Part 1 of 1 - 100.0/ 100.0 Points
Question 1 of 50 2.0/ 2.0 Points
Recovering a memory is like a _____________. A. Replaying a videotape of an event and filling in the missing sensory experiences, such as smell B. Reading a short story in which the plot is detailed but mental images must be generated C. Hearing the soundtrack of a story without access to the visual, and other sensory images
Correct
D. Watching unconnected frames of a movie and figuring out what the rest of the scene was like.
Answer Key: D
Question 2 of 50 2.0/ 2.0 Points
Which term is used to describe the confusion of an event that happened to someone else with one that happened to you.
Correct
A. Confabulation B.
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Classical conditioning
Correct
C. Latent learning D. Successive approximation
Answer Key: C
Question 14 of 50 2.0/ 2.0 Points
___________________ psychologists study how roles, attitudes, relationships, and groups influence people to do things they would not necessarily do on their own
Correct
A. Social B. Cultural C. Clinical D. Counseling
Answer Key: A
Question 15 of 50 2.0/ 2.0 Points
Marco enters an elevator and stands in it facing the back instead of turning around to face the elevator door. In this example, Marco violates ________________. A. His gender role B. A social role
Correct
C. A norm D. A stereotype
Answer Key: C
Question 16 of 50 2.0/ 2.0 Points
When we make situational attributions, we are identifying the cause of an action as something
Correct
A. In the environment B. In the person's disposition C. That is a biological trait D. With an unconscious motivation
Answer Key: A
Question 17 of 50 2.0/ 2.0 Points
________________ is a tendency for all people on a team or a mission together to agree with each other and suppress any dissension among their ranks.
Correct
A. Groupthink B. Conformity C. Consensus D. Deindividuation
Answer Key: A
Question 18 of 50 2.0/ 2.0 Points
Lucas is making his way across a busy campus between classes. He notices smoke coming from the
A collective term for the economic, occupational, and educational factors that influence an individual's relative position in society defines _____
Some of the current changes that can be seen in regards to prescription privileges include changes in the ways that physicians and mental health professionals are able to prescribe medications to their patients. According to Brenda Smith of the APA (2012), currently patients receive their medications for psychological conditions by a physician usually without having been evaluated by a mental health practitioner according to the CDC. The trend includes individuals to visit their general health practitioners in order to receive psychotropic medications such as antidepressants and anxiolytics. The problem with individuals receiving these medications from other sources include: deterrence
1. At a given time you occupy a number of statuses. These statuses make up your:
Yes! Education is very important to me because of the way I grew up. My mother wasn’t very educated about children sometimes I think she thought that children should come with a how-to book, which is why my brother and I were put into foster care. I told myself that when I grew up I was going to go to college. I enrolled here at Ashford University on December, 21, 2014 and I’m estimated to graduate on December 3, 2018. My three (3) educational goals that align with education as a core value are Goal A, Do the best to my ability and apply myself to do the work and receive a passing grade. Get a “B” or better. Goal B, Never give up! No matter what anyone says? My final goal C is to finish out with my bachelor’s degree in childcare. With me willpower has a play in all that I do. I have so many people that do not believe in me. They say that because I have a learning disability that I won’t be able to do the work in college. I use my willpower to show them they are wrong. My willpower is
The Social Model of disability came about through the disability movement and other organisation campaigning for equal rights, opportunities and choices for disabled people. The social model of disability recognises that any problem of disability are created by society and its institution and that The Discrimination Acts are tools to help to improve the response of society to disability, also a wheel chair user is not hampered by their disability but by lack of adequate access to buildings. The social model may impact upon our practise as we would provide inclusive environments as a starting point for all children. The Scope website stated ‘The social model of disability says that disability is caused by the way
Week Seven Homework Exercise Answer the following questions, covering material from Ch. 13 of Methods in Behavioral Research Define inferential statistics and how researchers use inferential statistics to draw conclusions from sample data. According to Cozby (2009) inferential statistics are used to determine whether we can in fact make statements that the results reflect what would happen if we were to conduct the experiment again and again with multiple samples Define probability and discuss how it relates to the concept of statistical significance. Probability is the possible that an outcome of an experience or an event will occur (Cozby 2009) Statistical significant and probability are one in the same. A researcher is studying the
-3 x 1.66 pts. = minus 5 pts. = 45 pts. out of 50 pts. = 90%
a. Nominal: This is a measurement that has a number assigned to show something or someone else, an example of this would be one’s social security number.
1. In the state of Oklahoma we know how important it is to have the appropriate resources available to you for early childhood intervention so they can maintain a healthy learning, living and social environment. Our most popular and highly recommended is SoonerStart. This program will evaluate all children from birth up to three years of age to make
The behaviourist perspective is an idea that we can understand any type of behaviour by looking at what the person has learner. This includes personality traits such as shyness, confidence, optimism or pessimism. Behaviourist psychologists explain all human behaviour as resulting from experience. Two key psychologists are Pavlov and Skinner, although these two theorists believed that different processes were involved, they both explained all types of behaviour as being the result of learning. This is everything from shyness to aggression and happiness to depression.
What is the relative humidity when the air temperature is 75 degrees Fahrenheit and the Wet Bulb temperature is 65 degrees Fahrenheit?
When I started this class this pass September I had a little knowledge of psychology. In my junior year of high school I took Psychology as an elective class. I really enjoy it alot, it amaze me how much there was to know about our brains. This September I came with the feeling that this psychology class was going to be way different from my psychology class from high school. And that my knowledge from my class before wasn’t going to be useful at all. But I was wrong, this class has actually been better than my other class. Because it has help dust off some of the concepted that I had learn before. But it has also made gain more knowledge about psychology that I didn’t knew before. For example the next concepts are the ones that had impacted me the most: critical thinking and the eight essential, implicit learning, short term and long term memories. I chose these concept because they have not only taught me more about psychology, but they have made a big impact on me.
Furthermore, the commonality of experiencing deja vu reporting 60% of the population has experienced déjà vu and its frequency varies with association with age, stress, etc. However, the report of déjà vu experiences is mostly asked non-qualitative dimensions of the experience. The basic premise of neurological explanations is that déjà vu relates to brief and temporary neurological dysfunctioning characterized by a change or seizure in the flow of neural transmission from specific receptor sites in the brain: the hippocampus and temporal lobes. Halgren, Walter, Cherlow, and Crandall (1978) hypothesized that déjà vu results not from a decrease but from an increase in the electrical outflow of the hippocampal gyrus (the area of the brain involved in encoding and retrieval) and that this is qualitatively experienced as a misinterpretation of familiarity. Memory explanations may serve as the basis for theorizing that implicit familiarity is the basis for déjà vu. If an individual processes information without paying conscious attention to the experience of processing information, subsequent processing may give rise to the sensation of objective familiarity in the absence of exact recollection, if the
17. Reducing the variations in our product or services is an important key to perceived quality TRUE