final 7-8 Flashcards

1
Q

a form of learning in which animals or people make a connection between two stimuli that have occurred together such that one predicts the other.

A

Classical Conditioning

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2
Q

one of the most prominent figures in the history of psychology.He examined secretions made by various parts of the digestive tract, including saliva, which is produced in the mouth to start the digestive process

A

Ivan Pavlov

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3
Q

a stimulus that causes a response automatically, without any need for learning. Food certainly fits that description, since a dog instinctively salivates to food as a natural biological reflex.

A

Unconditioned stimulus

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4
Q

the automatic response to a stimulus that occurs naturally, without any need for learning.

A

, unconditioned response

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5
Q

a formerly neutral stimulus that now causes a response because of its link to an unconditioned stimulus.the dog salivates to the sound of the bell even if there is no food.

A

Conditioned stimulus

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6
Q

the response to a conditioned stimulus acquired through learning. This salivation—specifically, salivation in response to the bell rather than the food

A

, conditioned response

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7
Q

a stimulus that causes no response at all. He used sounds such as a bell for the neutral stimulus because its sound produced no salivation (or any other reaction) in the dog

A

Neutral Stimulus

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8
Q

a form of learning in which the consequences of a voluntary behavior affect the likelihood that the behavior will recur.

A

Operant Conditioning

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9
Q

one of the most influential of American psychologists. A behaviorist, he developed the theory of operant conditioning – the idea that behavior is determined by its consequences, be they reinforcements or punishments, which make it more or less likely that the behavior will occur again.

A

B.F. Skinner

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10
Q

positive reinforcement

A

Increase frequency of behavior by getting something good. involves getting something desirable (doesn’t mean good) a college football team earning a trophy for winning a bowl game

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11
Q

involves removing something undesirable. Increase frequency of behavior by removing something bad ( doesn’t mean bad) homeowner getting rid of bugs by calling an exterminator

A

negative reinforcement

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12
Q

Decrease frequency of behavior by getting something bad, a parent who spanks a child for cursing. (adding something undesirable)

A

positive punishment

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13
Q

Decrease frequency of behavior by removing something good, parent who takes away a child’s handheld video game system. (subtracting something desirable)

A

negative punishment

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14
Q

is the process of gradually learning a complex behavior through the reinforcement of each of its small steps.

A

. Shaping

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15
Q

learning that occurs as a result of observing others’ behavior and consequences rather than your own

A

Observational Learning

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16
Q

the perception of a solution to a problem that results from cognitive understanding rather than from trial and error.sometimes you figure out problems because you use your analytic abilities or creativity to come up with a solution

A

Insight Learning

17
Q

the absence of any attempt to help oneself that results from previously learning that such attempts are useless. ( when a person is unable to find resolutions to difficult situations — even when a solution is accessible.)

A

Learned Helplessness

18
Q

a mental representation of a category of similar things, actions, or people.are the most basic building blocks of thinking, the pieces that you use to string together thoughts.

A

Concepts

19
Q

the most typical or best example within a concept.something we imagine, rather than some specific thing we have actually encountered

A

Prototypes

20
Q

is an educated guess based on the information that most quickly and easily comes to mind

A

(availability heuristic

21
Q

the limits you place on your approach to problem solving based on what has worked in the past.

A

Mental Set

22
Q

a tendency to prefer information that confirms what you thought in the first place.

A

Confirmation Bias

23
Q

the particular way a question or problem is presented, which can influence how you respond to it

A

Framing

24
Q

thinking about something in only the way it is most typically used, rather than other possible uses.

A

Functional Fixedness

25
Q

Perhaps the most well known nativist theorist, Noam Chomsky, hypothesized that children are born with a hard-wired language acquisition device (LAD) in their brain.a theory of language development that says the ability to use language is inborn.

A

Chomsky’s Nativist Theory

26
Q

which suggests that kids learn language through the process of hearing others speak it

A

Formalist theory of language development

27
Q

suggests that a child’s use of language develops from a desire to interact socially.

A

Social-Pragmatic Theory

28
Q

overall intelligence that applies across all tasks and situations.

A

Spearman’s General Intelligence

29
Q

One involves comprehension, reasoning and problem solving while the other involves recalling stored knowledge and past experiences.

A

Fluid vs. Crystalized Intelligence

30
Q

proposes that people are not born with all of the intelligence they will ever have. suggests human intelligence can be differentiated into eight modalities: visual-spatial, verbal-linguistic, musical-rhythmic, logical-mathematical, interpersonal, intrapersonal, naturalistic and bodily-

A

Gardner’s Theory of Multiple Intelligences

31
Q

the kind of street smarts that help you get by in your day-to-day lives just as much as book smarts do

A

Practical Intelligence

32
Q

the ability to sense and manage emotions in yourself and others.

A

Emotional Intelligence

33
Q

which values pile up in the center at the mean and fall off into tails at either end. When plotted, it gives the familiar bell-shaped curve expected when variation about the mean value is random.

A

Normal distribution

34
Q

a mental disorder based on significantly below-average intelligence and impaired day-to-day functioning.

A

Intellectual Disability

35
Q

significantly above-average intelligence.

A

Giftedness

36
Q

the extent to which an assessment technique measures what it claims to measure./ the extent to which an assessment technique provides consistent, repeatable results.

A

Validity and reliability

37
Q

the expectation that others may judge you according to stereotypes about a group to which you belong.

A

Stereotype Threat

38
Q

the tendency of a test to produce scores in a consistently inaccurate way for members of particular groups.critics of intelligence tests have accused the test makers of including items that give certain groups an advantage (typically middle- to upper-class Whites,

A

Testing Bias