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August 28, 2019 by ktangen

Test 1 Terms

Here are the terms you’ll need to know for the first test. There are a lot more terms you will encounter but these are the more essential ones.

They are in alphabetical order. When you are studying, arrange them in clusters so they are easier to remember.

  • accommodation
  • afferant neurons
  • efferent neurons
  • afterimages
  • algor mortis
  • alpha waves
  • altered state of consciousness
  • animal research
  • aqueous humor
  • assimilation
  • astrocytes
  • attention
  • axons
  • backfire effect
  • Barnum Effect
  • beta waves
  • bottom-up processing
  • brain
  • causation
  • center yourself
  • central tendency
  • centration
  • cerebellum
  • chromosomes
  • CNS
  • color constancy
  • cones
  • confounding variable
  • conservation
  • continuity
  • cornea
  • corpus callosum
  • correlation
  • cross-sectional study
  • deep sleep
  • delayed gratification
  • delta waves
  • dendrites
  • dependent variable
  • experimental physiology
  • experiment
  • figure
  • frontal lobes
  • Gestalt 
  • glial cells
  • ground
  • Harlow
  • histogram
  • hot flashes
  • hypnosis
  • independent variable
  • induction
  • intermittent fasting
  • intervening variable
  • introspection
  • irregular menstrual periods
  • K complexes
  • left hemisphere
  • liquefaction
  • lividity
  • livor mortis
  • longitudinal study
  • magic
  • magical thinking
  • Margaret Washburn
  • Marshmallow Study
  • mean
  • median
  • meditation
  • menopause
  • Mischel
  • mode
  • monocular cues
  • motor neurons
  • naturalistic observation
  • normal distribution
  • occipital lobes
  • odds
  • operational definition
  • opponent-process theory of color 
  • pallor mortis
  • parietal lobes
  • phi phenomenon
  • philosophy
  • Piaget
  • PNS
  • population
  • pragnanz
  • probability
  • puppy smiles
  • random assignment
  • red-green color blindness
  • relationship 
  • REM waves
  • reticular formation
  • right hemisphere
  • rigor mortis
  • rods
  • sample
  • scatterplot
  • self-talk
  • sensory neurons
  • skeletonization
  • skewed distribution
  • sleep spindles
  • sleep stage N2
  • Stroop effect
  • subjective validation
  • suggestion
  • surveys
  • synapses
  • Tangen’s 12 steps to mindfulness
  • target detection
  • target identification
  • temporal lobes
  • tender breasts
  • theta waves
  • top-down processing
  • trichromatic theory of color
  • Type I error
  • Type II error
  • upright faces
  • vivid sensory scene

Go through the list and identify the one you don’t know. We have a great mental capacity called negative recognition. It is easier for us to identify things we don’t know than things we sort-of and actually know. You don’t have to search your memory to find a word like Schmotdz. You immediately know you don’t know it. Use that phenomenon to your advantage. Go through the list and identify the Don’t Knows.

Look up the Don’t Knows in your notes and learn them. Then you’ll have moved everything into only two categories: Know and Sort-of-Know.

Once you have adequately learned all of the terms, go back and arrange them into easier to remember groups. Facts are easier to remember when bundled together. Make your own clusters.

No get you started, here is a more clustered list:

efferent neurons

afterimages

algor mortis

alpha waves

altered state of consciousness

animal research

aqueous humor

assimilation

astrocytes

attention

axons

backfire effect

Barnum Effect

beta waves

bottom-up processing

brain

causation

center yourself

central tendency

centration

cerebellum

chromosomes

CNS

color constancy

cones

confounding variable

conservation

continuity

cornea

corpus callosum

correlation

cross-sectional study

deep sleep

delayed gratification

delta waves

dendrites

dependent variable

experimental physiology

experiment

figure

frontal lobes

Gestalt 

glial cells

ground

Harlow

histogram

hot flashes

hypnosis

independent variable

induction

intermittent fasting

intervening variable

introspection

irregular menstrual periods

K complexes

left hemisphere

liquefaction

lividity

livor mortis

longitudinal study

magic

magical thinking

Margaret Washburn

Marshmallow Study

mean

median

meditation

menopause

Mischel

mode

monocular cues

motor neurons

naturalistic observation

normal distribution

occipital lobes

odds

operational definition

opponent-process theory of color 

pallor mortis

parietal lobes

phi phenomenon

philosophy

Piaget

PNS

population

pragnanz

probability

puppy smiles

random assignment

red-green color blindness

relationship 

REM waves

reticular formation

right hemisphere

rigor mortis

rods

sample

scatterplot

self-talk

sensory neurons

skeletonization

skewed distribution

sleep spindles

sleep stage N2

Stroop effect

subjective validation

suggestion

surveys

synapses

Tangen’s 12 steps to mindfulness

target detection

target identification

temporal lobes

tender breasts

theta waves

top-down processing

trichromatic theory of color

Type I error

Type II error

upright faces

vivid sensory scene

Wundt

Filed Under: Tests

‘There are two great principles of psychology: people have a tremendous capacity to change, and we usually don’t.”   Ken Tangen

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