PSY101 Short Notes
PSY101 Short Notes
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one is, what might be his potentials, and how much he/ she is capable of
performing certain tasks.
Question: 32- What are the main stages or extensions of classical conditioning?
Answer: Stages and Extensions of Classical Conditioning: • Acquisition • Extinction •
Spontaneous recovery • Stimulus generalization • Stimulus discrimination •
Higher Order Conditioning
Question: 34- How can we apply operant conditioning in real life situations?
Answer: Applications of Operant Conditioning • Child rearing. • Classroom management. •
Teaching of skills. • Animal taming. • Advertising. • Psychological intervention
and Psycho- therapy: behavior modification, assertiveness training, and token
economy.
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Science, Physical Education, or Consumer and Applied Sciences.
Question: How can you differentiate between a clinical psychologist and a psychiatrist?
Answer: Clinical Psychologists and Psychiatrists are both trained to diagnose and treat
psychological disorders and dysfunctions. Both can provide therapy and
counseling services for children and adults. Psychiatrists have a general medical
degree and then advanced training in psychiatry. Psychiatrists can prescribe
medication for people with serious mental illness, such as schizophrenia, whereas
psychologists cannot. Clinical Psychologists have a MA, MSc or PhD in
Psychology and advanced training in Clinical Psychology (Postgraduate Diploma
in Clinical Psychology). As well as therapy and counseling services, clinical
psychologists can do psychological testing with well-researched tests.
Psychiatrists usually do not do psychological testing.
Question: 16- How would you enlist main steps of scientific method?
Answer: Main steps of scientific methods are listed below: • Identifying the research
problem • Review of the related literature • Formulation of hypotheses •
Designing and conducting the research • Analysis of data • Drawing conclusions
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psychology is the application of the principles, knowledge, training, and
understanding of psychology for the understanding of factors affecting sport
performance, with an aim to improve it, and to make the sportspersons feel
stronger and more confident.
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everyday situations?
Forensic Forensic psychology is the application of psychological principles and knowledge
Psychology : to various legal activities. Typical issues include child custody disputes, child
abuse or neglect, assessing personal capacity to manage one's affairs, matters of
competency to stand trial, criminal responsibility, personal injury, and advising
judges in matters relating to sentencing regarding various mitigants and the
actuarial assessment of future risk.
Linguistics : The scientific study of language, which may be undertaken from many different
aspects, for example, sounds (phonetics) or structures of words (morphology) or
meanings (semantics).
Empathy : Ability to imagine oneself in another's place and understand the other's feelings,
desires, ideas, and actions. The empathic actor or singer is one who genuinely
feels the part he or she is performing. The spectator of a work of art or the reader
of a piece of literature may similarly become involved in what he or she observes
or contemplates. The use of empathy was an important part of the psychological
counseling technique developed by Carl R. Rogers
Object A Wechsler performance subtest consisting of one sample and four test-item
assembly : jigsaw puzzles of common objects. The child is asked to assemble the pieces to
complete a picture. Items are presented one at a time in a specified pattern. The
items are timed, with bonus points awarded for speed; some points are awarded
for partially correct responses. Object assembly is a test of synthesis, involving
visual organization and visual-motor coordination and attention. ...
Reliability : The extent to which a measurement instrument yields consistent, stable, and
uniform results over repeated observations or measurements under the same
conditions each time. For example, a scale is unreliable if it weighs a child three
times in three minutes and gets three different weights.
Cognitive The treatment approach based on the theory that our cognitions or thoughts
Therapy : control a large part of our behaviors and emotions. Therefore, changing the way
we think can result in positive changes in the way we act and feel.
Construct : any variable that can not be directly observed but rather is measured through
indirect methods. (Examples: intelligence, motivation)
Episodic Subcategory of Declarative memory where information regarding life events are
Memory : stored.
Equity The theory that argues a couple must see each other as contributing and benefiting
Theory : equally to the relationship for them both to feel comfortable in the relationship.
Etiology : Causal relationships of diseases; theories regarding how the specific disease or
disorder began.
Experimental In research, the group of subjects who receive the independent variable.
Group :
Experimental Research method using random assignment of subjects and the manipulation of
Method : variables in order to determine cause and effect.
Latent Learning that occurs without apparent reinforcement but is not demonstrated until
Learning : such time as reinforcement occurs.
Learning Based on the idea that changes in behavior result more from experience and less
Theory : from our personality or how we think or feel about a situation.
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Limbic A brain system that plays a role in emotional expression, particularly in the
System : emotional component of behavior, memory, and motivation.
Lucid A dream in which you are aware of dreaming and are sometimes able to
Dream : manipulate the dream.
Maslow, Humanistic Theorist most famous for the development of the Hierarchy of Needs.
Abraham :
Medulla Part of the brainstem that controls vital life-sustaining functions such as heartbeat,
Oblongata : breathing, blood pressure, and digestion.
Meta The statistical procedure used to combine numerous and independent research
Analysis : results into one study. Each research study becomes one subject in the meta-
analysis.
Minnesota An Objective test utilizing 567 items which have been empirically derived to
Multiphasic measure a variety of psychological concerns.
Personality
Inventory,
2nd. :
N: Symbol used for the number of subjects or data in a distribution. A study with 10
subjects would have an N equal to 10.
Naturalistic A research method where the subject(s) is(are) observed without interruption
Observation under normal or natural circumstances.
:
Negative a correlation where one two variables tend to move in the opposite direction
Correlation : (example: the number of pages printed and the amount of ink left in your printer
are negatively correlated. The more pages printed, the less ink you have left.)
Occipital One of for lobes of the brain. Contains the visual cortex and therefore plays a
Lobe : major role in the interpretation of visual information.
Parasympathetic A subsystem of the Autonomic Nervous System (ANS) that returns the body to
Nervous System homeostasis.
:
Parietal One of four lobes of the brain. Contains the Somatosensory Cortex d is therefore
Lobe : involved in the processing of touch, pressure, temperature, and pain.
Penis Envy : In Psychoanalytic Thought, the desire of girls to posses a penis and therefore have
the power that being male represents.
Perception : The process of organizing and using information that is received through the
senses.
Perceptual The ability to perceive objects as unchanged despite the change noticed by the
Constancy : senses (e.g., the ability to understand and see buildings as remaining the same
height even though they appear larger as we get closer to them).
Perfect A correlation of either +1.0 or -1.0. A perfect correlation is extremely rare and
Correlation : when it occurs means that predicting one score based on another score is perfect
or without error.
Person The therapeutic technique based on humanistic theory which is non-directive and
Centered empathic.
Therapy :
Persuasion : The deliberate attempt to influence the thoughts, feelings or behaviors of another.
Primary A reinforcer that meets our basic needs such as food, water, sleep, or love.
Reinforcer :
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Theory : topographical model of personality, defense mechanisms, drives, and the
psychosexual stages of development. The primary driving force behind the
theory is the id, ego and superego and the division of consciousness into the
conscious mind, the pre/subconscious, and the unconscious.
Sample : Portion of the entire population used to estimate what is likely happening within a
population.
Shaping : Gradually molding a specific response by reinforcing responses that come close to
the desired response.
Short Term The stage of memory where information is stored for up to 30 seconds prior to
Memory : either being forgotten or transferred to long term memory.
Skinner, B. Considered the father of behavioral therapy. He once stated that with the ability to
F. : control a child's environment, he could raise a child to become anything he
wanted.
Social Developmental theory arguing that personality is learned through the interactions
Learning with the environment.
Theory :
Social The branch of psychology which focuses on society and it's impact on the
Psychology : individual.
Somatic Sub system of the Peripheral Nervous System (PNS). Primary function is to
Nervous regulate the actions of the skeletal muscles.
System :
Stage The idea that an individual must pass through one stage of development before he
Theory : or she can reach the next stage.
State The theory that information learned in a particular state of mind (e.g., depressed,
Dependent happy, somber) is more easily recalled when in that same state of mind.
Memory :
Sublimation A defense mechanism where undesired or unacceptable impulses are transformed
: into behaviors which are accepted by society.
Superego : In Psychoanalytical theory, the part of the personality that represents the
conscience.
Variable : Any factor which has the potential to influence another factor in a research study.
Aggressive : An interpersonal style where only the immediate needs of the self are considered
rather than the needs of others. (As opposed to passive or assertive)
All or None Either a neuron completely fires or it does not fire at all.
Law :
Altruism : Behavior that is unselfish and may even be detrimental but which benefits others.
Amnesia : Loss of memory. Usually only a partial loss such as for a period of time or
biographical information.
Anal Stemming from the Anal stage, a child who becomes fixated due to over control
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Expulsive transfers his or her unresolved anal (or control) issues into characteristics such as
Personality : cruelty, pushiness, messiness, or disorganization.
Anal Stemming from the Anal stage, a child who becomes fixated due to under control
Retentive transfers his or her unresolved anal (or control) issues into characteristics such as
Personality : compulsivity, stinginess, cleanliness, organization, and obstinance.
Quick Find:
Anxiety : The physiological and psychological reaction to an expected danger, whether real
or imagined.
Behaviorism The school of psychology founded on the premise that behavior is measurable and
: can be changed through the application of various behavioral principles.
Castration According to Freud's Stages of Psychosexual Development, the fear a boy in the
Anxiety : phallic stage experiences due to a fear that his father will render him powerless if
his father finds out about his attraction toward his mother.
Catharsis : The emotional release associated with the expression of unconscious conflicts.
Cerebellum : Part of the brain associated with balance, smooth movement, and posture.
Chemical A generic term for the idea that chemical in the brain are either too scarce or too
Imbalance : abundant resulting in or contributing to a mental disorder such as schizophrenia or
bipolar disorder. Others believe that the disorder precedes the imbalance,
suggesting that a change in mood, for example, changes our chemicals rather than
the chemical changing our mood.
Chunking : Combining smaller units of measurement or chunks into larger chunks. (e.g., a
seven chunk phone number such as 5-5-5-1-2-1-2 becomes a five chunk number
such as 5-5-5-12-12)
Classical The behavioral technique of pairing a naturally occurring stimulus and response
Conditioning chain with a different stimulus in order to produce a response which is not
: naturally occurring.
Client A humanistic therapy based on Carl Roger's beliefs that an individual has an
Centered unlimited capacity for psychological growth and will continue to grow unless
Therapy : barriers are placed in the way.
Cognitive The sub-field of psychology associated with information processing and the role it
Psychology : plays in emotion, behavior, and physiology.
Collective According to Jung, the content of the unconscious mind that is passed down from
Unconscious generation to generation in all humans.
:
Compulsion The physical act resulting from an obsession. Typically a compulsive act is done
: in an attempt to alleviate the discomfort created by an obsession.
Concrete According to Piaget, the stage of cognitive development where a child between
Operational the ages of 7 and 12 begins thinking more globally and outside of the self but is
Stage : still deficient in abstract thought.
Conditioned The response in a stimulus-response chain that is not naturally occurring, but
Response : rather has been learned through its pairing with a naturally occurring chain.
Conditioned The stimulus in a stimulus-response chain that is not naturally occurring, but
Stimulus : rather has been learned through its pairing with a naturally occurring chain.
Conditioning The process of learning new behaviors or responses as a result of their
: consequences.
Confound : Any variable that is not part of a research study but still has an effect on the
research results
Context The theory that information learned in a particular situation or place is better
Dependent remembered when in that same situation or place.
Memory :
Control The group of subjects in an experiment that does not receive the independent
Group : variable.
Correlation : The degree to which two or more variables a related to each other. A correlation
refers to the direction that the variables move and does not necessarily represent
cause and effect. (Example: height and weight are correlated. As one increases,
the other tends to increase as well)
Correlation The statistic or number representing the degree to which two or more variables are
Coefficient : related. Often abbreviated 'r.'
pamine The theory that schizophrenia is caused by an excess amount of dopamine in the
Hypothesis : brain. Research has found that medication to reduce dopamine can reduce the
positive symptoms of schizophrenia.
Ego : In Psychoanalytical theory, the part of the personality which maintains a balance
between our impulses (id) and our conscience (superego).
Egocentric : The thinking in the preoperational stage of cognitive development where children
believe everyone sees the world from the same perspective as he or she does.
Ego Ideal : In psychoanalytic thought, this is the ideal or desired behavior of the ego
according to the superego.
Emotional The awareness of and ability to manage one's emotions in a healthy and
Intelligence productive manner.
(EQ) :
Extrinsic The desire or push to perform a certain behavior based on the potential external
Motivation : rewards that may be received as a result.
Fixed Ratio A schedule in which the reinforcement is presented after a specific number of
Schedule : responses.
Group Psychotherapy conducted with at least three or four non-related individuals who
Therapy : are similar in some are, such as gender, age, mental illness, or presenting
problem.
Humanistic A theoretical view of human nature which stresses a positive view of human
Psychology : nature and the strong belief in psychological homeostasis.
Learned A condition that occurs after a period of negative consequences where the person
Helplessness begins to believe they have no control.
:
Neurotransmitter A chemical found in animals that plays a role in our behavior, cognitions, and
: emotions.
Nondeclarative A subsystem within Long term memory which consists of skills we acquire
Memory : through repetition and practice (e.g., dance, playing the piano, driving a car)
Object The understanding that objects exist even when they are not directly observed.
Permanence
:
Operant Learning that occurs due to the manipulation of the possible consequences.
Conditioning
:
Projective A generic term for the psychological procedures used to measure personality
Techniques : which rely on ambiguous stimuli.
Punishment : The adding of a negative stimulus in order to decrease a response (e.g., spanking a
child to decrease negative behavior).
Reality According the Freud, the attempt by the ego to satisfy both the id and the
Principle : superego while still considering the reality of the situation.
Reflection : A therapeutic technique in humanistic therapy where the feelings and thoughts of
the client are reflected or reworded back to the client to assist in understanding
them.
Self The process of understanding oneself more completely and being aware of issues
Actualization affecting one's life.
:
Sensory The brief storage of information brought in through the senses; typically only
Memory : lasts up to a few seconds.
Accommodation The creation of new cognitive schemas when objects, experiences, or other
: information does not fit with existing schemas.
Convergence The binocular cue to distance referring to the fact that the closer an object, the
: more inward our eyes need to turn in order to focus
Crystallized The part of intelligence which involves the acquisition, as opposed to the use, of
Intelligence : information
Declarative The part of long-term memory where factual information is stored, such as
Memory : mathematical formulas, vocabulary, and life events.
Deductive Decision making process in which ideas are processed from the general to the
Reasoning : specific.
Delusion : False belief system (e.g., believing you are Napoleon, have magical powers, or
the false belief that others are 'out to get you.').
Dendrites : Extensions of the cell body of a neuron responsible for receiving incoming
neurotransmitters.
Dissociation A separation from the self, with the most severe resulting in Dissociative Identity
: Disorder. Most of us experience this in very mild forms such as when we are
driving long distance and lose time or find ourselves day dreaming longer than we
thought.
Distinctiveness The phenomenon in memory that states we are better able to remember
: information if it is distinctive or different from other information.
Divergent The ability to use previously gained information to debate or discuss issues which
Thinking : have no agreed upon definitive resolution.
Dopamine : A neurotransmitter associated with movement, attention and learning and the
brain's pleasure and reward system.
Functionalism The school of thought popular in the 19th century emphasizing conscious
: experiences as a precursor to behavior
Health The specific field in psychology concerned with psychology’s impact on health,
Psychology : physical well being, and illness.
Hypnosis : A deep state of relaxation where an individual is more susceptible to suggestions.
Hypno A trained, and often licensed, therapist who utilizes the therapeutic technique of
therapist : hypnosis as part of a treatment regimen.
Hypnotist : An individual, most likely unlicensed, who uses hypnosis techniques or variations
of these techniques for a variety of reasons, including treatment and/or
entertainment.
Hypothalamus A part of the brain that controls the autonomic nervous system, and therefore
: maintains the body’s homeostasis (controls body temperature, metabolism, and
appetite. Also translates extreme emotions into physical responses.
Oral Stage : Freud's first stage of psychosexual development where the primary sexual focus is
on the mouth through sucking, tasting, and verbalizing.
Overlearning A technique used to improve memory where information is learned to the point
: that it can be repeated without mistake more than one time.
Panic Attack Period of extreme anxiety and physical symptoms such as heart palpitations,
: shakiness, dizziness, and racing thoughts. Initial attacks are often reported to feel
like a heart attack due to the heart palpitations. A medical exam should be
conducted to rule out any such condition.
Phallic Stemming from the Phallic stage, a child who becomes fixated may develop a
Personality : personality characterized by selfishness, impulsivity, and a lack of or reduced
ability to feel empathy.
Phallic Stage Freud's third stage of psychosexual development where the primary sexual focus
: is on symbolism of the genitals.
Phi The perception of motion based on two or more stationary objects (e.g., the
Phenomenon perception of chaser lights brought about by different lights blinking at different
: times).
Positive A correlation where as one variable increases, the other also increases, or as one
Correlation : decreases so does the other. Both variables move in the same direction.
Power : The strength or the data to find a difference when there truly is a ).difference.
Power is abbreviated with the capital Greek letter beta (
Reticular Part of the brain stem involved in arousal and attention, sleep and wakefulness,
Formation and control of reflexes.
(Reticular
Activating
System) :
Personality A maladaptive and stable set of individual characteristics that cluster to form a
Disorder : recognized disorder.
Phallic Stemming from the Phallic stage, a child who becomes fixated may develop a
Personality : personality characterized by selfishness, impulsivity, and a lack of or reduced
ability to feel empathy.
Phallic Stage Freud's third stage of psychosexual development where the primary sexual focus
: is on symbolism of the genitals.
Phi The perception of motion based on two or more stationary objects (e.g., the
Phenomenon perception of chaser lights brought about by different lights blinking at different
: times).
Pons : Part of the brain that plays a role in the regulation of states of arousal, including
sleep and dreaming.
Positive A correlation where as one variable increases, the other also increases, or as one
Correlation : decreases so does the other. Both variables move in the same direction.
Power : The strength or the data to find a difference when there truly is a ).difference.
Power is abbreviated with the capital Greek letter beta (
Preoperational Piaget's second stage of cognitive development in which a child develops objects
Stage : permanency and language.
Reticular Part of the brain stem involved in arousal and attention, sleep and wakefulness,
Formation and control of reflexes.
(Reticular
Activating
System) :
Retinal The binocular cue to distance referring to the distance between the two images
Disparity : sent to the brain by our eyes. The farther apart these images, the closer the object.
Retrieval : The process of bringing material out of long term memory and into consciousness.
Reversibility A child's ability to reverse operations and therefore recognize that the qualities of
: an object remain the same despite changes in appearance. Occurs in Piaget's
Concrete Operational Stage of Cognitive Development (e.g., 1+2=3 to 3-2=1).
Secondary A reinforcer other than one which meets our basic needs such as food or water
Reinforcer : (e.g., intellectual stimulation, money, praise).
Self Serving The tendency to assign internal attributes to successes and external factors to
Bias : failures.
Semantic The part of declarative memory that stores general information such as names and
Memory : facts.
Structuralism School of thought from the 19th century focused on the gathering of
: psychological information through the examination of the structure of the mind.
Super traits : Hans Eysenck's term for his two distinct categories of personality traits. They
include Introversion-Extroversion and Neuroticism. According to Eysenck, each
of us fall on a continuum based on the degree of each super traits.
Sympathetic Part of the Autonomic Nervous System responsible for the fight or flight
Nervous phenomenon and which plays a role (along with the Parasympathetic Nervous
System System) in maintaining the body's homeostasis.
(SNS) :
Synapse : The space between the axon of one neuron and the dendrites of another through
which neurotransmitters travel.
Temporal One of the four lobes of the brain. Contains the auditory cortex and therefore
Lobe : plays a role in receptive language as well as memory and emotion.
Quick Find:
Thalamus : Considered the central switching station of the brain because all of the body's
senses (except the olfactory senses) pass through this before being relayed to the
brain.
Thematic A subjective personality test where ambiguous pictures are shown to a subject
Apperception and they are asked to tell a story related to them.
Test (TAT) :
Transference Intense feelings directed toward the therapist that many clients experience in the
: process of therapy.
Trial and Learning that takes place through the application of possible solutions to a
Error problem.
Learning :
Vicarious The reinforcement that occurs as a result of watching a model get reinforced for
Reinforcement a specific behavior or series of behaviors.
:
Wechsler An objective measure of intelligence. The Stanford-Binet test is also used, has
Adult very similar validity, but is not as popular.
Intelligence
Scale, Third
Edition :
Action The firing on a neuron. Occurs when the charge inside the neuron becomes more
Potential : positive than the charge outside.
Anal Stage : Freud's second stage of psychosexual development where the primary sexual
focus is on the elimination or holding onto feces. The stage is often thought of as
representing a child's ability to control his or her own world.
Aphasia : The impairment of the ability to communicate either through oral or written
discourse as a result of brain damage.
Assertive : Style of interpersonal interaction where both the needs of the self and others are
considered. (As opposed to passive or aggressive)
Associations The phenomenon in learning that states we are better able to remember
: information if it is paired with something we are familiar with or otherwise stands
out.
Decay : Theory which states that memory fades and/or disappears over time if it is not
used or accessed.
Difference The smallest change in perception which is noticeable at least 50% of the time.
Threshold :
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Discrimination In behavioral theory, the learned ability to differentiate between two similar
: objects or situations.
Displacement The pushing out of older information in short term memory to make room for
: new information.
Intrinsic The motivation or desire to do something based on the enjoyment of the behavior
Motivation : itself rather than relying on or requiring external reinforcement.
Introversion The tendency to focus energy inward resulting in decreased social interaction.
:
Just The smallest change in a sensory perception that is detectable 50% of the time.
Noticeable
Difference :
Jung, Carl : A student of Freud who split from the Psychoanalytic Society because of his
disagreements with Freud, especially his view of the collective unconscious.
Latent Freud's term for the underlying or hidden content represented in the symbols of
Content : dreams.
Law of Theory proposed by Thorndike stating that those responses that are followed by a
Effect : positive consequence will be repeated more frequently than those that are not.
Maturation : Changes due to the natural process of aging as determined by your genetics
Motivation : The process that energizes and/or maintains a behavior.
Rational A Cognitive Therapy based on Albert Ellis' theory that cognitions control our
Emotive emotions and behaviors; therefore, changing the way we think about things will
Repression : In Psychoanalytic Theory, the defense mechanism whereby our thoughts are
pulled out of our consciousness and into our unconscious.
Response A therapeutic technique where stimuli is presented to the client but the client is
Prevention : not permitted to exercise his or her typical response. Used for the treatment of
phobias, obsessive compulsive disorder and other anxiety disorders.
Sensorimotor The first stage in Piaget's Stages of Cognitive Development where a child's
Stage : primary way of learning about the world is through the senses and movement.
Social Term used to describe the degree of emotional support afforded a client by
Support : friends, family, and other acquaintances.
Spontaneous The tendency for previously learned information to resurface rapidly after a
Recovery : period of extinction. Information that is spontaneously recovered is thought to lay
dormant but not forgotten (e.g., riding a bicycle after a long period of not riding).
Stimulus The response to new stimuli due its similarity to the original stimuli.
Generalization
:
Phenotype : The phenotype of an individual organism is either its total physical appearance
and constitution or a specific manifestation of a trait, such as size, eye color, or
behavior that varies between individuals.
Bulumia An eating disorder in which people eat large amounts of food in a sitting
Nervosa : (binging), and then vomit(purging). The vomiting is triggered by a fear of weight
gain, from stomach pain, or from the guilt of overeating. People with bulimia also
use laxatives, diuretics, and vigorous exercise to lose weight. In order to be
diagnosed with bulimia, this behavior must occur at least twice a week for three
months in a row.
Attachment : The strong bond a child forms with his or her primary caregiver.
Attribution The theory that argues people look for explanation of behavior, associating either
Theory : dispositional (internal) attributes or situational (external) attributes.
Autonomic Part of the peripheral nervous system that regulates the involuntary actions of the
Nervous body (e.g., breathing, heart rate, blood pressure, pupil dilation). Also regulates the
System : Fight or Flight Phenomenon.
Availability A rule of thumb stating that information more readily available in our memory is
Heuristic : more important than information not as easily accessible.
Aversion A type of behavioral treatment where an aversive stimuli is paired with a negative
Therapy : behavior in hopes that the behavior will change in the future to avoid the aversive
stimuli.
Axon : The tail-like part of the neuron through which information exits the cell.
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Behavior The application of behavioral theory (e.g. conditioning, reinforcement) in the
Therapy : treatment of mental illness.
Binocular Visual cues (convergence and retinal disparity) that require both eyes to perceive
Cues : distance (as opposed to monocular cues)
Cell Body : The main part of a neuron where the information is processed.
Extroversion Personality style where the individual prefers outward and group activity as
: opposed to inward and individual activity.
Family Treatment involving family members which seeks to change the unhealthy
Therapy : familial patterns and interactions.
Fixed A schedule in which the reinforcement is presented after a specific period of time.
Interval
Schedule :
Freud, Dr. Freud is often referred to as the father of clinical psychology. His extensive
Sigmund : theory of personality development (psychoanalytical theory) is the cornerstone for
modern psychological thought, and consists of (1) the psychosexual stages of
development, (2) the structural model of personality (id, ego, superego), and (3)
levels of consciousness (conscious, subconscious, and unconscious). See
Psychoanalysis.
Flooding : A behavioral technique used to treat phobias in which the client is presented with
the feared stimulus until the associated anxiety disappears.
Fluid According to Cattell, the part of intelligence which involves the use, as opposed to
Intelligence : the acquisition, of information.
Formal Pavlov's fourth and final stage of cognitive development where thinking becomes
Operational more abstract.
Stage :
Frontal Lobe The lobe at the front of the brain associated with movement, speech, and
: impulsive behavior.
Fundamental The tendency to over estimate the internal attributes of another person's actions.
Attribution
Error :
Gender The internal sense of being either male or female. Usually congruent with
Identity : biological gender, but not always as in Gender Identity Disorder.
Generalization The tendency to associate stimuli, and therefore respond similarly to, due to their
: closeness on some variable such as size, shape, color, or meaning.
Genital Freud's final stage of psychosexual development where healthy sexual
Stage : development is defined as attraction to a same aged, opposite sexed peer.
Hallucination False perception of reality (e.g., hearing voices that aren't there or seeing people
: who do not exist) [auditory (hearing); visual (sight); olfactory (smell); tactile
(touch); and taste].
Halo Effect : The tendency to assign generally positive or generally negative traits to a person
after observing one specific positive or negative trait, respectively.
Heterosexuality Being attracted to or aroused by members of the opposite gender. See Sexual
: Orientation.
Hierarchy of Maslow’s Theory of Motivation which states that we must achieve lower level
Needs : needs, such as food, shelter, and safety before we can achieve higher level needs,
such as belonging, esteem, and self-actualization.
Hippocampus Part of the limbic system. Involved more in memory, and the transfer of
: information from short-term to long-term memory.
History : External events that take place during a research study that are not part of the
study but have an effect on the outcome
Homeostasis The tendency of the body (and the mind) to natural gravitate toward a state of
: equilibrium or balance.
Ideal Self : Humanistic term representing the characteristics, behaviors, emotions, and
thoughts to which a person aspires.
Illusion : Misperception of reality (e.g., the illusion of a lake in the middle of a desert).
Inductive Decision making process in which ideas are processed from the specific to the
Reasoning : general.
Instinct : A behavior we are born with and therefore does not need to be learned.
Pleasure Freud’s theory regarding the id’s desire to maximize pleasure and minimize pain
Principle : in order to achieve immediate gratification.
Positive Something positive provided after a response in order to increase the probability
Reinforcement of that response occurring in the future.
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Prejudice : Negative beliefs, attitudes, or feelings about a person's entire character based on
only one characteristic. This belief is often based on faulty information.
Pretest- A method of determining the amount of change that occurred in a set of data by
Posttest measuring the data prior to treatment and then after treatment and comparing the
Method : two measurement outcomes.
Primacy The tendency to remember the first bit of information in a series due to increased
Effect : rehearsal.
Psychoanalysis Developed by Sigmund Freud, this type of therapy is known for long term
: treatment, typically several times per week, where the unresolved issues from
the individual's childhood are analyzed and resolved. These issues are
considered to be primarily unconscious in nature and are kept from
consciousness through a complex defense system.
Psychotherapy The treatment of mental illness or related issues based on psychological theory.
:
Psychology : The study of emotion, cognition, and behavior, and their interaction.
Quasi- Any research study that uses specific experimental methods but does not
Experimental randomize subjects
Research :
Stage : A period of development that occurs at about the same time for each person.
Developmental and Personality theories are often made up of a series of stages.
Long Questions
At the end of the course; you should be able to:
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