A.P Psychology Midterm Review

Chapter 1

-Definition of Psychology

-What is the difference between Behaviors and Mental Processes?

-Why do we study psychology?

-How did Psychology develop as a scientific study of behavior?

- Pioneers of Psychology

- study your timeline

- What is the difference between Structuralism and Functionalism?

- Introspection

- who pioneered it?

- how do we use it?

- what is it?

-How do the various schools of psychology differ?

- be able to apply the approaches to Psychology to a case study

  • Behavioral Genetics
  • Neuroscience
  • Cognitive
  • Behavioral
  • Psychodynamic
  • Socio-Cultural
  • Evolutionary

Chapter 2

-Differentiate between the different Research Methods

  • Field Experiment
  • Laboratory Experiment
  • Survey
  • Interview
  • Case Study
  • Naturalistic Observation
  • Longitudinal Study
  • Cross Sectional Study

-pay particular attention to the following:

  • Placebo Effect
  • Control Group
  • Experimental Group
  • Single-Blind Study
  • Double-Blind Study
  • Independent Variable
  • Dependent Variable
  • Extraneous Variables
  • Confounding of Variables

-when given a hypothesis, be able to determine independent and dependent as well as the controlled variables.

-Organizing Data

- What are Statistics? Why do we use them?

  • Define:
  • Mean, Median & Mode
  • Correlation
  • Be able to identify the correct graph as it applied to positive, negative and no correlation.
  • Positive correlation
  • Negative correlation
  • Standard Deviation
  • Variance

-Psychological Evidence

- What does it mean to be an Empirical Science?

- What is the difference between Inference and Observation?

-What Ethical Standards should a psychologist follow when conducting research on human subjects?

-What are the two primary arguments presented by animal activists? Can you think of any arguments to counter these?

Chapter 3

Be able to identify the major parts of the neuron & explain their function.

Explain the following:

-action potential

  • all or none law

-absolute refractory period

-resting potential

-reuptake process

Hemispheres of the Brain

What are the functions of the right brain and left brains? What characteristics do people who are “left-brained” and “right-brained” possess?

Neurotransmitters – name all of them and name 2 things they are responsible for.

The Cortex – Lobes

What are the functions of each:

-Frontal Lobe

  • Motor Cortex
  • Broca’s Area
  • Frontal Lobotomy
  • Phineas Gage

-Parietal Lobe

  • Somatosensory Cortex

-Temporal Lobe

  • Primary Auditory Cortex
  • Auditory Association Area
  • Wernicke’s Area

-Occipital Lobe

  • Primary Visual Cortex
  • Visual Association Area

Major Parts of the Brain

______Occipital Lobea. transforms signals from eyes into

______Broca’s Aphasia basic sensations

______Wernicke’s Areab. lobe responsible for hearing and

______Frontal Lobe speaking coherently

______Somatosensory Cortexc. narrow strip at the front of the parietal

______Parietal Lobe lobe that processes sensory info

______Broca’s Aread. lobe responsible for making decisions

______Temporal Lobe and executing plans

______Primary Auditory Cortexe. the wrinkled area of the brain

______Auditory Association Areaf. narrow strip at the back of the frontal

______Neglect Syndrome lobe that initiates voluntary movement

______Visual Association Areag. a surgical procedure where the frontal

______Primary Visual Cortex lobe is cut away from the rest of brain

______Cortexh. area of the brain that combines sound into

______Frontal Lobotomy words and sentences

______Motor Cortexi. area of the brain that understands speech

and allows you to speak coherently

j. responsible for turning basic visual sensations into complete
perceptions

k. lobe responsible for seeing colors and
recognizing objects

l. transforms electrical signals from ears into
meaningless sound sensations

m. lobe responsible for processing sensory info like touching,
feeling temperature and pain.

n. disorder where the individual fails to see objects on the
opposite side of the brain damage

o. transforms noise and sounds into words and music

p. disorder where a person can’t speak in sentences but can
understand spoken and written words

The ______is involved in performing timed motor responses such as those required in playing sports.

The ______functions as a bridge between the spinal cord and the brain.

The ______saves fleeting memories by putting them into permanent storage throughout the brain.

The ______is the control center of the endocrine system.

The ______gland regulates metabolism.

The ______glands secrete adrenaline (epinephrine) and noradrenalin (norepinephrine).

The ______gland regulates growth and produces hormones.

The ______receives sensory information and relays the information to areas of the cortex.

The ______controls vital reflexes such as respiration, heart rate and blood pressure.

Brain Scanning Techniques

Explain each of the following:

-Electroencephalograph:

-CT Scan:

-MRI Scan:

-fMRI Scan:

-PET Scan:

-Lesioning:

-ESB:

Evolution of Psychology

-be able to explain the major driving force behind Charles Darwin and his Evolutionary theory

Genetics

-Be aware of the basic genetic principles that we went over in class.

Chapter 4

  1. Sensation
  2. Thresholds
  3. Sensory Differences and Ratios
  4. Sensory Adaptation
  5. Motivation and Signal Detection Theory
  6. The Senses
  7. Vision
  8. Hearing
  9. Smell and Taste
  10. Touch
  11. Kinesthetic and Vestibular Systems
  12. Perception
  13. Principles of Perception
  14. Depth Perception
  15. Constancy
  16. Illusions
  17. Subliminal messages

Review Questions:

  1. Define Sensation and Perception.
  2. What is Psychophysics?
  3. Define Absolute Threshold. Give examples from notes.
  4. What is a Just Noticable Difference?
  5. What is Subliminal Advertising? Why was there a mass outcry over the use of Subliminal Messages? How do most psychologists view the technique today?
  6. How does motivation affect a person’s ability to receive and perceive sensations?
  7. Define and provide an example of the Signal Detection Theory.
  8. Diagram the eye using the following parts: Cornea, Lens, Iris, Pupil, Retina, Fovea. What does each part do?
  9. What is the difference in nearsightedness and farsightedness in the eye?
  10. What is the Trichromatic Theory of Color Vision? The Opponent Process Theory?
  1. What is an optical illusion? Impossible figures?
  2. Explain the concept of the Ames Room.
  3. Diagram the ear using the following parts: pinna, eardrum, hammer, anvil, stirrup, cochlea, outer ear, middle ear, inner ear. What do each of these parts do?
  4. How do smell and taste work?
  5. What factors can we attribute to taste preference?
  6. What is the pathway involved in the feeling of pain? Explain.
  7. What is Gate-Control Theory?
  8. What are the Kinesthetic System and the Vestibular System? Why are they important to us?
  9. Which of the senses is the only one in which impulses are NOT sent through the Thalamus?

Chapter 7 – Memory

Encoding:

-Cocktail Party Phenomenon:

Storage:

Retrieval:

Flashbulb memories:

Sensory Memory:

Short-Term Memory:

-Chunking:

-Rehearsal:

Long-Term Memory:

What are the two differing theories about Long-Term Memory?

In order to commit something to memory you must pay ______to it. Which means focusing awareness on a narrow range of stimuli.

Elaboration:

Dual-Coding Theory:

Tip of the Tongue Phenomena:

Clustering:

Conceptual Hierarchy:

Schema:

Semantic Network:

Why do we forget? Explain each of the following theories.

  1. Ineffective Coding – (Psedoforgetting):
  2. Decay:
  3. Interference:
  4. Proactive
  5. Retroactive
  6. Retrieval Failure:
  7. Motivated Forgetting (Repression):

Retrograde Amnesia:

Anterograde Amnesia:

Chapter 13 – Stress, Health & Coping

The Nature of Stress

-Biopsychosocial Model

-Health Psychology

-Types of Stress

  • Frustration
  • Conflict
  • Kurt Lewin & Neal Miller
  • Approach-approach conflict
  • Avoidance-avoidance conflict
  • Approach-avoidance conflict
  • Change
  • Social-Readjustment Scale
  • Pressure

Responding to Stress

-Common emotional responses

-Common physiological responses

  • Fight-or-flight response
  • General Adaptation Syndrome

-Common behavioral responses

  • Coping
  • Defense Mechanisms
  • Constructive Coping
  • Learned Helplessness
  • Aggression
  • Catharsis

Effects of Stress on Psychological Functioning

-Burnout

-Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

-Positive vs. Negative Effects of Stress

Effects of Stress on Physical Health

-Psychosomatic diseases

-Type A vs. Type B Personalities

-Diseases linked to stress

Factors Impacting Stress

-Social Support

-Optimism

-Conscientiousness

Health-Impairing Behavior

-Effects of Smoking

-Effects of a poor diet

-Alcohol and Drug Use

-Lack of Exercise

-AIDS

Reactions to Illness

-seeking treatment and communicating with health care professionals

-listening to medical advice