this definition, they dont agree on the
operational definition of intelligence (that is, a statement of the procedures to be
used to precisely define the variable to be measured) or how to accomplish its
measurement.
Tests of aptitude and achievement. Group tests, like the SAT measure
aptitude, or the capacity to learn and achievement, what has been learned.
Each dimension is subdivided and the combinations can lead to over 100
separate factors.
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ABNORMAL
Defining abnormal behavior is difficult. It generally has the following characteristics.
CATEGORIES OF DISORDERS
- hypochondriasis
- conversion disorder
Dissociative Disorders
- psychogenic amnesia
- fugue
- multiple personality disorder
- Major depression also known as unipolar depression- the most common mood
disorder. Key factor is the length of the depressive episode. Other symptoms- loss of
appetite, fatigue, change in sleeping patterns, lack of interest in normally enjoyable
activities, feelings of worthlessness
- Bipolar disorder, also know as manic depression- involves both depressed and manic
episodes
Theories on causes
- Aaron Beck, cognitive theorist says comes from unreasonably negative ideas that
people have about themselves, their world, and their futures- cognitive triad. Also
attributional theory applies
- Catatonic schizophrenia- engage in odd movements, stupor, move jerkily and quickly
for no apparent reason, waxy flexibility. Increasingly rare
Causes- most popular ideas is biological, dopamine hypothesis, people with schizophrenia
have high dopamine levels. Also, enlarged ventricles and brain asymmetries, also seems to be
genetic predisposition
Who has schizophrenia?
Schizophrenia is one of the most common mental illnesses. About 1 of every 100
people (1% of the population) is affected by schizophrenia. This disorder is found
throughout the world and in all races and cultures. Schizophrenia affects men and
women in equal numbers, although on average, men appear to develop
schizophrenia earlier than women. Generally, men show the first signs of
schizophrenia in their mid 20s and women show the first signs in their late 20s.
Schizophrenia has a tremendous cost to society, estimated at $32.5 billion per year
in the US (statistic from Brain Facts, Society for Neuroscience, 1997).
Narcissistic
Histrionic
How is normality defined, and what are the major psychological disorders?
Suicide is statistically related to such factors as age, sex, and marital status.
In individual cases, the potential for suicide is best identified by a desire to escape,
unbearable psychological pain, frustrated psychological needs, and a constriction of
options.
Suicide can often be prevented by the efforts of family, friends, and mental health
professionals.
In Western law, the insanity defense evolved from the McNaghten rule.
Insanity is closely related to claims of diminished capacity or claims that a person had an
irresistible impulse.
Inconsistencies in the application of the insanity defense have fueled debate about its
validity.
Thomas Szasz has raised questions about the nature of abnormal behavior and its
relationship to personal responsibility and civil rights.
Public policies concerning treatment of the chronically mentally ill continue to evolve as
authorities try to strike a balance between providing help and taking away personal
freedoms.
For more info. on abnormal and other psychology topics check out
www.rider.edu/users/suler/psylinks.html
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TREATMENT OF PSYCHOLOGICAL
DISORDERS
Mental illnesses are brought on by a variety of causes therefore therapists must use
a variety of methods to treat them.
Research shows that about two-thirds of adults who undergo psychotherapy show
marked improvement or recover however about the same number improve without
treatment also.
PSYCHODYNAMIC APPROACHES
HUMANISTIC THERAPY
COGNITIVE THERAPY
GROUP THERAPY
-family therapy
-encounter groups
-self-help groups
SOMATIC THERAPY
Behavior therapists use various behavior modification techniques that apply learning
principles to change human behavior.
In aversion therapy, classical conditioning is used to associate maladaptive behavior
(such as smoking or drinking) with pain or other aversive events in order to inhibit
undesirable responses.
In most communities, a competent and reputable therapist can be located with public
sources of information or through a referral.
Practical considerations such as cost and qualifications enter into choosing a therapist.
However, the therapists personal characteristics are of equal importance.
Many cultural barriers to effective counseling and therapy have been identified.
Aware therapists are beginning to seek out the knowledge and skills needed to intervene
successfully in the lives of clients from diverse cultural backgrounds.
The culturally skilled counselor must be able to establish rapport with a person from a
different cultural background and adapt traditional theories and techniques to meet the
needs of clients from non-European ethnic or racial groups.
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SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
-The scientific study of the ways in which the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of one individual
are influenced by the real, imagined, or inferred behavior or characteristics of other people.
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
The study of personal space is called proxemics. Four basic spatial zones around each
persons body are intimate distance (0 to 18 inches), personal distance (1 to 4 feet),
social distance (4 to 12 feet), and public distance (12 feet or more).
How do we perceive the motives of others and the causes of our own behavior?
Attribution theory is concerned with how we make inferences about behavior. A variety
of factors affect attribution, including consistency, distinctiveness, situational demands,
and consensus.
The fundamental attributional error is to ascribe the actions of others to internal causes.
Because of actor-observer differences, we tend to attribute our own behavior to external
causes.
Self-handicapping, involves arranging excuses for poor performance as a way to protect
ones self-image or self-esteem.
The need to affiliate is tied to additional needs for approval, support, friendship, and
information. Additionally, research indicates that affiliation is related to reducing anxiety
and uncertainty.
Social comparison theory holds that we affiliate to evaluate our actions, feelings, and
abilities. Social comparisons are also made for purposes of self-protection and self-
enhancement.
What have social psychologists learned about conformity, social power, obedience, and
compliance?
In general, social influence refers to alterations in behavior brought about by the behavior
of others. Conformity to group pressure is a familiar example of social influence
Virtually everyone conforms to a variety of broad social and cultural norms. Conformity
pressures also exist within smaller groups. The famous Asch experiments demonstrated
that various group sanctions encourage conformity.
Groupthink refers to compulsive conformity in group decision making. Victims of
groupthink seek to maintain each others approval, even at the cost of critical thinking.
Social influence is also related to five types of social power: reward power, coercive
power, legitimate power, referent power, and expert power.
Obedience to authority has been investigated in a variety of experiments, particularly
those by Milgram. Obedience in Milgrams studies decreased when the victim was in the
same room, when the victim and subject were face to face, when the authority figure was
absent, and when others refused to obey.
Compliance with direct requests is another means by which behavior is influenced.
Three strategies for inducing compliance are the foot-in-the-door technique, the door-it-
the-face approach, and the low-ball technique.
Recent research suggests that, in addition to excessive obedience to authority, many
people show a surprising passive compliance to unreasonable requests.
Self-assertion, as opposed to aggression, involves clearly stating ones wants and needs to
others. Learning to be assertive is accomplished by role-playing, rehearsing assertive
actions, over-learning, and using specific techniques, such is the broken record.
What is a social trap?
A social trap is a social situation in which immediately rewarded actions have undesired
effects in the long run.
One prominent social trap occurs when limited public resources are overused, a problem
called the tragedy of the commons.
* Social Psychology Humor Links to cartoons that relate to principles of social psychology.
http://miavxl.muohio.edu/~shermarc/p324cart.html
TERMS
Primacy effect - early information about someone weights more heavily that later information in
influencing ones impression of that person
Attribution theory - theory that addresses the question of how people make judgments about the
causes of behavior
Defensive attribution - tendency to attribute our successes to our own efforts or qualities and
our failures to external factors
Just-world hypothesis - attribution error based on the assumption that bad things happen to bad
people and good things happen to good people
Exchange - concept that relationships are based on trading rewards among partners
Equity - fairness of exchange achieved when each partner in the relationship receives the same
proportion of outcomes to investments
Intimacy - the quality of genuine closeness and trust achieved in communication with another
person
Attitude - relatively stable organization of beliefs, feelings, and behavior tendencies directed
toward something or someone-the attitude object
Self-monitoring - tendency for an individual to observe the situation for cues about how to react
Discrimination - an unfair act or series of acts taken toward an entire group of people or
individual members of that group
Frustration-aggression theory - theory that under certain circumstances people who are
frustrated in their goals turn their anger away from the proper, powerful target toward another,
less powerful target it is safer to attack
Social influence - process by which others individually or collectively affect ones perceptions,
attitudes, and actions.
Culture - All the goods, both tangible and intangible, produced in a society
Cultural truism - Belief that most members of a society accept as self-evidently true
Conformity - Voluntarily yielding to social norms, even at the expense of ones own preferences
Risky shift -Greater willingness to take risks in decision making in a group than as independent
individuals
Polarization - Shift in attitudes by members of a group toward more extreme positions than the
ones held before groups discussion
Great person theory -Theory that leadership is a result of personal qualities and traits that
qualify one to lead others
Hawthorne effect - Principle that subjects will alter their behavior because of researchers
attention and not necessarily because of any specific experimentation
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ESSAY QUESTIONS
.Free-Response questions from past AP exams. There are two questions and you must answer
both in 45 minutes. It is not enough to answer a question by merely listing facts. You should
present a cogent argument based on your critical analysis of the question posed.
1994
2. One of the most useful generalizations in psychology is that behavior is adaptive. Explain
this generalization and then identify each of the following and describe how each could be
adaptive.
A. Repression
B. Conformity
C. Imprinting
D. Displaced aggression
E. Loss of information from short-term memory
1995
1. Compare and contrast the experimental method and the survey method in terms of their
suitability for investigating the hypothesis that frustration leads to aggressive behavior.
In comparing and contrasting the two methods, be sure to identify and discuss each of the
following.
A. Independent variable
B. Dependent variable
C. Control
D. Experimenter and response bias
E. Ethical issues
2. Define each of the following concepts and explain how each contributes to the phenomenon
of prejudice.
A. Stereotyping
B. Self-fulfilling prophecy
C. Fundamental attribution error
D. Projection
E. Schema
1996
1. Discuss how social and biological factors have an impact on each of the following in the
individual.
A. Body weight
B. Perception
C. Alcoholism
D. Extraversion
E. Schizophrenia
2. Professor Jackson believes that frustration increases the need for achievement. She
decides to test her hypothesis with her introductory psychology class of about 100 students.
The first 50 students who arrive for class one day are taken to a separate room and given a
series of easy puzzles to complete. Professor Jackson then asks each student about his or her
professional goals. She rates the statement of each on a 7-point scale for strength of
achievement motivation.
When they arrive, the remaining students are taken to another room and given a series of
difficult puzzles by Professor Jacksons teaching assistant, Jim. Jim also asks each student
about his or her professional goals and, like Professor Jackson, then rates the statement of
each on a 7-point scale.
The group given the difficult puzzles has, on the average, higher achievement motivation
scores than the group given the easy puzzles. Professor Jackson concludes that her
hypothesis is supported.
Show how each of the following aspects of Professor Jacksons experimental design is
flawed. Indicate how you would correct each problem.
A. Sampling
B. Assignment of participants
C. Dependent variable
D. Control for experimenter bias
E. Control of confounding variables (You need cite only one.)
1997
1. Many People are concerned about the effects of the use of physical punishment to modify the
undesirable behavior of children.
Modeling
Displacement
B. How would psychologists use the following processes to modify childrens undesirable
behavior?
Positive reinforcement
Extinction
2. Although personality is generally consistent throughout the life span, some people exhibit
major personality changes.
A. How do each of the following help to explain BOTH continuity and change in
personality?
Biological factors
Learning factors
Situational factors
Cognitive factors
B. How would any TWO of the above interact to produce change in the trait of shyness?
1998
1. Read the following abstract of a student research project on bystander intervention and then
answer the questions that follow.
The ten participants in the study were unaware of its purpose. The first five who signed up to be
tested were assigned to the Alone condition and the next five were assigned to the With Others
condition. The Alone condition was run in the morning and the With Others condition in the
afternoon.
In the Alone condition, each of the five participants was asked to wait alone in a room. While
the participant waited, a female voice in the next room screamed out, asking for help. In the
With Others condition, each one of the five participants was asked to wait in a room with several
confederates of the researcher. During this waiting period, a male voice in the next room
screamed out, asking for help.
In each condition, the percentage of participants who responded to the cry for help was
recorded.
B. Identify four flaws in the design of this study and the recommendations you would make to
correct these flaws.
D. Use your knowledge of research in social psychology to describe the likely results of this
study if correct methodology had been used.
2. A. Describe fully the distinctive emphasis of the cognitive approach to human behavior and
mental processes. In your essay, be sure to specify how the cognitive approach differs from
the following psychological approaches.
Psychodynamic/psychoanalytic
Behavioral
Biological
Memory
Depression
PRACTICE EXAM
The following questions are the released multiple choice questions from the 1994 exam.
After you take it you can e-mail me and I will send you the answers
tmorford@woodford.k12,ky.us
Directions: Each of the questions or incomplete statements below is followed by five suggested answers or
completions. Select the one that is best in each case and then fill in the corresponding oval on the answer sheet.
I. The painful experience associated with termination of the use of an addictive substance is known as
(A) discontinuance
(B) tolerance
(C) withdrawal
(D) forced independence
(E) transduction
2. When parents refuse to accept several psychologists' diagnosis of a child's mental illness, they are using which of
the following defense mechanisms?
(A) Denial
(B) Displacement
(C) Projection
(D) Rationalization
(E) Regression
3. After several trials during which a dog is given a certain kind of food at the same time that a specific tone is
sounded, there is evidence of conditioning if the dog salivates when
(A) the tone only is presented
(B) the food only is presented
(C) the food and tone are presented together
(D) a different tone is presented with the food
(E) a different kind of food is presented without a tone
7. Sigmund Freud believed that dream analysis was a useful device for
(A) decreasing repression
(B) sublimating the id
(C) strengthening the superego
(D) displacing instinctual forces
(E) gaining insight into unconscious motives
8. When rehearsal of incoming information is prevented, which of the following will most likely occur?
(A) The information will remain indefinitely in short-term memory.
(B) There will be no transfer of the information to long-term memory.
(C) The sensory register will stop processing the information.
(D) Retrieval of the information from long-term memory will be easier. .
(E) Information already in long-term memory will be integrated with the incoming information.
9. Which of the following behavior-therapy techniques is typically used to reduce fear of heights?
(A) Time-out
(B) Punishment
(C) Discrimination learning
(D) Token economy
(E) Systematic desensitization
11. Receptors that are especially important for helping a person maintain balance are located in the
(A) gyrus cinguli
(B) inner ear
(C) tendons
(D) ossicles
(E) ligaments
12. In terms of the effect on the central nervous system, alcohol is most accurately classified as which of the
following types of drug?
(A) Depressant
(B) Narcotic
(C) Psychoactive
(D) Stimulant
(E) Hallucinogen
13. Research findings in the area of interpersonal attraction indicate that individuals are most likely to be attracted
to others who are
(A) critical of them
(B) similar to them in attitudes and values
(C) like their parents
(D) willing to do favors for them
(E) indulgent of their failings
14. On a fishing trip, Ed realizes that he has mistakenly packed the sewing box instead of the tackle box. He wants
to fish but returns home because he does not have any line or hooks. Ed's failure to realize that sewing thread can be
used as fishing line and that a bent needle can be used as a hook is an example of
(A) poor problem representation
(B) cognitive accommodation
(C) backward masking
(D) functional fixedness
(E) proactive interference
15. Which of the following responses was most likely acquired through classical conditioning?
(A) The startle response of a baby the first time the baby hears thunder
(B) A child's fear of dogs after the child has been bitten by a dog
(C) The cry of pain expressed by a man whose hand has been cut on a piece of broken glass
(D) The uncontrollable blinking of a woman who has just gotten dust in her eye
(E) The salivation of a dog that is halfway through a bowl of its favorite food
16. If a man who is a heavy smoker is given an electric shock every time he takes a puff on a cigarette, which of
the following behavior-moditication techniques is being used?
(A) Systematic desensitization
(B) Modeling
(C) Aversive conditioning
(D) Homogeneous reinforcement
(E) Interlocking reinforcement
17. The failure of bystanders to give victims of automobile accidents needed assistance is sometimes explained as an
instance of
(A) group polarization
(B) deindividuation
(C) situational attribution
(D) diffusion of responsibility
(E) mere exposure effect
20. Which of the following is most characteristic of individuals with chronic schizophrenia?
(A) Extreme mood swings
(B) Disordered thinking
(C) Profound sadness
(D) Unaccountable loss of body function
(E) Loss of memory
21. Activation of the sympathetic branch of the autonomic nervous system results in
(A) an increase in salivation
(B) an increase in digestion
(C) an increase in respiratory rate
(D) a decrease in heart rate
(E) a decrease in pupil dilation
22. The terms "modeling" and "imitation" are most closely associated with which of the following?
(A) Classical conditioning
(B) Gestalt theory
(C) Hypothesis testing
(D) Operant conditioning
(E) Social learning theory
23. In a famous series of experiments conducted by Harry Harlow, infant monkeys were separated from their
mothers at birth. The infants were then given two surrogate mothers (a terry-cloth "mother" and a wire "mother"),
each of which alternately had a nursing bottle that provided food to the infants. The experimental results showed that
in frightening situations the infant monkeys
(A) were more likely to become aggressive toward the wire mother than toward the terry-cloth mother
(B) failed to seek out either of the mothers because of their lack of experience in seeking contact comfort
(C) preferred the wire mother, even when the terry-cloth mother had the nursing bottle
(D) preferred the terry-cloth mother, even when the wire mother had the nursing bottle
(E) would run and cling to whichever mother had the nursing bottle
24. According to Sigmund Freud, a child's early experience in coping with external demands leads to the
development of the
(A) unconscious
(B) preconscious
(C) Oedipus complex
(D) id
(E) ego
25. According to Albert Bandura, people who believe i that their efforts will be successful and that they are in
control of events have a high level of
(A) insight
(B) self -efficacy
(C) social responsibility
(D) reciprocal determinism
(E) self-monitoring skill
26. Because studies of learning show that events occurring close together in time are easier to associate than those
occurring at widely different times, parents should probably avoid which of the following?
(A) Corporal punishment
(B) Mild punishment
(C) Consistent punishment
(D) Inescapable punishment
(E) Delay of punishment
27. According to Abraham Maslow's hierarchy of needs, which of the following statements is true?
(A) Individuals may have peak experiences when meeting physiological needs.
(B) Self-actualization will always precede the meeting of needs for esteem.
(C) There are cultural differences in the rate at which individuals attain self-actualization.
(D) Women are more likely to reach self-actualization than men are.
(E) Physiological needs must be met before an individual achieves self -actualization.
28. A teen-ager would most probably draw on which of the following to recall her tenth birthday party?
(A) Episodic memory
(B) Semantic memory
(C) Echoic memory
(D) Eidetic imagery
(E) State-dependent learning
29. Leadership, job satisfaction, and employee motivation are all studied in which of the following psychological
disciplines?
(A) Human factors psychology
(B) Industrial-organizational psychology
(C) Community psychology
(D) Counseling psychology
(E) Experimental psychology
30. According to the ethical guidelines set by the American Psychological Association (APA), which of the
following is true of psychological research in which animals are used as subjects?
(A) It must not involve the use of surgical procedures.
(B) It is no longer permitted by the APA without special authorization.
(C) It should conform to all APA ethical guidelines for animal research.
(D) It must be limited to investigations that use correlational procedures.
(E) It may not be conducted by psychologists who do not have a license.
31. Which of the following is INCORRECTLY matched with the hormone that it secretes?
(A) Thyroid gland..thyroxine
(B) Adrenal gland..epinephrine
(C) Pituitary gland..prolactin
(D) Pancreas..insulin
(E) Ovary..testosterone
32. Hunger and eating are primarily regulated by which of the following?
(A) Androgens
(B) Estrogens
(C) The hypothalamus
(D) The kidneys
(E) The medulla oblongata
33. Elena is presented with a list of 20 numbers. When asked to recall this list, she remembers more numbers from
the beginning than from the end of the list. This phenomenon demonstrates which of the following types of effect?
(A) Mnemonic
(B) Primacy
(C) Recency
(D) Secondary
(E) Clustering
*This question was not scored because recent research has invalidated option E as the correct answer.
35. Theories of motivation that assert the existence of biological motives to maintain the body in a steady state are
called
(A) mechanistic
(B) homeostatic
(C) reductionistic
(D) genetic
(E) instinctual
36. According to attribution theory, Pablo is most likely to attribute his high score on a difficult exam to
(A) good luck
(B) his intelligence
(C) his instructor's teaching ability
(D) the low level of difficulty of the exam
(E) his classmates' inadequate preparation for the exam
37. In which of the following types of research are the same children tested periodically at different points in their
development?
(A) Clinical case study
(B) Between subjects
(C) Cross-sectional
(D) Ethnographic
(E) Longitudinal
39. Eleanor Gibson and her colleagues have used the visual cliff to measure an infant's ability to perceive
(A) patterns
(B) depth
(C) size constancy
(D) shape constancy
(E) different hues
40. The most well-adjusted and socially competent children tend to come from homes where parents employ which
of the following parental styles?
(A) Minimal supervision
(B) Authoritarian
(C) Authoritative
(D) Indulgent
(E) Permissive
41. Which of the following approaches to psychology emphasizes observable responses over inner experiences when
accounting for behavior?
(A) Behaviorist
(B) Cognitive
(C) Existentialist
(D) Psychodynamic
(E) Structuralist
42. Carla tutors other students because she likes to be helpful, whereas Jane tutors classmates strictly for pay. Their
behaviors demonstrate the difference between
(A) primary and secondary drives
(B) instinctive and derived drives
(C) appetitive and aversive motivation
(D) intrinsic and extrinsic motivation
(E) positive and negative reinforcement
43. The view that human emotions are universal has been supported by studies of
(A) facial expressions
(B) body language
(C) linguistic structures
(D) hedonic relevance
(E) biological symmetry
45. The cognitive theory of depression states that depression results from
(A) anger directed toward the self and significant others
(B) an excess of certain neurotransmitters in the brain
(C) failure in adult love relationships
(D) maladaptive interpretations of life events
(E) oral fixations from disturbed mother-infant relationships
46 All of the following infant behaviors are usually considered by developmental psychologists to be reflexes
EXCEPT
(A) rooting
(B) reaching
(C) sucking
(D) grasping
(E) smiling
47. The most common form of color blindness is related to deficiencies in the
(A) blue-yellow system
(B) red-green system
(C) process of visual summation
(D) bipolar cells
(E) secretion of rhodopsin
48. A person is asked to listen to a series of tones presented in pairs, and asked to say whether the tones in each pair
are the same or different in pitch. In this situation the experimenter is most likely measuring the individual's
(A) sound localization ability
(B) dichotic listening ability
(C) difference threshold
(D) echoic memory
(E) attention span
49. A survey shows that children who have encyclopedias in their homes earn better grades in school than children
whose homes lack encyclopedias. The researcher concludes that having encyclopedias at home improves grades.
This conclusion is erroneous primarily because the researcher has incorrectly
(A) failed to allow for experimenter bias
(B) identified the independent variable
(C) identified the dependent variable
(D) inferred correlation from causation
(E) inferred causation from correlation
50. The release of those with mental disorders from mental hospitals for the purpose of treating them in their home
communities is called
(A) deinstitutionalization
(B) milieu therapy
(C) primary prevention
(D) secondary prevention
(E) noncrisis intervention
51. Lawrence Kohlberg's theory of moral reasoning is best described by which of the following?
(A) Personal conscience is innate and all human beings develop it at the same rate.
(B) By adulthood, all people judge moral issues in terms of self-chosen principles.
(C) Ethical principles are defined by ideals of reciprocity and human equality in individualistic societies, but by
ideals of law and order in collectivistic societies.
(D) Children grow up with morals similar to those of their parents.
(E) Children progress from a morality based on punishment and reward to one defined by convention, and ultimately
to one defined by abstract ethical principles.
52. The intelligence quotient (IQ) has traditionally been based on the relationship between an individual's mental age
and his or her
(A) stage of cognitive development
(B) level of physiological development
(C) reading ability
(D) chronological age
(E) quantitative aptitude
53. In Ivan Pavlov's experiments in classical conditioning, the dog's salivation was
(A) an unconditioned stimulus only
(B) an unconditioned response only
(C) a conditioned response only
(D) both an unconditioned and a conditioned stimulus
(E) both an unconditioned and a conditioned response
*This question was not scored because results of recent research indicate that more than one answer may be correct.
54. Which of the following is a characteristic common to all individuals with a narcissistic personality disorder?
(A) A domineering attitude toward others
(B) An unwarranted sense of self-importance
(C) Restricted ability to express warmth and affection
(D) Inability to form social relationships
(E) Oversensitivity to rejection or possible humiliation
56. In a normal distribution of test scores, the percentage of scores that fall at or below the mean score is
(A) 17.5
(B) 25
(C) 50
(0) 66.6
(E) 95
59. Which of the following best characterizes individuals diagnosed as having personality disorders?
(A) They are typically afraid to leave their homes.
(B) They are consistently psychotic in their cognition and affect.
(C) They may function reasonably well in society.
(D) Their symptoms are characterized by sudden onset and short duration.
(E) They developed their problems as a result of drug abuse.
60. The mean will be higher than the median in any distribution that
(A) is symmetrical
(B) is not normal
(C) is positively skewed
(D) represents measures for a random sample
(E) represents measures for a biased sample
63. A person with sight in only one eye lacks which of the following visual cues for seeing in depth?
(A) Retinal disparity
(B) Linear perspective
(C) Motion parallax
(D) Relative size
(E) Texture gradient
65. The intensity at which a sound becomes audible for a given individual is known as the individual's
(A) contrast sensitivity
(B) absolute threshold
(C) response threshold
(D) critical frequency
(E) just noticeable difference
66. A teacher asks students to think of as many uses for a brick as possible. By listing 50 uses, most of which the
class finds new and unusual, Susan is displaying
(A) computational learning
(B) paired-associate learning
(C) hypothetical thinking
(D) divergent thinking
(E) convergent thinking
68. Which of the following was true of Solomon Asch's experiments on conformity?
(A) People conformed if they knew and respected the authority figure present.
(B) An increase from 7 to 12 confederates increased conformity by experimental subjects.
(C) Experimental subjects conformed less frequently when their judgments were made known to the group.
(D) About 99% of the judgments made by the experimental subjects were wrong.
(E) If the confederates' judgments were not unanimous, the degree of conformity by experimental subjects
decreased.
69. Which of the following concepts was advanced by social psychologists to help explain why people who are part
of a crowd sometimes commit aggressive, antisocial acts that they would not commit if they were alone?
(A) Groupthink
(B) Cognitive dissonance
(C) Social facilitation
(D) Deindividuation
(E) Catharsis
71. It is widely known in Jerry's social circle that he is the most stubborn and inflexible member of the group. Yet
Jerry complains that all his friends are opinionated and rigid. Jerry's complaints are most clearly a sign of
(A) displacement
(B) repression
(C) projection
(D) reaction formation
(E) rationalization
72. Which of the following is a genetic disorder that results in a deficiency of a liver enzyme which, if not treated
soon after birth, may eventually lead to profound mental retardation?
(A) Down syndrome
(B) Tay-Sachs disease
(C) Fetal alcohol syndrome
(D) Toxoplasmosis
(E) Phenylketonuria (PKU)
74. Which of the following is most useful in under- standing an employer's interpretation of an employee's poor
performance?
(A) Cannon's theory
(B) Reinforcement theory
(C) Attribution theory
(D) Arousal theory
(E) Cognitive dissonance
75. Which of the following accurately describes a major change in perspective in the field of developmental
psychology over the past twenty-five years?
(A) A shift from an emphasis on childhood and adolescence to an interest in development over the life span
(B) A shift from a cognitive to a psychoanalytic interpretation of developmental phenomena
(C) A shift in research focus from cognitive to personality development
(D) A decrease in interest in the physiological factors affecting growth and development
(E) A decrease in interest in the study of the cognitive components of intellect
77. Which of the following allows the examination of living brain tissue visually without performing surgery?
(A) Computerized axial tomography
(B) Stereotaxic examination
(C) Retrograde degeneration
(D) Biofeedback
(E) Ablation
78. The change in the curvature of the lens that enables the eye to focus on objects at various distances is called
(A) accommodation
(B) adaptation
(C) conduction
(D) convergence
(E) consonance
79. The hypothesis that intelligence is in part inherited is best supported by the fact that the IQ correlation for
(A) pairs of twins reared together is greater than the correlation for pairs of twins reared apart
(B) pairs of identical twins is greater than for pairs of fraternal twins
(C) pairs of fraternal twins is greater than the correlation for other pairs of siblings
(D) adopted children and their adoptive parents is greater than zero
(E) adopted children and their adoptive parents is greater than the correlation for the same children and their
biological parents
80. The technique of strengthening behavior by reinforcing successive approximations is called
(A) positive reinforcement
(B) negative reinforcement
(C) distributed practice
(D) modeling
(E) shaping
76. Which of the following has been most effective in the treatment of schizophrenia?
(A) Administration of L-dopa
(B) Prefrontal lobotomy
(C) Psychoanalytic therapy
(D) Drug therapy that blocks neurotransmitter sites
(E) Drug therapy that increases the activity of limbic system neurons
81. According to Jean Piaget, what is the earliest stage at which a child is capable of using simple logic to think
about objects and events? (A) Sensorimotor
(B) Preoperational
(C) Symbolic
(D) Concrete operational
(E) Formal operational
82. Bipolar disorders are most effectively treated with a combination of tricyclic antidepressants and
(A) acetaminophen
(B) antianxiety drugs
(C) beta-blockers
(D) amphetamines
(E) lithium carbonate
83. The tendency of most people to identify a three- sided figure as a triangle, even when one of its sides is
incomplete, is the result of a perceptual process known as
(A) closure
(B) proximity
(C) similarity
(D) feature analysis
(E) shape constancy
84. According to Carl Rogers, the role of the therapist in person-centered psychotherapy is to
(A) accept the client unconditionally so that the client's own desire for mental health and positive growth will
flourish
(B) express warmth and empathy and suppress negative feelings that arise in the relationship with the client
(C) use a didactic approach to teach the client to correct maladaptive behavior
(D) establish behavior-change programs to alter the problematic behavior that is often learned in early childhood
(E) define ideal characteristics of mental health for the client and to encourage the client to incorporate these
elements in his or her personality
86. For most people, which of the following is an activity based in the right hemisphere of the brain?
(A) Muscular control of the right hand
(B) Simple spatial reasoning
(C) Arithmetic reasoning
(D) Language comprehension
(E) Speech
87. Which of the following are the stages in Hans Selye's general adaptation syndrome?
(A) Appraisal, stress response, coping
(B) Shock, anger, self-control
(C) Anxiety, fighting, adapting
(D) Alarm, resistance, exhaustion
(E) Attack, flight, defense
88. The defense mechanism of reaction formation is best exemplified in which of the following situations?
(A) A college student speaks sharply to her room- mate after quarreling with her professor about her grades.
(B) A woman who is unaware of her anger toward her friend expresses affection for that friend.
(C) A runner forgets the name of the opponent who just defeated her in an event for which she held the record.
(D) A man who dislikes his supervisor believes that his supervisor dislikes him.
(E) An elderly man lights up a cigarette just after learning that he has been cured of a respiratory ailment.
90. Which of the following types of test is designed to measure an individual's knowledge of a subject?
(A) Achievement
(B) Attitude
(C) Aptitude
(D) Projective
(E) Interest inventory
91. A word or part of a word that is in itself meaningful, but that cannot be broken into smaller meaningful units, is
called a
(A) grapheme
(B) morpheme
(C) phoneme
(D) performative
(E) holophrase
92. Which of the following studies has had the most profound impact on ethical issues in psychological research?
(A) Stanley Milgram's study of obedience
(B) Solomon Asch's study of conformity
(C) Daryl Bem's study of self-perception
(D) William McGuire's study of self-concept
(E) Leon Festinger's study of cognitive dissonance
94. If Carrnelita stares at a red spot for one minute and then shifts her gaze to a white piece of paper, she is likely to
experience an afterimage that is
(A) green
(B) red
(C) blue
(D) violet
(E) black
95. The place in the retina where the optic nerve exits to the brain is called the
(A) lens
(B) sclera
(C) fovea
(D) blind spot
(E) aqueous humor
96. Responses extinguish fastest when they are learned through which type of reinforcement schedule?
(A) Continuous
(B) Negative
(C) Variable-interval
(D) Variable-ratio
(E) Fixed-interval
97. According to Benjamin Whorf's linguistic relativity hypothesis, which of the following is true?
(A) Individuals have a natural predisposition to learn language.
(B) Individuals learn positive instances of concepts faster than they learn negative instances.
(C) Children learn their first language from their relatives and their peer group.
(D) Different languages predispose those individuals who speak them to think about the world in different ways.
(E) Children learn quantifying words such as "more" and "further" sooner than they do absolutes such as "every"
and "all."
98. In their discussions of the process of development, the advocates of nature in the nature-nurture controversy
emphasize which of the following?
(A) Socialization
(B) Cognition
(C)Maturation
(D) Experience
E) Information processing
100. The debate over whether development occurs gradually, without discernible shifts, or through a series of
distinct stages is termed
(A) nature vs. nurture
(B) developmental vs. cognitive
(C) cross-sectional vs. longitudinal
(D) continuity vs. discontinuity
(E) maturation vs. learning