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AP Psychology

AP Psychology. Exam Review. How to Write an Essay. Answer the questions/terms in order Do NOT start sentences with your answer! Do NOT add bullets, numbers, or additional letters Add trigger words AND define and explain them!. Prologue: History and Approaches (2 – 4%).

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AP Psychology

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  1. AP Psychology Exam Review

  2. How to Write an Essay • Answer the questions/terms in order • Do NOT start sentences with your answer! • Do NOT add bullets, numbers, or additional letters • Add trigger words AND define and explain them!

  3. Prologue: History and Approaches(2 – 4%) • How psychology developed • Major fields of psychology • Applying fields to other aspects of psychology

  4. How Psychology Developed • Overall • Debate between how mind and body work together • Empiricism: knowledge originates in experience- we should do experiments • Wundt: 1st psych laboratory • Titchener: structuralism- introspection • James: functionalism- how mind and body work together to help us flourish

  5. Fields of Psychology • Psychoanalytical • Psychodynamic/Neo Freudian • Cognitive • Social-Cognitive • Behavioral/Learning • Humanistic • Biomedical • Socio-Cultural

  6. Overall: how unconscious drives and thoughts influence people Freud Repressed unconscious drives Conflict between Id, Superego, Ego Childhood/Past Psychoanalytical

  7. Overall: deals with unconscious, but focuses more on the conscious Jung Collective unconscious Adler Childhood inferiority Horney Childhood anxiety Psychodynamic/Neo Freudian

  8. Overall: how our thought processes influence us Cognitive

  9. Overall: how our environment influences our thought process (vice versa) Bandura Reciprocal determinism Other Trigger Words Locus of Control Explanatory Style Self-efficacy Learned helplessness Social-Cognitive

  10. Overall: how our behaviors are conditioned and learned observations Pavlov Classical conditioning (dog) Watson Classical conditioning (baby Albert) Skinner Operant conditioning (rats) Bandura Learned observations (modeling) Behavioral

  11. Overall: how esteem, potential, positive regard, and love influence people Maslow Self-actualization Carl Rogers Unconditional positive regard Self-concept Humanistic

  12. Overall: structure and/or chemicals in the brain Wernicke Language comprehension Broca Language speech Biological

  13. Overall: how behaviors change through different situations and cultur Socio-Cultural

  14. How the Fields Apply to Other Aspects of Psychology • Personality • Disorders • Therapy

  15. Applying Fields to Personality Our personality is defined by or a result of. . . . . • Psychoanalytical • Conflicts between Id, Superego, and Ego. (Freud) • Repressed unconscious drives developed in childhood (Freud) • Psychodynamic/Neo Freudian • Our collective unconscious (Jung) • childhood inferiority (Adler) • childhood anxiety (Horney) • Humanistic • Our desire to reach self-actualization (Maslow) • how much unconditional positive regard we have received (Rogers) • Social-Cognitive • Reciprocal determinism (Bandura) • Locus of control, explanatory style, self-efficacy, learned helplessness

  16. Applying Fields to Disorders Psychological disorders are defined by or a result of. . . . . • Psychoanalytical • Repressed unconscious drives which started in childhood, conflict between Id, Superego, and Ego • Cognitive • Abnormal thoughts • Social Cognitive • Reciprocal determinism, external locus of control, pessimistic explanatory style, or learned helplessness • Behavioral • Learned behaviors, modeled behaviors, symptoms conditioned (either classical or operant) • Humanistic • Lack of unconditional positive regard, • Biomedical • Structural problem or chemical imbalance with the brain • Socio-Cultural • Environment and/or cultural influences

  17. Applying Fields to Therapy Psychological disorders can be treated by/through. . . • Psychoanalytical • Revealing repressed unconscious drives/thoughts • Psychodynamic/Neo Freudian • Revealing repressed unconscious drives/thoughts • Cognitive • Changing abnormal thoughts, develop more constructive ways of thinking • Behavioral • Condition away the symptoms, model good behavior • Humanistic • Boost client’s self esteem and help them realize their full potential • Biomedical • Treat the brain abnormalities

  18. Nature vs. Nurture • This goes with every chapter • Genetics: play a role in many chapters • If parents have it, children likely to have it • Twin studies: if one twin has it, other most likely has it • Biological vs. Adoptive: children are more like their biological parent than their adoptive

  19. Ch.1: Research Methods • Types of Research • Correlation • Experimentation • Statistical Reasoning • Ethics

  20. Types of Research • Case Study • Advantage: in depth • Disadvantage: isolated case • Survey • Advantage: large sample • Disadvantage: bias • Naturalistic Observation • Advantages: see how people “really” are • Disadvantages: does not explain behavior • Correlational Study • Advantages: can establish relationship • Disadvantages: does not provide cause and effect • Experiment • Advantages: manipulate variables to provide cause and effect • Disadvantages: human error, bias

  21. Correlation • Correlation coefficient- measures strength of correlation • Positive correlation- both variables increase or decrease together • Negative correlation- one variable increases, while the other decreases (vice versa) • Scatterplot • Illusory correlation

  22. Experimentation • Selecting Participants • Random Sample: people you choose • Random Assignment: how you assign them to your experiment • Experimental group: receives IV • Control group: does not receive IV, OR receives placebo • Conducting Experiment • Independent variable- thing you add to experiment • Dependent variable- thing you want to change • Blinds- participants don’t know the IV • Double blinds- both participants and experimenters don’t know who gets IV • Placebo- fake “IV” • Placebo effect- just thinking they are receiving IV can lead to an effect • Confounding variables- variables that may alter the results (other than IV) • Operational definitions- list of procedures (allows for replication!)

  23. Statistical Reasoning • Types of Research • Descriptive: finding mean, median, mode • Inferential: using mean, median, and mode to draw conclusions • Measures of Central Tendency • Mean: average • Median: middle • Mode: most often • Measures of Variation • Range: gap in between highest and lowest • Standard deviation: how much scores vary from mean • Statistical Significance • 95% or greater chance that the difference between groups is NOT due to chance!

  24. Normal Distribution/Bell Curve

  25. Ethical Considerations • Consent • confidentiality • volunteers only • the right to discontinue • conduct studies that limit stress • debrief/follow up with participants

  26. Ch.2: Neuroscience ( • Neurons • Nervous System • Endocrine System • Brain parts • Brain Hemispheres • Studying the brain

  27. Parts of the Neuron

  28. Neural Communication • Resting potential – Action potential – Refractory period • Polarized – depolarized - polarized

  29. Drugs

  30. Endocrine System

  31. Brain Parts Review all brain parts! ! ! • Brain parts that come up in other chapters: • Amygdala- fear • Hypothalamus- hunger, thirst, and sex • Hippocampus- memory • Prefrontal Cortex- memory as you go • Frontal Lobe- main area, speaking, muscle movements, planning

  32. Brain Hemispheres • Hemispheres: • Left- verbal, math, organized, etc. • Right- creative, spontaneous, fun • Split-Brain • Cannot transfer info to the other hemisphere, because corpus callosum is severed.

  33. MRI’s, Cat scan- structure only EEG, Pet scan- electrical activity, glucose levels fMRI- blood flow Studying the Brain

  34. Ch.4: Development • Infancy • Adolescence • Adulthood • Piaget Stages • Kohlberg’s Moral Development • Erickson’s Social Psych Development

  35. Zygote – embryo – fetus Teratogens, fetal alcohol syndrome Maturation habituation Infancy: Physical

  36. Infancy: Cognitive • Piaget- look at your chart!

  37. Harlow- attachment through body contact (monkeys) Lorenz- attachment through imprinting (geese) Ainsworth- secure vs. insecure attachment Baumrind- authoritarian, permissive, authoritative parenting Erickson- basic trust Infancy: Social

  38. Adolescence • Physical • Puberty, primary and secondary sex characteristics • Cognitive • See morality (it mainly develops in adolescence) • Social • See Erickson (identity)

  39. Adulthood • Physical • Overall decrease (strength, cognitions, etc.) • Menopause • Alzheimer’s, dementia • Cognitive • Crystallized intelligence- increases • Fluid- decreases • Social • Social clock

  40. Kohlberg: Refer to your handout Gilligan- girls morally different than boys (more social) Moral Development (Kohlberg)

  41. Erikson’s Social Development • Infancy • Trust, autonomy • Adolescence • identity • Adulthood • Intimacy, integrity

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