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The scientific study of behavior and mental processes |
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Directly observable behaviors |
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Private, internal activities such as emotions, thinking, dreaming, and memory |
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A systematic approach to answering scientific questions |
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In scientific research, the process of naming and classifying |
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When the causes of a behavior can be stated |
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An ability to accurately forecast behavior |
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Altering conditions that influence behavior |
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Any false and unscientific system of beliefs and practices that is offered as an explanation of behavior |
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An ability to reflect on, evaluate, compare, analyze, critique, and synthesize information |
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Actually based on some reasonable neurological findings but taken too far |
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Personality traits are revealed by handwriting |
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The positions of the stars and planets at the time of one's birth determine personality traits and affect behavior |
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Observing, defining a problem, proposing a hypothesis, gathering data/ testing the hypothesis, publishing results, building a theory |
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the tendency to believe generally positive or flattering descriptions of oneself |
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Fallacy of Positive Instances |
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The tendency to remember or notice information that fits one's expectations, while forgetting discrepancies |
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The tendency to consider a personal description accurate if it is stated in very general terms |
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Considered the "Father of Psychology"; studied conscious experience: reactions to various stimuli; used introspection |
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To look within; to examine one's own thoughts, feelings, or sensations |
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Brought Wundt's ideas to the US; renamed ideas structuralism; also used introspection; tried to analyze "structure" of mental life |
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Studied how the mind functions to help us adapt; applied the term functionalism |
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Deemed introspection as unscientific; objected to study of the mind; adopted Ivan Pavlov's concept of conditioning; observed relationship between stimuli and response |
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Studied relationship between actions, rewards, and punishments; emphasized positive reinforcement vs. punishment; worked with animals |
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Influenced perception and personality |
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Behavior is largely influenced by unconscious wishes, thoughts, and desires; especially sex and aggression; "talking cure" |
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A school of psychology emphasizing the study of thinking, learning, and perception in whole units, not by analysis into parts |
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Behavior can be explained through internal physical, chemical, and biological principles |
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Psychological Perspectives |
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Behavior results from psychological processes; includes cognitive psychology and consciousness |
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Sociological Perspectives |
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Many thoughts and behaviors are influenced by one's culture |
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Research Participant Bias |
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Changes in behavior (experiment) caused by expectations |
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Changes in behavior (experiment) caused by the belief one has taken a drug |
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Participants do not know if they are in experimental or control group; blind to the hypothesis |
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Change in behavior due to researcher's unintended influence |
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Prediction prompting people to act --> makes prediction come true |
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Neither researcher nor participants know who is in the experimental vs. control group |
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Consistent, systematic relationship between two or more events, measures, or variables |
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Increases in one measure match increases in the other measure; decreases in one measure match decreases in the other measure |
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Increases in one measure match decreases in the other measure |
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In-depth focus of all aspects of a single subject |
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Polling technique to answer psychological questions |
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