Final Exam Notes      Motivation — the process that initiates, guides, and maintains goal-oriented behaviors    Need — a requirement for survival (e.g. food, water); unmet needs motivate behavior    Need hierarchy — Maslow’s model ranking human needs (physiological, safety, love/belonging, esteem, self-actualization)    Drive — an internal state created by unmet needs (biological drive)    Homeostasis — tendency of body systems to maintain internal stability    Drive reduction — theory that motivation arises from the desire to reduce drives (i.e. satisfy needs)    Arousal — state of being physiologically alert, awake, and attentive    Optimal arousal — level of arousal leading to best performance (too low or too high impairs performance)    Pleasure principle — Freud’s idea that behavior is driven to seek pleasure and avoid pain    Incentive — external stimulus that “pulls” behavior (rewards, goals)    Intrinsic motivation — performing behavior for internal satisfaction or interest    Extrinsic motivation — performing behavior to earn external reward or avoid punishment    Biological factors (eating) — e.g. hunger signals from hypothalamus, genetics, metabolism    Learning factors (eating) — e.g. food preferences, cultural influences, classical conditioning    Achievement — desire to accomplish goals, attain standards    Self-efficacy — belief in one’s ability to succeed at a task    Delay of gratification — ability to resist short-term temptations for long-term goals    Emotion — complex reaction involving subjective experience, physiological arousal, and expressive behaviors    Primary emotions — basic emotions (e.g. joy, anger, fear, disgust, surprise)    Secondary emotions — more complex emotions (e.g. guilt, shame, pride)    James-Lange theory — emotion results from interpreting bodily reactions (e.g. see bear → heart races → feel fear)    Cannon-Bard theory — emotions and physiological reactions occur simultaneously    Two-factor (Schachter-Singer) theory — emotion = physiological arousal + cognitive label    Amygdala — brain region involved in processing emotions, especially fear and threat detection    Emotion regulation — methods to control or influence one’s emotions    Thought suppression — trying to push thoughts/feelings out of mind    Rumination — repetitively focusing on negative feelings    Positive reappraisal — reinterpret event in a more positive light    Humor — using jokes or laughter to cope with negative emotions    Distraction — shifting attention away from emotional triggers    Chapter 11: Health & Well-Being      Health psychology — field studying psychological influences on health, illness, and wellness    Well-being — sense of physical, mental, and social flourishing    Biopsychosocial model — model that health is determined by biological, psychological, and social factors    Body mass index (BMI) — weight (kg) / (height (m))²; used to classify obesity / overweight    Overeating factors — biological (metabolism, hormones), social (availability, norms), genetic predisposition    Anorexia nervosa — eating disorder where individuals restrict food intake, fear weight gain, distorted body image    Bulimia nervosa — cycle of binge eating followed by compensatory behaviors (e.g. purging, fasting, exercising)    Binge-eating disorder — recurrent episodes of eating large amounts without compensatory behaviors    Stress — a process by which we perceive and respond to events appraised as overwhelming    Stressor — event or condition that triggers stress response    Stress response — physical, emotional, and behavioral reaction to a stressor    Major life stressors — big events causing substantial change (e.g. death, job loss)    Daily hassles — everyday annoyances that accumulate stress (e.g. traffic, chores)    General adaptation syndrome (GAS) — three-stage model of stress response    GAS phases: alarm reaction → resistance → exhaustion    Fight-or-flight response — physiological response to threat (sympathetic activation)    Tend-and-befriend response — stress response especially in women: nurturing and social affiliation    Type A behavior pattern — competitive, time-urgent, hostile personality (linked to heart disease)    Type B behavior pattern — relaxed, easygoing, less competitive    Coping — efforts to manage stress    Primary appraisal — evaluating whether a stressor is harmful, threatening, or challenging    Secondary appraisal — evaluating one’s resources to cope    Emotion-focused coping — regulating emotional response to stressor    Problem-focused coping — tackling the stressor directly to reduce or eliminate it    Positive psychology — field focusing on strengths, well-being, and human flourishing    Five ways to stay healthy — e.g. good diet, exercise, sleep, social support, stress management    Chapter 12: Social Psychology      Personal attributions — attributing behavior to internal traits or dispositions    Situational attributions — attributing behavior to external circumstances    Fundamental attribution error — tendency to overestimate personal factors and underestimate situational factors when explaining others’ behavior    Actor/observer bias — tendency to attribute one’s own actions to the situation, but others’ actions to internal traits    Self-fulfilling prophecy — expectation that leads you to act in ways that make it come true    Stereotypes — fixed, overgeneralized beliefs about a group    Prejudice — negative attitude toward a group    Discrimination — negative behavior directed at a group    Ingroup bias — favoring one’s own group    Outgroup bias — negative attitudes toward those outside one’s group    Attitudes — evaluations of people, objects, or ideas (positive/negative)    Mere exposure effect — repeated exposure to something increases liking    Cognitive dissonance — discomfort when beliefs, attitudes, or behavior conflict    Postdecision dissonance — tension after making a choice, leading to justifying one’s decision    Persuasion — process of changing attitudes    Central route — persuasion via thoughtful consideration of arguments    Peripheral route — persuasion via superficial cues (e.g. attractiveness, emotion)    Social facilitation — improved performance in presence of others on simple tasks    Social loafing — exerting less effort when working in a group    Deindividuation — loss of self-awareness/inhibition in group situations    Conformity — adjusting behavior or thinking to match a group standard    Compliance — changing behavior in response to a direct request    Obedience — following orders from an authority figure    Milgram’s study — obedience experiments where participants (under instruction) delivered shocks to a “learner”    Bystander intervention effect — tendency for individuals less likely to help when others are present    Chapter 14: Psychological Disorders      Psychopathology — study of psychological disorders; abnormal patterns of behavior, thoughts, or feelings    Diathesis-stress model — view that psychological disorders develop due to genetic vulnerability + stress    Biopsychosocial approach (to disorders) — disorders result from biological, psychological, and social factors    DSM-5 — Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition (standard classification of mental disorders)    Specific phobia — irrational fear of specific object or situation    Social anxiety disorder — intense fear of social situations or being judged    Generalized anxiety disorder — chronic, uncontrollable worry about multiple domains    Panic disorder — recurrent, unexpected panic attacks    Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) — obsessions (intrusive thoughts) and compulsions (ritualistic behaviors)    Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) — disorder following exposure to traumatic event, with flashbacks, avoidance, hypervigilance    Major depressive disorder — persistent sadness, loss of interest, and other symptoms interfering with daily life    Bipolar I disorder — periods of mania (and usually depression)    Bipolar II disorder — hypomania (less severe mania) + major depressive episodes    Schizophrenia — disorder characterized by delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, negative symptoms    Positive symptoms (in schizophrenia) — delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech    Negative symptoms — flat affect, social withdrawal, lack of motivation    Hallucinations — perceptual experiences without external stimuli    Delusions — false beliefs held despite evidence to the contrary    Disorganized speech — incoherent or illogical thought reflected in speech    Disorganized behavior — inappropriate or bizarre behavior    Biological risk factors (schizophrenia) — genetics, neurotransmitter abnormalities, brain structure    Environmental risk factors — prenatal exposure, stress, family environment    Borderline personality disorder — instability in mood, self-image, relationships, impulsivity    Antisocial personality disorder (APD) — disregard for others’ rights, lack of remorse    Dissociative amnesia — inability to recall important personal information (usually after trauma)    Dissociative identity disorder (DID) — presence of two or more distinct identity states    Autism spectrum disorder — deficits in social communication, restricted/repetitive behaviors    ADHD (attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder) — inattention, hyperactivity, impulsivity    Chapter 15: Psychological Treatment      Psychotherapy — therapy involving psychological techniques to treat mental disorders    Psychodynamic therapy — therapy based on psychoanalytic concepts (e.g. unconscious conflicts)    Humanistic therapy — focuses on growth, self-actualization, and client potential (e.g. Rogerian)    Behavior therapy — uses learning principles (classical/operant conditioning) to change behavior    Cognitive therapy — focuses on changing maladaptive thoughts or beliefs    Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) — integrates cognitive and behavioral methods    Group therapy — therapy conducted with multiple participants simultaneously    Family therapy — therapeutic approach focusing on family relationships    Biological therapy — treatment using biological methods (e.g. medication, brain stimulation)    Psychotropic medications — drugs that affect mental processes (e.g. antidepressants, antipsychotics)    Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) — inducing seizures via electrical current to treat severe depression    Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) — using magnetic fields to stimulate brain regions    Deep brain stimulation (DBS) — surgical implantation of electrodes to stimulate brain structures    Exposure (in CBT) — confronting feared stimuli directly in safe context    Systematic desensitization — gradual exposure combined with relaxation    Cognitive restructuring — changing negative thought patterns    Exposure-response prevention — exposure without performing compulsive behavior (used for OCD)    SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) — class of antidepressants (e.g. Prozac, Zoloft)    Treatment for depression — CBT + SSRIs often most effective    Bipolar treatment — mood stabilizers (e.g"
Updated 22d ago