MCAT P/S terms
Emotional response are different from those in real life
Observer effect/ Hawthorne effect: emotions in real life are experienced in a more dynamic and multifaceted way
Participants in lab studies may be aware that they are being observed, leading to altered behavior or self-consciousness
Trace decay theory: memories fade as a function of time
Particular enhanced in older participants due to association w/ increased age and decreased ability to recall information
Similar to transience or forgetting
Schacter-singer theory: explains that emotion results from interaction between two factors: physiological arousal and condition → physiological arousal is cognitively interpreted within the context of each situation → ultimately produces emotional experience
Two factor schacter
James-lange (hot name so you are aroused): states that emotion is equivalent to the range of physiological arousal caused by external events → remember this by how long it takes to get an emotional response when it must be processed sequentially
Validity: related to accuracy of the a study
Mother’s IQ is not affected by race
Jean piagent stages
Sensorimotor stage: 0-2
Coordinator of sensory input and motor responses
Development of object permanence
Where autism manifests
Pre-operational stage: 2-7
Ability to use language and engage in pretend play
Marked by irreversibility, centration, egocentrism
Concrete operational: 7-11
Apply mental operations and master concept of conservation
Formal operational: 12+
Children learn about abstract concepts and principles
Polycistronic: describes messenger RNA
Polyphenic: refers to a trait which multiple, discrete phenotypes can arise from a single genotype as a result of differing environmental conditions
Polygenic
Polyploidy
EEGs → electrical activity can be up or down
Intelligence
Galton’s theory of hereditary genius: intelligence is hereditary can be passed down to offspring
Binet’s theory of mental age: uses a single number, the intelligence quotient (IQ) to represent an individual’s intelligence
Spearman theory of general intelligence: focuses on a general factor (g factor) to predict success on overall performance regarding mental ability tests
Thorndike’s theory of intelligence: 3 areas of intelligence
Abstract: associated with language and symbolic thinking
Mechanical: ability to control bodily movements
Social: ability to communicate and understand others
*useful for comparing IQ in children w/ and without autism
Memory
Sensory memory
visual/ iconic: <1 second
Echoic (Auditory): 2-3 seconds
Short terming/ working memory: 7 +/- 2 items <1 min (Rehearsal)
Long term memory: encoding short term memory and then retrieving it
Theoretically infinite Declarative: explicit/ conscious
Episodic: personal history, events, experiences
Semantic: general knowledge about the world
Nondeclarative: implicit
Priming: proper stimuli influencing responses to subsequent stimuli
Procedural: performance of cognitive and motor tasks
Associative memory: emotional memory; classical and operant condition
Nonassociative memory: sensitization and habituation
Electrical conductivity of the skin: is often measured to assess an individual’s level of arousal or sympathetic activity
Attitude: describes our evaluation of a person, idea, object
Can typically be described as being positive or negative
Consist of 3 things: cognitive (thoughts), affective (feelings), behavioral (actions)
Attribution: describes how individuals perceive the causes of certain experiences and can be described as being either external or internal w/ external attributions describing the cause as being beyond the control of the individual and internal attributions describing the cause as being within the control of the individuals → not related to attitude
Hidden curriculum: includes the norms, values, and beliefs that students are unintentionally taught through their attendance at school
Bias in research
Self-serving bias: tendency for individuals to make conclusion that keep themselves in a positive light despite these conclusions contradicting reality
Can be attributing to positive outcomes to internal qualities and negative outcomes to external uncontrolled bias
Fundamental attribution error (correspondence bias): occurs when individuals overemphasize internal factors as explanations for the behavior of other people
Person drinking bc of personality issues rather than recent divorce
Actor- observer bias: describes the phenomenon in which an individual attributes their own negative actions to external circumstances while attributing other people’s negative behaviors to internal qualities
Kohlberg’s theory of moral development: identify development theory that focuses on how children development morality
Preconventional
Stage 1: obedience bc behavior is driven by avoiding punishment
Stage 2: behavior is driven by self-interest and rewards
Conventional
Stage 3: behavior is driven by social approval
Stage 4: behavior is driven by obeying authorities and conforming to social order
Post-conventional morality
Stage 5: behavior is driven by a balance of social order and individual rights
Stage 6: behavior is driven by internal moral principles
Diagnostics
PETs: functional image technique that uses radiotracers to visualize and measure changes in metabolic processes and other physiological activities → helps study the localized effects of naltrexone on the brain
Moralistic trust
Humanistic: emphasizes empathy and focuses on innate goodness in human behavior
Aggress w/ views of moralistic trust
behaviorist: exhibited behaviors are in response to a stimulus and its associated outcomes
There are no clearly defined stimuli
Psychoanalytic perspective: focuses on the important in the unconscious mind and how it dictates behavior based on past experiences
Social cog: focuses on cognitive processes such as thinking and judging
And how these contribute to learned behaviors when observing others
Population
If dependency ratio increases (pop under 15 and over 65/ pop betw 15 and 65) → there is an increased burden on the working age population
Just noticeable difference: when a particular stimulus can be detected by a person 50% of the time
Optics
Convergence: binocular cue by which the extent to which the two eyes differently turn inward to view an object
Depth perception cue based on the inward movement of our eyes when we focus on the nearby objects
Group theory
Conformity: acquiescence to the socially pressure behavioral standard of a group
Weber: ideal bureaucracy
Hierarchy of authority, promotion based on effort, specialization and technical qualification, formal rules and regulations
Sleep
Dyssomina: has trouble falling asleep at night
Rxn formation
Person goes beyond denial and behaves the opposite way they thing and feel
*child bullies a romantic crush
When a student finds out they failed an important exam and immediately brushes it off as unimportant
Fecundity = fertility
Network dynamic: predicts that as the size of the group increases, the stability of the group increases but the intimacy of the group decreases
Social loafing: describe the situation in which an individual puts less effort into achieving a certain goal when working in a group compared to working alone
This is influenced by the belief that their individual effort won’t be evaluated as harshly in a group setting and that their lack of effort will go unnoticed
Functionalism: macrosociological perspective that views society as a connected structure between institutions such as schools, media, banks that meets the needs of society
Social institutions and organizations, have specific functions that contribute to the stability and survival of society
Counterurbanization: when people move from city to suburbs
Urban decline: when cities physically are in bad condition
Adrenaline: pupils dilate and blood vessels constrict
Mead personality: sociological theory of symbolic interactionism
Social rather than biological factors influence identity formation
Experience of self (“I” and “me”) emerges through social interaction with others who play important and formative roles in one’s life
Preparatory (imitation): babies/ toddlers imitate others and begin to use symbols or language without meaning comprehension
At this stage children have no sense of self as separate from the world around them
Play: role-taking and understanding perspectives of others
The “I” component of the self has developed
Children begin to imagine how others perceive them, which is the beginning of the development of me
Game: school-age children become aware of their position/role in relation to others
Begin to see themselves from the perspective of the more abstract generalized other
Further develop the me to incorporate the values/ rules of society in which they live
Auditory
Place theory: explains the perception of sound pitch (how high or low a tone is)
Inside the cochlea, specific sound wavelengths generate basilar membrane vibrations at specific loci
Each locus (place) corresponds to a slightly different frequency. Hair cells located at the base of the basilar membrane are activated by high frequency sounds, and hair cells located at the apex of the basilar membrane are activated by low frequency sounds
Bystander effect: individual is less likely to receive help as the number of onlookers are present
This is attributed to a diffusion of responsibility
Personality
Looking glass self: our interpretation of how we are perceived by others impacts our self-concept (beliefs about ourselves)
Emotional response are different from those in real life
Observer effect/ Hawthorne effect: emotions in real life are experienced in a more dynamic and multifaceted way
Participants in lab studies may be aware that they are being observed, leading to altered behavior or self-consciousness
Trace decay theory: memories fade as a function of time
Particular enhanced in older participants due to association w/ increased age and decreased ability to recall information
Similar to transience or forgetting
Schacter-singer theory: explains that emotion results from interaction between two factors: physiological arousal and condition → physiological arousal is cognitively interpreted within the context of each situation → ultimately produces emotional experience
Two factor schacter
James-lange (hot name so you are aroused): states that emotion is equivalent to the range of physiological arousal caused by external events → remember this by how long it takes to get an emotional response when it must be processed sequentially
Validity: related to accuracy of the a study
Mother’s IQ is not affected by race
Jean piagent stages
Sensorimotor stage: 0-2
Coordinator of sensory input and motor responses
Development of object permanence
Where autism manifests
Pre-operational stage: 2-7
Ability to use language and engage in pretend play
Marked by irreversibility, centration, egocentrism
Concrete operational: 7-11
Apply mental operations and master concept of conservation
Formal operational: 12+
Children learn about abstract concepts and principles
Polycistronic: describes messenger RNA
Polyphenic: refers to a trait which multiple, discrete phenotypes can arise from a single genotype as a result of differing environmental conditions
Polygenic
Polyploidy
EEGs → electrical activity can be up or down
Intelligence
Galton’s theory of hereditary genius: intelligence is hereditary can be passed down to offspring
Binet’s theory of mental age: uses a single number, the intelligence quotient (IQ) to represent an individual’s intelligence
Spearman theory of general intelligence: focuses on a general factor (g factor) to predict success on overall performance regarding mental ability tests
Thorndike’s theory of intelligence: 3 areas of intelligence
Abstract: associated with language and symbolic thinking
Mechanical: ability to control bodily movements
Social: ability to communicate and understand others
*useful for comparing IQ in children w/ and without autism
Memory
Sensory memory
visual/ iconic: <1 second
Echoic (Auditory): 2-3 seconds
Short terming/ working memory: 7 +/- 2 items <1 min (Rehearsal)
Long term memory: encoding short term memory and then retrieving it
Theoretically infinite Declarative: explicit/ conscious
Episodic: personal history, events, experiences
Semantic: general knowledge about the world
Nondeclarative: implicit
Priming: proper stimuli influencing responses to subsequent stimuli
Procedural: performance of cognitive and motor tasks
Associative memory: emotional memory; classical and operant condition
Nonassociative memory: sensitization and habituation
Electrical conductivity of the skin: is often measured to assess an individual’s level of arousal or sympathetic activity
Attitude: describes our evaluation of a person, idea, object
Can typically be described as being positive or negative
Consist of 3 things: cognitive (thoughts), affective (feelings), behavioral (actions)
Attribution: describes how individuals perceive the causes of certain experiences and can be described as being either external or internal w/ external attributions describing the cause as being beyond the control of the individual and internal attributions describing the cause as being within the control of the individuals → not related to attitude
Hidden curriculum: includes the norms, values, and beliefs that students are unintentionally taught through their attendance at school
Bias in research
Self-serving bias: tendency for individuals to make conclusion that keep themselves in a positive light despite these conclusions contradicting reality
Can be attributing to positive outcomes to internal qualities and negative outcomes to external uncontrolled bias
Fundamental attribution error (correspondence bias): occurs when individuals overemphasize internal factors as explanations for the behavior of other people
Person drinking bc of personality issues rather than recent divorce
Actor- observer bias: describes the phenomenon in which an individual attributes their own negative actions to external circumstances while attributing other people’s negative behaviors to internal qualities
Kohlberg’s theory of moral development: identify development theory that focuses on how children development morality
Preconventional
Stage 1: obedience bc behavior is driven by avoiding punishment
Stage 2: behavior is driven by self-interest and rewards
Conventional
Stage 3: behavior is driven by social approval
Stage 4: behavior is driven by obeying authorities and conforming to social order
Post-conventional morality
Stage 5: behavior is driven by a balance of social order and individual rights
Stage 6: behavior is driven by internal moral principles
Diagnostics
PETs: functional image technique that uses radiotracers to visualize and measure changes in metabolic processes and other physiological activities → helps study the localized effects of naltrexone on the brain
Moralistic trust
Humanistic: emphasizes empathy and focuses on innate goodness in human behavior
Aggress w/ views of moralistic trust
behaviorist: exhibited behaviors are in response to a stimulus and its associated outcomes
There are no clearly defined stimuli
Psychoanalytic perspective: focuses on the important in the unconscious mind and how it dictates behavior based on past experiences
Social cog: focuses on cognitive processes such as thinking and judging
And how these contribute to learned behaviors when observing others
Population
If dependency ratio increases (pop under 15 and over 65/ pop betw 15 and 65) → there is an increased burden on the working age population
Just noticeable difference: when a particular stimulus can be detected by a person 50% of the time
Optics
Convergence: binocular cue by which the extent to which the two eyes differently turn inward to view an object
Depth perception cue based on the inward movement of our eyes when we focus on the nearby objects
Group theory
Conformity: acquiescence to the socially pressure behavioral standard of a group
Weber: ideal bureaucracy
Hierarchy of authority, promotion based on effort, specialization and technical qualification, formal rules and regulations
Sleep
Dyssomina: has trouble falling asleep at night
Rxn formation
Person goes beyond denial and behaves the opposite way they thing and feel
*child bullies a romantic crush
When a student finds out they failed an important exam and immediately brushes it off as unimportant
Fecundity = fertility
Network dynamic: predicts that as the size of the group increases, the stability of the group increases but the intimacy of the group decreases
Social loafing: describe the situation in which an individual puts less effort into achieving a certain goal when working in a group compared to working alone
This is influenced by the belief that their individual effort won’t be evaluated as harshly in a group setting and that their lack of effort will go unnoticed
Functionalism: macrosociological perspective that views society as a connected structure between institutions such as schools, media, banks that meets the needs of society
Social institutions and organizations, have specific functions that contribute to the stability and survival of society
Counterurbanization: when people move from city to suburbs
Urban decline: when cities physically are in bad condition
Adrenaline: pupils dilate and blood vessels constrict
Mead personality: sociological theory of symbolic interactionism
Social rather than biological factors influence identity formation
Experience of self (“I” and “me”) emerges through social interaction with others who play important and formative roles in one’s life
Preparatory (imitation): babies/ toddlers imitate others and begin to use symbols or language without meaning comprehension
At this stage children have no sense of self as separate from the world around them
Play: role-taking and understanding perspectives of others
The “I” component of the self has developed
Children begin to imagine how others perceive them, which is the beginning of the development of me
Game: school-age children become aware of their position/role in relation to others
Begin to see themselves from the perspective of the more abstract generalized other
Further develop the me to incorporate the values/ rules of society in which they live
Auditory
Place theory: explains the perception of sound pitch (how high or low a tone is)
Inside the cochlea, specific sound wavelengths generate basilar membrane vibrations at specific loci
Each locus (place) corresponds to a slightly different frequency. Hair cells located at the base of the basilar membrane are activated by high frequency sounds, and hair cells located at the apex of the basilar membrane are activated by low frequency sounds
Bystander effect: individual is less likely to receive help as the number of onlookers are present
This is attributed to a diffusion of responsibility
Personality
Looking glass self: our interpretation of how we are perceived by others impacts our self-concept (beliefs about ourselves)