Intro to Psychology Exam 1 Study Guide

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100 Terms

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Willhelm Wundt

First person to establish a psychology laboratory in Liepzig, Germany in 1879.

He was a physiologist and philosopher.

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Structuralism

Used introspective to explore the structural elements of the human mind

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Functionalism

Focused on how our mental and behavioral processes function-- how they enable us to adapt, survive and flourish

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Sigmund Freud

-A psychiatrist

-An Austrian physician

-He and his followers emphasized the importance of the unconscious mind and its effects on human behavior. He attempted to cure female victims of hysteria through speaking to them`

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Psychologists in the 1920's-1960's

Many pioneering psychologists such as Freud, Piaget, Watson, Rogers, and Maslow

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Behaviorists

-Objective

-Watson and later Skinner, emphasized the study of overt behavior as the subject matter of scientific psychology

-Between 1920 and 1960, these were the top "psychologists" and gained or lost respect from the rest of the scientific community

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B.F. Skinner

Most famous Behaviorist

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Humanistic Psychology

Maslow and Rogers emphasized current environmental influences on our growth potential and our NEED FOR LOVE AND ACCEPTANCE

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Psychology today

The scientific study of behavior and our mental processes

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Psychology is...

A combo of anatomy and philosophy

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Nature vs. Nurture

The argument over whether the way you are raised overpowers your human nature, or vice versa

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Psychology's 3 Levels of Analysis

1. Biological Influences

2. Psychological Influences

3. Social-cultural Influences

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Examples of Biological Influences

Genetic predispositions, genetic mutations, genes and responding to the environment

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Examples of Psychological Influences

Learned fears and expectations, Emotional responses, Cognitive processing and perceptual interpretations

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Examples o Social-Cultural Influences

Presence of others, Cultural, societal, family expectations, peer and other group influences, compelling models such as the media

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The BioPsychoSocial Model is

A combination of Biological, Psychological, and Social factors

Ex: Lori is depressed because she has a genetic predisposition, has been sad for the past 6 months, because of stress at work and the loss of a loved one.

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Behaviorist School of Psychology

attributed largely by Watson, Pavlov and Skinner

-All behaviors are learned through reward and punishment pairings

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Humanistic School of Psychology

-Says humans are unique and good and possess an inner ability to change: free will and growth are important

-Motivation based on hierarchy of needs

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Person-Centered Therapy

Therapy in which the patient directs therapy and others support helps the patient become better

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Psychoanalytic/Psychodynamic School of Psychology

-Developed by Freud, and believed our unconscious mind shapes our thoughts and behaviors

-Believes that childhood is the most important point of development

-Ex: anal retentive or anal repuslive

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Cognitive School of Psychology

-We interpret the environment around us

-Behaviors are based on the perception of the world

-Thoughts shape feelings, which shape behaviors

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Biological (physiological) School of Psychology

-Investigates how specific physiological processes explain individual differences

-Describe how internal biological events interact with the environment

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Hindsight Bias

The "I-knew-it-all-along" phenomenon

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Vivid Cases

People fail to make accurate generalizations because they are unduly influenced by vivid cases such as Jersey Shhore

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Critical Thinking

-Does not accept arguments and conclusions blindly

-It examines assumptions, discerns hidden values, evaluates evidence and assesses conclusions

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Empirical Approach

By testing their predictions with the observational method of science, psychologists are using an empirical approach

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The Scientific Method

1. Question/Purpose

2. Research

3. Hypothesis

4. Prepare

5. Experiment

6. Collect Data

7. Conclude/Analyze

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Operational Definition

A statement of procedures used to define research variables

-Ex: human intelligence may be operationally defined as what an IQ test measures

-Ex: Depression isn't visible but you can be tested to see how depressed you are

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Types of Descriptive Methods to Inform Hypotheses

-Naturalistic Observation

-Case Study

-Surveys

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Correlational methods

Associate different factors to show relationships between them

Ex: Measuring how long a preschool teacher spends teaching ABC songs and how well they know their ABCs

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Correlation

-The degree to which one variable or set of data is related to another variable/set of data

-Correlation does not prove causation

-Scatterplots represent correlations between 2 variables

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Correlation Coefficient

Number between -1 and +1 to show the strength and direction of the relationship

-Correlations help us predict behavior but do not indicate the cause of the relationship

-R

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Scatterplots

-X axis: variables that you change (such as times)

-Y axis: something that ou don't really know if it is going to change or not

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Third Variable

A variable that is responsible for the relation between two variables

-Ex: Increased ice cream consumption and high drowning rates correlate because of warmer temperatures, but do not cause each other

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Illusory Correlations

There is a perception of a relationship that does not exist

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Experimental Research

-Actively manipulating one variable to observe its effects on another variable (dependent variable)

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Independent Variable

A factor manipulated by the experimenter and is the focus of the study

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Dependent Variable

A factor that may be influenced by the manipulated experimental variable

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Experimental Group

The group exposed to the treatment

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Control group

The group not exposed to the treatment

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Double Blind Procedure

Both parties are ignorant about who has received the drug and who has received the placebo

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Placebo

Inert substance administered instead of a drug to see if it produces any of the same effects as the drug

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Placebo Effect

When participants who are given an inert substance experience something

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Experiments are most helpful for revealing

Cause and effect realtionships

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Survey

Pro: Can be easy to collect lots of data

Con: Sample may be biased or inaccurate

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Case Studies

Pro: In-depth data

Con: Can't assume it will apply to all others

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Mode

Most frequently occurring score

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Mean

the average score obtained

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Median

Middle score

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Standard Deviation

Measure of degree of variation among a set of scores (how much scores vary around the mean)

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Statistical Significance

This term is used when deciding whether observed differences between samples reflect actual differences between populations

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What are neurons?

The smallest part, a brain/nerve cell

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3 types of neurons

-Sensory: Body sends messages to the brain

-Motor: Brain sends messages to the body

-Interneurons: Messages between neurons in the brain

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Dendrites

-Busy fibers that receive information

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Axon

-Long stem that passes message through cell

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Myelin Sheath

-Fat and nerve tissue that insulates and speeds up impulses (like insulation on a wire)

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Excitatory and Inhibitory Signals

If enough excitatory information, exceeds threshold of excitation it sends a message/signal down the axon

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Action Potential

A brief electrical charge that's fired when a neuron gets a message and generates electricity through chemical events

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Absolute Refractory Period

The reason that the action potential only travels in one direction of the axon is because of the absolute refractory period

-The period immediately following the firing of a nerve fiber when it cannot be stimulated no matter how great a stimulus is applied

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Synapse

-How neurons communicate

-Meeting point between neurons

-Synaptic gap is less than a millionth of an inch wide

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Neurotransmitters

-Chemical messengers

-Are released at the synaptic gap and fit into the next like a key in a lock

-Ex: Serotonin, Dopamine, Norepinephrine, Acetylcholine, GABA, Glutamate

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Reuptake

The sending neuron reabsorbs extra neurotransmitter

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Seretonin

Affects mood, hunger, sleep and arousal

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Dopamine

Influence movement, learning, attention and emotion

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Norepinephrine

Affects alertness and arousal

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Endorphins

-Natural opium

-Makes you feel good

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Agonist Drugs

-Mimics neurotransmitter functioning

-Ex: Drugs that mimic things like Serotonin

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Antagonist Drugs

-Blocks a neurotransmitters functioning

-Ex: Botox, Botulin

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Central Nervous System

-Brain and Spinal Bord

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Peripheral Nervous System

-Body's sensory receptors, muscles and glands

-Pass information through bundled axons called nerves

-Is made up off the Somatic and Autonomic Nervous System

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Somatic N.S.

Controls skeletal muscles

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Autonomic N.S.

Regulates glands, blood vessels, and internal organs

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Sympathetic Nervous System

Prepares you for action (fight or flight) by increasing heart rate, rapid breathing, increased muscular function, etc.

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Parasympathetic Nervous System

Returns your body to normal functioning, normal heart rate, digestion stimulated, relaxed, etc.

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Reflexes

Somatic movements that do not involve your brain: brain and spinal cord does not always meet up; spinal cord sends the signal

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Sensory Division

How information comes into the brain, conducts impulses from receptors to the CNS

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Endocrine System

-Nervous system's slower cousin

-Uses hormones to transmit messages instead of neurotransmitters and travel through the blood stream

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Pituitary Gland

Most important, pea-sized, core of the brain that controls sex hormones, growth hormones, etc

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Adrenal Glands

Top of kidneys, release epinephrine and norepinephrine

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Neural Networks

Neurons cluster into working groups

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Spinal Cord

Information highway between peripheral nervous system and brain

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Forebrain:

Thought processes occurs and motor function is controlled

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Midbrain

Connects hindbrain and forebrain, linked to thought

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Hindbrain

Links the spinal cord and brain region that regulates physiological functions

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Brain Stem

Oldest and innermost, autonomic survival functions

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Thalamus

Communication hub, Switchboard that directs messages to the sensory receiving areas in the cortex and transmits replies to the cerebellum and medulla

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Reticular Formatin

Arousal and sleep

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Pons

Coordinates movements between sides of body; connects the cerebellum

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Medulla

Base of brainstem, controls heartbeat and breathing

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Cerebellum

Almost entirely hindbrain, still part of the older part of the brain

-Helps judge time

-Modulate emotions

-Coordinating movement

-Balance

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Amygdala

Anger and fear, less active = more thrill seeking

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Hypothalamus

Keeps body regulated (hunger, thirst, temperature, etc)

-Fighting, Feeding, Fleeing and Freaking

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Cerebral Cortex

A thin surface layer of interconnected neural cells

-higher order thinking

-ultimate control and information processing center

-makes us more adaptable

-Four regions: frontal, parietal, occipital, temporal

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Frontal lobe

motor cortex, memory, reasoning, decision making, flexibility, planning

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Parietal Lobe

Somatosensory cortex, pressure, pain, touch, temperature

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Temporal Lobe

Primary auditory cortex, hearing, memory of sounds

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Wernicke's area

Left lobe, language development

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Occipital Lobe

Reception and interpretation of visual information

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Motor Cortex

An area at the rear of the frontal lobes that controls voluntary movements

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Split Brain

When patients have their corpus callosum severed, generally disabling if you're older