color theory Crossword Puzzles
Conspiracy theory 2022-10-18
19 Clues: God • diseases • bank-power • Lizard men • moon landing • don't believe • Nixon scandal • with a syringe • youth molecule • secret society • come from aware • US military base • french illuminaty • American president • I’m a sphere hater • drop from an airplane • in love with the devil • once upon a time in ... • destroy the pont de l'Alma
Cell Theory 2022-01-24
Across
- the jelly like substance in the cell
- contains food water or waste
- tiny water bears that live on the outside of the space station
- the doorway to the cell
- site of photosynthesis
- the movement of water from high to low concentration
- the cell is the basic unit of structure and blank in living things
- provides structure to plant cells
- each cell part is know as an
- control center of the cell
Down
- the process of turning light into sugar
- like a highway in the cell
- involved with shipping and packaging
- powerhouse of the cell
- the process by which a substance moves from high to low concentration
- breaks down waste and old vacuoles
- Creates protein
- according to cell theory all cells come from
- according to cell theory all living things are made of
19 Clues: Creates protein • powerhouse of the cell • site of photosynthesis • the doorway to the cell • like a highway in the cell • control center of the cell • contains food water or waste • each cell part is know as an • provides structure to plant cells • breaks down waste and old vacuoles • the jelly like substance in the cell • involved with shipping and packaging • ...
AP Psychology Unit 1: SubUnit 3: Perception and Sensation 2025-09-28
Across
- the influence of bodily sensations, gestures, and other states on cognitive preferences and judgments
- the theory that the spinal cord contains a neurological “gate” that blocks or allows pain signals to pass to the brain
- a tone’s experienced highness or lowness, depending on frequency
- the system for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts
- retinal receptor cells that function in daylight or well-lit conditions; detect fine detail and give rise to color sensations
- a coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear that transforms sound vibrations into nerve impulses
- in hearing, the theory that the rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, enabling pitch perception
- analysis that begins with the sensory receptors and works up to the brain’s integration of sensory information
- a device for converting sounds into electrical signals and stimulating the auditory nerve through electrodes threaded into the cochlea
- the sense of smell
- the study of relationships between the physical characteristics of stimuli (such as intensity) and our psychological experience of them
- the dimension of color determined by the wavelength of light (e.g., blue, green, red)
- the process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment
- the light-sensitive inner surface of the eye, containing receptor rods and cones plus layers of neurons that begin processing visual information
- in hearing, the theory that links the pitch we hear with the place where the cochlea’s membrane is stimulated
- the central focal point in the retina, around which the eye’s cones cluster
- neuroscientist who, along with Torsten Wiesel, won the Nobel Prize for work on feature detectors in the visual cortex
- the sense or act of hearing
- the principle that, to be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage
- the eye’s clear, protective outer layer that bends light to provide focus
- the point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, creating a “blind” spot because no receptor cells are located there
- the brain’s ability to process many aspects of a problem simultaneously, such as color, motion, form, and depth in vision
- neuroscientist who, with David Hubel, discovered feature detector cells in the visual cortex
- the sense of body movement and position, including the sense of balance
- the process by which the eye’s lens changes shape to focus near or far objects on the retina
- the number of complete wavelengths that pass a point in a given time; determines pitch
- the theory that the retina contains three different color receptors (red, green, blue) that can combine to produce the perception of any color
- the principle that one sense may influence another (e.g., smell affecting taste)
- the process of converting one form of energy into another; in sensation, transforming stimulus energies into neural impulses
Down
- nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of a stimulus, such as shape, angle, or movement
- the process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events
- information processing guided by higher-level mental processes, as when we construct perceptions drawing on experience and expectations
- the minimum difference between two stimuli required for detection 50% of the time; also called just noticeable difference (JND)
- founder of psychophysics, studied the relationship between stimulus intensity and sensation/perception
- the minimum stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus 50% of the time
- retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray; necessary for peripheral and twilight vision when cones do not respond
- specialized neurons that respond to specific types of sensory information, such as light, sound, touch, taste, and smell
- the amount of energy in a light or sound wave, which influences brightness (light) or loudness (sound)
- the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain
- the sense of taste
- diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation
- the innermost part of the ear, containing the cochlea, semicircular canals, and vestibular sacs
- the activation, often unconsciously, of certain associations, predisposing one’s perception, memory, or response
- the adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters
- the chamber between the eardrum and cochlea containing three tiny bones (ossicles) that concentrate vibrations of the eardrum
- a theory predicting how and when we detect the presence of a faint stimulus amid background stimulation; depends on experience, expectations, motivation, and alertness
- psychologist who discovered the principle that two stimuli must differ by a constant proportion (not a constant amount) to be perceived as different
- the distance from the peak of one light or sound wave to the peak of the next; determines hue (color) in vision and pitch in sound
- the transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to help focus images on the retina
- stimuli that are below one’s absolute threshold for conscious awareness
- hearing loss caused by damage to the mechanical system that conducts sound waves to the cochlea
- the theory that opposing retinal processes (red–green, blue–yellow, black–white) enable color vision
- hearing loss caused by damage to the cochlea’s receptor cells or to the auditory nerves
- a ring of muscle tissue that forms the colored portion of the eye and controls the size of the pupil opening
54 Clues: the sense of smell • the sense of taste • the sense or act of hearing • diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation • a tone’s experienced highness or lowness, depending on frequency • the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain • stimuli that are below one’s absolute threshold for conscious awareness • ...
English Club articles based crossword #1 2017-12-05
Across
- an agreement between parties settling what each gives or receives in a transaction between them
- the reverse of a coin
- a common word for contacting between people by speaking, writing, or using some other medium
- a symbolic color of the most well-known day of sales and discounts
- a person who play games of chance
- a restriction or a specified period beyond which an action may be defeated or ceised
- a person who is studying or has expert knowledge of one or more of academic subjects
- a particular process or practical method for trying or assessing someting stated in a theory
- a close relative of human
- substance used for writing or printing
Down
- a month that has two names
- a person whose job involves discovering or verifying information stated in some theory
- the ability to make considered decisions
- one of the offered variants that is or may be chosen
- the obverse of a coin
- currency in the USA
- the conclusion that can be drawn from some facts
- a close confidant
- an adjective describing a day of sales and discounts on the internet
- a person or organization that puts money into some business with the expectation of achieving a profit.
- a reduction in price
- the potential of losing or gaining something that has a value or importance
- a system of ideas intended to explain something, especially one based on general principles
23 Clues: a close confidant • currency in the USA • a reduction in price • the obverse of a coin • the reverse of a coin • a close relative of human • a month that has two names • a person who play games of chance • substance used for writing or printing • the ability to make considered decisions • the conclusion that can be drawn from some facts • ...
Quiz 3 2024-11-26
Across
- A spectrum of light formed when sunlight strikes raindrops, refracts into them, reflects within them, and the refracts out of them
- 300,000 kilometers/second
- The bending of light as it passes through the boundary between two media
- The emission of electrons by a surface when struck by electromagnetic radiation
- Radiant energy visible to the human eye
- Theory that light consists of waves traveling out from light sources
- Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation
- A property of the light that reaches our eyes and is determined by its wavelength or frequency
- Theory that energy is radiated or absorbed in discrete units
Down
- Light waves restricted to a single plane that is perpendicular to the direction of wave motion
- The spreading of white light into the full spectrum
- The distance that light travels in one year
- Light appears to act as a wave or a particle depending on the type of experiment
- The number of complete vibrations or cycles per second of a wave
- Theory that light consists of a stream of particles
- The colors resulting from the dispersion of white light through a prism
- A property of a wave that describes its ability to bend around obstacles in its path
- The distance between two successive corresponding points on a wave
- The turning back of all or part of a beam of light at a surface
- Packets of energy that carry light or electromagnetic radiation
20 Clues: 300,000 kilometers/second • Radiant energy visible to the human eye • The distance that light travels in one year • The spreading of white light into the full spectrum • Theory that light consists of a stream of particles • Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation • Theory that energy is radiated or absorbed in discrete units • ...
Famous Psychologists 2015-05-06
Across
- cognitive development theory,
- studies split brain patients
- test
- and facial expressions
- hierarchy of needs
- of multiple intelligences
- collaborated with Lange on theory of emotion
- of psychology
- psychologist specializing in developmental psychology
- memory researcher
- salivating dogs
- client-centered approach
- taste aversion
- worked with and against Kohlberg on research in ethical relationships
Down
- theory of moral development
- emotive behavior therapy
- parenting styles
- with rat experiments
- psychoanalysis
- positive psychology
- social isolation experiments on rhesus monkeys
- Bobo dolls
- prison study
- using correlation to describe statistics
- theory
- situation design
- obedience experiments
- female psychologist on feminine psychology
- famous linguist
- analytical psychology
30 Clues: test • theory • Bobo dolls • prison study • of psychology • psychoanalysis • taste aversion • famous linguist • salivating dogs • parenting styles • situation design • memory researcher • hierarchy of needs • positive psychology • with rat experiments • obedience experiments • analytical psychology • and facial expressions • emotive behavior therapy • client-centered approach • of multiple intelligences • ...
Famous Psychologists 2015-05-06
Across
- client-centered approach
- salivating dogs
- behaviourism with rat experiments
- collaborated with Lange on theory of emotion
- theory of moral development
- taste aversion
- constructive memory researcher
- analytical psychology
- positive psychology
- studies split brain patients
- obedience experiments
- prison study
- theory of multiple intelligences
- emotions and facial expressions
- social isolation experiments on rhesus monkeys
- intelligence test
Down
- female psychologist on feminine psychology
- cognitive development theory,
- soviet psychologist specializing in developmental psychology
- triarchic theory
- using correlation to describe statistics
- hierarchy of needs
- worked with and against Kohlberg on research in ethical relationships
- Bobo dolls
- parenting styles
- strange situation design
- famous linguist
- rational emotive behavior therapy
- psychoanalysis
- father of psychology
30 Clues: Bobo dolls • prison study • taste aversion • psychoanalysis • salivating dogs • famous linguist • triarchic theory • parenting styles • intelligence test • hierarchy of needs • positive psychology • analytical psychology • obedience experiments • client-centered approach • theory of moral development • strange situation design • studies split brain patients • father of psychology • ...
Color wheel 2022-03-21
Across
- Colors next to each other
- Red plus Yellow
- pair of colors opposite on wheel
- Blue, green and Purple
- Red, yellow and Orange
- Red plus orange
- Red plus blue
Down
- Yellow green, Blue violet, and Red orange
- Blue plus yellow
- yellow plus green
- Blue plus purple
- An arrangement of colors in a circle
- Orange, Green and Purple
- Red,Yellow and Blue
14 Clues: Red plus blue • Red plus Yellow • Red plus orange • Blue plus yellow • Blue plus purple • yellow plus green • Red,Yellow and Blue • Blue, green and Purple • Red, yellow and Orange • Orange, Green and Purple • Colors next to each other • pair of colors opposite on wheel • An arrangement of colors in a circle • Yellow green, Blue violet, and Red orange
Color Crossword 2022-08-26
Across
- The color seen when all light is reflected by an object.
- Another word for purple.
- Color is made from ______.
- Colors that you cannot create by mixing.
- Sunlight and rain create a ____.
- Color that we can see is ____ by an object.
- Colors can be arranged on a color ____.
- Blue and red make ____.
Down
- The third color in rainbow order.
- Red and yellow make ____.
- Blue and yellow make ____.
- Color that we cannot see is ____ by an object.
- The result of mixing two primary colors.
- The color seen when all light is absorbed by an object.
14 Clues: Blue and red make ____. • Another word for purple. • Red and yellow make ____. • Color is made from ______. • Blue and yellow make ____. • Sunlight and rain create a ____. • The third color in rainbow order. • Colors can be arranged on a color ____. • Colors that you cannot create by mixing. • The result of mixing two primary colors. • ...
Color Design 2021-07-26
Across
- Change in color from one to another repeatedly
- Visualizing lightness or darkness
- Dark shadow with bright acceents framing the face can emphasize
- Can accentuate the sculpted form
- In the solid form these tones along perimeter enhance form line
- Interior this creates a more activated appearance with graduation
- Draws attention away from texture and focuses on form
- Ascending or descending scale of color
Down
- Imagining the placement of color
- Identify colors based on warmth/coolness, intensity, etc.
- Relationship of opposites
- A repetition of color with unoformly layered with do what
- subdivide the head into multiple aras
- These tones in the interior create the illusion of valume with increase-layer
- Creates maximum light reflection and shine
- Darker color in nape will visually do this
16 Clues: Relationship of opposites • Imagining the placement of color • Can accentuate the sculpted form • Visualizing lightness or darkness • subdivide the head into multiple aras • Ascending or descending scale of color • Creates maximum light reflection and shine • Darker color in nape will visually do this • Change in color from one to another repeatedly • ...
El Color 2023-10-12
Adlerian Theory 2018-01-28
Across
- _____ order is not a deterministic concept
- Exploring concepts of self, personal beliefs, and convictions in therapy
- ____________ feelings drive individuals to strive for mastery, success, and completion
- The baby of the family
- The first phase of ABT involves __________ the relationship
- Stories of events that a person "says" occurred before the age of 10.
- Straying from Freud's divided id, ego, and super ego Adler emphasized unity and _________.
Down
- Some clients may feel as though it is __________ to reveal family information unrelated to their pressing problems.
- Also known as minor psychotherapy, Adlerians coined the 4 phase approach now called
- Carlson believes that Adlerian theory is best applied when counseling ________ populations
- Alder grew up in __________
- The _______ child shares some characteristics of the oldest child but are often pampered by their parents
- An individuals' awareness of and attitude towards being part of the community
- Individuals often strive for __________ to complete their "Imagined Life"
- Alfred Adler wrote the first major psychology book entitled Understanding Human __________.
- ____________ deals with clients’ underlying motives for behaving the way they do in the here and now.
- Alder developed the ________ as a means of determining which life task a problem might be helping the person avoid
- We can not be understood in parts if we are applying Alder's _________ concept.
- The ___________ child will often feel squeezed out
19 Clues: The baby of the family • Alder grew up in __________ • _____ order is not a deterministic concept • The ___________ child will often feel squeezed out • The first phase of ABT involves __________ the relationship • Stories of events that a person "says" occurred before the age of 10. • Exploring concepts of self, personal beliefs, and convictions in therapy • ...
Music Theory 2012-12-12
Across
- gradually getting faster
- another name for the G clef
- two identical notes playing together
- a composition for three instruments
- plucked strings
- very slow
- another name for a 'pause'
- at a walking pace
Down
- very fast
- this symbol: >
- ____ fourth, same as diminished fifth
- Fast
- gradually getting quieter
- several notes played together in harmony
- another name for the F clef
- gradually getting louder
- The speed of music
- the unit of musical rhythm
- the interval between D# and D#
19 Clues: Fast • very fast • very slow • this symbol: > • plucked strings • at a walking pace • The speed of music • gradually getting faster • gradually getting louder • gradually getting quieter • the unit of musical rhythm • another name for a 'pause' • another name for the G clef • another name for the F clef • the interval between D# and D# • a composition for three instruments • ...
Discourse Theory 2013-12-03
Across
- Small Talk
- Question -> Answer Inform -> Acknowledge
- To express the speakers feelings
- Utterances that provide information
- Speech used to convey information
- moving our speech away from that of another
- Performative Utterances
- Another Creator Of Frame Theory (1974)
Down
- Moving our speech closer to that of another
- How well you should speak in a conversation (Maxim)
- Question -> Answer -> Comment
- Creator of accommodation theory
- Suitable Speech for a conversation (Maxim)
- Speech That Affects The Listener
- A creator of exchange structure theory
- How Much you should say in a conversation (Maxim)
- One Creator of Frame Theory (1974)
- How you should speak in a conversation (Maxim)
- Markers in conversation to determine a frame
19 Clues: Small Talk • Performative Utterances • Question -> Answer -> Comment • Creator of accommodation theory • To express the speakers feelings • Speech That Affects The Listener • Speech used to convey information • One Creator of Frame Theory (1974) • Utterances that provide information • A creator of exchange structure theory • Another Creator Of Frame Theory (1974) • ...
Atomic Theory 2021-08-26
Across
- an atom with lost or gained electrons
- same element, different mass
- the scientist who invented the "Billiard Ball Mode"
- Subatomic particle with a neutral charge
- subatomic particle with a positive charge
- means atom in greek
- atom or molecule that gained or lost an electron
- a positively charged ion
- The scientist that discredited Leucippus and Democritus
- chemist that discovered the orbital model
- a mathematical expression to find the wave function
Down
- who discovered the electron
- substance that cannot be broken down into a smaller substance
- Subatomic particle with a negative charge
- the sum of protons and neutrons on the periodic table
- rejected the idea of only four elements
- electrons at the out edge of the shell
- a chemical bond of two elements
- type of model that includes element symbol as the nucleus
- drop experiment to find charge and mass of the electron
20 Clues: means atom in greek • a positively charged ion • who discovered the electron • same element, different mass • a chemical bond of two elements • an atom with lost or gained electrons • electrons at the out edge of the shell • rejected the idea of only four elements • Subatomic particle with a neutral charge • Subatomic particle with a negative charge • ...
Hope Theory 2022-05-01
Across
- One hypothesis of this theory is that people of differing hope levels should have differing emotional sets, with high-hope people having enduring __ emotions
- Dixson et al. (2017) used __ analysis to provide basic empirical support for the theory
- Hope theory has mainly correlational support, with evidence for hope levels predicting loneliness (Sympson, 1999), adjustment to physical health changes (Kwon, 2002), and __ achievement (Snyder et al., 1999)
- One of the two key theorists; rhymes with Heider
- Goal-directed energy; the motivation to use the routes to reach goals
- Although Hope Theory was initially focused on applicability across __, it is now sometimes applied in specific areas such as math or employment
- Some current researchers are exploring the idea that hope, optimism, and self-efficacy may all be part of some larger overarching __
- The second seminal year; also a palindrome
- One of the two key theorists; rhymes with pope says
Down
- Hope is framed as a __ set rather than an emotion
- For people lower in hope, this tends to produce rumination and self-doubt rather than leading to improvements in goal pursuit
- Hope Theory is an __ process, meaning the pathways influence each other
- These are said to reflect responses to perceptions about how one is doing in goal pursuit activities
- Hope is always directed at specific __
- True or false: Hope Theory is still used today, with no major changes to the original theory structure
- The first seminal year; a palindrome
- Creating different routes to goals
- People with higher levels of this tend to be flexible thinkers, able to come up with alternative routes to their goals if they encounter barriers
- Some of the initial empirical support for the theory came from Snyder et al. (1991) who administered Snyder's Hope Scale to different __, finding that hope scores differed between college students and people receiving psychological treatment
19 Clues: Creating different routes to goals • The first seminal year; a palindrome • Hope is always directed at specific __ • The second seminal year; also a palindrome • One of the two key theorists; rhymes with Heider • Hope is framed as a __ set rather than an emotion • One of the two key theorists; rhymes with pope says • ...
Sculpture Theory 2021-06-22
Across
- Form consists of shorter interior lengths that progress toward longer exterior lengths
- Widest area around the head
- Concentration of length within a given area
- Structure
- Texture
- Form consists of lengths that progress from shorter in the exterior to longer in the interior
- Unactivated/activated
- Form consists of the same lengths throughout the design
- Very short version of graduated form
- Using two of more of the basic forms in one design
Down
- Form consists of shorter exterior lengths that gradually progress toward longer interior lengths
- Number one requested appointment
- Artistic carving or removing of hair lengths to create various forms and shapes
- Lengths of hair that follow the curves of the head
- Form/Shape
- Arrangment of lengths across the curves of the head
- Area below the crest
- Area above the crest
- Silhouette
19 Clues: Texture • Structure • Form/Shape • Silhouette • Area below the crest • Area above the crest • Unactivated/activated • Widest area around the head • Number one requested appointment • Very short version of graduated form • Concentration of length within a given area • Lengths of hair that follow the curves of the head • Using two of more of the basic forms in one design • ...
kinetic theory 2025-05-15
Across
- the name of particles in gas.
- the kinetic energy of a substance is directly proportional to it.
- shows a coil of wire that produces radiant energy when it is heated.
- the state of matter where particles are most free to move.
- molecular theory ,the idea that matter is made of tiny particles in motion.
- that increases as its temperature increases.
- which contains a set of narrowly spaced fan blades.
- the force of a gas against a surface.
- is the energy that is carried by an electric current.
Down
- that can be transformed into other forms of energy.
- is energy stored in chemical bonds.
- is the energy an object has due to its motiois the ability to cause change.
- what happens to gas when volume as temperature increases.
- potential energy is the energy stored in an object because of its position.
- is a device that transforms kinetic energy into electrical energy.
- law, a gas law relating volume and pressure .
- of conservation of energy energy is never created or destroyed.
- the states of matter where particles are arranged in a fixed pattern.
- Lussacacs law a gas law relating pressure and temperature.
19 Clues: the name of particles in gas. • is energy stored in chemical bonds. • the force of a gas against a surface. • that increases as its temperature increases. • law, a gas law relating volume and pressure . • that can be transformed into other forms of energy. • which contains a set of narrowly spaced fan blades. • is the energy that is carried by an electric current. • ...
galileo galilei 2023-02-16
10 Clues: how did he die? • what was his job? • where was he born • why is he so famous? • what was his theory? • what age did he die? • what was his fav drink • what was his fav color • where did he go to school? • what did Galileo Galilei invent?
English Club articles based crossword #1 2017-12-05
Across
- a close relative of human
- a person who play games of chance
- a close confidant
- the potential of losing or gaining something that has a value or importance
- a month that has two names
- a reduction in price
- a person whose job involves discovering or verifying information stated in some theory
- the conclusion that can be drawn from some facts
- a person who is studying or has expert knowledge of one or more of academic subjects
Down
- an adjective describing a day of sales and discounts on the internet
- currency in the USA
- one of the offered variants that is or may be chosen
- a symbolic color of the most well-known day of sales and discounts
- a person or organization that puts money into some business with the expectation of achieving a profit.
- an agreement between parties settling what each gives or receives in a transaction between them
- a common word for contacting between people by speaking, writing, or using some other medium
- a restriction or a specified period beyond which an action may be defeated or ceised
- a system of ideas intended to explain something, especially one based on general principles
- the ability to make considered decisions
- the obverse of a coin
- the reverse of a coin
- substance used for writing or printing
- a particular process or practical method for trying or assessing someting stated in a theory
23 Clues: a close confidant • currency in the USA • a reduction in price • the obverse of a coin • the reverse of a coin • a close relative of human • a month that has two names • a person who play games of chance • substance used for writing or printing • the ability to make considered decisions • the conclusion that can be drawn from some facts • ...
PSYCHOLOGY!!!!!! 2013-04-24
Across
- Innate Language Acquisition Device
- Misinformation Effect
- Conditioned Taste Aversion
- Bobo Doll
- Binet-Simon Scale
- Psychosocial Development
- Developmental Psychology
- Theory Of Cognitive Dissonance
- Stages Of Moral Development
- Social Conformity
- Learned Helplessness
- Rosenhan Experiment
- Father Of Psychoanalysis
Down
- Hypnosis
- Hierarchy Of Needs
- Little Albert
- Humanistic Approach
- Attachment Theory
- Triarchic Theory Of Intelligence
- Learning Curve
- Analytical Psychology
- Cognitive Therapy
- Theory Of Cognitive Development
- Cognitive Biases
- Multiple Intelligences
- Facial Expression
- Feminine Psychology
- Rational-Emotive Therapy
28 Clues: Hypnosis • Bobo Doll • Little Albert • Learning Curve • Cognitive Biases • Attachment Theory • Cognitive Therapy • Binet-Simon Scale • Social Conformity • Facial Expression • Hierarchy Of Needs • Humanistic Approach • Rosenhan Experiment • Feminine Psychology • Learned Helplessness • Misinformation Effect • Analytical Psychology • Multiple Intelligences • Psychosocial Development • ...
Nursing Theorists 2020-11-12
Across
- E Johnson / proposed in 1968 the model advocates the fostering of efficient and effective behavioral functioning in the patient to prevent illness
- Rizzo Parse / Their theory is based on the idea that to fulfill the goal of nursing, one must focus on quality of life from each individual’s own perspective. It is centered around three themes: meaning, rhythmicity, and transcendence.
- Watson / This Nursing theorist was born in WV and is very focused on how nurses express care to their patients. Caring is the central idea to her theory that has four concepts including human being, health, environment-society, and nursing.
- Neuman / this theorist’s theory is based on the patient’s relationship to stress, reaction to it, and reconstitution factors that are dynamic
- Peplau / This theorist’s theory introduced a therapeutic way of nursing that emphasizes the importance of building trust with the patient.
- Abdellah / Their theory was designed to help with nursing education, identifying nursing as a helping profession. It defines ten problem solving steps and eleven nursing skills that can be used to develop a treatment plan.
- Mercer / Her theory involves the relationship between one and their mother and how it affects the growth of both people. Specifically, it helps nurses reinforce a nontraditional mother’s maternal identity and bond to her (not necessarily biological) new baby through four stages of acquisition.
- Lewin / this theorist’s theory involves three stages. These stages make change easy to accomplish, especially when you are trying to change a behavior that has been set in place to a new set in place behavior.
- E Hall / After her life’s work in psychiatry, she developed a theory of nursing that’s name resembles an alliteration. It focuses on three circles, which their names compose the name of the theory. When working together, the circles describe the process of healthcare professionals and patients interacting to achieve the patient’s health. Her theory emphasizes the patient as a whole.
- Pender / This theorist developed a model with five key concepts. In this model health is seen as a positive dynamic state, not just free of disease.
Down
- Travelbee / This theory was presented in her book which was published in 1961. It has influenced hospice nurses to improve the quality of their patients’ lives by forming a relationship.
- Jean Orlando / This nursing theorist’s process she developed explains how nursing care plans need to be developed in a way that allows adaptation and encourages the nurse to think of a plan before immediately taking action.
- Orem / This theorist presented a theory that informs us on the importance of letting a patient learn to do things on his own so he/she can be strong enough as an individual to remain healthy when not in a hospital setting.
- Nightingale / established a nursing theory that incorporates the patients’ surrounding environment in his or her nursing care plan
- Henderson / Her theory focuses on the idea that nurses, through a substitutive, supplementary, or complementary role, help patients learn how to independently fulfill their needs to either achieve health or peaceful death. Her theory also outlines the needs that each person must meet to survive, some of which the nurse will need to teach the patient how to complete on their own to prepare for independent living, through 14 components. Hey theory also focuses on the idea that a patient is a sum of needs that must be met.
- Wiedenbach / developed Helping Art of Clinical Nursing. The theory identifies four elements in nursing; a philosophy, a purpose, a practice, and art. This theory is based off of the needs of the patient, looking for symptoms, and determining what the patient needs to resolve the illness.
- Roy / Her theory includes a model of nursing with three central concepts and questions. She has four doctoral degrees. Within her model are three concepts being human being, adaptation, and nursing. The adaptation concept can be broken down into four modes.
- Roper / Established a theory that looks at the patient's overall independence, determining what the patient can and can't do and how their illness has affected them. Then, they come up with a care plan for the specific needs of that certain patient. Upon arrival, they assess the patient for things such as breathing, eating, dressing, temperature control, and communication, then as time goes on they modify their plan of care to meet the needs of the patient.
- Erickson / in this theorist’s theory the roles of nursing are facilitation, nurturance, and unconditional acceptance.
- Joyce Fitzgerald / This doctor created a theory that has provided a framework for newer nursing theorists. The model representing the theory states that human development is centered along the rhythms of person, health, wellness-illness, and metaparadigm and nurses can use these to achieve maximum wellness for patients.
- Kolcaba / Her theory was developed in the 1990s. This theorist focuses on the comfort of the patient. This theory ensures that the patient is comforted mentally and physically.
21 Clues: Erickson / in this theorist’s theory the roles of nursing are facilitation, nurturance, and unconditional acceptance. • Nightingale / established a nursing theory that incorporates the patients’ surrounding environment in his or her nursing care plan • ...
Cell Theory 2022-01-24
Across
- powerhouse of the cell
- site of photosynthesis
- tiny water bears that live on the outside of the space station
- control center of the cell
- provides structure to plant cells
- breaks down waste and old vacuoles
- according to cell theory all cells come from
- the process of turning light into sugar
- involved with shipping and packaging
Down
- the movement of water from high to low concentration
- the process by which a substance moves from high to low concentration
- each cell part is know as an
- contains food water or waste
- the doorway to the cell
- the cell is the basic unit of structure and blank in living things
- like a highway in the cell
- the jelly like substance in the cell
- according to cell theory all living things are made of
- Creates protein
19 Clues: Creates protein • powerhouse of the cell • site of photosynthesis • the doorway to the cell • like a highway in the cell • control center of the cell • each cell part is know as an • contains food water or waste • provides structure to plant cells • breaks down waste and old vacuoles • the jelly like substance in the cell • involved with shipping and packaging • ...
Havighurst Theory 2021-11-18
Across
- reduced productivity and retirement
- Decisions fit aptitude, ability, resources
- It is under the super" vocational development stages, experienced at the time of birth until the age of 14
- Introduced his concept of hierarchy of needs
- His work received the credit for the idea of developmental task theory
- Arises at a certain period of our lives
- In this period, acquiring personal independence is considered as an important task
- An individual should be at the age of 61 and above in this age period
- This theory of education states that the child must learn to become a worthy, responsible adult through restraints imposed by his society.
Down
- According to our biopsychosocial model, the third source corresponds to what part of the model?
- Those that emerge from the maturing personality and take the form of personal values and aspirations, such as learning the necessary skills for job success. These tasks are from what source?
- This theory of education states that the child will develop best if left as free as possible
- Selecting a mate as a developmental task is under this age period
- He examined the developmental tasks of siblings
- In this stage the developmental tasks includes achieving a masculine or feminine social role
- Adults find it hard to _______ their children
- His psychosocial development theory also influenced Havighurst theory
- tentative plans, choices narrowed not finalize
- Havighurst identified age in how many periods?
19 Clues: reduced productivity and retirement • Arises at a certain period of our lives • Decisions fit aptitude, ability, resources • Introduced his concept of hierarchy of needs • Adults find it hard to _______ their children • tentative plans, choices narrowed not finalize • Havighurst identified age in how many periods? • He examined the developmental tasks of siblings • ...
Music Theory 2017-10-24
Across
- moderately
- gradually faster
- gradually slower
- the beats per measure over what note gets 1 beat
- quarter not plus half the value of a quarter note
- very loud
- hold the note for its full value
- play the note louder, with a special emphasis
- a sudden, strong accent
Down
- hold the note longer than its normal value
- organization of notes over time using different note values
- a bass staff and a treble staff connected by a line
- short lines added to extend the range of the staff
- half note plus half of the value of a half note
- rest equal to the value of an eighth note
- quickly or cheerfully
- the steady pulse in music
- joins two notes of the same pitch
- moderately
- the 5 lines ad the 4 spaces on which music notes and symbols are written
20 Clues: very loud • moderately • moderately • gradually faster • gradually slower • quickly or cheerfully • a sudden, strong accent • the steady pulse in music • hold the note for its full value • joins two notes of the same pitch • rest equal to the value of an eighth note • hold the note longer than its normal value • play the note louder, with a special emphasis • ...
Adlerian Theory 2018-01-28
Across
- _____ order is not a deterministic concept
- Exploring concepts of self, personal beliefs, and convictions in therapy
- ____________ feelings drive individuals to strive for mastery, success, and completion
- The baby of the family
- The first phase of ABT involves __________ the relationship
- Stories of events that a person "says" occurred before the age of 10.
- Straying from Freud's divided id, ego, and super ego Adler emphasized unity and _________.
Down
- Some clients may feel as though it is __________ to reveal family information unrelated to their pressing problems.
- Also known as minor psychotherapy, Adlerians coined the 4 phase approach now called
- Carlson believes that Adlerian theory is best applied when counseling ________ populations
- Alder grew up in __________
- The _______ child shares some characteristics of the oldest child but are often pampered by their parents
- An individuals' awareness of and attitude towards being part of the community
- Individuals often strive for __________ to complete their "Imagined Life"
- Alfred Adler wrote the first major psychology book entitled Understanding Human __________.
- ____________ deals with clients’ underlying motives for behaving the way they do in the here and now.
- Alder developed the ________ as a means of determining which life task a problem might be helping the person avoid
- We can not be understood in parts if we are applying Alder's _________ concept.
- The ___________ child will often feel squeezed out
19 Clues: The baby of the family • Alder grew up in __________ • _____ order is not a deterministic concept • The ___________ child will often feel squeezed out • The first phase of ABT involves __________ the relationship • Stories of events that a person "says" occurred before the age of 10. • Exploring concepts of self, personal beliefs, and convictions in therapy • ...
Color and Color Schemes 2023-04-07
Across
- This is the term for lightness or darkness of a color.
- A color scheme made up of one color plus the tints and shades of that hue.
- This group of hues: blue, purple, green.
- Colors that are next to each other on the color wheel.
- The term for the name of a color.
- This is created when white is added to a hue.
Down
- This is the term for brightness or dullness of a color.
- This group of hues: red, orange, yellow.
- This is created when black is added to a hue.
- The Element of art produced by light and is seen when light is reflected off a surface.
- These color schemes consist of three colors equally spaced apart on the color wheel.
11 Clues: The term for the name of a color. • This group of hues: red, orange, yellow. • This group of hues: blue, purple, green. • This is created when black is added to a hue. • This is created when white is added to a hue. • This is the term for lightness or darkness of a color. • Colors that are next to each other on the color wheel. • ...
English Club articles based crossword 1 2017-12-06
Across
- a close confidant
- an adjective describing a day of sales and discounts on the internet
- currency in the USA
- a person who is studying or has expert knowledge of one or more of academic subjects
- a particular process or practical method for trying or assessing someting stated in a theory
- a restriction or a specified period beyond which an action may be defeated or ceised
- a person who play games of chance
- a system of ideas intended to explain something, especially one based on general principles
- a common word for contacting between people by speaking, writing, or using some other medium
- the ability to make considered decisions
- the obverse of a coin
Down
- a reduction in price
- a symbolic color of the most well-known day of sales and discounts
- one of the offered variants that is or may be chosen
- the potential of losing or gaining something that has a value or importance
- the conclusion that can be drawn from some facts
- a person whose job involves discovering or verifying information stated in some theory
- the reverse of a coin
- substance used for writing or printing
- a month that has two names
- an agreement between parties settling what each gives or receives in a transaction between them
- a close relative of human
- a person or organization that puts money into some business with the expectation of achieving a profit.
23 Clues: a close confidant • currency in the USA • a reduction in price • the reverse of a coin • the obverse of a coin • a close relative of human • a month that has two names • a person who play games of chance • substance used for writing or printing • the ability to make considered decisions • the conclusion that can be drawn from some facts • ...
AP Psych Unit 3 2023-10-26
Across
- Hearing loss caused by something that stops sounds from getting through the outer or middle ear.
- the theory that opposing retinal processes (red-green, yellow-blue, white-black) enable color vision. For example, some cells are stimulated by green and inhibited by red; others are stimulated by red and inhibited by green
- he physiological process by which neural substrates are activated by physical stimuli resulting in the perception of what we describe as touch, pressure, pain, etc.
- a theory predicting how and when we detect the presence of a faint stimulus (signal) amid background stimulation (noise).
- perception of a stimulus below the threshold for conscious perception
- the light-sensitive inner surface of the eye, containing the receptor rods and cones plus layers of neurons that begin the processing of visual information
- A mental predisposition to perceive or notice some aspects of the available sensory data and ignore others; influences nearly everything we perceive;related to "top-down processing"
- the system for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts.
- The transparent, protective outer layer of the eye that bends light waves to assist in proper focus
- A type of inattentional blindness; the inability to see changes in our environment when our attention is directed elsewhere
- monitors the position of the head relative to the vertical.
- Failing to see visible objects when our attention is directed elsewhere
- Describes how the context in which a stimulus occurs can contribute to how people perceive that stimulus, used in marketing/advertising
- depth cues, such as interposition and linear perspective, available to either eye alone
- the adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters
- The ability to focus your hearing on one specific thing even though noise is all around you.
- sensors that are located in the skin, joints, muscles, and tendons for kinesthesis.
- the fleshy outside part of the ear
- the experience that we describe with color name labels such as red or blue
- Processing information processing guided by higher-level mental processes, as when we construct perceptions drawing on our experience and expectations
- the minimum difference between two stimuli required for detection 50 percent of the time
- the way a thing has been “placed,” or “put together.”
- states that the rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, thusenabling us to sense its pitch.
- a term developed by psychologist Jean Piaget to describe what occurs when new information or experiences cause you to modify your existing schemas.
- retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray; necessary for peripheral and twilight vision, when cones don't respond
- processing analysis that begins with the sensory receptors and works up to the brain's integration of sensory information
- retinal receptor cells that are concentrated near the center of the retina and that function in daylight or in well-lit conditions.
- the principle that, to be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage
- the theory that the retina contains three different color receptors—one most sensitive to red, one to green, one to blue—which, when stimulated in combination, can produce the perception of any color.
Down
- diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation
- the minimum stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus 50 percent of the time
- the tendency to perceive objects, or figures, as existing on a background
- nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of the stimulus, such as shape, angle, or movement
- the sense of smell. *Remember: an old factory smells bad.
- to convert a stimulus (such as light, or sound, or the position of the body) into an electrical signal in the nervous system.
- Involves one sense affecting another.
- the spiral cavity of the inner ear containing the organ of Corti, which produces nerve impulses in response to sound vibrations.
- the process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment
- a ring of muscle tissue that forms the colored portion of the eye around the pupil and controls the size of the pupil opening
- the sense or act of hearing
- the sense of body movement and position, including the sense of balance
- three tiny, fluid-filled tubes in the inner ear that help you keep your balance
- the transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to help focus images on the retina
- Mental filters or maps that organize our information about the world, Can bias the way new information is interpreted, stored, and recalled
- perceiving objects as unchanging even as illumination and retinal images change
- the process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events
- Each eye sees a slightly different image because they are about 6 cm apart (on average). Your brain puts the two images it receives together into a single three-dimensional image.
- cues that depend on having 2 eyes; result from our anatomy-we see the world w/ 2 eyes set a certain distance apart, & this feaure of our anatomy gives us the ability to perceive depth
- happens after inner ear damage.
- the theory that the spinal cord contains a neurological "gate" that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass on to the brain
- The process of directing our awareness to relevant stimuli while ignoring irrelevant stimuli in the environment
- A membrane inside the cochlea which vibrates in response to sound and whose vibrations lead to activity in the auditory pathways.
- the theory that links the pitch we hear with the place where the cochlea's membrane is stimulated
- the sense of taste. There are 5 basic tastes: sweet, salty, sour, bitter, and umami (taste of meat; savory).
- the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain
- the ability to see objects in three dimensions although the images that strike the retina are two-dimensional; allows us to judge distance
- the wave's height. It is measured from the peak of the wave to the trough of the wave.
- an auditory-visual illusion that illustrates how perceivers merge information for speech sounds across the senses
- the distance from the peak of one light or sound wave to the next peak.
- The tight membrane that vibrates when sound waves hit it.
60 Clues: the sense or act of hearing • happens after inner ear damage. • the fleshy outside part of the ear • Involves one sense affecting another. • the way a thing has been “placed,” or “put together.” • the sense of smell. *Remember: an old factory smells bad. • The tight membrane that vibrates when sound waves hit it. • ...
Exam #1 2023-09-25
Across
- _____ vs. achievement
- _____ analysis
- what genes look like
- ________'s Investment Theory
- not latent, but
- Sternberg's theory
- purpose of the z-score
Down
- more natural intelligence
- WKU mascot
- _____ factor analysis
- Thurstone's Primary Mental
- invisible idea
- numerator in z-score
- not a standard score
- _____ to find confidence interval
- Psychometric theory
- Luria's neurocognitive theory
17 Clues: WKU mascot • invisible idea • _____ analysis • not latent, but • Sternberg's theory • Psychometric theory • numerator in z-score • what genes look like • not a standard score • _____ vs. achievement • _____ factor analysis • purpose of the z-score • more natural intelligence • Thurstone's Primary Mental • ________'s Investment Theory • Luria's neurocognitive theory • ...
Development of the Atomic Theory 2024-10-06
Across
- British,"Father of Atomic Theory"
- planetary model
- determined the charge on the electron
- color of the cathode ray
- atomos,small,indivisible
- earth,wind water,fire
Down
- elixir of life,change lead into gold
- arranged elements by atomic number
- plum-pudding model,discovered electrons
- saw a connection between atoms and electricity
- gold foil,discovered the nucleus
11 Clues: planetary model • earth,wind water,fire • color of the cathode ray • atomos,small,indivisible • gold foil,discovered the nucleus • British,"Father of Atomic Theory" • arranged elements by atomic number • elixir of life,change lead into gold • determined the charge on the electron • plum-pudding model,discovered electrons • saw a connection between atoms and electricity
Attention 2025-11-01
Across
- Ability to combine features to perceive a single object
- Filter model: Unattended stimuli are blocked early in processing
- processing: The ability to perform a task without attention after extensive practice
- listening task: Task that demonstrates selective attention by shadowing one message while ignoring another
- party effect: Tendency to detect your own name in an unattended message
- Period when the eyes remain stationary between saccades
- Attenuation model: Model suggesting unattended info is not blocked but weakened
- Shifting attention to a location before a stimulus appears
- attention: Focusing attention on a location without moving your eyes
- The process of focusing on specific objects while ignoring others
- attention: Thefocusing of attention on one message and ignoring all others
- cueing task: Task used to measure how attention improves reaction time at a location
Down
- When a response to one stimulus interferes with response to another
- salience: Attention guided by physical properties like color, contrast, and movement
- up processing: Attention driven by the stimulus itself
- load: The limited capacity of our cognitive system to handle multiple inputs
- attention: The ability to pay attention to more than one thing at a time
- Integration Theory: Theory explaining how features are combined
- down processing: Attention driven by goals, expectations, or knowledge
- A brief shift in eye position from one location to another
- blindness: Failure to notice a visible stimulus because attention is elsewhere
- attention: Focusing attention by physically moving the eyes
- effect: Task used to demonstrate interference between reading and color naming
23 Clues: up processing: Attention driven by the stimulus itself • Ability to combine features to perceive a single object • Period when the eyes remain stationary between saccades • A brief shift in eye position from one location to another • Shifting attention to a location before a stimulus appears • attention: Focusing attention by physically moving the eyes • ...
Astrophysics 2025-03-13
Across
- The unit of distance used for stars outside the Solar System. (10 letters)
- The process by which stars produce energy. (9 letters)
- This planet has the Great Red Spot. (7 letters)
- A system of millions or billions of stars held together by gravity. (7 letters)
- The largest type of galaxies. (8 letters)
- This planet has the most massive moon, Titan. (6 letters)
- He proposed the theory of general relativity. (9 letters)
- The hottest type of stars appear this color on the spectrum. (4 letters)
- The color of cooler stars. (3 letters)
- The galaxy that includes our Solar System. (7 letters)
Down
- A small, rocky object orbiting the Sun, mostly found between Mars and Jupiter. (8 letters)
- The end stage of a massive star’s life cycle that results in an explosion. (9 letters)
- The force that keeps planets in orbit around the Sun. (11 letters)
- The theory that explains the origin of the universe. (3 words, 3, 4, 6 letters)
- He discovered that galaxies are moving away from us. (6 letters)
- The law that states: The total energy radiated per unit surface area of a black body is proportional to the fourth power of its temperature. (6 letters)
- The third planet from the Sun. (5 letters)
- The outermost planet in our solar system. (6 letters)
- The name of our star. (3 letters)
- A cloud of gas and dust in space; a star is born here. (6 letters)
- The shift in wavelength due to objects moving away from Earth. (6 letters)
- The term for Earth’s natural satellite. (4 letters)
22 Clues: The name of our star. (3 letters) • The color of cooler stars. (3 letters) • The largest type of galaxies. (8 letters) • The third planet from the Sun. (5 letters) • This planet has the Great Red Spot. (7 letters) • The term for Earth’s natural satellite. (4 letters) • The outermost planet in our solar system. (6 letters) • ...
Unit 3 exam 2022-12-05
Across
- a less common form of hearing loss, caused by damage to the mechanical system that conducts sound waves to the cochlea.
- an illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on and off in succession.
- in hearing, the theory that links the pitch we hear with the place where the cochlea's membrane is stimulated.
- the number of complete wavelengths that pass a point in a given time.
- a binocular cue for perceiving depth. By comparing retinal images from the two eyes, the brain computes distance-the greater disparity between the two images, the closer the object.
- the innermost part of the ear, containing the cochlea, semicircular canals, and vestibular sacs.
- perceiving objects as unchanging even as illumination and retinal image change.
- a depth cue, such as interposition or linear perspective, available to either eye alone.
- the ability to see objects in three dimensions although the images that strike the retina are two-dimensional; allows us to judge distance.
- an organized whole. Gestalt psychologists emphasized our tendency to integrate pieces of information into meaningful wholes.
- hearing loss caused by damage to the cochlea's receptor cells or to the auditory nerves; the most common form of hearing loss, also called nerve deafness.
- the chamber between the eardrum and cochlea containing three tiny bones that concentrate the vibrations of the eardrum on the cochlea's oval window.
Down
- perceiving familiar objects as having consistent color, even if changing illumination alters the wavelengths reflected by the object.
- a device for converting sounds into electrical signals and stimulation the auditory nerve through electrodes threaded into the cochlea.
- the principle that one sense may influence another, as when the smell of food influences its taste.
- in hearing, the theory that the rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, thus enabling us to sense its pitch.
- the theory that the spinal cord contains a "gate: that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass on to the brain. The "gate" is opened by the activity of pain signals traveling up small nerve fibers and is closed by activity in larger fibers or by information coming from the brain.
- the sense of smell.
- the ability to adjust to changed sensory input, including an artificially displaced or even inverted visual field.
- a laboratory device for testing depth perception in infants and young animals.
- a tone's experienced highness or lowness; depends on frequency.
- the perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into coherent groups.
- our sense of body movement and position that enables our sense of balance.
- a depth cue, such as retinal disparity, that depends on the use of two eyes.
- cognition the influence of bodily sensations, gestures, and other states on cognitive preferences and judgments.
- the organization of the visual field into objects that stand out from their surroundings.
- a coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear; sound waves traveling through the cochlear fluid trigger nerve impulses.
- our movement sense-our system for sensing the position and movement of individual body arts.
28 Clues: the sense of smell. • a tone's experienced highness or lowness; depends on frequency. • the perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into coherent groups. • the number of complete wavelengths that pass a point in a given time. • our sense of body movement and position that enables our sense of balance. • ...
Natural selection 2025-05-14
10 Clues: baby • a cat is this • the human race • A human is this • hair and eye color • something that is living • a place you were born and stay • something you use all day at school • something that you get from parents • the person who made the theory about natural selection
TFN CROSSWORD PUZZLE 2022-12-13
Across
- wiuefh8w
- kwefhw
- whjedgw
- jefcwjb
- mwhcn
- kwijfeiw
- uegduww
- Self-Care Deficit Theory
- Science of Unitary Human being
- jwefh
- kwfhiw
- wefh
- An Influential Nurse in the Development of the Profession of Nursing
- wkefiui
- kwieh
- wkefjiwo
- iqurd
- uqwhrw
- iwu8w
- Environmental Theory
Down
- iwroiw
- ewfbygd
- wejfh
- kwfjiwo
- wufd
- wdgwy2dv
- Theory of Transpersonal Caring
- wefhw
- Theory of Caritative Caring
- iwurf
- wijfiow
- webfwy
- wijfh8wh
- wihfiwh
- wjehfuwi
- jwufh
- welfjwi
37 Clues: wufd • wefh • wejfh • mwhcn • wefhw • iwurf • jwefh • kwieh • jwufh • iqurd • iwu8w • iwroiw • kwefhw • webfwy • kwfhiw • uqwhrw • ewfbygd • kwfjiwo • whjedgw • jefcwjb • uegduww • wijfiow • wihfiwh • wkefiui • welfjwi • wiuefh8w • wdgwy2dv • kwijfeiw • wijfh8wh • wjehfuwi • wkefjiwo • Environmental Theory • Self-Care Deficit Theory • Theory of Caritative Caring • Theory of Transpersonal Caring • Science of Unitary Human being • ...
Nursing Theorists 2020-11-12
Across
- / This doctor created a theory that has provided a framework for newer nursing theorists. The model representing the theory states that human development is centered along the rhythms of person, health, wellness-illness, and metaparadigm and nurses can use these to achieve maximum wellness for patients.
- / in this theorist’s theory the roles of nursing are facilitation, nurturance, and unconditional acceptance.
- / This nursing theorist’s process she developed explains how nursing care plans need to be developed in a way that allows adaptation and encourages the nurse to think of a plan before immediately taking action.
- Her theory involves the relationship between one and their mother and how it affects the growth of both people. Specifically, it helps nurses reinforce a nontraditional mother’s maternal identity and bond to her (not necessarily biological) new baby through four stages of acquisition.
- / Their theory was designed to help with nursing education, identifying nursing as a helping profession. It defines ten problem solving steps and eleven nursing skills that can be used to develop a treatment plan.
- / After her life’s work in psychiatry, she developed a theory of nursing that’s name resembles an alliteration. It focuses on three circles, which their names compose the name of the theory. When working together, the circles describe the process of healthcare professionals and patients interacting to achieve the patient’s health. Her theory emphasizes the patient as a whole.
- / this theorist’s theory involves three stages. These stages make change easy to accomplish, especially when you are trying to change a behavior that has been set in place to a new set in place behavior.
- / This theorist presented a theory that informs us on the importance of letting a patient learn to do things on his own so he/she can be strong enough as an individual to remain healthy when not in a hospital setting.
- / developed Helping Art of Clinical Nursing. The theory identifies four elements in nursing; a philosophy, a purpose, a practice, and art. This theory is based off of the needs of the patient, looking for symptoms, and determining what the patient needs to resolve the illness.
- / This theorist developed a model with five key concepts. In this model health is seen as a positive dynamic state, not just free of disease.
- / Her theory includes a model of nursing with three central concepts and questions. She has four doctoral degrees. Within her model are three concepts being human being, adaptation, and nursing. The adaptation concept can be broken down into four modes.
- / This Nursing theorist was born in WV and is very focused on how nurses express care to their patients. Caring is the central idea to her theory that has four concepts including human being, health, environment-society, and nursing.
Down
- / This theory was presented in her book which was published in 1961. It has influenced hospice nurses to improve the quality of their patients’ lives by forming a relationship.
- a nursing theory that incorporates the patients’ surrounding environment in his or her nursing care plan
- / Established a theory that looks at the patient's overall independence, determining what the patient can and can't do and how their illness has affected them. Then, they come up with a care plan for the specific needs of that certain patient. Upon arrival, they assess the patient for things such as breathing, eating, dressing, temperature control, and communication, then as time goes on they modify their plan of care to meet the needs of the patient.
- / Her theory was developed in the 1990s. This theorist focuses on the comfort of the patient. This theory ensures that the patient is comforted mentally and physically.
- / proposed in 1968 the model advocates the fostering of efficient and effective behavioral functioning in the patient to prevent illness
- / Their theory is based on the idea that to fulfill the goal of nursing, one must focus on quality of life from each individual’s own perspective. It is centered around three themes: meaning, rhythmicity, and transcendence.
- / Her theory focuses on the idea that nurses, through a substitutive, supplementary, or complementary role, help patients learn how to independently fulfill their needs to either achieve health or peaceful death. Her theory also outlines the needs that each person must meet to survive, some of which the nurse will need to teach the patient how to complete on their own to prepare for independent living, through 14 components. Hey theory also focuses on the idea that a patient is a sum of needs that must be met.
- / This theorist’s theory introduced a therapeutic way of nursing that emphasizes the importance of building trust with the patient.
- / this theorist’s theory is based on the patient’s relationship to stress, reaction to it, and reconstitution factors that are dynamic
21 Clues: a nursing theory that incorporates the patients’ surrounding environment in his or her nursing care plan • / in this theorist’s theory the roles of nursing are facilitation, nurturance, and unconditional acceptance. • / This theorist’s theory introduced a therapeutic way of nursing that emphasizes the importance of building trust with the patient. • ...
AP Psych - Great Minds 2022-01-04
Across
- Maternal separation, dependency, social isolation
- Influenced behaviorism - operant conditioning box
- marshmallow experiment
- Classical conditioning
- Work in ethical community/relationships
- Professor of Human Development at Cornell
- Expert on human memory
- Genetic epistomology - work in child development
- Controversial experiments with obedience in 1960s
- Developed method: client centered therapy
- Founded analytical psychology
- Statistics/factor analysis/correlation coefficient
- developed practice of cognitive behavioral therapy
- Research into intrapersonal psychological structure
- Father of modern social psychology
- Established school of functionalism
Down
- Freedom = fundamental part of human nature
- First woman to earn doctorate degree in psychology - known for work on animal behavior/motor theory development
- Theory of stages of moral development
- Founder of psychoanalysis
- psychoanalyst known for work in child analysis
- Soviet psychologist worked with children
- 1971 Stanford prison experiment
- cognitive dissonance and social comparison theory
- Founder of school of individual psychology
- One of founders of field of cognitive science
- Advocacy of evolutionary psychology
- Comparative psychology and learning process
- Gestalt psychology + social psychology
- Development of attachment theory
- Founder of experimental psychology
- opened first psychology lab in US
- Originator of theory attachment
- Theory of multiple intelligences
- Self psychology
- Study of emotions and relation to facial expressions
- Believed in 8 phase personality development
- Popularized scientific theory: behaviorism
- Social learning theory
- Grandfather of evolutionary psychology
40 Clues: Self psychology • marshmallow experiment • Classical conditioning • Expert on human memory • Social learning theory • Founder of psychoanalysis • Founded analytical psychology • 1971 Stanford prison experiment • Originator of theory attachment • Development of attachment theory • Theory of multiple intelligences • opened first psychology lab in US • Founder of experimental psychology • ...
CDF 14 - CH 1 & 2 - Fall 23 2023-09-20
Across
- 12 years to adulthood
- Likert Scale
- guided by logic
- studies salvation in lab dogs
- domain for height and weight
- research over time
- Social Learning Theory
- developmental gains and losses
- test hypothesis
- toxins
- hereditary development
- learned response
- domain for emotion
Down
- promotes behavior
- Skinner conditioning theory
- development conception through birth
- inborn
- Freud's theory
- theory of Erikson
- domain for Intelligence
- categories of knowledge
- balance in the outside world and mind
- watching and recording of participants
- guided by guilt
- environment shapes development
25 Clues: inborn • toxins • Likert Scale • Freud's theory • guided by logic • guided by guilt • test hypothesis • learned response • promotes behavior • theory of Erikson • research over time • domain for emotion • 12 years to adulthood • Social Learning Theory • hereditary development • domain for Intelligence • categories of knowledge • Skinner conditioning theory • domain for height and weight • ...
Unit 3 exam 2022-12-05
Across
- a less common form of hearing loss, caused by damage to the mechanical system that conducts sound waves to the cochlea.
- an illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on and off in succession.
- in hearing, the theory that links the pitch we hear with the place where the cochlea's membrane is stimulated.
- the number of complete wavelengths that pass a point in a given time.
- a binocular cue for perceiving depth. By comparing retinal images from the two eyes, the brain computes distance-the greater disparity between the two images, the closer the object.
- the innermost part of the ear, containing the cochlea, semicircular canals, and vestibular sacs.
- perceiving objects as unchanging even as illumination and retinal image change.
- a depth cue, such as interposition or linear perspective, available to either eye alone.
- the ability to see objects in three dimensions although the images that strike the retina are two-dimensional; allows us to judge distance.
- an organized whole. Gestalt psychologists emphasized our tendency to integrate pieces of information into meaningful wholes.
- hearing loss caused by damage to the cochlea's receptor cells or to the auditory nerves; the most common form of hearing loss, also called nerve deafness.
- the chamber between the eardrum and cochlea containing three tiny bones that concentrate the vibrations of the eardrum on the cochlea's oval window.
Down
- perceiving familiar objects as having consistent color, even if changing illumination alters the wavelengths reflected by the object.
- a device for converting sounds into electrical signals and stimulation the auditory nerve through electrodes threaded into the cochlea.
- the principle that one sense may influence another, as when the smell of food influences its taste.
- in hearing, the theory that the rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, thus enabling us to sense its pitch.
- the theory that the spinal cord contains a "gate: that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass on to the brain. The "gate" is opened by the activity of pain signals traveling up small nerve fibers and is closed by activity in larger fibers or by information coming from the brain.
- the sense of smell.
- the ability to adjust to changed sensory input, including an artificially displaced or even inverted visual field.
- a laboratory device for testing depth perception in infants and young animals.
- a tone's experienced highness or lowness; depends on frequency.
- the perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into coherent groups.
- our sense of body movement and position that enables our sense of balance.
- a depth cue, such as retinal disparity, that depends on the use of two eyes.
- cognition the influence of bodily sensations, gestures, and other states on cognitive preferences and judgments.
- the organization of the visual field into objects that stand out from their surroundings.
- a coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear; sound waves traveling through the cochlear fluid trigger nerve impulses.
- our movement sense-our system for sensing the position and movement of individual body arts.
28 Clues: the sense of smell. • a tone's experienced highness or lowness; depends on frequency. • the perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into coherent groups. • the number of complete wavelengths that pass a point in a given time. • our sense of body movement and position that enables our sense of balance. • ...
Unit 2 2022-08-31
Across
- college quarters
- When two animals become species because they live in different habitats
- How a species is differentiated from another
- Two words- Charles Darwin was the fittest of them all to come up with this term
- similar in function but not in structure
- color that you would wear to a Ralston spirit day
- platform that Mr.Beast is famous on
- acronym you would use when you are annoyed
- Theory that all says all existing organism come from organisms in the past
- A type of reproductive isolation that happens after conception
- Parents passing down traits
Down
- When two animals live in the same habitat but do not mate
- A type of reproductive isolation that comes before conception
- Process of changing to fit better in the environment
- name of Kanye West's kid that sounds like a direction
- similar structure but different functions
- Ms. Namuth's favorite color
- not in
- mascot of Ralston High School
- When species are completely wiped out
20 Clues: not in • college quarters • Ms. Namuth's favorite color • Parents passing down traits • mascot of Ralston High School • platform that Mr.Beast is famous on • When species are completely wiped out • similar in function but not in structure • similar structure but different functions • acronym you would use when you are annoyed • How a species is differentiated from another • ...
Famous Scientists 2024-07-07
Across
- - Radioactivity research
- - Discovered penicillin
- - Invented the light bulb
- - Atomic structure
- - Black hole theory
- - AC electricity
- - Theory of relativity
- - Theory of evolution
Down
- - Expanding universe
- - Laws of motion
- - Computer science pioneer
- - Quantum mechanics
- - Electromagnetic induction
- - Astronomy pioneer
- - Germ theory
- - Cosmos exploration
16 Clues: - Germ theory • - Laws of motion • - AC electricity • - Atomic structure • - Quantum mechanics • - Astronomy pioneer • - Black hole theory • - Expanding universe • - Cosmos exploration • - Theory of evolution • - Theory of relativity • - Discovered penicillin • - Radioactivity research • - Invented the light bulb • - Computer science pioneer • - Electromagnetic induction
Sensation & Perception 2025-10-15
Across
- The sensory system for taste.
- The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information.
- The central focal point in the retina, around which the eye's cones cluster.
- The process by which the eye's lens changes shape to focus near or far objects on the retina.
- The theory that color vision depends on three sets of opposing colors (red-green, blue-yellow, black-white).
- The amount of energy in a light or sound wave, which determines the brightness or loudness; related to amplitude.
- The minimum stimulus energy needed to detect a particular stimulus 50% of the time.
- The theory that we perceive depth by interpreting monocular cues (like light and shadow).
- Specialized neurons in the visual cortex that respond to specific features of the stimulus, such as shape, angle, or movement.
- The light-sensitive inner surface of the eye, containing the rods and cones.
- Visual receptors that detect black, white, and gray; necessary for peripheral and twilight vision.
- The minimum difference between two stimuli required for detection 50% of the time. Also called the just noticeable difference (JND).
- The sense of smell.
- Theory that predicts how and when we detect the presence of a faint stimulus (signal) amid background stimulation (noise).
Down
- Diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation.
- The ring of muscle tissue that forms the colored portion of the eye and regulates the size of the pupil.
- The basic taste sensations are sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and this one for savory/meaty.
- The distance from the peak of one light or sound wave to the peak of the next.
- Nerve that carries information from the retina to the brain.
- The area of the cerebral cortex that receives input from the eyes.
- Visual receptors sensitive to color and fine detail; function in daylight or well-lit conditions.
- The conversion of one form of energy into another, like sensory stimuli into neural impulses.
- The principle that, to be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage (rather than a constant amount).
- The opening in the center of the eye through which light enters.
24 Clues: The sense of smell. • The sensory system for taste. • Nerve that carries information from the retina to the brain. • The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information. • Diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation. • The opening in the center of the eye through which light enters. • ...
Novel Two Crossword (The Benefits of Being an Octopus) 2025-02-21
Across
- It is an idea or theory of something
- Running a business or an organization
- Type of color that blends in to the surrounding
- Having no reaction due to an event
- Moving or dragging feet without lifting feet
- A Rut or Groove on a surface
Down
- Cells or Skin that are a different color
- Searching quickly or desperately for something
8 Clues: A Rut or Groove on a surface • Having no reaction due to an event • It is an idea or theory of something • Running a business or an organization • Cells or Skin that are a different color • Moving or dragging feet without lifting feet • Searching quickly or desperately for something • Type of color that blends in to the surrounding
Unit 2 2022-08-31
Across
- color that you would wear to a Ralston spirit day
- A type of reproductive isolation that happens after conception
- When two animals become species because they live in different habitats
- acronym you would use when you are annoyed
- When two animals live in the same habitat but do not mate
- Ms. Namuth's favorite color
- Theory that all says all existing organism come from organisms in the past
- college quarters
- Parents passing down traits
- Two words- Charles Darwin was the fittest of them all to come up with this term
Down
- When species are completely wiped out
- Process of changing to fit better in the environment
- A type of reproductive isolation that comes before conception
- not in
- similar structure but different functions
- similar in function but not in structure
- mascot of Ralston High School
- platform that Mr.Beast is famous on
- name of Kanye West's kid that sounds like a direction
- How a species is differentiated from another
20 Clues: not in • college quarters • Ms. Namuth's favorite color • Parents passing down traits • mascot of Ralston High School • platform that Mr.Beast is famous on • When species are completely wiped out • similar in function but not in structure • similar structure but different functions • acronym you would use when you are annoyed • How a species is differentiated from another • ...
crosswordlabs v1 2015-03-30
Across
- International trade
- Externalities and transaction costs
- Economics of common pool resources
- Efficient markets hypothesis
- Industrial organization and theory of regulation
- Economic growth
- Unemployment and search costs
- Asset pricing and options pricing
- Input-output analysis
- Game theory applied to industrial organization issues
- Asset prices and optimal portfolio
- Mathematical proof of market equilibrium
- Allocation of resources in a centrally planned economy
- Economics of social issues
- Uncertainty and transactions costs
- Mechanism design theory
- Growth and development
- Non-cooperative game theory equilibrium
- Deferred algorithm in game theory
- IS-LM model
- Financial markets’ impact on monetary and fiscal policy
- Social choice and market equilibrium
Down
- Applications of deferred algorithm to
- Trade and development
- Options pricing
- Vector autoregression (VAR)applications in finance
- Life Cycle Hypothesis
- Mathematical principles to optimization
- Application of statistical methods to economic history
- Growth and development
- Uncertainty and macroeconomic policy
- Permanent income hypothesis
- Auctions and game theory
- Rational expectations and macroeconomic policy
- Game theory
- International and interregional trade issues
- Father of econometrics
- Economic development of various cultures
- Repeated games
- Behavioral finance
- National income accounting
- Decision-making with bounded rationality and satisficing
42 Clues: Game theory • IS-LM model • Repeated games • Options pricing • Economic growth • Behavioral finance • International trade • Trade and development • Life Cycle Hypothesis • Input-output analysis • Growth and development • Father of econometrics • Growth and development • Mechanism design theory • Auctions and game theory • Economics of social issues • National income accounting • ...
AUTHOR NAMES 2020-04-26
12 Clues: Cybernetics • Genetic theory • Cognitive theory • Hierarchy of needs • Psychosocial theory • Operant conditioning • Cartilaginous theory • Social learning theory • Classical conditioning • Sutural dominance theory • Functional matrix concept • Psychosexual theory/Psychoanalytic theory
Human Development Theories 2024-12-11
Across
- The amount of substages in Piaget’s Sensorimotor stage
- Theorist whose theory spans from birth to age 12
- Theorist whose theory spans from birth to age 7
- Stimulus that turns from Neutral to Conditioned
- The analogy for Freud’s Components of Personality
- The way the brain processes and adds new information
- Freud’s theory
- The understanding of how shape doesn’t change quantity
- Animal used for Classical Conditioning
- Name of clown used in Bandura’s Social Learning Theory
Down
- Meant to encourage behaviour
- Acronym for when a task can be done with help
- (of an Object)when a child cannot see an object, therefore it doesn’t exist
- The second stage in Paiget’s Theory
- Theorist whose theory spans the entire lifespan
- Creator of the Stanford Prison Experiment
- Creator of the Hierarchy of Needs
- Creator of Operant Conditioning
- How Bandura said we learn
19 Clues: Freud’s theory • How Bandura said we learn • Meant to encourage behaviour • Creator of Operant Conditioning • Creator of the Hierarchy of Needs • The second stage in Paiget’s Theory • Animal used for Classical Conditioning • Creator of the Stanford Prison Experiment • Acronym for when a task can be done with help • Theorist whose theory spans from birth to age 7 • ...
What's In The Universe? 2021-10-20
Across
- made the fields of extragalactic astronomy and observational cosmology
- what allows us to function
- definition of color
- one of the first particles
- creator of the steady-state theory
- the study of everything in space
- the first particle
- developed the special and general theories of relativity
- where our planets are located
Down
- measurement of radiation frequencies
- the creation of the universe
- accidentally discovered CMB
- leftover radiation from the big bang
- what happens to light when it moves away from us
- space and its contents
- graph that measures wavelength signals
16 Clues: the first particle • definition of color • space and its contents • what allows us to function • one of the first particles • accidentally discovered CMB • the creation of the universe • where our planets are located • the study of everything in space • creator of the steady-state theory • measurement of radiation frequencies • leftover radiation from the big bang • ...
GUESS ME LIKE A LIFETIME! 2023-11-27
Across
- The nurse formulates an action plan and goals based on the patient’s health information.
- She illustrated the interactional phases, which are empathy, rapport, original encounter, etc.
- The nurse interprets and identifies the data.
- The nurse will execute the action and goals.
- It is a theory by Florence Nightiangle in which she emphasizes the strong influence of the environment on a patient’s health.
- She made the “Notes on Nursing.”
- Who developed the metaparadigm of nursing theory?
- Congruence, empathy, and warmth are characterized by her for helping-trust relationship.
- She focused on a sociological anthropology nursing theory that illuminated the preservation, transaction, and adaptation of one’s culture.
- She established the self-care deficit theory.
Down
- What is the other term for derivable consequences, as it is one of the criteria used for nursing theory analysis
- The nurse will draw conclusions about whether the action and goal are effective.
- The restorative subsystem, as the 8th added subsystem, is in the theory of _______system.
- Defined nursing as all: a refuge and the body of the patients.
- The nurse obtains information and vital signs about the patient’s health concerns.
- It is a type of concept in theory that is defined in a way that exists but has neither physical nor material form.
- Provides a goal and reason for a theory.
- The orientation, identification, exploitation, and resolution phases belong to the theory of ___________ relations.
- She defined the caring elements, which are faith, love, tending, etc.
- She highlighted the importance of adaptation and responses in nursing.
20 Clues: She made the “Notes on Nursing.” • Provides a goal and reason for a theory. • The nurse will execute the action and goals. • The nurse interprets and identifies the data. • She established the self-care deficit theory. • Who developed the metaparadigm of nursing theory? • Defined nursing as all: a refuge and the body of the patients. • ...
cr 5 final 4062015 2015-04-06
Across
- Auctions and game theory
- Father of econometrics
- Asset prices and optimal portfolio
- Vector autoregression (VAR)applications in finance
- Game theory
- Permanent income hypothesis
- Asymmetric information impacts on macroeconomics
- Allocation of resources in a centrally planned economy
- Principles for maximizing individual and firm behavior
- Externalities and transaction costs
- Decision-making with bounded rationality and satisficing
- Financial markets’ impact on monetary and fiscal policy
- Application of statistical methods to economic history
- Behavioral finance
- Economics of common pool resources
- International and interregional trade issues
- Social choice and market equilibrium
- Mathematical proof of market equilibrium
- Capital asset pricing and valuation of derivatives
- Non-cooperative game theory (_____ equilibrium)
- Game theory applied to industrial organization issues
- Institutions and economic performance
- Trade and development
Down
- Rational expectations and macroeconomic policy
- Input-output analysis
- Unemployment and search costs
- Life Cycle Hypothesis of savings
- Deferred algorithm in game theory
- Options pricing
- IS-LM model
- Information asymmetries and macroeconomic policy
- Industrial organization and theory of regulation
- Economic growth theory and models
- Efficient markets hypothesis
- International trade and capital movements
- Growth and development
- Mechanism design theory
- Economics of social issues (crime, discrimination…)
- Repeated games
- Market design with applications of deferred algorithm
- National income accounting
- Growth and development
42 Clues: Game theory • IS-LM model • Repeated games • Options pricing • Behavioral finance • Input-output analysis • Trade and development • Father of econometrics • Growth and development • Growth and development • Mechanism design theory • Auctions and game theory • National income accounting • Permanent income hypothesis • Efficient markets hypothesis • Unemployment and search costs • ...
Early Years Theorists 2020-01-23
Across
- Social learning theory
- Attachment Theory
- Ecological systems theory
- Cognitive Developmental Theory
- Sociocultural Theory
- Psycho social stage theory
Down
- Educational approach founded by Rudolph Steiner
- Moral understanding stage theory
- Loris Malaguzzi
- Scaffolding theory
- Wrote the book Absorbent minds
- Psychosexual stage theory
12 Clues: Loris Malaguzzi • Attachment Theory • Scaffolding theory • Sociocultural Theory • Social learning theory • Psychosexual stage theory • Ecological systems theory • Psycho social stage theory • Wrote the book Absorbent minds • Cognitive Developmental Theory • Moral understanding stage theory • Educational approach founded by Rudolph Steiner
Vocabulary Assignment for week of 10/9 by Joshua Gerrish 2017-10-13
Across
- discovered the electron by experimenting with a Crookes, or cathode ray, tube
- the relative overall energy of each orbital, and the energy of each orbital increases as the distance from the nucleus increases
- best known for proposing the modern atomic theory and for his research into color blindness
- a Nobel Prize-winning Austrian physicist who developed a number of fundamental results in the field of quantum theory
Down
- a French physicist who made groundbreaking contributions to quantum theory
- British physicist who came to be known as the father of nuclear physics
- the central and most important part of an object, movement, or group, forming the basis for its activity and growth
- used to describe where electrons are when they go around the nucleus of an atom
- a mathematical function that describes the wave-like behavior of either one electron or a pair of electrons in an atom
- the minimum amount of any physical entity involved in an interaction
- the fixed amount of energy that a system described by quantum mechanics, such as a molecule, atom, electron, or nucleus, can have
- a Danish physicist who made foundational contributions to understanding atomic structure and quantum theory
12 Clues: the minimum amount of any physical entity involved in an interaction • British physicist who came to be known as the father of nuclear physics • a French physicist who made groundbreaking contributions to quantum theory • discovered the electron by experimenting with a Crookes, or cathode ray, tube • ...
Famous psychologists 2015-04-16
Across
- Dog experiments for classical conditioning
- theory of stages of moral development
- developed behaviourism
- bobo the doll experiments
- father of contemporary positive psychology
- formed social cultural theory and zone of prozimal development
- developed humanistic psychology
- researched parenting styles, authoritative, authoritarian, and permissive
- theory of cognitive dissonance and social comparison
- Founded analytical psychology, concepts of archetypes and collective unconscious
- social isolation on young monkeys
- researched operant conditioning and leader in behaviourism
- theories of neurosis, feminine psychology, and self-psychology
- father of american psychology, contributed to functionalism
Down
- developed the first widely used intelligence test
- hierarchy of needs
- Father of modern linguistics, major figure in analytic philosophy
- worked on cognitive biases
- infant temperament, infancy behaviours are predictive of behaviours in adolescence
- founder of psychoanalysis and created Oedipus complex
- created attachment theory
- Formed triarchic theory of intelligence
- Established the very first experimental psychology lab in Leipzig
- stage theory of cognitive development
- worked on hypnosis especially with regard to pain control
- stage theory of psychosocial development
- Social psychologist and did social conformity experiments
- Pioneered study of emotions and their relation to facial expressions
28 Clues: hierarchy of needs • developed behaviourism • bobo the doll experiments • created attachment theory • worked on cognitive biases • developed humanistic psychology • social isolation on young monkeys • theory of stages of moral development • stage theory of cognitive development • Formed triarchic theory of intelligence • stage theory of psychosocial development • ...
crosswordlabs v1 2015-03-29
Across
- Financial markets’ impact on monetary and fiscal policy
- IS-LM model
- Non-cooperative game theory equilibrium
- Economics of common pool resources
- Auctions and game theory
- Uncertainty and transactions costs
- Application of statistical methods to economic history
- Permanent income hypothesis
- Economics of social issues
- Trade and development
- Life Cycle Hypothesis
- International trade
- Economic growth
- Repeated games
- Asset prices and optimal portfolio
- Social choice and market equilibrium
- Growth and development
- Uncertainty and macroeconomic policy
- Father of econometrics
- Game theory
- Options pricing
- Mathematical proof of market equilibrium
- Efficient markets hypothesis
- Economic development of various cultures
- Vector autoregression (VAR)applications in finance
Down
- Applications of deferred algorithm to
- Game theory applied to industrial organization issues
- International and interregional trade issues
- Industrial organization and theory of regulation
- Asset pricing and options pricing
- Externalities and transaction costs
- Mathematical principles to optimization
- Growth and development
- Input-output analysis
- Allocation of resources in a centrally planned economy
- Deferred algorithm in game theory
- Mechanism design theory
- Behavioral finance
- Unemployment and search costs
- National income accounting
- Decision-making with bounded rationality and satisficing
- Rational expectations and macroeconomic policy
42 Clues: IS-LM model • Game theory • Repeated games • Economic growth • Options pricing • Behavioral finance • International trade • Input-output analysis • Trade and development • Life Cycle Hypothesis • Growth and development • Growth and development • Father of econometrics • Mechanism design theory • Auctions and game theory • Economics of social issues • National income accounting • ...
Earth & Environmental Crossword 2021-08-25
Across
- the study of rocks and how they form
- the combination of physics and geology to attain more information about earth
- the theory that the universe started with an explosion
- the study of long extinct life
- the study of very large bodies of water
- the theory about sections of earths crust
- the theory that earth is and has been changing with a pattern
- the theory that most rocks were formed during one large scale catastrophic event
- the theory of a compressed electromagnetic field around large objects
- study of celestial bodies
Down
- a form of transference in wave like patterns through the air
- the mapping of above water earth and large bodies of water
- the study of the solid earth
- a type of rock formed inside of a volcano
- the theory that the continents were once one large structure known as Pangea
- the study of why the celestial bodies move the way they do
- the theory that the life on earth has slowly adapted to its environment
- the study of earthquakes and their effects
- a model of our interworking of our celestial bodies
19 Clues: study of celestial bodies • the study of the solid earth • the study of long extinct life • the study of rocks and how they form • the study of very large bodies of water • a type of rock formed inside of a volcano • the theory about sections of earths crust • the study of earthquakes and their effects • a model of our interworking of our celestial bodies • ...
Color 2022-02-18
8 Clues: - Màu của quả phúc bồn tử • - Màu tượng trưng cho máu • - Màu tượng trưng cho hy vọng. • - Màu pha trộn giữa trắng và đỏ • - Màu tượng trưng cho tang tóc. • - Màu pha trộn giữa đen và cam. • - Màu pha trộng giữa vàng và đỏ • - Màu tượng trưng cho sự trong trắng.
Color 2023-11-09
color 2024-07-05
Vision 2022-02-09
Across
- the theory that opposing retinal processes (red-green, yellow-blue, white-black) enable color vision. For example, some cells are stimulated by green and inhibited by red; others are stimulated by red and inhibited by green.
- the light-sensitive inner surface of the eye, containing the receptor rods and cones plus layers of neurons that begin the processing of visual information.
- the transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to help focus images on the retina.
- retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray; necessary for peripheral and twilight vision, when cones don’t respond.
- the dimension of color that is determined by the wavelength of light; what we know as the color names blue, green, and so forth.
- nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of the stimulus, such as shape, angle, or movement.
- the distance from the peak of one light or sound wave to the peak of the next. Electromagnetic wavelengths vary from the short blips of cosmic rays to the long pulses of radio transmission.
Down
- the point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, creating a “blind” spot because no receptor cells are located there.
- the central focal point in the retina, around which the eye’s cones cluster.
- a ring of muscle tissue that forms the colored portion of the eye around the pupil and controls the size of the pupil opening.
- the adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters.
- the amount of energy in a light or sound wave, which we perceive as brightness or loudness, as determined by the wave’s amplitude.
- the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain.
- retinal receptor cells that are concentrated near the center of the retina and that function in daylight or in well-lit conditions. The cones detect fine detail and give rise to color sensations.
- the process by which the eye’s lens changes shape to focus near or far objects on the retina.
- the processing of many aspects of a problem simultaneously; the brain’s natural mode of information processing for many functions, including vision. Contrasts with the step-by-step (serial) processing of most computers and of conscious problem solving.
- the theory that the retina contains three different color receptors—one most sensitive to red, one to green, one to blue—which, when stimulated in combination, can produce the perception of any color.
17 Clues: the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain. • the adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters. • the central focal point in the retina, around which the eye’s cones cluster. • the process by which the eye’s lens changes shape to focus near or far objects on the retina. • ...
color 2020-09-08
color 2019-11-30
8 Clues: coffee is this color • the sun is this color • clouds are this color • this is the color of blood • grass, plants are this color • streets, tires are this color • the sky and the ocean are this color • this color is also the name of a fruit
color 2024-01-13
8 Clues: Not bold • Be careful! • Anger and hostility • Unhealthy sadness and low mood • Strong actions, daring and brave • Not biased in one way or the other/no opinion • To wrap, or place something inside a container • Remove something from a source, for example gas or coal
color 2025-08-11
8 Clues: the color of sea • the color of tree • the color of night • the color of paper • the color of autumn • the color of blood or fire • the color between red and yellow • the color of earth, wood, or coffee
color 2025-09-19
cr 5 final 2015-03-31
Across
- Economic growth
- Financial markets’ impact on monetary and fiscal policy
- Economic development of various cultures
- Growth and development
- Industrial organization and theory of regulation
- Input-output analysis
- International trade
- Repeated games
- Asset prices and optimal portfolio
- Economics of common pool resources
- Applications of deferred algorithm to
- Mechanism design theory
- Social choice and market equilibrium
- Life Cycle Hypothesis
- Application of statistical methods to economic history
- Uncertainty and transactions costs
- Game theory
- Economics of social issues
- Unemployment and search costs
- Decision-making with bounded rationality and satisficing
- IS-LM model
- Mathematical proof of market equilibrium
Down
- Growth and development
- Options pricing
- Game theory applied to industrial organization issues
- Mathematical principles to optimization
- International and interregional trade issues
- Uncertainty and macroeconomic policy
- National income accounting
- Trade and development
- Efficient markets hypothesis
- Allocation of resources in a centrally planned economy
- Permanent income hypothesis
- Behavioral finance
- Asset pricing and options pricing
- Externalities and transaction costs
- Auctions and game theory
- Non-cooperative game theory equilibrium
- Rational expectations and macroeconomic policy
- Father of econometrics
- Deferred algorithm in game theory
- Vector autoregression (VAR)applications in finance
42 Clues: Game theory • IS-LM model • Repeated games • Economic growth • Options pricing • Behavioral finance • International trade • Input-output analysis • Trade and development • Life Cycle Hypothesis • Growth and development • Growth and development • Father of econometrics • Mechanism design theory • Auctions and game theory • National income accounting • Economics of social issues • ...
Pschology 101 2023-11-19
Across
- A stage in Erik Erikson's theory where an individual commits to an identity without exploring alternatives.
- A type of insecure attachment characterized by emotional distance and avoidance of the caregiver.
- Lawrence Kohlberg's theory categorizes moral development into these stages, reflecting different levels of ethical reasoning.
- Piaget's theory divides development into these stages, each marked by distinct cognitive abilities.
- Piaget's concept involving mental structures (schemas) and the processes of fitting new information into existing schemas (assimilation) or modifying schemas to accommodate new information (accommodation).
- A healthy and positive emotional bond formed between an infant and their caregiver.
Down
- A stage in Erik Erikson's theory where an individual has successfully formed a clear and stable identity.
- Sigmund Freud's theory of development, focusing on stages related to sexuality and pleasure.
- An aspect of Erik Erikson's psychosocial stages, specifically addressing the formation of one's identity during adolescence.
- stage in Piaget’s theory of cognitive development; from birth through age 2, a child learns about the world through senses and motor behavior.
- Term associated with Harry Harlow's research on the importance of physical touch and comfort in emotional development
- A level of moral development in Kohlberg's theory where moral judgments are based on self-interest and avoiding punishment.
- Social support/friendships dwindle in number, but remain as close, if not more close than in earlier years.
- A stage in Erik Erikson's theory where an individual is actively exploring different identity options.
- Final stage in Piaget’s theory of cognitive development; from age 11 and up, children are able to deal with abstract ideas and hypothetical situations
- A stage in Erik Erikson's theory where an individual has not yet explored or committed to an identity.
- The highest level of moral development in Kohlberg's theory, where individuals base moral judgments on personal principles and ethics.
- A level of moral development in Kohlberg's theory where moral judgments are influenced by societal norms and expectations.
18 Clues: A healthy and positive emotional bond formed between an infant and their caregiver. • Sigmund Freud's theory of development, focusing on stages related to sexuality and pleasure. • A type of insecure attachment characterized by emotional distance and avoidance of the caregiver. • ...
Theorists of Child Development 2013-05-10
Across
- Encourages parents to trust themselves and enjoy their baby
- Human Ecology theory
- Operant Conditioning theory
- Multiple Intelligence theory
- Socio-cultural theory
Down
- Human Needs theory
- Attachment theory
- Parents as preschool educators
- Children of Challenge
- Psychosocial theory
- Psychoanalytic theory
- Cognitive Development theory
12 Clues: Attachment theory • Human Needs theory • Psychosocial theory • Human Ecology theory • Children of Challenge • Psychoanalytic theory • Socio-cultural theory • Operant Conditioning theory • Cognitive Development theory • Multiple Intelligence theory • Parents as preschool educators • Encourages parents to trust themselves and enjoy their baby
Cr spaces 2015-03-29
Across
- Growth and development
- Economics of common pool resources
- Behavioral finance
- National income accounting
- Life Cycle Hypothesis
- Growth and development
- International and interregional trade issues
- Uncertainty and macroeconomic policy
- Economics of social issues
- Mechanism design theory
- Externalities and transaction costs
- Asset prices and optimal portfolio
- Mathematical proof of market equilibrium
- Options pricing
- Efficient markets hypothesis
- International trade
- Input-output analysis
- IS-LM model
- Applications of deferred algorithm to
- Game theory
- Economic development of various cultures
- Application of statistical methods to economic history
Down
- Trade and development
- Rational expectations and macroeconomic policy
- Vector autoregression (VAR)applications in finance
- Permanent income hypothesis
- Auctions and game theory
- Allocation of resources in a centrally planned economy
- Game theory applied to industrial organization issues
- Repeated games
- Unemployment and search costs
- Social choice and market equilibrium
- Mathematical principles to optimization
- Asset pricing and options pricing
- Industrial organization and theory of regulation
- Non-cooperative game theory equilibrium
- Father of econometrics
- Economic growth
- Financial markets’ impact on monetary and fiscal policy
- Decision-making with bounded rationality and satisficing
- Uncertainty and transactions costs
- Deferred algorithm in game theory
42 Clues: IS-LM model • Game theory • Repeated games • Options pricing • Economic growth • Behavioral finance • International trade • Trade and development • Life Cycle Hypothesis • Input-output analysis • Growth and development • Growth and development • Father of econometrics • Mechanism design theory • Auctions and game theory • National income accounting • Economics of social issues • ...
The Issues With Banning Critical Race Theory 2023-03-21
Across
- Can show unfairness in our society and how we can improve and make an attempt to change it.
- Mainly __ politicians and parents are wanting the ban of teaching critical race theory.
- About __ of students grades 9-12 have experienced racism in school.
Down
- Critical race theory is under attack in __ states in the US.
- The problem mostly impacts __, they won’t learn all the history and different perspectives that they could be learning.
- Some people like parents and politicians believe that critical race theory is __ students in school and should not be allowed.
- Banning critical race theory impacts people of color, __, and the lgbtq community.
7 Clues: Critical race theory is under attack in __ states in the US. • About __ of students grades 9-12 have experienced racism in school. • Banning critical race theory impacts people of color, __, and the lgbtq community. • Mainly __ politicians and parents are wanting the ban of teaching critical race theory. • ...
Nursing Theorists 2022-03-10
Across
- Founder of Bolton's World Health Collaborating Center for Nursing
- developed the theory of interpersonal relations
- this lady’s theory has three components: focal, contextual, and residual
- published her first book along with Evelyn M. Tomlin and Mary Ann P. Swain in 1983
- Revolutionized clinical psychology and counseling in schools
- Her theory states that a nurse and patient should set attainable goals and then both take actions to work towards those goals.
- this lady’s theory identifies the four main elements of nursing as philosophy, a purpose, a practice, and the art.
- currently serving as Associate Professor of nursing at the University of Akron College of Nursing
- her theory deals with the interpersonal aspects of nursing and human-to-human relationships
- Her theory assessed patients' level of independence and provided the best-individualized care for them
Down
- Her theory states that all patients will recover more quickly and holistically by performing their own self-care if possible.
- first woman to serve as a Deputy Surgeon General
- known for her definition of nursing, “The unique function of the nurse is to assist the individual, sick or well, in the performance of those activities contributing to health or its recovery (or to peaceful death) that he would perform unaided if he had the necessary strength, will or knowledge"
- proposed interpersonal theory of personality
- developed the helping art of clinical nursing
- developed a grading policy that required nursing students to prove their abilities in order to be awarded qualifications
- this lady’s theory makes the assumption that care is the essence of nursing and a distinct, dominant, and unifying focus.
- known as the “Lady with the lamp.”
- he contributed to the field of psychology and his theory established the factors that cause a high or low level of self-efficacy
- Her theory states that a holistic approach is key when caring in nursing.
20 Clues: known as the “Lady with the lamp.” • proposed interpersonal theory of personality • developed the helping art of clinical nursing • developed the theory of interpersonal relations • first woman to serve as a Deputy Surgeon General • Revolutionized clinical psychology and counseling in schools • Founder of Bolton's World Health Collaborating Center for Nursing • ...
Pschology 101 2023-11-19
Across
- A stage in Erik Erikson's theory where an individual commits to an identity without exploring alternatives.
- A type of insecure attachment characterized by emotional distance and avoidance of the caregiver.
- Lawrence Kohlberg's theory categorizes moral development into these stages, reflecting different levels of ethical reasoning.
- Piaget's theory divides development into these stages, each marked by distinct cognitive abilities.
- Piaget's concept involving mental structures (schemas) and the processes of fitting new information into existing schemas (assimilation) or modifying schemas to accommodate new information (accommodation).
- A healthy and positive emotional bond formed between an infant and their caregiver.
Down
- A stage in Erik Erikson's theory where an individual has successfully formed a clear and stable identity.
- Sigmund Freud's theory of development, focusing on stages related to sexuality and pleasure.
- An aspect of Erik Erikson's psychosocial stages, specifically addressing the formation of one's identity during adolescence.
- stage in Piaget’s theory of cognitive development; from birth through age 2, a child learns about the world through senses and motor behavior.
- Term associated with Harry Harlow's research on the importance of physical touch and comfort in emotional development
- A level of moral development in Kohlberg's theory where moral judgments are based on self-interest and avoiding punishment.
- Social support/friendships dwindle in number, but remain as close, if not more close than in earlier years.
- A stage in Erik Erikson's theory where an individual is actively exploring different identity options.
- Final stage in Piaget’s theory of cognitive development; from age 11 and up, children are able to deal with abstract ideas and hypothetical situations
- A stage in Erik Erikson's theory where an individual has not yet explored or committed to an identity.
- The highest level of moral development in Kohlberg's theory, where individuals base moral judgments on personal principles and ethics.
- A level of moral development in Kohlberg's theory where moral judgments are influenced by societal norms and expectations.
18 Clues: A healthy and positive emotional bond formed between an infant and their caregiver. • Sigmund Freud's theory of development, focusing on stages related to sexuality and pleasure. • A type of insecure attachment characterized by emotional distance and avoidance of the caregiver. • ...
Terms and Concepts of Art 2026-03-17
Across
- Overarching idea or vision that guides the creation of a work
- The overall arrangement and organization of visual elements
- Tendency or style in art with a specific art philosophy or goal
- Art which is produced by artists who are currently living.
- Art that reduces the world to its essential rather than representing it realistically.
- The study of how colors work together
- The lightness or darkness of a color.
Down
- Visual art form that involves applying pigments, colors, or other materials to a surface
- The size relationship between parts.
- Materials used to create the art
- Art representing recognizable things.
- The use of the imagination or original ideas
- The difference between elements
- Linking personal experiences to their artwork
- The subjective process of assigning meaning and significance to a work
15 Clues: The difference between elements • Materials used to create the art • The size relationship between parts. • Art representing recognizable things. • The study of how colors work together • The lightness or darkness of a color. • The use of the imagination or original ideas • Linking personal experiences to their artwork • ...
Atonement Theories 2015-05-06
Across
- the focus of Moral Influence theory is Christ's -------
- Calvin's three offices of Christ
- Christ the Victor Theory
- Anselm's question, "Why did God become -----?"
- word starting with 'a'
- Anslem is credited with this theory
- ------ conflict or Christ the Victor
- God acts in ---- towards humanity
- important salvation concept for Feminist and Liberation theologians
- Reformation leader who developed the Satisfaction Theory further
- Barth's two themes, "---- as Servant
Down
- What Christ achieves for humanity with God
- Barth's two themes, "------- as Lord
- Calvin's three offices of Christ
- The atoning work of Christ encompasses which aspects of the Gospel story?
- The New Testament has many --------- of atonement
- The Moral Influence Theory is this
- Calvin's three offices of Christ
- credited with the Moral Influence Theory
19 Clues: word starting with 'a' • Christ the Victor Theory • Calvin's three offices of Christ • Calvin's three offices of Christ • Calvin's three offices of Christ • God acts in ---- towards humanity • The Moral Influence Theory is this • Anslem is credited with this theory • Barth's two themes, "------- as Lord • ------ conflict or Christ the Victor • ...
Big Bang Theory 2023-04-13
Across
- A theory that states that the universe started as a hot, dense single point that expanded(and is still expanding), spreading out space, time and matter
- The universe started as a hot, dense single point known as ___________
- Device used to detect CMBR and help provide evidence for the Big Bang
- Light and sound travel in ______
- The perceived stretching or compressing of waves caused by the motion of the wave's source is known as the _______ effect
Down
- The Big Bang is thought to mark the beginning of the universe starting 4.3 _______ years ago
- CMBR stands for cosmic _________ background radiation
- The shift of visible light towards the red end of the color spectrum caused by a light source moving AWAY from the observer
- The Big Bang theory states that the universe is ______________ in all directions
- Changes in the frequency of light waves is seen as _____
10 Clues: Light and sound travel in ______ • CMBR stands for cosmic _________ background radiation • Changes in the frequency of light waves is seen as _____ • Device used to detect CMBR and help provide evidence for the Big Bang • The universe started as a hot, dense single point known as ___________ • ...
Influential Psychologists 2016-04-14
Across
- Known for his concepts of archetypes
- Developed the hierarchy of needs
- Brain damaged by a railroad spike (Not psychologist)
- Known for his studies on conformity
- Known for his experiments on dogs
- Created the stages of psychosocial development
- Developed the first widely used intelligence test
- Developed the inferiority complex
- Developed the theory of cognitive dissonance
- Developed the sociocultural theory
- Known for the "Bobo Doll" experiment
- Developed the attachment theory
- created the theory of cognitive development
- Developed the drive reduction theory
- known as "the father of behaviorism" and conducted the "Little Albert" experiment
Down
- Known as the father of American psychology
- known for his "(blank) box" experiment
- First female president of the APA
- Known for his Stanford prison experiment
- developed the theory of neurotic needs
- Developed the law of effect
- Known for his work with the unconscious
- First president of the APA
- Known for "Monkey" experiment
- Established the first psychology lab
25 Clues: First president of the APA • Developed the law of effect • Known for "Monkey" experiment • Developed the attachment theory • Developed the hierarchy of needs • First female president of the APA • Known for his experiments on dogs • Developed the inferiority complex • Developed the sociocultural theory • Known for his studies on conformity • Known for his concepts of archetypes • ...
Influential Psychologists 2016-04-14
Across
- Known for his concepts of archetypes
- Known for his studies on conformity
- Known as the father of American psychology
- Developed the inferiority complex
- Developed the hierarchy of needs
- First female president of the APA
- Known for his Stanford prison experiment
- Developed the sociocultural theory
- Created the stages of psychosocial development
- Developed the law of effect
- developed the theory of neurotic needs
- known as "the father of behaviorism" and conducted the "Little Albert" experiment
Down
- Brain damaged by a railroad spike (Not psychologist)
- Known for the "Bobo Doll" experiment
- Known for "Monkey" experiment
- Developed the drive reduction theory
- Developed the theory of cognitive dissonance
- Known for his experiments on dogs
- Developed the attachment theory
- Established the first psychology lab
- Known for his work with the unconscious
- known for his "(blank) box" experiment
- created the theory of cognitive development
- Developed the first widely used intelligence test
- First president of the APA
25 Clues: First president of the APA • Developed the law of effect • Known for "Monkey" experiment • Developed the attachment theory • Developed the hierarchy of needs • Known for his experiments on dogs • Developed the inferiority complex • First female president of the APA • Developed the sociocultural theory • Known for his studies on conformity • Known for his concepts of archetypes • ...
Earth and life science 2018-08-06
Across
- moon un-illuminated side
- It is a blue planet due to methane gas in its athmosphere
- It has a fastest winds in the solar system and has 8 moons
- Solid debris colliding to form planet
- Largest and most massive planet
- An intentional split
- It dissolves minerals
- theory Automatically mean that the creationist theory is wrong
- This theory is far different from all other theories
Down
- theory Explanation for the formation of solar system
- weathering Changes the shape and size
- action It is the process of freezing and thawing
- gibbous Appears to be more than one half but not fully illuminated by direct sunlight
- The study of solar system
- Revolves in 88 days
- Quarter one-half of the moon appears to be illuminated by direct sunlight
- Moon of pluto
- action Root system causes rocks to crack
- bang theory This theory says that universe was in tiny ball,and it exploded and created all the stars and planets to existence
- Study of earth
20 Clues: Moon of pluto • Study of earth • Revolves in 88 days • An intentional split • It dissolves minerals • The study of solar system • Largest and most massive planet • moon un-illuminated side • Solid debris colliding to form planet • weathering Changes the shape and size • action Root system causes rocks to crack • ...
TFN 2022-01-15
Across
- 19 Created the Human becoming Theory of Nursing
- 4 Nursing research pioneer
- 18 Developed the Theory of Comfort
- 2 Mother of Psychiatric nursing
- 3 Most famous nurse of the 20th century
- 15 Developed the Care, Cure and Core Nursing
- 1 Pioneer modern nursing Polar area diagram
- 7 Developed of the Science of Unitary Human Beings
- 14 Known for Her book From Novice to Expert
- 16 Nursing Theorist in 1956
- 10 developed First community mental health program
- 5 Psychiatric health nurse theorist
Down
- 13 Developed the Transcultural Nursing Theory or Culture Care Nursing Theory
- 17 She advanced the knowledge of the discipline of Nursing
- 11 Developed Adaptation model of Nursing
- 8 Developed of Orem Model of nursing
- 9 Developed the Theory of Goal Attainment
- 12 Developed the Theory of Human Caring
- 20 Developed the Conceptual model of nursing called the helping art of Clinical Nursing
- 6 Creator of the Behavioral System Model
20 Clues: 4 Nursing research pioneer • 16 Nursing Theorist in 1956 • 2 Mother of Psychiatric nursing • 18 Developed the Theory of Comfort • 5 Psychiatric health nurse theorist • 8 Developed of Orem Model of nursing • 3 Most famous nurse of the 20th century • 12 Developed the Theory of Human Caring • 11 Developed Adaptation model of Nursing • 6 Creator of the Behavioral System Model • ...
Criminal Theories 2026-05-13
Across
- Says that human behavior is controlled by biological, psychological and social factors, not by free will
- This perspective suggests that crime is the result of a power struggle. The laws are influenced by people in power
- The theory that people make the active choice to commit crime--a criminal weighs the costs and benefits of committing a crime
- This theory suggests that when social bonds are weakened or broken, people are more likely to commit crime. Social ties control the urge to commit crime.
- This theory suggests that crime occurs as a part of a daily routine. Suggests that crime only needs a motivated offender, an absence of a capable guardian and a suitable target.
- These are crimes that are wrong by their very nature--these crimes are bad in all situations
- This theory says that behavior is learned and will be maintained or stopped with rewards or punishment
- This theory says that people learn crime when associating with those involved in crime.
Down
- This theory about why women commit crime emphasizes that factors, both internal and external to the individual, are instrumental in predicting violence.
- This theory suggests that those with power may be labeled as deviant by the elites in society as a way to control others
- This theory is short for Feminist Ecological Model. This theory takes into account social, historical, institutional, and individual factors.
- This theory suggests that the reason that women commit crime is due to the way that women’s lives are influenced by structural oppression, gender expectations, gender socialization, and punitive societal responses to behaviors.
- The people agree on the laws. They have come to a consensus about what the laws should be
- This theory suggests that by labeling someone a criminal, they will continue to engage in criminal activity
- This theory suggests that criminals are born. Criminals have specific physical traits. Criminals are less evolved a represent an earlier version of humans
- This theory suggests that criminal behavior could be explained by looking at someone's entire life.
- This is the violation of a norm. It is not necessarily always a criminal.
- The idea that all actions should create the most good for the most amount of people
- This theory suggests that the reason that women commit crime has to do with the way women process trauma. It suggests that trauma can distort women’s conceptualization of health relationships and hamper psychological development.
- Credited with creating avatism. Believes that criminals are born.
- This theory suggests that when there is strain between what a person wants to achieve and the means to achieve it, they will commit a crime.
- These are crimes that we decide as a society are bad. They are not necessarily wrong but they are criminal
22 Clues: Credited with creating avatism. Believes that criminals are born. • This is the violation of a norm. It is not necessarily always a criminal. • The idea that all actions should create the most good for the most amount of people • This theory says that people learn crime when associating with those involved in crime. • ...
Sensation & Perception pt. 2 2022-03-31
Across
- The adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters.
- Outermost layer that protects the eye and bends light to provide focus.
- The theory that opposing retinal processes (red-green, yellow-blue, white-black) enable color vision.
- A lab device for testing depth perception in infants and young animals
- Retinal receptor cells that are concentrated near the center of the retina and that function in daylight or well-lit conditions.
- Retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray; necessary for peripheral and twilight vision.
- The dimension of color that is determined by the wavelength of light.
- Nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of the stimulus, such as shape, angle, or movement.
- The light-sensitive inner surface of the eye, containing the receptor rods and cones plus layers of neurons that begin the processing of visual information.
- The amount of energy in a light or sound wave, which we perceive as brightness or loudness, as determined by the wave’s amplitude.
- An organized whole; these types of psychologists emphasize our tendency to integrate pieces of info. into meaningful wholes.
- The central focal point in the retina, around which the eye's cones cluster
- The nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain.
Down
- The controversial claim that perception can occur apart from sensory input; includes telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition. (2 words/separated by dash)
- The theory that the retina contains three different color receptors which, when stimulated in combination, can produce the perception of any color.
- A mental predisposition to perceive one thing and not another. (2 words/separated by dash)
- The transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to help focus images on the retina.
- The distance from the peak of one light or sound wave to the peak of the next.
- The point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, where no receptor cells are located.
- Processing of many aspects of a problem simultaneously (brain uses it for vision).
- German scientist & philosopher who studied our awareness of faint stimuli, later calling them our absolute thresholds.
- A ring of muscle tissue that forms the colored portion of the eye around the pupil and controls the size of the pupil opening.
22 Clues: The nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain. • The dimension of color that is determined by the wavelength of light. • A lab device for testing depth perception in infants and young animals • Outermost layer that protects the eye and bends light to provide focus. • The adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters. • ...
Famous Psychologists 2014-04-07
Across
- Functionalism
- First intelligence test
- Taste Aversion
- Hierarchy of needs
- Theory of Multiple Intelligences
- Experiment with monkeys
- Developmental stages
- Stages of psychosocial development
- Conformity experiment
- Known for his experiment that challenges the validity of psychiatry diagnosis
- Theory of the forgetting curve and spacing effect
- Father of client centered therapy
- Work on classical conditioning
- Founded analytical psychology
Down
- Study of emotions and facial expressions
- Operant Conditioning Chamber
- Father of cognitive therapy
- Behaviourism
- Social Learning Theory
- Study on obedience to authority
- Development of attachment theory
- Research on human memory
- Famous for his research on hypnosis
- Moral Stages of Development
- Social comparison theory and cognitive dissonance
- Work on Temperament
- Standford Prison Experiment
- Father of psychoanalysis
28 Clues: Behaviourism • Functionalism • Taste Aversion • Hierarchy of needs • Work on Temperament • Developmental stages • Conformity experiment • Social Learning Theory • First intelligence test • Experiment with monkeys • Research on human memory • Father of psychoanalysis • Father of cognitive therapy • Moral Stages of Development • Standford Prison Experiment • Operant Conditioning Chamber • ...
Color 2016-09-04
8 Clues: opposites • pure color • adjacent colors • color wheel inventor • such as yellow-green • lightness or darkness • such as green or violet • such as red, yellow or blue
Color 2019-07-08
color 2023-08-10
8 Clues: The color of grass. • The color of the sun. • The color of the soil. • The color of the plum. • The color of the ocean • The color of the snow. • The color of the night. • The color of a ripe apple.
Color 2023-08-11
Across
- is a royal color, like the dress of a princess. Orange is the color of a juicy orange fruit or a sunset. Pink is a soft and lovely color, like the petals of a flower.
- is as dark as the night sky and the color of some animals like bears.
- is the color of chocolate and the dirt in the garden.
- is pure and snowy, like a fluffy cloud or a polar bear's fur.
Down
- is the color of grass and leaves on trees.
- is as sunny as the sun itself and the color of happy flowers.
- is the color of the sky on a sunny day and the ocean.
- is like the color of a bright apple or a stop sign.
8 Clues: is the color of grass and leaves on trees. • is like the color of a bright apple or a stop sign. • is the color of chocolate and the dirt in the garden. • is the color of the sky on a sunny day and the ocean. • is as sunny as the sun itself and the color of happy flowers. • is pure and snowy, like a fluffy cloud or a polar bear's fur. • ...
color 2022-09-09
The World of Makeup 2022-05-26
Across
- Our first service core value
- gives the skin a warm glow and an instant healthy pop of color on the cheeks.
- used to crease illusion of brightness & light onto the face.
- a secondary colour
- for the lips
- our third service core value
- used to enhance the natural eyelashes
- used to define, enhance or change the shape of the eyes.
Down
- Our second service core value
- Evens out the skin to create flawless skin.
- The number of tertiary colours in the colour wheel
- used to cover under eye dark circles, blemishes and small dark spots on the face.
- adds color and definition to the eye area.
- A prep product use after skincare and before foundation, to help foundation stays longer.
- A theory that helps us correct unwanted colours on someone's skin
- a primary colour
16 Clues: for the lips • a primary colour • a secondary colour • Our first service core value • our third service core value • Our second service core value • used to enhance the natural eyelashes • adds color and definition to the eye area. • Evens out the skin to create flawless skin. • The number of tertiary colours in the colour wheel • ...
Introduction to Color and Color Mixing 2025-11-22
Across
- The thickness or fluidity of a paint (high viscosity = thick, holds texture and brushstrokes; low viscosity = fluid, good for washes, glazing, or smooth pours).
- A hue mixed with white to make it lighter (produces pastel versions of the original color).
- three equally spaced colors on the color wheel creating balanced contrast (e.g., red, yellow, blue).
- Colors made by mixing a primary color with a neighboring secondary color (e.g., yellow-green, blue-violet), filling the spaces on the color wheel between primaries and secondaries.
- colors are created by mixing pigments or inks—mixing absorbs/blocks wavelengths, often making darker results; used in painting and printing.
- Colors that sit next to each other on the color wheel (e.g., blue, blue-green, green); they create harmonious, cohesive palettes and are often calming.
- the pure color family (like red, blue, or yellow) before any white, black, or gray is added; the basic “name” of a color.
- two complementary pairs used together for a diverse yet structured palette.
- colors are created by mixing light—adding wavelengths makes lighter colors; used for screens.
- Colors made by mixing two primary colors (e.g., red + yellow = orange; blue + yellow = green; red + blue = purple).
Down
- the intensity or purity of a color; highly saturated colors are vivid and bright, while desaturated colors look muted or dull.
- A color that does not correspond to a single wavelength of light (magenta is perceived when red and blue/violet are combined); it exists because of how our brains interpret mixed wavelengths rather than as a single spectral hue.
- A hue mixed with gray (a combination of white and black) which reduces saturation and creates more subtle, muted colors.
- Pairs of colors opposite each other on the color wheel (e.g., red and green) that increase each other’s intensity when placed side by side and neutralize each other (produce grays/browns) when mixed.
- A hue mixed with black to make it darker (used to create depth but can become muddy if overused).
- the set of foundational colors used by a color model (in RYB: red, yellow, blue for paint; in CMY: cyan, magenta, yellow for printing; in RGB: red, green, blue for light) that cannot be created by mixing other colors within that model.
- how light or dark a color is; value controls contrast and depth in a composition (lighter = higher value, darker = lower value).
17 Clues: two complementary pairs used together for a diverse yet structured palette. • A hue mixed with white to make it lighter (produces pastel versions of the original color). • colors are created by mixing light—adding wavelengths makes lighter colors; used for screens. • ...
CROSSWORD PUZZLE: THEORIES ON NURSING 2022-01-13
Across
- It was developed by Dorothy Johnson that stresses the importance of research-knowledge about the effect of nursing care on patients.
- A motivational theory in psychology compromising five (5) tier model of human needs, often depicted as hierarchical levels within a pyramid.
- Culture Care Diversity and Universality Theory that gives importance in cultural and care knowledge in nursing practice.
- This theory is an expansion of Piaget’s theory having three (3) levels of reasoning namely; pre-conventional, conventional and post-conventional.
- This theory describes the importance of promoting adaptation on nursing processes.
- Orlando’s model that explain the role of the nurse in finding out and meeting the patient’s immediate needs for help.
- This theory is composed of ten (10) steps in identifying patient’s problems and eleven (11) skills used in developing a nursing care plan.
- The Orem Model of Nursing used in rehabilitation and primary care of or other settings in which patients are encouraged to be independent.
- A system theory that includes purpose, content and process, and breaking down the “whole” and analyzing the parts.
Down
- Henderson’s Theory that emphasizes the importance of increasing the patient’s independence to continue the progress after hospitalization.
- This Nursing theory proposes that expert nurses develop skills and understanding of patient care over time through education and experiences; from Novice to Expert.
- Levine’s Model focusing on conserving the patient’s energy for health and healing.
- , Theory that deals with the interpersonal aspects of nursing, focusing especially to mental health by Joyce Travelbee.
- A theory about the importance of environment in client’s healing process.
- A theory that advocate that “caritas” means love and charity and caring is an endeavor to mediate faith, hope and love through tending, playing and learning
- King’s Model proposing three interacting systems; a person system, an interpersonal system and a social system.
- It is also known as the "Three Cs of Lydia Hall", containing three (3) independent but interconnected circles.
- This model provides a comprehensive holistic and system-based approach to nursing that contains an element of flexibility by Neuman.
- Main goal is to help the patient through the family, when nurses can be of great assistance to prevent at the very beginning serious complication.
- Nursing as a health care profession would prove its worth of being at par in quality performance with other health care professionals by Divinagracia.
20 Clues: A theory about the importance of environment in client’s healing process. • Levine’s Model focusing on conserving the patient’s energy for health and healing. • This theory describes the importance of promoting adaptation on nursing processes. • It is also known as the "Three Cs of Lydia Hall", containing three (3) independent but interconnected circles. • ...
CROSSWORD PUZZLE: THEORIES ON NURSING 2022-01-13
Across
- Theory that deals with the interpersonal aspects of nursing, focusing especially to mental health by Joyce Travelbee.
- A motivational theory in psychology compromising five (5) tier model of human needs, often depicted as hierarchical levels within a pyramid.
- This theory is composed of ten (10) steps in identifying patient’s problems and eleven (11) skills used in developing a nursing care plan.
- This theory is an expansion of Piaget’s theory having three (3) levels of reasoning namely; pre-conventional, conventional and post-conventional.
- Culture Care Diversity and Universality Theory that gives importance in cultural and care knowledge in nursing practice.
- Main goal is to help the patient through the family, when nurses can be of great assistance to prevent at the very beginning serious complication.
- King’s Model proposing three interacting systems; a person system, an interpersonal system and a social system.
- This model provides a comprehensive holistic and system-based approach to nursing that contains an element of flexibility by Neuman.
Down
- A theory about the importance of environment in client’s healing process.
- A theory that advocate that “caritas” means love and charity and caring is an endeavor to mediate faith, hope and love through tending, playing and learning
- Levine’s Model focusing on conserving the patient’s energy for health and healing.
- It was developed by Dorothy Johnson that stresses the importance of research-knowledge about the effect of nursing care on patients.
- Orlando’s model that explain the role of the nurse in finding out and meeting the patient’s immediate needs for help.
- This Nursing theory proposes that expert nurses develop skills and understanding of patient care over time through education and experiences; from Novice to Expert.
- Nursing as a health care profession would prove its worth of being at par in quality performance with other health care professionals by Divinagracia.
- Henderson’s Theory that emphasizes the importance of increasing the patient’s independence to continue the progress after hospitalization.
- The Orem Model of Nursing used in rehabilitation and primary care of or other settings in which patients are encouraged to be independent.
- It is also known as the "Three Cs of Lydia Hall", containing three (3) independent but interconnected circles.
- A system theory that includes purpose, content and process, and breaking down the “whole” and analyzing the parts.
- This theory describes the importance of promoting adaptation on nursing processes.
20 Clues: A theory about the importance of environment in client’s healing process. • Levine’s Model focusing on conserving the patient’s energy for health and healing. • This theory describes the importance of promoting adaptation on nursing processes. • It is also known as the "Three Cs of Lydia Hall", containing three (3) independent but interconnected circles. • ...
Exploring Art Ways of Expression and Aesthetics 2024-06-22
Across
- Art of capturing images with a camera.
- Art form involving carving or modeling materials into 3D objects.
- Art Art form intended for display in public spaces.
- Art period marked by the revival of classical art and learning.
- Art movement known for light and color, featuring artists like Monet.
- Performing art involving rhythmic body movement.
- Element of art related to shape and structure.
Down
- Art form that utilizes computers and technology.
- Study of colors and their combinations.
- Art movement that embraces a mix of styles and interpretations.
- The material or technique used by an artist.
- Literary art form using meter and rhyme.
- Element of art related to surface feel, like smooth or rough.
- Philosophy of beauty and artistic taste.
14 Clues: Art of capturing images with a camera. • Study of colors and their combinations. • Literary art form using meter and rhyme. • Philosophy of beauty and artistic taste. • The material or technique used by an artist. • Element of art related to shape and structure. • Art form that utilizes computers and technology. • Performing art involving rhythmic body movement. • ...
