THEORIES
Weber's law- just noticeable difference
Young-Helmholtz Color Theory- (trichromatic
theory)- color determined by he relative activity in
red, blue, or green sensitive cones
Opponent-Process Color Theory- Color
information is organized into 3 antagonistic pairs
Place Theory- relates perceived pitch to region
Frequency Theory- related pitch to the frequency
of sound waves and frequency of neuron firing
Facial Feedback hypothesis- sensations from the
face provide cues to the brain that help us determine
what emotion we are feeling (Ekman)
Statistical Significance- .05 chance accounts for
results less then 5% of the time
Template-Matching Theory-stored copies
Prototype-Matching Theory-recognition involves
comparison
Feature-Analysis Theory-patterns are
represented and recognized by distinctive features
Restorative Theory-We sleep in order to
replenish
Adaptive Nonresponding Theory-sleep and
inactivity have survived value
Activation-Synthesis hypothesis-dreams are
products of spontaneous neural activity
Thorndike's Law of effect-reward and
punishment encourages and discourages responding;
Thorndike
Premack principle-states that any high-probability
behavior can be used as a reward for any lowerprobability behavior
Continuity vs. Discontinuity-theories of
development, nature vs. nurture
Serial position phenomenon-sequence influences
recall
Primacy effect-enhanced memory for items
presented earlier
Recency effect-enhanced memory for items
presented last
Decay theory-forgetting caused by learning similar
materials
proactive-initially
retroactive-previously
Linguistic relativity hypothesis-person's language
determines and limits a persons experiences
Hull's drive-reduction model-motivation arises out
of need
Cognitive consistency theory-cognitive
inconsistencies create tension and thus motivate the
organism
Festinger's Cognitive dissonance theoryreconcile cognitive discrepancies
Arousal Theories-we all have optimal levels of
stimulation that we try to maintain
Yerkes-Dodson law-arousal will increase
performances up to a point, then further increases
will impair performance; inverted U function
Incentive theory-behavior is pulled rather then
pushed
James-Lange theory-emotion is caused by bodily
changes
Cannon-Bard's Thalamic theory-emotional
expression caused by simultaneous changing bodily
event thoughts and feelings
Schachter's Cognitive-Physiological Theorybodily changes, current stimuli, events, and
memories combine to determine behavior
Attribution theory-explains how people make
inferences about the causes of behavior; personal or
situational; self-serving bias
Deindividuation-loss of self-restraint that occurs
out of anonymity
Contact theory-proposes that equal-status contact
between antagonistic groups should lower tension
and bring harmony
Selye's General Adaptation Syndrome- (GAS)
emergency reaction to stressful situations Alarm
reaction, resistance and exhaustion
Lazaru's Cognitive-Psychological Modelemphasizes the process of appraisal (primary and
secondary) as the primary determinant of stress
Twin Studies-allows a researcher to test influence
of heredity v. environment
Personal Construct Theory-unique system of
reality
Deinstitutionalization-occurred because of
changes in political policy and development of new
drug therapies
Ainsworth's Strange Situation-looked at
attachment in young children to their parents