Psychology 2000 LSU Exam 1

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145 Terms

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Psychology

The scientific study of behavior and mental processes

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Wilheim Wundt

father of psychology, first attempt to bring objectivity/measurements in psychology, physical world connection to our mental experiences

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Edward Titchener

student of Wundt, founder of structuralism

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structuralism

study consciousness by trying to understand its smallest, most basic elements

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William James

founder of functionalism

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Functionalism

study consciousness & how the mind allows people to work, play, adapt, to new circumstances.."

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Max Wertheimer

founder of Gestalt Psychology

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Gestalt Psychology

how we experience the world , "The whole is greater than the sum of its parts"

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Sigmund Freud

worked with patients whose complaints had no identifiable physical cause, focused on the role of the unconscious,focus on early childhood developments

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Psychoanalysis

psychology based on Freud's ideas

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John B. Watson

conducted the Little Albert Study

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John Watson

founder of behaviorism

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Behaviorism

study of observable behaviors and actions

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Psychodynamic

Modern version of psychoanalysis, development of a sense of self

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Behavioral Perspective

How to manipulate voluntary behaviors by changing the consequences of behavior

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Human perspective

Emphasis on conscious and immediate experiences and the empowerment of the individual to become self-actualize

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Humanists

held the view that people have free will: the freedom to choose/shape their own destiny

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Cognitive perspective

How people think, remember, and store information

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Cognitive neuroscience

brain and cognitive processing. Can do this by MRI

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too much dopamine

What is the cause of Parkinson's disease?

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too little dopamine

What is the cause of Schizophrenia?

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autonomic and somatic

What are the subdivisions of the PNS?

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sulcus

depression or groove in the surface of the cerebral cortex; fissure

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gyrus

A _______ refers to a bulge of tissue located between the adjacent grooves in the surface of the human cortex.

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ventricle

Where is cerebrospinal fluid formed?

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parietal, occipital, temporal, and frontal

What are the 4 lobes of the cortex?

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split-brain research

surgical cutting of the corpus callosum to study the effects of disconnecting the right and left brain hemispheres, specifically the independent functioning of the 2 hemispheres

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lesion studies

Methodology used to examine the effects of brain damage

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Broca's aphasia

When a person can form words in there heads, but get them out of their mouths. They know they are having a problem speaking.

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Wernicke's aphasia

When a person's sentences do not make sense. They do not know that their words do not make sense

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Broca's area

What is the area of the brain involving speech?

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Wernicke's area

What is the are of the brain involving understanding language and hearing?

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genetic influences, hereditary factors, and personality factors

What are some of the possible causes of ADHD/ADD that the book talks about?

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Left Hemisphere

What hemisphere controls spoken and written language, mathematical calculations, reading, logical thought processes, and analysis of detail?

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Right Hemisphere

What hemisphere controls nonverbal actions, visual-spatial perception, music and artistic processing, emotional thought and recognition, pattern recognition, and facial recognition?

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MRI

Uses a giant magnet to align atoms in your brain

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fMRI

image brain function through tracking changes in blood oxygen levels; increase in oxygen levels associated with increased functioning

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EEG

Brain waves are studied by placing electrodes on the scalp. When neurons fire, they produce electrical fields, and researchers can record electrical activity in response to certain stimuli.

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PET

involves injection of a radioactive tracer that binds to glucose, records activity of cells that use radioactive glucose

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CT

based on X-ray technology; good for imaging brain structure, especially when there is metal in the body

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fMRI, PET, EEG

What are the 3 ways that we can image the brain?

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CT & MRI

What are the 2 ways that we can map the structure of the brain?

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glia

backup dancers to neurons

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support structure, deliver nutrients, and produce myelin

What are the 3 functions of the glia cells?

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Sociocultural perspective

perspective that focuses on the relationship b/t social behavior and culture

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Biopsychological perspective

perspective that attributes human and animal behavior to biological events occurring in the body

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Evolutionary Perspective

perspective that focuses on the biological bases for universal mental characteristics that all humans share

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Psychologist

doctoral degree and specialized training in one or more subfield of psychology. Some do basic research; others do applied research; some do both

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Psychiatry

Go to medical school and then specialize in the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders. Often used medication as treatment

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Confirmation bias

Tendency to notice, seek out, and interpret information in a way to consistent with your own prior beliefs

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Naturalistic observation

watching animals of humans behave in there normal environment

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Laboratory observation

looking in a controlled environment. Advantages: control over environment. Allows use of specialized equipment. Limitations: artificial situation that may result in artificial behavior

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Observer bias

tendency of observers to see what they expect to see

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Case study

study of one individual in great detail. Advantage: tremendous amount of detail. Limitations: finding may not generalize to others

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Surveys

Advantage's: data from large numbers of people, study covert behaviors. Limitations: people are not always accurate, small variations in wording used or order of question can affect outcomes. Researchers have to ensure representative sample if interest in generalizing finding to a certain population

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Population

entire group of people or animals the researchers is interested in

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Correlations

a measure of the relationship between two variables. If variables are causally related, a ____________ wont tell you which variable is the cause and which is the effect

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Variable

anything that can change or vary

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Positive correlation

variables are related in the same direction

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Negative correlation

variables are related in opposite direction

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Independent

What is manipulated by the experimenter?

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Dependent

this represents the measurable response or behavior of the subject in the experiment

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Experiment group

subjects in an experiment who are subjected to the independent variable

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Control group

subjects in an experiment who are not subjected to the independent variable and who may receive a placebo treatment

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Random assignment

assigning participants to experimental and control conditions by ____________ ______________ minimizes pre-existing differences between the two groups

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Experimenter effect

experimenter's expectations can unintentionally influences the results of the study

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Central nervous system

Brain and spinal cord

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Peripheral nervous system

Peripheral nerves

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Nervous system

Network of specialized cells that carry information throughout the body

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Neurons

Basic cell that sends and receives messages throughout the body

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Glia

90% of the cells in our nervous system are ____________

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Dendrites

receive messages fro other cells

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Axon

passes messages away from the cell body to other neurons, muscles, or glands

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Axon Terminal

form junction with other cells

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Cell body

Soma

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Action potential

Neural transmission, all or nothing

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The number of actions potentials

How does the strength of the message get coded?

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Synapse

is the tiny gap between the axon tip of the sending neuron and the dendrite or cell body of the receiving neuron

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Neurotransmitter

chemicals released from the sending neuron, travel across the synapse and bind to receptor sites on the receiving neuron, thereby influencing it

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Serotonin, Acetylcholine, & Dopamine

Name the Neurotransmitters that we talked about in class.

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Reabsorbed into the sending neurons through the process of reuptake, diffuse, or are broken down by enzymes

Neurotransmitters in the synapse are either

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Agonists

increases original message that NT was supposed to send

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Antagonists

blocks original message that NT was supposed to send

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Spinal cord

reflex arc neurons

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Somatic nervous system

Part of the PNS, we are aware of this process, Sensations, Voluntary muscle movement

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Autonomic nervous System

Part of the PNS that controls the involuntary muscles, organs, and glands

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Sympathetic NS

arouses- fight of flight

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Parasympathetic NS

calms- rest and digest

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Endocrine system

the body's slow chemical communications system. Communication is carried out by hormones

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Pituitary

master gland, responsible for growth and control of other glands

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thyroid gland

gland for metabolism

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Parathyroid gland

gland for calcium regulation

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Adrenal glans

gland that triggers flight or fight response engaged under stress or danger

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Pancreas

regulates blood sugar

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Testes and ovaries

secrete sex hormones for males and females respectively

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Pons, Medulla, Reticular formations

Brain stem broken into

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Pons

sends messages between the cerebellum and cortex; sleep, dreaming

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Medulla

Heartbeat, breathing, swallowing

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Reticular formations

arousal, attentions, alertness

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Midbrain

is the segment of the brainstem that lies between the hindbrain and the forebrain. It integrates sensory processes, such as vision and hearing