PSM101 - MIDTERM

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Consciousness

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Consciousness

The individual's current awareness of external and internal stimuli, including events in the environment, body sensations, memories, and thoughts.

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Monitoring

The act of being aware of and paying attention to stimuli in our surroundings and within our own bodies.

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Controlling

The ability to initiate and terminate behavioral and cognitive activities.

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Preconscious Memories

Memories that are not currently part of our consciousness but can be brought to consciousness when needed.

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The Unconscious

The part of the mind that contains memories, impulses, and desires that are not accessible to consciousness.

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Automaticity

The habituation of responses that initially required conscious attention, making them become habitual or automatic.

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Dissociation

The splitting off or dissociation of thoughts and actions from the rest of consciousness, functioning outside of awareness.

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Sleep

A circadian state characterized by partial or total suspension of consciousness, voluntary muscle inhibition, and relative insensitivity to stimulation.

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Electroencephalogram (EEG)

The graphic recording of the electrical changes, or brain waves, that measures the average electrical potential of neurons on the surface of the cortex.

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Stages of Sleep

The different stages of sleep, including Stage 1, Stage 2, Stage 3, and Stage 4, each characterized by specific brain wave patterns and physiological changes.

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REM Sleep

Rapid Eye Movement sleep, characterized by rapid eye movements and vivid dreaming.

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NREM vs REM

The differences between Non-Rapid Eye Movement (NREM) sleep and REM sleep in terms of brain and body activity.

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The Sleep Theory

The opponent-process model proposed by Dale Edgar and William Dement, which includes the Homeostatic Sleep Drive and the Clock-Dependent Alerting Process.

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Circadian Rhythm

The internal biological clock that controls psychological and physiological changes, including rhythms of alertness.

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Dreaming

An altered state of consciousness in which picture stories are constructed based on memories, emotions, fantasies, and images.

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Meditation

Achieving an altered state of consciousness through rituals and exercises, resulting in mental and physical relaxation.

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Hypnosis

A responsive state in which individuals focus their attention on the hypnotist and accept suggestions.

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Induction of Hypnosis

The process of inducing a hypnotic state by the hypnotist using various methods.

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Characteristics of a Hypnotized State

Planfulness ceases, attention becomes more selective, enriched fantasy is readily evoked, reality testing is reduced, suggestibility is increased, and posthypnotic amnesia may be present.

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Posthypnotic Response

Involuntary movement in response to a prearranged signal by the hypnotist after being roused from hypnosis.

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Posthypnotic Amnesia

Forgetting events that occurred during hypnosis until a signal from the hypnotist enables recall.

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Hallucinations

Perceiving objects or hearing voices that are not actually present (positive hallucinations) or not perceiving something that should be perceived (negative hallucinations).

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The Hidden Observer

A mental structure that monitors everything that happens, even events that the hypnotized individual is not consciously aware of perceiving.

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Hypnosis as a Therapy

The use of hypnosis in therapeutic interventions for various conditions.

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Psychoactive Drugs

Any substance (other than food) that chemically alters the functioning of an organism.

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Drug Dependence

The state of being physically or psychologically dependent on a drug, characterized by tolerance, withdrawal, and compulsive craving.

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Depressants

Drugs that depress the central nervous system, such as tranquilizers, barbiturates, inhalants, and alcohol.

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Cannabis

A psychoactive substance that creates a high feeling, cognitive and motor impairments, and sometimes hallucinations.

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Opiates

Drugs that diminish physical sensation and the capacity to respond to stimuli by depressing the central nervous system.

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Heroin

An opiate that can be injected, smoked, or inhaled, producing a special thrill or "rush."

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Stimulants

Drugs that increase alertness and general arousal, physically and mentally.

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Amphetamines

Powerful stimulants that increase alertness and decrease feelings of fatigue and boredom.

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Cocaine

A substance obtained from the dried leaves of the coca plant, increasing energy and self-confidence.

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Ecstasy

A drug with stimulant effects and occasional hallucinogenic properties, associated with poor performance on cognitive tests and increased rates of anxiety, depression, and paranoia.

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Memory

The means by which we retain and draw on our past experiences to use that information in the present.

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Encoding

The process of transforming sensory data into a mental representation.

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Storage

The process of keeping encoded information in memory.

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Retrieval

The process of pulling out or using information stored in memory.

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Recall

The act of producing a fact, word, or other item from memory.

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Recognition

The act of selecting or identifying an item as one that has been previously encountered.

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Relearning

The process of learning once again items that were learned in the past.

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Mnemonists

People with outstanding memory who use special techniques for memory enhancement.

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Amnesia

Severe loss of explicit memory, including retrograde amnesia (loss of memory for events prior to trauma) and anterograde amnesia (inability to remember events after trauma).

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Alzheimer's Disease

A disease of older adults that causes dementia and progressive memory loss, characterized by plaques and tangles in the brain.

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Learning

A relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs as a result of experience.

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Non-Associative Learning

Involves learning about a single stimulus.

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Habituation

A type of non-associative learning characterized by a decreased behavioral response to an innocuous stimulus.

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Sensitization

A type of non-associative learning characterized by an increase in a behavioral response to an intense stimulus.

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Associative Learning

Involves learning relationships among events.

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Classical Conditioning

An organism learns that one event follows another.

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Ivan Pavlov

A Russian physiologist who proposed classical conditioning.

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Unconditioned Response (UR)

An unlearned response.

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Unconditioned Stimulus (US)

A stimulus that automatically elicits a response without prior conditioning.

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Neutral Stimulus (NS)

An unconditioned stimulus that may lead to other responses.

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Instrumental Conditioning

Certain behaviors are learned because they operate on the environment.

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Burrhus F

An American psychologist who contributed to our understanding of instrumental conditioning.

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Edward L

Carried out important conditioning experiments and studied trial-and-error learning in animals.

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Insight

An understanding of the situation leading to the solution of a problem.

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Reinforcement

The process whereby the delivery of a stimulus increases the probability of a behavior.

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Punishment

Decreases the probability of a behavior.

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Positive Reinforcement

Giving an appetitive stimulus.

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Positive Punishment

Giving an aversive stimulus.

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Negative Reinforcement

Removing an aversive stimulus.

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Negative Punishment

Removing an appetitive stimulus.

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John B

The most important 'spokesman' for behaviorism.

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Observational Learning

Copying the behavior of others based on successful observations.

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Albert Bandura

The researcher connected with the study of observational learning.

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Model

Actual persons whose behaviors we observe.

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Imitator

The individual who expects to be reinforced like the model.

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Intelligence

The concept of intelligence has been one of the most contentious across the history of psychology.

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Charles Spearman

The originator of factor analysis who proposed the Two-Factor Theory of Intelligence.

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Factor Analysis

A statistical technique that examines intercorrelations among tests and reduces them to a smaller number of independent dimensions.

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General Factor (g factor)

The major determinant of performance on intelligence tests.

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Special Factor (s factor)

Specific to particular abilities or tests.

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Howard Gardner

Developed the Theory of Multiple Intelligences.

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Linguistic Intelligence

The capacity for speech and language-related mechanisms.

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Musical Intelligence

The ability to create, communicate, and understand meanings made of sound.

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Logical-Mathematical Intelligence

The ability to use and appreciate relationships in abstract thought.

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Spatial Intelligence

The ability to perceive and manipulate visual or spatial information.

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Bodily-Kinesthetic Intelligence

The ability to use the body to solve problems or manipulate objects.

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