Chapter 11 Flashcards

1
Q

Tightness-looseness

A

Tighter cultures place greater values on adherence to social norms than looser cultures do.

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2
Q

Health Psychology

A

Field that involved the application of psychological principles to promote health and well-being

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3
Q

Well-being

A

Positive state that includes striving for optimal health and life satisfaction.

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4
Q

Socioeconomic status health gradient

A

People with fewer resources have worse health outcomes even when health care is universal.

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5
Q

Immigrant paradox

A

Pattern among immigrant communities where later generations are unhealthier than the immigrant generation.

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6
Q

What causes people to eat more?

A

More selection and bigger portions

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7
Q

Availability heuristic

A

Tendency to believe information that comes most easily to mind.

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8
Q

Representativeness heuristic

A

Placing a person or an object in a category if that person or object is similar to one’s prototype for that category

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9
Q

Stress

A

A type of response due to the demands placed on us exceeding our abilities to respond to them.

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10
Q

Stressor

A

Something in the external situation that is perceived as threatening or demanding and therefore produces stress.

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11
Q

Eustress

A

Stress of positive events.

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12
Q

Distress

A

Stress of negative events

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13
Q

Three categories of stressors

A

Major life stressors (new baby), chronic stress (poverty), and daily hassles.

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14
Q

Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal (HPA) Axis

A

Slower-acting stress response where the hypothalamus sends a chemical message to the pituitary gland, which then sends a hormone to the adrenal glands which then secrete Cortisol. Cortisol then shuts off the hypothalamus through negative feedback loop

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15
Q

Effects of prolonged stress

A

Cortisol becomes less effective and can damage long-term memory.

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16
Q

Fast-acting physiological stress response

A

Hypothalamus activates the sympathetic nervous system which activates the adrenal glands to release epinephrine and norepinephrine. This and HPA axis are to prepare for flight or fight response.

17
Q

General adaptation syndrome

A

Pattern of responses to stress that consists of three stages: Alarm (emergency response), resistance (defenses maximized), exhaustion (systems fail).

18
Q

Allostatic load

A

Cumulative wear and tear on biological systems after repeated stressful events

19
Q

Tend-and-befriend response

A

Tendency to protect and care for offspring and form social alliances rather than fight or flee in response to threat.

20
Q

Lymphocytes

A

Three types of specialized white blood cells which make up the immune system. B Cells produce antibodies, T Cells attack intruders and increase strength of immune response, and natural killer cells which kill viruses and attack tumors.

21
Q

Type A behavior pattern

A

People who are competitive, achievement oriented, aggressive, hostile, impatient, and time pressed. Much more likely to develop heart disease.

22
Q

Anticipatory coping

A

Coping that occurs before the onset of a future stressor. Applies to coping with the same stressor over time.

23
Q

Hardiness

A

Tendency to view threats as challenges and positively reappraise stressors. See themselves as being in control of their lives.

24
Q

Why does stress increase risk of heart disease?

A

Decreases blood flow and creates clogged vessels.

25
Q

Buffering hypothesis

A

Impacts of stress can be buffered through being surrounded with friends and comforting things

26
Q

Primary appraisal

A

Part of coping process that involves deciding whether a stimulus is stressful, benign, or irrelevant.

27
Q

Secondary appraisal

A

Part of coping with stressful stimuli where people evaluate their response options and choose coping behaviors

28
Q

Emotion-focused coping

A

Type of coping in which people try to prevent having an emotional response to a stressor. Only helpful in the short term with uncontrollable stressors.

29
Q

Problem-focused coping

A

Type of coping in which people take direct steps to confront or minimize a stressor. Some responses are positive reappraisal, downward comparison, and identifying everyday occurrences as positive events.

30
Q

Positive psychology

A

Launched by Martin Seligman, emphasizes the strengths and virtues that help people thrive in an attempt to understand their psychological well-being.