Quarter 2 AP Psych

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119 Terms

1

Intelligence

the ability to gather and use information in productive ways

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Generalists

beleive that if you were intelligent you would have a high g-factor

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Charles Spearman

Generalists

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Howard Gardner

believes in Multiples; everyone is intelligent in different ways

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5

Interpersonal

sensing people’s feelings and motives

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Bodily-Kinesthetic

coordinating your mind with your body

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7

Linguistic

finding the right words to express what you mean

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Intra-personal

understanding yourself, what you feel, and what you want

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9

Spatial

visualizing the world in 3D

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10

Naturalisitc

understanding living things and reading nature

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11

Musical

discerning sounds, their pitch, tone, rhythm, and timbre

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12

Logical-mathematical

quantifying things, making hypotheses and proving them

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13

Existential

tackling the questions of why we live, and why we die

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14

Robert Sternberg

created the Triarchic Theory of Intelligence

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15

Triarchic Theory on Intelligence

Includes Analytic, Practical, and Creative forms of intelligence

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16

Part one in the Triarchic Theory of Intelligence

Analytic intelligence which is mental steps or “components” used to solve problems

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Part two in the Triarchic Theory of Intelligence

Practical intelligence which is the ability to read and adapt to the contexts of everyday life

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18

Part three in the Triarchic Theory of Intelligence

Creative intelligence which is the use of experience in ways that foster insight

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19

Daniel Goleman

Coined the term EQ → emotional intelligence and listed the 5 elements of EQ: self-awareness, self-regulation, motivation, empathy, and social skills

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20

Nature v Nurture

Look at intelligence and if it is genetically or environmental

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21

Alfred Binet

created the first intelligence test called the Binet-Simon Scale to organize children into grades when school became required in France

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22

Lewis Terman

Created the Stanford-Binet test

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23

Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale

tests people 17 and older

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24

Weschler Intelligence Scale for Children

test people ages 6-16

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25

Weschler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence

tests children ages 4-5

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26

Reliability & Validity

measurements need to be consistent all the time and is the ability for the test to measure what it is supposed to measure

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27

Fluid Intelligence

abstract thinking that decreases with age

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Crystallized Intelligence

knowledge and facts that increase with age

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29

Flynn Effect

phenomenon over the last 100 years that shows that tests of IQ, fluid intelligence, and crystal intelligence has been on a steady rise

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30

Aptitude Test

measures ability or potential

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31

Achievement Test

measures what one has learned or accomplished

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32

Speed Test

consists of a large number of questions asked in a short amount of time to see how quickly a person can solve problems

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33

Power Test

designed to gauge the difficulty level of problems an individual can solve

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34

Test Reliability

for us to have any faith in the meaning of a test score, we must believe that the test is both reliable and valid

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35

Spit-half reliability

randomly dividing a test into two different sections and then correlating performance on the two halves

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Equivalent-Form Reliability

many tests are available in multiple equivalent forms

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Test-Retest Reliability

correlation between a persons score on ones administration of a test with subsequent attempts of the test

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38

Content Validity

how well a measure reflects the entire range of material

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Criterion-Related Validity

concurrent validity measures the now while the predictive validity measures future performance

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40

Construct Validity

is the most meaningful and is a measurement of the measurement

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41

Plethoras

also seen as chakras such as exercise, sweating, dieting, and vomiting

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42

Four Humors

sickness caused by an imbalance of humors; blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile

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43

Bloodletting

humors were balanced out with a practice of bloodletting

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44

Trephination

process of drilling holes in the skull

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45

Phrenology

popular until the mid 19th century that beleived that there was 27 individual organs and you could connect them to bumps on the head

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46

Introspection

the first wave in Psychology that included Wilhelm Wundt and William James

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47

Wilhelm Wundt

created the first Psych lab and beleived in structuralism

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48

William James

created the first text book and beleived in functionalism

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49

Gestalt Psychology

Second wave that included Max Wertheimer

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50

Max Wertheimer

created a response to structuralism and functionalism that looked at: closure, similarity, figure ground, proximity, enclosure, and continuance

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51

Psychoanalysis

third wave that included Sigmund Freud

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Sigmund Freud

known for the Unconscious mind theory (ID, Ego, Superego)

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53

Behaviorism

Wave four and included John Watson, Ivan Pavlov, and B.F.Skinner

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People involved in Behaviorism

John Watson, Ivan Pavlov, and B.F. Skinner

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Multiple Perspectives

Wave five

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56

Structuralism

sought to break the human experience down to sensations, views, feelings, emotions, etc.

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57

Naturalisitc Observation

watching a person, or an animal behave in its normal surroundings

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58

Case Studies

a thorough study of one person in hopes to learn about people in general

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59

Surveys

asks questions and deals with many more people in less depth and can gather information from a large number of people

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60

Correlation Studies

when two things are related or they go together

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Experiments

only research method that can determine causation

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Purpose of Naturalisitc Observations

to gather information

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Strengths of Naturalistic Observations

inexpensive, can normally be done when ethical factors won’t allow for experiments

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Weaknesses of Naturalistic Observation

individual cases can perhaps be misleading

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Purpose of Case Studies

to gather information

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Strengths of Case Studies

inexpensive, requires only one participant, can often be done when ethical factors won’t allow experiments

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Weaknesses of Case Studies

individual cases can be misleading

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68

Purpose of Surveys

to gather information

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Strengths of Surveys

inexpensive, can gather lots of info fast, can often be done when ethical factors won’t allow experiments

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Weaknesses of Surveys

wording and personal bias can severely alter results

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Strength of correlation

0-0.199 =-0.199 very weak; .2-.399 =-0.199 weak; .4-.599 =-0.199 medium; .6-.79 =-0.19 strong; .8-1 =-0.2 very strong

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72

steps to conduct an experiment

research question, hypothesis, population, random selection, sample, rando assignment, confounding variables, experimental group(s), independent variables, operational definitions, dependent variable, control group

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measures of central tendency

mean, median, mode

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measures of variation

standard deviation, range

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75

Neuron

part in the body that sends signals through others to alert body

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76

Soma

large beginning of the Neuron that contains dendrites

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Dendrites

attached to the Soma

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Myelin sheath

attached to the Axon

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79

axon

home for the Myelin sheaths

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80

terminal buttons

attached to the end of the axon

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81

agonist

mimics or stimulates neurotransmitters

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82

antagonist

blocks the production of neurotransmitters

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83

Corpus callosum

connects the right and left hemisphere of the brain so they can communicate

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84

Parts in the Hindbrain

Medulla Oblongata, Pons, Reticular Formation, Cerebellum, Brain Stem

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Medulla Oblongata

located on top of the spinal cord that involves the control of blood pressure and heart rate

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86

Pons

located on top of the medulla and involves the control of facial expressions

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Reticular Formation

located through the middle of the medulla & the Pons and is involved in various physiological functions, including pain sensitization

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88

Cerebellum

located in the rear of the brain and coordinates some habitual muscle movements such as tracking with our eyes

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Brain Stem

located in the lower part of the brain and helps to regulate vital body functions that you’d on’t have to think about like breathing

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90

Parts in the Forebrain

Limbic system, thalamus, hypothalamus, hippocampus, amygdala

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91

Limbic System

located as a loosely connected network of structures and is responsible for mood & emotions

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Thalamus

located on top of the brainstem and is responsible for redividing the sensory signals coming up the spinal cord

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93

Hypothalamus

Located directly underneath the thalamus & directly above the pituitary gland and controls several metabolic functions including body temperature

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Hippocampus

curved structure located within each temporal lone

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95

Amygdala

Two almond shaped structures located near the hippocampus that are vital to our experiences of emotions

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96

Parts in the Cerebrum

frontal lobe, prefrontal cortex, primary motor cortex, broca’s area, temporal lobe, auditory cortex, wernicke’s area, parital lobe, sensory cortex, somatosensory strip, occipital lobe, and visual cortex

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97

Frontal Lobe

located in front of the brain and is important for voluntary movement and expressive language

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98

Prefrontal Cortex

thought to play a critical role in directing thought processes and acts as the brain central executive

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Primary Motor Cortex

provides the most important signal for the production of skilled movements

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100

Broca’s Area

responsible for controlling the muscles involved in producing speech; if damaged you may be unable to make the muscle movements needed for speech

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