Chapter 1 Glossary Flashcards

1
Q

What is the goal of application?

A

In scientific research, the goal of application involves using or knowledge to solve real-world problems.

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2
Q

What is authority?

A

A way of acquiring knowledge. New ideas are accepted as valid because some respected authority has declared it to be true.

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3
Q

What is behaviour modification?

A

A set of teaching or threapeutic procedures that are based on laboratory derived principles of learnings.

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4
Q

What is behavioural neuroscience?

A

A field that relates to behaviour of an organism to the brain mechanisms contributing to behaviour.

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5
Q

What is behaviourism?

A

A philosophical perspective that argues that a scientific psychology should base its theories only on observable events.

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6
Q

What is causation?

A

Bringing about a change in a phenomenon.

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7
Q

What is cognitive psychology?

A

A sub-discipline in psychology that studies perceptual processing, memory and basic thought processes.

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8
Q

What is description?

A

Identifying and observing phenomena and carefully recording their details.

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9
Q

Is description one of the goals of research?

A

Yes

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10
Q

What is empiricism?

A

System of knowing that is based solely on observations of events.

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11
Q

What is experimentation?

A

Manipulating the independent variable to observe the effects on the dependent variable.

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12
Q

What is explanation?

A

Using scientific understanding to develop a statement of the mechanisms of how certain factors can change other factors.

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13
Q

What is functionalism?

A

A philosophical perspective that stresses the need to study how the mind functions and adapts to the environment.

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14
Q

What is Gestalt psychology?

A

A philosophical perspective on perception that rests on the concept that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.

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15
Q

What is health psychology?

A

An applied discipline that focuses on understanding and modifying behaviour that affect a person physical health.

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16
Q

What is hub science?

A

A highly influential body of scientific knowledge from which other sciences and non-scientific agencies draw heavily.

17
Q

What is humanistic behaviour?

A

A philosophical perspective that emphasises subjective experience and the distinctively human qualities of choice and self-realisation.

18
Q

What is intuition?

A

Way of acquiring knowledge without intellectual effort or sensory processes.

19
Q

What is logic?

A

Set of operations that can be applied to statements, and the conclusions draw from these statements, to determine the internal accuracy of the conclusions.

20
Q

What is mainstream psychology?

A

Contemporary psychology that represents an integration of many of the early school of psychology and their theoretical models.

21
Q

What is naive empiricism?

A

Extreme dependence on personal experience in order to accept events as facts.

22
Q

What is orderliness belief?

A

Ancient belief that events in nature are predictable.

23
Q

What is phylogenetic continuity?

A

An evolutionary concept about the contunuity of structure and functions between humans and other animals.

24
Q

What is prediction?

A

It is making a statement about what will happen to one factor if we know what happens with another factor.

25
Q

What is prepared mind?

A

A disciplined curiosity that makes scientists sharply alert to the possibility of unanticipated discoveries.

26
Q

What is process of inquiry?

A

The perspective that views research as a dynamic process of formulating questions and answering those questions through research.

27
Q

What is pseudoscience?

A

Popular distortions of scientific knowledge and procedures, which appear on the surface to be scientific, but lack critical scientific procedures.

28
Q

What is psychology?

A

Scientific study of the behaviour of organisms.

29
Q

What is psychophysics?

A

Involves the presentation of pricise stimuli under controlled conditions and the recording of the participant’s responses.

30
Q

What is rationalism?

A

A way of knowing that relies on logic a set of premises from which logical inferences are made.

31
Q

What is science?

A

Ways of knowing that combines rationalism and empricism.

32
Q

What is scientific research?

A

Research based on the combination of rationalism and empiricism

33
Q

What is serendipity?

A

The process of experiencing unanticipated scientific discoveries.

34
Q

What is skeptic?

A

A person who characteristically applies skepticism.

35
Q

What is sophisticated empiricism?

A

Accepting indirect evidence for a phenomenon.

36
Q

What is structuralism?

A

A philosophical perspective, populaiszed y Wundt, in which scientists seek to identify the structure of mechanisms that control behaviour.

37
Q

What is tenacity?

A

Ways of knowing based on accepting an idea as true because it has been accepted as true for a long time.

38
Q

What is theology?

A

The philosophical tenets and/or study of religion.