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Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Dec 13, 2015

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Godfrey Sanders
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Page 1: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.
Page 2: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Perspectives and Methods

Page 3: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Biological Basis of Human Behavior

Page 4: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Sensation and Perception

Page 5: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Learning

Page 6: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Memory

Page 7: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Cognition

Page 8: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

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Perspectives and Methods

Biological Basis of

Behavior

Sensation and Perception

Learning Memory Cognition

Page 9: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

What is a case study?

Page 10: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Research technique in which one person is studied in depth

Page 11: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

What is correlation? AND

What is the most important thing to remember about

correlation?

Page 12: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Extent to which 2 things are related

Correlation does NOT equal causation!

Page 13: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

What is natural selection?

Page 14: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Traits that contribute to survival will be passed on to succeeding generations

Page 15: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

A sample that fairly represents a population because each member has an equal chance of inclusion

Page 16: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Random Sample

Page 17: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

What is an independent variable?

Dependent?

Page 18: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Independent: thing that is manipulated to see if there is a change in the depend. variable

Dependent: thing that is influenced by the independent variable

Page 19: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

A brief electrical charge that travels down the axon of the neuron

Page 20: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Action Potential

Page 21: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

What is your frontal lobe responsible for?

Page 22: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Planning and judgment

Motor cortex

Page 23: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

The “recharging phase” when a neuron, after firing, cannot generate another action potential

Page 24: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Refractory Period

Page 25: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Part of the brain responsible for emotions like fear and anger

Page 26: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Amygdala

Page 27: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Hormone that is responsible for releasing strength and increasing endurance during stressful situations

Page 28: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Epinephrine

Page 29: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information

Page 30: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Perception

Page 31: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Part of the eye that works with the iris to control the amount of light that enters the eye

Page 32: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Pupil

Page 33: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Three tiny bones that pick up and transmit sound waves from the ear drum

Page 34: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Ossicles

Page 35: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Your vestibular sense is controlled by what part of the body?

Page 36: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Semi-circular ear canals

Page 37: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Monocular depth cue that determines depth by noting that parallel lines appear to converge in the distance

Page 38: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Linear Perspective

Page 39: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Process in which an organism produces the same response to two similar stimuli

Page 40: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Generalization

Page 41: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Who is responsible for the BoBo doll experiments?

Page 42: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Albert Bandura

Page 43: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

What is negative reinforcement?

Page 44: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Anything that increases the likelihood of a behavior by removing an undesirable event or state

Page 45: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

ID the US;UR;CS;CR for Pavlov’s experiment

Page 46: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

US: Meat Powder CS: Tuning Fork

UR: Drooling CR: Drooling

Page 47: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Interval schedules deal with…

Ratio schedules deal with…

Page 48: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Interval: time that has passed by

Ratio: number of times something is done

Page 49: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Method of retrevial Method of retrevial used by essay, fill-in-used by essay, fill-in-the blank, and short the blank, and short answer questionsanswer questions

Page 50: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Recall

Page 51: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Retrieval method Retrieval method used by multiple used by multiple choice tests choice tests

Page 52: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Recognition Recognition

Page 53: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Part of your memory you are aware of – often called “working memory”

Page 54: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Short-term memory

Page 55: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

What is implicit memory? What part of the brain processes these memories?

Page 56: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Memories of tasks and skills

Cerebellum

Page 57: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

What is the misinformation effect? Who did research on this?

Page 58: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Incorporating misleading info into one’s memory

Elizabeth Loftus

Page 59: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Typical best example of a concept

Page 60: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Prototype

Page 61: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

What is the difference between a phoneme and a morpheme?

Page 62: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Phoneme: smallest unit of sound

Morpheme: smallest unit of sound with meaning

Page 63: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

What is intelligence?

Page 64: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to a new situation

Page 65: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

What is the difference between achievement and aptitude tests?

Page 66: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Achievement: Achievement: Tests that attempt to measure what the test-taker has accomplished

Aptitude: Aptitude: Tests that attempt to predict the test-taker’s future performance

Page 67: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

What is validity?

Page 68: Perspectives and Methods Biological Basis of Human Behavior.

Extent to which a test measures or predicts what it is suppose to