color theory Crossword Puzzles
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. • ...
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 • ...
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 • ...
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 • ...
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 2021-09-20
color 2022-04-05
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.
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
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. • ...
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. • ...
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 • ...
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 ___________ • ...
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 • ...
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. • ...
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 • ...
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 • ...
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 • ...
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. • ...
Color TV 2015-12-15
Across
- what happened the first time he tried to get his invention approved
- what year was it created in
- how wide was the tv
- what was peter the head of
- what was the first name of the man who created the first color tv
- what was another disadvantage to the tv
- who did he base his invention off of
- what was the last name of the man who created the first color tv
Down
- what happened to the demonstration that he was supposed to do
- how tall was the tv
- what was the name of the first color tv show
- how old was he when he created the color tv
- what was a disadvantage of the tv
13 Clues: how tall was the tv • how wide was the tv • what was peter the head of • what year was it created in • what was a disadvantage of the tv • who did he base his invention off of • what was another disadvantage to the tv • how old was he when he created the color tv • what was the name of the first color tv show • what happened to the demonstration that he was supposed to do • ...
Color Edition! 2022-06-15
13 Clues: Ash • Grass • Paper • Grapes • flamingo • Strawberries! • Darkness/Shade • ocean/blueberries • Color of dirt/mud • The brightest color • Than without the 'H' • Green and blue mixed together • The name of the color is the name of a fruit
Color Splash 2025-04-11
Across
- A shiny metal colour like treasure.
- The colour of grapes and lavender.
- The colour of apples and stop signs.
- The colour of pumpkins and tigers.
- Sparkly like stars and coins.
- A mix of seven vibrant colours.
- The colour of snow and clouds.
- The colour of flamingos.
Down
- The colour of grass and leaves.
- The colour of the sun and bananas.
- The colour of chocolate and tree trunk
- The colour of storm clouds and elephants.
- The colour of night and shadows.
13 Clues: The colour of flamingos. • Sparkly like stars and coins. • The colour of snow and clouds. • The colour of grass and leaves. • A mix of seven vibrant colours. • The colour of night and shadows. • The colour of the sun and bananas. • The colour of grapes and lavender. • The colour of pumpkins and tigers. • A shiny metal colour like treasure. • The colour of apples and stop signs. • ...
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. • ...
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. • ...
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 • ...
Sensation & Perception pt. 2 2022-03-31
Across
- 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 distance from the peak of one light or sound wave to the peak of the next.
- Retinal receptor cells that are concentrated near the center of the retina and that function in daylight or well-lit conditions.
- The controversial claim that perception can occur apart from sensory input; includes telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition. (2 words/separated by dash)
- The transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to help focus images on the retina.
- The dimension of color that is determined by the wavelength of light.
- An organized whole; these types of psychologists emphasize our tendency to integrate pieces of info. into meaningful wholes.
- A mental predisposition to perceive one thing and not another. (2 words/separated by dash)
- The theory that opposing retinal processes (red-green, yellow-blue, white-black) enable color vision.
- German scientist & philosopher who studied our awareness of faint stimuli, later calling them our absolute thresholds.
Down
- The central focal point in the retina, around which the eye's cones cluster
- The point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, where no receptor cells are located.
- Nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of the stimulus, such as shape, angle, or movement.
- 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 light-sensitive inner surface of the eye, containing the receptor rods and cones plus layers of neurons that begin the processing of visual information.
- Retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray; necessary for peripheral and twilight vision.
- The theory that the retina contains three different color receptors which, when stimulated in combination, can produce the perception of any color.
- Processing of many aspects of a problem simultaneously (brain uses it for vision).
- The nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain.
- A lab device for testing depth perception in infants and young animals
- 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.
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 central focal point in the retina, around which the eye's cones cluster • ...
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 • ...
Random Science Facts 2023-05-03
Across
- The human body has 7 octillion ____
- the strongest muscle in the human body is __ muscle
- just a jaguar with a black color mutation
- animals without a backbone
- a human ____ stops growing after the age of 18 years
- the “Father of Western Medicine”, first person to explain disease
- the sheep is the first cloned mammal using an adult cell.
- human organ that is 17-20 square feet
Down
- There are more ____ on Earth than stars in our galaxy
- father of taxonomy (science of classification)
- there's more ___ in a human mouth than there are people in the world
- O- blood types are universal ___
- the most common species of bacteria found in humans
- Humans can see more shades of ___ than any other color
- wrote the “Theory of Evolution”
15 Clues: animals without a backbone • wrote the “Theory of Evolution” • O- blood types are universal ___ • The human body has 7 octillion ____ • human organ that is 17-20 square feet • just a jaguar with a black color mutation • father of taxonomy (science of classification) • the strongest muscle in the human body is __ muscle • the most common species of bacteria found in humans • ...
Astronomy #1 2025-09-30
Across
- The theory that explains what is happening in the universe
- What our sun is currently making
- A piece of evidence for the expanding universe
- A star and everything that orbits around it
- Unit of measurement used for distances outside of our solar system
- The color with the longest wavelength
Down
- Everything, everywhere
- A ball of rock, metal, and/or gas in orbit around a star
- The color with the shortest wavelength
- A ball of gas, producing light and heat through nuclear fusion
- The largest object in the solar system
- Name of the galaxy you are currently in
- The element that makes up 91% of the universe
- _________ Unit, a measurement used inside of our solar system
14 Clues: Everything, everywhere • What our sun is currently making • The color with the longest wavelength • The color with the shortest wavelength • The largest object in the solar system • Name of the galaxy you are currently in • A star and everything that orbits around it • The element that makes up 91% of the universe • A piece of evidence for the expanding universe • ...
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
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. • ...
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
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
photosynthesis crossword 2023-09-27
Across
- stores energy so it can be used for later
- coverts sun rays to chemical energy.
- sugars in foods.
- turns broken down food into energy
- who invented photosynthesis theory.
- absorb pigments of color
Down
- the producer of energy in photosynthesis
- get energy by eating other organisms.
- energy absorbed by the sun
- 6CO2+ 6H2O → C6H12O6 + 6O2
- organisms that makes its own food.
- located in the chloroplast
- a type of sugar
13 Clues: a type of sugar • sugars in foods. • absorb pigments of color • energy absorbed by the sun • 6CO2+ 6H2O → C6H12O6 + 6O2 • located in the chloroplast • organisms that makes its own food. • turns broken down food into energy • who invented photosynthesis theory. • coverts sun rays to chemical energy. • get energy by eating other organisms. • the producer of energy in photosynthesis • ...
Unit 4 AP Psych 2021-09-29
Across
- allow us to see color
- to perceive a difference in stimuli they must differ by a CONSTANT PERCENTAGE
- conversion of one form of energy to another
- theory that opposing retinal processes allow color vision
- an organized whole
- minimum amount of stimulation
- sense of body movement and position (specifically the head), balance
- diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation
Down
- process of organizing and interpreting info into something we can understand
- system for sensing position and motion of body parts
- to detect something 50% of the time
- making perceptions based off experience and expectations
- something below our absolute threshold
- help us detect things in dim light/peripheral vision
- process where sensory receptors take in stimulus from our environment
- analysis that starts with small pieces to build a whole interpretation
16 Clues: an organized whole • allow us to see color • minimum amount of stimulation • to detect something 50% of the time • something below our absolute threshold • conversion of one form of energy to another • system for sensing position and motion of body parts • help us detect things in dim light/peripheral vision • making perceptions based off experience and expectations • ...
Personality 2020-08-25
Across
- Inkblot Test of Personality
- Theory of Introverts Extroverts and Ambiverts
- Reciprocal Determinism
- Pyknic, Athletic and Leptosomatic personalities
- Psycho-social theory of Personality
- Theory of Self-Actualization
- Feminine Psychology
Down
- Psycho-sexual theory of personality
- Somato type theory
- Functional Autonomy
- Source and Surface traits
- Theory of Self
- Locus (variables) of Control
- Sanguine/Choleric/Phlegmatic/Melancholic personalities
14 Clues: Theory of Self • Somato type theory • Functional Autonomy • Feminine Psychology • Reciprocal Determinism • Source and Surface traits • Inkblot Test of Personality • Locus (variables) of Control • Theory of Self-Actualization • Psycho-sexual theory of personality • Psycho-social theory of Personality • Theory of Introverts Extroverts and Ambiverts • ...
Psychologists 2014-04-07
Across
- Developmental psychologist;parenting styles
- Triarchic theory;intelligence
- Operant conditioning
- Experiment on attachment with monkeys
- Constructive memory studies
- Hierarchy of needs;humanist
- 3 stages of moral development
- Observational learning;bobo dolls
- Study on conformity
- Humanist;created client-centered therapy;unconditional positive regard
- Neo Freudian;personal/collective unconscious
- Language acquisition theory
- Labeling experiment
- Obedience study;shock
- Disagreed with Freud;personality is continually changed rather than being decided early in life
Down
- 4 stage theory of cognitive development
- Stanford Prison experiment
- Cognitive-behavioral therapist;REBT
- Cognitive Dissonance theory
- Founder of behaviorism
- 8 stages of development
- Criticized Kohlberg;gender-based developmental difference
- Learned helplessness
- Cognitive Triad
- Multiple intelligence
- Mental age;IQ test
- Dissociation theory (hypnosis)
- Classical conditioning
28 Clues: Cognitive Triad • Mental age;IQ test • Study on conformity • Labeling experiment • Operant conditioning • Learned helplessness • Multiple intelligence • Obedience study;shock • Founder of behaviorism • Classical conditioning • 8 stages of development • Stanford Prison experiment • Cognitive Dissonance theory • Constructive memory studies • Hierarchy of needs;humanist • ...
Mathematicians crossword 2025-07-11
Across
- Gives name to a periodicity property
- Certain type of orthogonal polynomials
- Gave a rule for inverting conditional probabilities
- Analyzed singularities of ODEs
- Gives name to isometries of Riemannian spaces
- Axiomatized probability theory
- Pioneer in set theory
- Name of mathematician and writer J. Taine
- Famous topologist
- Author of famous catalogue on differential equations
Down
- Polish logician
- Pioneer in group theory
- Expert in measure theory
- French geometer of the XIX Century
- Gives name to the characteristic of polyhedra
- Gives name to a transformation in integral geometry
- Famous number theorist
- Pioneer on logarithms
- Introduced continuous groups of transformations
- Founder of sequential analysis
- Creator of Erlangen's program
- Famous for catastrophe theory
- Shares an important theorem with S. Ulam
23 Clues: Polish logician • Famous topologist • Pioneer on logarithms • Pioneer in set theory • Famous number theorist • Pioneer in group theory • Expert in measure theory • Creator of Erlangen's program • Famous for catastrophe theory • Analyzed singularities of ODEs • Founder of sequential analysis • Axiomatized probability theory • French geometer of the XIX Century • ...
Ch 6 & 27 Puzzle 2015-12-02
Across
- A ____ number estimates the number of studies reporting non-significant results that would be needed to reverse the conclusion of a significant effect in a meta-analysis
- A ____ review methodically integrates research evidence about a specific research question using carefully developed sampling and data collection procedures
- A ____ model is a visual representation of some aspect of reality
- Roy's ____ model is a theory which views humans as biopsychosocial adaptive systems who cope with change through the process of adaptation
- A ____ theory is a non-nursing model used by nurse researchers
- Currently the leading term in qualitative research that describes systematic review
- A visual representation of heterogeneity, generated using meta-analytic software
- Another term for a grand theory, a theory which describes or explains large segments of the human experience
- ____ bias is the tendency for published studies to over-represent statistically significant findings
- ___ studies are original research investigations
- A ___ is a visual representation of potential publication bias with effects from individual studies plotted on the horizontal and precision plotted on the vertical
- A ____ model is a less formal means of organizing phenomena than a theory; what distinguishes this from a theory is the absence of the deductive system of propositions that explain relationships
- A _____ review is a means of refining the specific question for the systematic review
Down
- An acronym for an explicit reporting guideline for meta-analyses, stands for Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses
- In qualitative research, ____ theory involves conceptualization of the target phenomenon being studied
- The overall conceptual underpinnings of a study
- This theory focuses on patient compliance and postulates that health-seeking behavior is influenced by one's perception of threat to their health and the value associated with actions to reduce the threat
- an abstract generalization that offers a systematic explanation about how phenomena are interrelated
- ___ theory or micro theory has a very narrow scope and are oriented towards action
- ____ literature has a limited distribution and includes dissertations and unpublished reports
20 Clues: The overall conceptual underpinnings of a study • ___ studies are original research investigations • A ____ theory is a non-nursing model used by nurse researchers • A ____ model is a visual representation of some aspect of reality • A visual representation of heterogeneity, generated using meta-analytic software • ...
Yellow Fever Review 2023-12-15
Across
- The name of the city in America where a yellow fever outbreak too place.
- Reed had volunteers sign this type of form so they knew the risks
- The name of the camp where Reed tried to prove the mosquito theory
- This doctor led the team of researchers
- It remains a mystery if Lazear accidentally let a mosquito bite him, or if he did it this way
- Doctors were in need of these brave individuals to prove theories
- Side effects of the fever were intense vomiting, a high fever, and sometimes even skin turning this color
- Only a certain type of mosquito actually bites individuals
Down
- Scientists perform these before testing an experiment
- This Dahkta survived, but got very sick from yellow fever
- The name of the country where the doctors studied the yellow fever outbreak
- This Cuban doctor was once laughed at, but his theory all along was correct.
- In the 1790's, when the yellow fever outbreak occurred Philadelphia, this percent of the population died
- The amount of days the yellow fever germ had to be in a mosquito before it could contaminate someone
- This theory was supported once the contamination theories were proven wrong
- This doctor died studying the yellow fever.
16 Clues: This doctor led the team of researchers • This doctor died studying the yellow fever. • Scientists perform these before testing an experiment • This Dahkta survived, but got very sick from yellow fever • Only a certain type of mosquito actually bites individuals • Reed had volunteers sign this type of form so they knew the risks • ...
nursing theory 2021-12-16
Across
- Statements that explain the relationship between the concepts in a theory
- Coping mechanism from close relationship which results to giving and receiving of love, respect and value
- Tensions that produce alternations in the environment
- According to Rogers’ theory, “continuous and mutual interaction between man and environment” is termed as
- Any change in the internal and external environment that induces a response in the adaptive system
- Who described about 5 levels of nursing experience from novice to expert?
- She formulated the “Science of Unitary Human Beings” theory
- “Carin consists of caative factors that result in the satisfaction of certain human needs”. This explanation was stated by
- A biopsychosocial being in constant reaction interaction with a changing environment
Down
- nursing, The theory proposed by Madeleine M. Leininger
- Determination of how best assist the person in attaining the established goals
- The state of coming back to actual state of health before the illness occurred
- The term which refers the “irreducible, pan dimensional energy field identified by pattern and integral with the human field” is
- Typolgy of 21 nursing problems were explained by
- Outcome or produced results of certain stressors and actions of the line of resistance
- She is the mind behind the “Nursing Process Theory”
- Who explained about “Care, Cure, and Core as three independent but interconnected circles of the nursing mode”?
- Most immediately confronting the person, attracts the most attention
18 Clues: Typolgy of 21 nursing problems were explained by • She is the mind behind the “Nursing Process Theory” • Tensions that produce alternations in the environment • nursing, The theory proposed by Madeleine M. Leininger • She formulated the “Science of Unitary Human Beings” theory • Most immediately confronting the person, attracts the most attention • ...
Music Theory 2018-11-06
Across
- soft
- clef most commonly used
- fires cause great destruction and everything burns
- to help separate and organize notes
- load
- note one beat
- signature to show how many notes you say per measure
- to signify the tempo. what u need to play or sing
- extra soft
- slowly getting louder
Down
- rest takes up four beats/one measure
- do re mi fa sol etc.
- slowly getting quieter
- forte medium loud
- very loud
- rest takes up two notes
- clef it looks like a sad face/ has lower notes
- to signify where you stop playing/singing
18 Clues: soft • load • very loud • extra soft • note one beat • forte medium loud • do re mi fa sol etc. • slowly getting louder • slowly getting quieter • clef most commonly used • rest takes up two notes • to help separate and organize notes • rest takes up four beats/one measure • to signify where you stop playing/singing • clef it looks like a sad face/ has lower notes • ...
Atomic Theory 2022-12-06
Across
- the surrounding orbits of an atom that electrons can jump to.
- Performed the Gold Foil Experiment.
- Proposed the modern atomic theory.
- A subatomic particle with no electric charge.
- The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom.
- The tiny dense center of an atom.
- The amount of mass in an atom.
- A substance that is made up of two or more bonded elements
- The overall charge of an atom.
Down
- A model of an atom that shows electrons circling the atom.
- A negatively charged subatomic particle.
- forms of the same element that contain different numbers of neutrons
- The outermost shell of an atom.
- A subatomic particle with a positive electric charge.
- The structure of the atom.
- Experimented with cathode rays.
- A substance that's made up of one type of atom
- The smallest building block of a substance.
18 Clues: The structure of the atom. • The amount of mass in an atom. • The overall charge of an atom. • The outermost shell of an atom. • Experimented with cathode rays. • The tiny dense center of an atom. • Proposed the modern atomic theory. • Performed the Gold Foil Experiment. • A negatively charged subatomic particle. • The smallest building block of a substance. • ...
PC 2017-11-04
Across
- talking freely to the therapist
- Cognitive Behavior Theory
- classic Conditioning
- redirecting feelings about certain people in one’s life unto the therapist
- counseling strictly adhering to biblical principles by Jay Adams
- Client centered theory
Down
- believes that behaviors are learned & unlearned
- Operant Conditioning
- theory that holds to the idea of unconscious forces that drives behavior and actions.
- theory and approach that aim for a client to gain awareness of what they are experiencing.
- exploring dreams for important information about the unconscious
- ______therapy aims to alter one's sexual orientation
- S.___, author of psychoanalytic theory
- Theory theory believes that people’s thinking can change feelings and beh
- Focuses more on client’s Experience by Fritz & Laura Perls
15 Clues: Operant Conditioning • classic Conditioning • Client centered theory • Cognitive Behavior Theory • talking freely to the therapist • S.___, author of psychoanalytic theory • believes that behaviors are learned & unlearned • ______therapy aims to alter one's sexual orientation • Focuses more on client’s Experience by Fritz & Laura Perls • ...
color vocabulary 2022-11-03
Across
- the liquid that controls the thickness or thinness of paint
- Finely ground colored powders that form paint when mixed with a liquid
- pigment that dissolves in liquid.
- color spectrum bent into a circle
- dark value of a color
- brightness or dullness of a color
- colors that are next to each other on the color wheel
Down
- color scheme that uses one one color plus its tints and shades
- a liquid that holds paint together
- colors opposite each other on the color wheel
- Element of art derived from reflected light.
- name of a spectral color
- light value of a color
13 Clues: dark value of a color • light value of a color • name of a spectral color • pigment that dissolves in liquid. • color spectrum bent into a circle • brightness or dullness of a color • a liquid that holds paint together • Element of art derived from reflected light. • colors opposite each other on the color wheel • colors that are next to each other on the color wheel • ...
Color & Transportation 2025-07-08
Haematology Theory 2019-03-15
Across
- The type of pipette used with an Improved Neubauer Chamber
- number of minutes that a PCV should be spun in a centrifuge
- The type of stain that needs to be cultured with blood
- This happens to a blood smear when uneven pressure is applied
- The stain the third DiffQuik tub
- Decreased total white blood cells
- DiffQuik and Leishmann's are exmaples of this type of stain
- Most common reason for an increased PCV
- Crenation occurs when blood is placed in what type of solution?
- Increased number of monocytes
- Abbreviation for the anti-coagulant used when making blood smears
Down
- The blood cell with orange granules
- The blood cell with blue granules
- This happens to a blood smear when grit is on the spreader
- Section of a PCV containing platelets and white blood cells
- An immature red blood cell
- Red or pink serum
- Yellow serum
18 Clues: Yellow serum • Red or pink serum • An immature red blood cell • Increased number of monocytes • The stain the third DiffQuik tub • The blood cell with blue granules • Decreased total white blood cells • The blood cell with orange granules • Most common reason for an increased PCV • The type of stain that needs to be cultured with blood • ...
Perm Theory 2020-04-17
Across
- Croquignole method is also known as the _______ method
- Generate their own heat through a chemical reaction
- Using appropriate tension without _________ hair to ensure the hair takes on the desired shape
- Applied to regarded and fix hair into new wavy or curly shape
- Method of wrapping hair from the ends to the scalp
- With this method, sometimes the client would have the wave wrapped in the salon, go home and return in the morning for her finished design
- Method of wrapping the hair from scalp to ends
- Phase where curl pattern is achieved by wrapping the hair around perm rods
- After rinsing, a chemical with an _______ pH is applied to re-form hair to take on the shape of a rod
- Invented the first cold wave
Down
- Specialized perm skills will allow you to transform and personalize a client's appearance by ___________ or enhancing their hair sculpture
- Made first real breakthrough with his heat permanent waving machine
- _____ phases of the perm process are of equal importance
- Applied to break disulfide bonds and soften protein structure
- Heat is absorbed from the surroundings
- Soft, wavy, loose-curled texture perm brought about in the 21st century is sometimes referred to as a "_________ perm"
- Hair needs to be wrapped __________ and evenly around each rod
- Phase where perm solution and neutralizer are applied
18 Clues: Invented the first cold wave • Heat is absorbed from the surroundings • Method of wrapping the hair from scalp to ends • Method of wrapping hair from the ends to the scalp • Generate their own heat through a chemical reaction • Phase where perm solution and neutralizer are applied • Croquignole method is also known as the _______ method • ...
Music Theory 2021-09-03
Across
- ____ cadence progression of chord V-VI
- press the soft pedal
- gradually quicker in tempo
- second highest female voice
- something you would never find in simple time
- two notes that sound the same but are written differently
- all together
- always
- lowest singing voices
Down
- mark at the end of the piece
- 2-chord progression that usually occurs at the end of a phrase
- a note that last for 1/2 beats
- is the 3rd degree of a scales
- lowest sounding instrument in Brass family
- very loud in dynamic
- you dont always use a # to raise the 7th note, sometime you use ______
- chord I IV V are _____ chord
- a group of notes sounded together.
18 Clues: always • all together • press the soft pedal • very loud in dynamic • lowest singing voices • gradually quicker in tempo • second highest female voice • mark at the end of the piece • chord I IV V are _____ chord • is the 3rd degree of a scales • a note that last for 1/2 beats • a group of notes sounded together. • ____ cadence progression of chord V-VI • ...
Atomic Theory 2021-08-26
Across
- the scientist who invented the "Billiard Ball Mode"
- same element, different mass
- an atom with lost or gained electrons
- chemist that discovered the orbital model
- The scientist that discredited Leucippus and Democritus
- Subatomic particle with a negative charge
- drop experiment to find charge and mass of the electron
- rejected the idea of only four elements
- the sum of protons and neutrons on the periodic table
- substance that cannot be broken down into a smaller substance
Down
- means atom in greek
- subatomic particle with a positive charge
- a chemical bond of two elements
- a mathematical expression to find the wave function
- electrons at the out edge of the shell
- Subatomic particle with a neutral charge
- who discovered the electron
- type of model that includes element symbol as the nucleus
- atom or molecule that gained or lost an electron
19 Clues: means atom in greek • 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 positive charge • chemist that discovered the orbital model • ...
Havighurst Theory 2021-11-18
Across
- has identified critical developmental tasks
- are modified by interactions with family, experiences at school, and acculturation.
- adulthood period people experience stress due to the double responsibility of caring for the aged parents and the growing children.
- refers to the process of biological maturation inheritance and maturation.
- this stage of development has some predictable physical milestone
- view sees development as more abrupt-a succession of changes
- It is a critical period in setting the pattern for personal and emotional adjustments.
- adulthood period adults are at the peak of physical
- refers to the impact of the environment, which involves the process of learning through experiences
Down
- can be defined as the period that extends from conception to death.
- is a process that creates growth, progress, and positive change.
- is typically viewed as a continual and cumulative process.
- is transformed into a walking,talking toddler within a relatively short period of time.
- is primarily influenced by heredity
- implies personality traits present during infancy
- period that ranges from conception to birth.
- strength and energy.
- adulthood is the period of decline where the person thinks that he has done what he wanted to do and most of his life span is over.
18 Clues: strength and energy. • is primarily influenced by heredity • has identified critical developmental tasks • period that ranges from conception to birth. • implies personality traits present during infancy • adulthood period adults are at the peak of physical • is typically viewed as a continual and cumulative process. • ...
Havighurst Theory 2021-11-18
Across
- has identified critical developmental tasks
- are modified by interactions with family, experiences at school, and acculturation.
- adulthood period people experience stress due to the double responsibility of caring for the aged parents and the growing children.
- refers to the process of biological maturation inheritance and maturation.
- this stage of development has some predictable physical milestone
- view sees development as more abrupt-a succession of changes
- It is a critical period in setting the pattern for personal and emotional adjustments.
- adulthood period adults are at the peak of physical
- refers to the impact of the environment, which involves the process of learning through experiences
Down
- can be defined as the period that extends from conception to death.
- is a process that creates growth, progress, and positive change.
- is typically viewed as a continual and cumulative process.
- is transformed into a walking,talking toddler within a relatively short period of time.
- is primarily influenced by heredity
- implies personality traits present during infancy
- period that ranges from conception to birth.
- strength and energy.
- adulthood is the period of decline where the person thinks that he has done what he wanted to do and most of his life span is over.
18 Clues: strength and energy. • is primarily influenced by heredity • has identified critical developmental tasks • period that ranges from conception to birth. • implies personality traits present during infancy • adulthood period adults are at the peak of physical • is typically viewed as a continual and cumulative process. • ...
Music Theory 2023-04-04
Across
- gradually slow the tempo
- five lines and four spaces
- Lowers a note
- Smooth and Connected
- To gradually get softer
- To gradually get louder
- A musical sentence
- Not the melody
- forte Medium loud
Down
- piano Medium soft
- soft
- The speed at which music should be played or sung.
- loud
- Everyone sings the same note
- The words of a song
- The musical pattern
- shown to accent a note or word
- The combination of three or more notes to create harmony
- The interval of an 8th
19 Clues: soft • loud • Lowers a note • Not the melody • piano Medium soft • forte Medium loud • A musical sentence • The words of a song • The musical pattern • Smooth and Connected • The interval of an 8th • To gradually get softer • To gradually get louder • gradually slow the tempo • five lines and four spaces • Everyone sings the same note • shown to accent a note or word • ...
Evolution Theory 2014-02-25
Across
- blending in with your environment/adaption
- species that are inherited to naturally survive in their adaption and can produce quicker offspring
- ability to more likely to survive its environment and produce more offspring also other members of population
- structures that were used anciently in evolution,but now useless
- humans reproduce plants/animals by selected genes, creating new species
- structures that have similar origins with other organisms
- adaptive trait
Down
- physical features of an organism
- basic material of evoulution
- french artist who discovered evolution and the concept of biology with other special science terms
- organisms moving from area to another,or position change
- type of gene produce more offspring than others
- structures that have similar species,from different evolutions
- external resemblance of organisms
- Darwin english naturalist and geologist known for evolutionary theory
- change in environment over time
- Genetic change due to natural selection
- species adapting to their environment,to survive longer
18 Clues: adaptive trait • basic material of evoulution • change in environment over time • physical features of an organism • external resemblance of organisms • Genetic change due to natural selection • blending in with your environment/adaption • type of gene produce more offspring than others • species adapting to their environment,to survive longer • ...
Theory Review 2015-10-22
Across
- in Critical Disability Theory, the belief that science and medicine should not separate the needs of disabled persons, but work for the welfare of all people
- the voluntary or forced migration of peoples from their native homelands
- this branch of feminism's primary goal is gender equality in the public sphere; private sphere issues are explored in terms of their impact on public sphere inequalities
- a study of the effects of colonialism on cultures and societies
- Critical Disability Theorists explore how our use of this reflects our discomfort with disability
- this branch of feminism is concerned with the oppressive nature of capitalism; connects the oppression of women with other oppression in society
- the power of the ruling class to convince others that their interests are the interests of all
- new transcultural forms that result from cross-cultural exchange - it is not necessarily a peaceful mixture
Down
- the process by which a cultural practice is made stimulating and exciting by its difference from the colonizer’s ideas of normalcy
- views gender as a social construct and maintains that definitions of gender and sexuality are non-binary, and constantly in flux
- a refusal to use the language of the colonizer in the correct or standard way
- in Critical Disability Theory, the position that disabled persons are oppressed by multiple systems, not just ableism
- in Post-Colonial Theory, this involves the colonized taking the language of their colonizers, and blending with their native languages, thus creating their own rules of usage
- this branch of feminism emphasizes essential differences between men and women, and advocates for equally valuing “female” occupations and values
- the state of being “other” or different, and the study of the ways in which one group differentiates itself from others
- in Critical Disability Theory, this issue is about representation
- Critical Disability Theory is concerned with these, both individually and socially
- this branch of feminism is more militant in approach than other branches, they oppose existing social structures as inherently tied to patriarchy
18 Clues: a study of the effects of colonialism on cultures and societies • in Critical Disability Theory, this issue is about representation • the voluntary or forced migration of peoples from their native homelands • a refusal to use the language of the colonizer in the correct or standard way • ...
Cell Theory 2022-01-26
Across
- Creates protein
- breaks down waste and old vacuoles
- the doorway to the cell
- according to cell theory all cells come from
- site of photosynthesis
- the process by which a substance moves from high to low concentration
- tiny water bears that live on the outside of the space station
- each cell part is know as an
- according to cell theory all living things are made of
- the movement of water from high to low concentration
- control center of the cell
Down
- contains food water or waste
- the process of turning light into sugar
- provides structure to plant cells
- the cell is the basic unit of structure and blank in living things
- like a highway in the cell
- involved with shipping and packaging
- the jelly like substance in the cell
18 Clues: Creates protein • 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 • involved with shipping and packaging • the jelly like substance in the cell • the process of turning light into sugar • ...
SOCIO-3163 Final Exam Review Crossword 2023-12-04
Across
- Term often used interchangeably with "Self-Concept"
- Labeling by people or groups with the official authority to label someone deviant
- Drift Theory
- Swiftness
- Reintegrative Shaming
- Morphed into "Severity"
- Seductions of Crime
- Looking-Glass Self
Down
- Labeling by people or groups that do NOT have the official authority to label someone deviant
- Deterrence
- Social Bonds Theory
- Pleasure-Seeking
- The strongest component of deterrence theory
- The Saints and the Roughnecks
- Half of Low Self-Control Theory
- Deviance that happens after an individual's behavior has been discovered and labeled
- Containment Theory
- Early deviant behavior that occurs prior to being discovered,labeled, or sanctioned
18 Clues: Swiftness • Deterrence • Drift Theory • Pleasure-Seeking • Containment Theory • Looking-Glass Self • Social Bonds Theory • Seductions of Crime • Reintegrative Shaming • Morphed into "Severity" • The Saints and the Roughnecks • Half of Low Self-Control Theory • The strongest component of deterrence theory • Term often used interchangeably with "Self-Concept" • ...
Lawrence Kohlberg's Moral Development Theory 2016-12-06
Across
- The moral capability of a person
- The man who used Kohlberg's theory in a disciplinary model for schools
- The creator of the theory of moral development in children
- The stage of a social contract
- The fifth and sixth stages of Kohlberg's theory
- The use of Kohlberg's theory in ____________ in school systems.
Down
- The first and second stages of Kohlberg's theory
- A concept or idea that is testable
- The stage of individualism and exchange
- The stage of maintaining interpersonal relationships
- The third and fourth stages of Kohlberg's theory
- The stage of Law and Order
- The stage of obedience and punishment
- The stage of Universal principles
- The test that was developed in 1959 by James Rest based on Kohlberg's theory
15 Clues: The stage of Law and Order • The stage of a social contract • The moral capability of a person • The stage of Universal principles • A concept or idea that is testable • The stage of obedience and punishment • The stage of individualism and exchange • The fifth and sixth stages of Kohlberg's theory • The first and second stages of Kohlberg's theory • ...
sddf 2022-10-16
Across
- originated quantum theory
- developed the classification system of living things
- proposed a heliocentric theory
- Darwin wrote Origin of Species
- BC Greek know for his medical ethics.
- inventor of the light bulb & phonograph
- inventor of the telephone
- formalized the study of genetics
- invented scuba gear
- proved Copernicus' theory.
- Isolated penicillin
Down
- calculated Pi
- created the first telescope
- invented dynamite
- He invented calculus Volta invented a battery
- A nurse, fixed unsanitary conditions; sparked change
- first man to walk on the moon.
- Developed the first vaccine for smallpox
- who constructed proofs of a geocentric theory of the solar system
- theory of general relativity
- Developed a vaccine for polio.
- discovered two new radioactive elements
- devised code for the telegraph
23 Clues: calculated Pi • invented dynamite • invented scuba gear • Isolated penicillin • originated quantum theory • inventor of the telephone • proved Copernicus' theory. • created the first telescope • theory of general relativity • proposed a heliocentric theory • Darwin wrote Origin of Species • first man to walk on the moon. • Developed a vaccine for polio. • devised code for the telegraph • ...
CROSSWORD PUZZLE: THEORIES ON NURSING 2022-01-13
Across
- 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 model provides a comprehensive holistic and system-based approach to nursing that contains an element of flexibility by Neuman.
- Nursing as a health care profession would prove its worth of being at par in quality performance with other health care professionals by Divinagracia.
- Theory that deals with the interpersonal aspects of nursing, focusing especially to mental health by Joyce Travelbee.
- King’s Model proposing three interacting systems; a person system, an interpersonal system and a social system.
- The Orem Model of Nursing used in rehabilitation and primary care of or other settings in which patients are encouraged to be independent.
- Henderson’s Theory that emphasizes the importance of increasing the patient’s independence to continue the progress after hospitalization.
- It is also known as the "Three Cs of Lydia Hall", containing three (3) independent but interconnected circles.
- This Nursing theory proposes that expert nurses develop skills and understanding of patient care over time through education and experiences; from Novice to Expert.
Down
- It was developed by Dorothy Johnson that stresses the importance of research-knowledge about the effect of nursing care on patients.
- This theory describes the importance of promoting adaptation on nursing processes.
- A motivational theory in psychology compromising five (5) tier model of human needs, often depicted as hierarchical levels within a pyramid.
- Orlando’s model that explain the role of the nurse in finding out and meeting the patient’s immediate needs for help.
- A system theory that includes purpose, content and process, and breaking down the “whole” and analyzing the parts.
- Culture Care Diversity and Universality Theory that gives importance in cultural and care knowledge in nursing practice.
- 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
- 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.
- Levine’s Model focusing on conserving the patient’s energy for health and healing.
- This theory is an expansion of Piaget’s theory having three (3) levels of reasoning namely; pre-conventional, conventional and post-conventional.
20 Clues: A theory about the importance of environment in client’s healing process. • This theory describes the importance of promoting adaptation on nursing processes. • Levine’s Model focusing on conserving the patient’s energy for health and healing. • It is also known as the "Three Cs of Lydia Hall", containing three (3) independent but interconnected circles. • ...
CCJ 101 Chapter 4 2023-09-27
Across
- Theory that tries to understand how different inequalities (race, gender, class) interact
- Les Miserables shows the criminal justice system's overwhelming reaction to a _____ offense
- Law that rather than requiring someone say "no" to sexual advances, it is rape if they do not actively say "yes"
- T/F: Human experience is made up of a complex web of various roles and identities
- According to queer theorists, gender is a ________
- ______ theorizes that social conflict exists due to constant power struggles between capitalists and workers
- T/F: Some think environmental laws do not go far enough
- T/F: Racial inequalities rarely occur in the American Criminal Justice System
- Theory where Black Americans are seen as a threat to white American's power, weath, and security so they are controlled by a white-dominated society
- Leader in the field of intersectionality with a focus on Black women
- Who believes in the theory that the best response to crimes against women is to aggressively push for harsher punishments against those who commit these crimes
- Les Miserables shows irony in emphasizing excesses of ______ ______
Down
- Many colleges have begun implementing what policy as a way to address unwanted sexual contact on campuses?
- What term did Marx use to identify the common ways that people in higher classes justify their relative wealth and privilege?
- Law that makes it unlawful to ask about a rape victim's sexual history during trial
- Which branch of critical criminology looks at how society, and the criminal justice system specifically, oppresses people of color?
- Author of "Discipline and Punish", arguing that the sensibilities of control and manipulation by prisons are now used in everyday life
- Carceral feminists want increasing policing and arrests of ____ perpetrators
- _____ criminologists understand how governments and private companies harm the environment through their activities
- _______ is often hidden and imbedded in the major institutions of the U.S.
- "Human experience is made up of a complex web of various roles and identities" supports which theory?
- Postmodernists like Foucault and Simon are primarily concerned with the actions of ______
- Structuring society based on the needs of men first and foremost is known as _______
- Belief that people think they deserve such material goods and that the government should protect those items
24 Clues: According to queer theorists, gender is a ________ • T/F: Some think environmental laws do not go far enough • Les Miserables shows irony in emphasizing excesses of ______ ______ • Leader in the field of intersectionality with a focus on Black women • _______ is often hidden and imbedded in the major institutions of the U.S. • ...
Famous Scientists 2023-08-10
Across
- Electromagnetism
- Expanding universe
- DNA structure
- Electrical innovations
- Theory of evolution
- Genetics pioneer
- DNA structure
- Mathematical genius
- Radioactivity research
- Astronomical discoveries
Down
- Laws of planetary motion
- Laws of motion
- Theory of relativity
- Cosmos popularizer
- Black hole theories
- Atomic model
- Heliocentrism advocate
- Computing pioneer
- Germ theory
- Penicillin discovery
20 Clues: Germ theory • Atomic model • DNA structure • DNA structure • Laws of motion • Electromagnetism • Genetics pioneer • Computing pioneer • Cosmos popularizer • Expanding universe • Black hole theories • Theory of evolution • Mathematical genius • Theory of relativity • Penicillin discovery • Heliocentrism advocate • Electrical innovations • Radioactivity research • Laws of planetary motion • ...
Psychologists 2014-04-07
Across
- Mental age;IQ test
- Dissociation theory (hypnosis)
- Constructive memory studies
- Multiple intelligence
- Observational learning;bobo dolls
- Learned helplessness
- Humanist;created client-centered therapy;unconditional positive regard
- Study on conformity
- 3 stages of moral development
- Operant conditioning
- Neo Freudian;personal/collective unconscious
- Founder of behaviorism
- Triarchic theory;intelligence
- Stanford Prison experiment
- Disagreed with Freud;personality is continually changed rather than being decided early in life
Down
- 4 stage theory of cognitive development
- Cognitive Triad
- Cognitive-behavioral therapist;REBT
- Obedience study;shock
- Developmental psychologist;parenting styles
- 8 stages of development
- Labeling experiment
- Criticized Kohlberg;gender-based developmental difference
- Experiment on attachment with monkeys
- Cognitive Dissonance theory
- Classical conditioning
- Hierarchy of needs;humanist
- Language acquisition theory
28 Clues: Cognitive Triad • Mental age;IQ test • Labeling experiment • Study on conformity • Learned helplessness • Operant conditioning • Obedience study;shock • Multiple intelligence • Classical conditioning • Founder of behaviorism • 8 stages of development • Stanford Prison experiment • Constructive memory studies • Cognitive Dissonance theory • Hierarchy of needs;humanist • ...
Nursing Theorists 2021-11-01
Across
- Created a series of stages in order to help new nurses monitor progress through experience and developing knowledge.
- Theory focuses on the quality of life of the patient.
- She played a huge role in nursing education. She created the grading policy for nursing students which made students prove their abilities in order to be certified.
- 3 concept theory starting with all C’s, encourages patient to take responsibility for their illness.
- This theorist created a patient centered approach that utilizes a list of twenty-one steps and skills.This theory is most applicable to the education of nurses.
- He created a method that believed every relationship in a hospital setting required a helper and a helpee.
- Developed the Health promotion model which is composed of 5 key concepts: person, environment, nursing, health, and illness that all focus on positive motivation.
- She is commonly referred to as “the lady with the lamp” and focused on the patients environment to helping them become better.
- Created a theory stating that the goal of nursing care is to promote adaptations in the patient.
- Mostly dealt with psychiatric patients, and teaching, died at young age of 47.
- She created a theory that emphasized patient independence. In this theory nurses have three roles, substitutive, supplementary, and complimentary.
- Created a theory that was based on an open-system-based perspective that helps respond to stressors in the environment.
- Created a model that practices identification of patients need through observation.
Down
- Identified seven nursing roles in order for health care workers develop more therapeutic interventions.
- Theory about assessing a patients comfort needs in three forms: relief, ease, and transcendence.
- Created a model focusing on behavior of a patient in order to prevent illnesses.
- Her theory focuses on nurse and patient setting goals and working together to attain those goals.
- A male, New York native, that created a theory based on alternative medicine treatments.
- Her theory has four major concepts: human being, health, environment/society, and nursing.
- Travelled to many different cultures, was a nurse and anthropologist.
20 Clues: Theory focuses on the quality of life of the patient. • Travelled to many different cultures, was a nurse and anthropologist. • Mostly dealt with psychiatric patients, and teaching, died at young age of 47. • Created a model focusing on behavior of a patient in order to prevent illnesses. • ...
Maslow's Humanistic Theory 2022-05-01
Across
- The theorist did not provide any __ support for his theory in his initial paper
- Second half of publication year (rhymes with sporty bee)
- True or false: A review by Wahba & Bridwell (1976) found support for the idea that people always move through the hierarchy in the exact order proposed by the theory
- Dominant school of psychology that this theory departed from
- This theory proposes that basic needs are organized into a hierarchy of relative ___
- Second level of needs: includes security and a preference for familiarity
- First level of needs; includes hunger, thirst, sleep
- Key theorist
- The top level of the hierarchy focuses on __ motivation
- The dominating force influencing behavior
Down
- This theory may be used to __ why behavior occurred rather than predict the future; can use context clues to try to determine what needs were emergent at the time
- Tay & Diener (2011) found that the theory may be applicable on a __ level, observing that the search for meaning was more common in countries where basic needs had been met for most of the population
- Although this theory is not commonly used as a framework for empirical studies, it makes an appearance in fields such as education and ___
- First half of publication year (rhymes with pine bean)
- This theory contributed to the development of __'s Model of Psychological Wellbeing that includes components such as environmental mastery and growth
- The first four levels of the hierarchy focus on __ needs
- Top level of the hierarchy; growing into the person you were meant to be
- Major field this theory contributed to; focuses on topics such as optimal human functioning, wellbeing, and peak experiences
- The theory is said to appeal to __ __ (also the name of a book by Thomas Paine)
- Fourth level of needs; includes high evaluation of the self and recognition from others
- Third level of needs; includes affection, belonging, and group membership
21 Clues: Key theorist • The dominating force influencing behavior • First level of needs; includes hunger, thirst, sleep • First half of publication year (rhymes with pine bean) • The top level of the hierarchy focuses on __ motivation • The first four levels of the hierarchy focus on __ needs • Second half of publication year (rhymes with sporty bee) • ...
Famous Mathematicians 2023-06-09
Across
- - Austrian mathematician and logician who is known for his incompleteness theorems, which have had a profound impact on the foundations of mathematics.
- - German mathematician who made significant contributions to the field of analysis, particularly in his work on Riemannian geometry.
- - Italian mathematician who introduced the Fibonacci sequence, a sequence of numbers with each number being the sum of the two preceding ones.
- - German mathematician who formulated a famous list of 23 unsolved problems that greatly influenced the course of 20th-century mathematics.
- - Ancient Greek mathematician and philosopher, best known for the Pythagorean theorem in geometry.
- - French lawyer and mathematician who famously claimed to have a proof for what became known as Fermat's Last Theorem.
- - German mathematician who made significant contributions to abstract algebra and theoretical physics, particularly in the field of Noether's theorem.
- - Indian mathematician who made extraordinary contributions to number theory, particularly in the areas of partition functions and modular forms.
- - Ancient Greek mathematician known for his treatise "Elements," which presented foundational principles of geometry.
- - Russian mathematician who made significant contributions to probability theory, statistics, and information theory.
Down
- - English mathematician and physicist who formulated the laws of motion and universal gravitation.
- - Ancient Greek mathematician, physicist, engineer, and inventor known for his contributions to mathematics and physics.
- - French philosopher, mathematician, and scientist who is considered the father of analytic geometry.
- - Austrian mathematician known for his contributions to Lie group theory, representation theory, and quantum mechanics.
- - German mathematician who developed set theory and made profound discoveries related to infinite sets and cardinality.
- - English mathematician and writer who is recognized for her work with Charles Babbage on his early mechanical general-purpose computer.
- - Swiss mathematician known for his contributions to number theory, graph theory, and mathematical analysis.
- - French mathematician, physicist, and philosopher known for his contributions to probability theory, number theory, and projective geometry.
- - English mathematician and computer scientist who played a crucial role in cracking the Enigma code during World War II.
- - French mathematician who made groundbreaking contributions to group theory and abstract algebra before his untimely death.
20 Clues: - English mathematician and physicist who formulated the laws of motion and universal gravitation. • - Ancient Greek mathematician and philosopher, best known for the Pythagorean theorem in geometry. • - French philosopher, mathematician, and scientist who is considered the father of analytic geometry. • ...
Module 3, Lesson 1-3 Vocabulary 2024-10-22
Across
- deposits of this mineral suggests that Antarctica once had warmer climates
- the number of decades AFTER Wegener's death that his theory was accepted
- pangaea is divided into Laurasia and this land mass
- deep, underwater trough along a plate boundary
- female scientist that created the first complete map of the ocean floor
- ridge that separates the Atlantic Ocean
- important fossil discover because this animal could not swim, but was found on two distant continents
- less dense plate found under land
- map maker
- technology that uses pulses of sound waves to measure ocean depths
- a rupture and sudden movement of rocks along an active plate boundary
- evidence that land was connected; living remains turned to rock
- (two words) continuous process of creating new oceanic crust along a ridge while destroying it along the trench
- plant fossil used by Wegener to support his Theory of Plate Tectonics
Down
- two words) theory that stated the continents drifted away from each other over millions of years
- plate boundary where two plates are moving away from each other
- type of map that color codes rocks based on age
- Name Wegener's theorized supercontinent
- hypothesized the theory of continental drift
- a break in the earth's crust along which movement occurs
- "fluid" rock under the earth's surface
- (two words) circular depressions caused by meteors
- (two words)evidence that continents were once connected; rock strata
- more dense type of plate
- plate boundary where two plate are pushing towards each other
- name for molten rock once its outside the Earth's crust
- digital image of underwater land and water depth
- plate boundary where two plates are sliding horizontally past each other
- scientist that studies rocks, materials, and processes of the Earth's history
- occurs when an oceanic and a continental plate converge
- mountain formed when two continental plates converge
31 Clues: map maker • more dense type of plate • less dense plate found under land • "fluid" rock under the earth's surface • Name Wegener's theorized supercontinent • ridge that separates the Atlantic Ocean • hypothesized the theory of continental drift • deep, underwater trough along a plate boundary • type of map that color codes rocks based on age • ...
Electrical Theory 2021-01-15
Across
- - unit used to measure a material’s resistance
- (R) - tendency of a material to prevent electrical flow
- current (AC) - electricity flow changes direction with armature(turning magnet) change
- circuit - current cannot flow through
- Law - flow of electricity through a conductor is directly proportional to the electrical force that produces it (R = E/I)
- wire - carries current away from appliance and back to source
- - source of electricity connected to a light, heater, or motor
- - form of energy that can produce light, heat, magnetism, and chemical changes
Down
- - measure of the amount of energy or work that can be done by amps and volts (volts x amps)
- - measure of the rate of flow
- wire - carries current
- - an additional connection between equipment and the earth
- - material that provides great resistance to electricity flow
- current (DC) - electricity flows in one direction
- - tubing that contains individual insulated wires
- circuit - occurs when resistance is not high enough for flow of electricity; flows through circuit and back to source too quickly
- (E) - measure of electrical pressure
- - a material that electricity flows freely through
18 Clues: wire - carries current • - measure of the rate of flow • (E) - measure of electrical pressure • circuit - current cannot flow through • - unit used to measure a material’s resistance • current (DC) - electricity flows in one direction • - tubing that contains individual insulated wires • - a material that electricity flows freely through • ...
Electrical Theory 2021-01-15
Across
- carries current away from appliance and back to source
- measure of electrical pressure
- measure of the rate of flow
- source of electricity connected to a light, heater, or motor
- tendency of a material to prevent electrical flow
- electricity flow changes direction with armature(turning magnet)change
- unit used to measure a material’s resistance
- current cannot flow through
Down
- tubing that contains individual insulated wires
- an additional connection between equipment and the earth
- electricity flows in one direction
- measure of the amount of energy or work that can be done by amps and volts (volts x amps)
- form of energy that can produce light, heat, magnetism, and chemical changes
- flow of electricity through a conductor is directly proportional to the electrical force that produces it (R = E/I)
- carries current to appliance
- occurs when resistance is not high enough for flow of electricity; flows through circuit and back to source too quickly
- material that provides great resistance to electricity flow
- a material that electricity flows freely through
18 Clues: measure of the rate of flow • current cannot flow through • carries current to appliance • measure of electrical pressure • electricity flows in one direction • unit used to measure a material’s resistance • tubing that contains individual insulated wires • a material that electricity flows freely through • tendency of a material to prevent electrical flow • ...
Set theory 2024-07-15
Across
- no element common between sets
- all outputs true
- no.of elements in a set
- AU(BNC)=(AUB)N (AUC)
- outputs are false
- a set which is contained in the given set
- combination of two sets
- outputs can be true or false
- possible combinations of all elements in a given set
Down
- AUA=A
- or condition
- true or false structure
- and condition
- set which contain repetitive elements
- common element between sets
- if then condition
- opposite of a boolean
- AuB=BuA
18 Clues: AUA=A • AuB=BuA • or condition • and condition • all outputs true • if then condition • outputs are false • AU(BNC)=(AUB)N (AUC) • opposite of a boolean • true or false structure • no.of elements in a set • combination of two sets • common element between sets • outputs can be true or false • no element common between sets • set which contain repetitive elements • ...
Generational Theory 2023-02-02
Across
- Follows the crisis that ended the previous cycle and typified by strong institutions and social collectivism, and weak individualism.
- “independent variables in social change” - cohorts should be placed within geographical location, education, and race
- “cycles” - specific patterns of behavior that are regarded as intertwined with the history
- Generation archetype that are born after the unraveling, during a crisis, when external dangers recreate a demand for strong social institutions.
- Generation archetype that are born after an awakening, during an unraveling, when social institutions are weak, and individuals have to be self-reliant and pragmatic.
- Generational theory with the fourth turning.
- These consist of four turnings (saeculum) that repeat for each cycle.
- This period is typified by increasing personal and spiritual autonomy of people. Social institutions may be attacked, impeding public progress.
Down
- Generation archetype that are born near the end of a crisis, during a time of community cohesion and strong social order.
- This period is typified by weak institutions that are distrusted. Individualism is strong and flourishing.
- “social location” - people resemble their times more than they resemble their parents
- This is an era of destruction, e.g., through war, where institutional life is destroyed. As this period ends, institutions will be rebuilt. Society will rediscover the benefits of being part of a collective, and community purpose will take precedence again.
- The length of a single historical cycle of ‘four turnings’
- Symbols, between cycles, that share basic attitudes towards family, risk, culture and values, and civic engagement.
- “value systems” - argued that values can be generalized based on generations
- Generation archetype that are born during an awakening, when crusader prophets are attacking the status quo and its institutions.
- a cohort group that shares an age location in history, meaning that members of the generation encounter similar historical events and social influences while in the same phase of life.
- Time span of a generation
18 Clues: Time span of a generation • Generational theory with the fourth turning. • The length of a single historical cycle of ‘four turnings’ • These consist of four turnings (saeculum) that repeat for each cycle. • “value systems” - argued that values can be generalized based on generations • ...
Music Theory 2023-02-17
Across
- To hold longer than the notes value
- 1 beat
- The speed at which music should be played
- Cancels a flat or a sharp
- Short and separated
- 1/2 a beat
- Area between two bar lines
- 4 beats
Down
- How loud or soft the music is
- Slow tempo
- Loud
- 2 beats
- No sharps or flats
- Soft
- The words of a song
- Gradually get louder
- 1 sharp
- Fast tempo
18 Clues: Loud • Soft • 1 beat • 2 beats • 1 sharp • 4 beats • Slow tempo • 1/2 a beat • Fast tempo • No sharps or flats • The words of a song • Short and separated • Gradually get louder • Cancels a flat or a sharp • Area between two bar lines • How loud or soft the music is • To hold longer than the notes value • The speed at which music should be played
Theory prject 2023-06-05
Across
- a reapeated pitch pattern
- melody and accompaniment
- a mixture of sequence and repetition
- reocurring rhythmic pattern
- short reoccurring figure
- harmonic and rhythmic support functions are combined
- substantial musical thought
- Two or more lines moving independently
- two adjacent phrases combine
Down
- only diatonic notes of the scale are repeated
- simplest texture type in music
- similar rhythmic material in all parts
- most important line in musical texture
- the immediate restatement of a figure in the same instrument
- pedal tones or repeated melodic and rhthmic figures
- two phrases are not similar in melodic content
- lines less significant than the melody
- assisting the melody with chord tones
18 Clues: melody and accompaniment • short reoccurring figure • a reapeated pitch pattern • reocurring rhythmic pattern • substantial musical thought • two adjacent phrases combine • simplest texture type in music • a mixture of sequence and repetition • assisting the melody with chord tones • similar rhythmic material in all parts • most important line in musical texture • ...
Atomic Theory 2025-01-29
Across
- Table, organized chart of all naturally occurring and man-made elements
- negatively charged particle, outside the nucleus
- discovered the neutron
- criticized Democritus's theory
- having no charge, equal number of positive and negative charges
- proposed the idea that electrons were in a fixed orbit around the nucleus
- abbreviation for an element
- number, another name of the number of protons
- first proposed the idea that matter was made of atoms
- neutral particle in the nucleus
- developed the Plum Pudding Model, and is credited with discovering the electron
Down
- his Gold Foil Experiment led to the discovery of the nucleus
- the three particles that make up an atom
- positively charged particle in the nucleus
- all matter is composed of __________
- developed the 5 points of the Modern Atomic Theory
- substance composed of only one type of atom
- number, protons and neutrons added together
- number of elements on the periodic table
- Mass, the average masses of all isotopes of an element
20 Clues: discovered the neutron • abbreviation for an element • criticized Democritus's theory • neutral particle in the nucleus • all matter is composed of __________ • the three particles that make up an atom • number of elements on the periodic table • positively charged particle in the nucleus • substance composed of only one type of atom • ...
Evolutionary theory 2025-03-07
Across
- The process where different species develop similar traits because they live in similar environments
- a change in DNA that can lead to new traits (alleles) in a population
- Fossils that show the intermediate stages between different forms of life
- Similarities in structure that indicate a common incestry
- the process by which organisms better adapted to their environment tend to survive and reproduce more
- A scientific explanation for the unity and diversity of life
- The process where two or more related species become more different over time, often due to different environments
- The study of how species are distributed geographically
- A decrease in genetic variation that occurs when a small group of individuals starts a new population
Down
- the process of combining different genes during meiosis (sexual reproduction)
- The process by which organisms diversify rapidly into a wide variety of forms
- the transfer of genetic material between populations; migration with mating
- A mechanism of evolution that involves random changes in a population's gene pool
- The history of life as documented by fossils
- the formation of new and distinct species in the course of evolution
- The idea that different species share a common ancestor
- a reduction in genetic diversity that occurs when a populations size is greatly reduced, often due to a disaster
- The process where two or more species influence each other's evolution, often because they interact closely
18 Clues: The history of life as documented by fossils • The idea that different species share a common ancestor • The study of how species are distributed geographically • Similarities in structure that indicate a common incestry • A scientific explanation for the unity and diversity of life • the formation of new and distinct species in the course of evolution • ...
music theory 2024-02-04
Across
- a representation of how long or short a sound is
- a staff where the lower notes live
- how we organize the music to articulate ideas and give the song a coherent structure w/bars
- a sound taking up three beats
- four beats of silence symbol
- the speed of a piece
- a staff where the high notes live
- a moment to represent when you do not play/sing
- 4/4, 3/4, 6/8 for example
- a sound taking up two beats
Down
- three beats of silence symbol
- one beat of silence symbol
- a sound taking up one beat
- a steady pulse that occurs throughout a piece of music
- a sound taking up four beats
- where you assign pitches; could be treble, bass etc.
- two beats of silence symbol
- having to go back and do a section of music a second time
18 Clues: the speed of a piece • 4/4, 3/4, 6/8 for example • one beat of silence symbol • a sound taking up one beat • two beats of silence symbol • a sound taking up two beats • a sound taking up four beats • four beats of silence symbol • three beats of silence symbol • a sound taking up three beats • a staff where the high notes live • a staff where the lower notes live • ...
Interference theory 2024-11-14
Across
- The passing of what causes retroactive interference to be greater than proactive?
- Who found evidence to support the validity of Retroactive Interference theory?
- What sector benefits from the practical applications of interference theory?
- Type of interference that involves forgettiing new info. as it's confused with old?
- What type of research method did Postman conduct in 1960?
- When a memory is forgotten due to another memory conflicting with it?
- What do lab tasks testing interference lack?
- What type of sport did the ppts of Baddeley and Hitch play?
- Type of approach that focuses on different counterparts of the human mind together?
Down
- Type of interference that involves forgetting old info. as it's confused with new?
- A higher number of what decreased recall in Baddeley and Hitch's rugby study?
- Who suggested the types of interference?
- Who stated that studying similar subjects causes interference?
- People with a higher what were less susceptible to proactive interference?
- What's it called when a theory simplifies a cognitive process to a single cause?
- Is interference theory reliable or unreliable?
- Type of research method that was conducted by Baddeley and Hitch when testing retroactive interference?
- What did McGeoch and McDonald ask their ppts to recall?
18 Clues: Who suggested the types of interference? • What do lab tasks testing interference lack? • Is interference theory reliable or unreliable? • What did McGeoch and McDonald ask their ppts to recall? • What type of research method did Postman conduct in 1960? • What type of sport did the ppts of Baddeley and Hitch play? • ...
Psychologists 2013-04-24
Across
- studied attachment in monkeys with artificial mothers
- classical conditioning
- developed "rational emotive behavior therapy"(REBT)
- Stanley ____ experiment; electric shock experiments on obedience
- developed cognitive-behavior therapy
- theory of parenting styles; 3 main types
- conducted experiements with dogs that led to the concept of "learned helplessness"
- experimented to determine the validity of psychiatric diagnosis
- developmental psychologist; 3 stage theory of moral development in children
- described concept of cognitive dissonance
- father of client-centered therapy
- known for his discovery of the forgetting curve and spacing effect
- developmental psychologist; 8 stages of psychosocial development
- studied taste aversion in rats; sickness and taste preferences can be conditioned
- developed the first widely used intelligence test
- notable for his work on decision-making and judgement
- Little Albert experiment
- conducted longitudinal studies on temperament (infancy to adolescence)
Down
- interested in the univerality of facial expressions; microexpressions to detect lying
- offered feminist critique of Freud's theory
- famous for his hypnosis research; hidden observer theory
- Stanford prison experiment
- developmental psychologist; 4 stages of cognitive development
- "Bobo doll" experiment, concepts of self-efficacy and social learning
- best known for her research on attachment theory
- creator of "successful intelligence" theory; 3 types
- known for his theory of "multiple intelligences"
- known as the father of psychoanalysis
- developed the theory of operant conditioning
- founder of analytical psychology
- critiqued Kolhberg's moral development theory; believed women's moral sense are guided by relationships
- misinformation effect; created doubts about the accuracy of eye-witness testimony
- ___'s Hierarchy of Needs
- created concept of "universal grammar";all languages share the same basic elements
- social psychologist; famous for his conformity experiments (line test)
- published the first psychology textbook
36 Clues: classical conditioning • ___'s Hierarchy of Needs • Little Albert experiment • Stanford prison experiment • founder of analytical psychology • father of client-centered therapy • developed cognitive-behavior therapy • known as the father of psychoanalysis • published the first psychology textbook • theory of parenting styles; 3 main types • ...
Nicki’s Fan Theories & Rumors 2025-06-29
Across
- Joke rumor that her album’s length hinted at her wardrobe size
- Fan theory about her mansion purchase controversies
- Rumor she uses biblical themes in hidden Easter eggs
- Rumored name for scrap tracks vs Remy Ma
- Meme theory that it’s not always her in early footage
- IG story theory predicting a secret Barbie music phase reveal
- Conspiracy that certain songs got inflated plays by bots
- Old Twitter shade tweets that disappear then reappear
- Fans thought she’d release Queen II or Pinkprint 2
- Theory that her unfollowed celebs were secretly beefed
- Fans thought she layered Roman’s voice on older mixtapes
- Fan hope rumor about a second child sneak preview
- Theory her outfits signal upcoming singles
- Believed by fans to drop but never released, causing major buzz
- Theory that chart positions were skewed due to her fanpower
Down
- Rumor that Roman was retired in hidden skit post‑Queen era
- Theory that Nicki still has unreleased bars hidden in vaults
- Long-debunked rumor about hidden co-writers
- Rumor Nicki performs unannounced shows without promotion
- Fans expected this but never got an official version
- Belief that she hides personal life details in veiled bars
- Rumor she’d include her brother on a future album cover
- Theory that she sent bare‑face pics to test fan loyalty
- Fan debate about a secret intended diss track
- Rumor that she was proposed to live onstage (never confirmed)
- Speculation on her pop‑culture influence mapped year by year
- Fans decode hidden messages in her visuals
- Fans believe she’s holding back a major diss
- Theory that she intentionally leaked snippets to test reactions
- Debate on whether it ended early or still ongoing
30 Clues: Rumored name for scrap tracks vs Remy Ma • Fans decode hidden messages in her visuals • Theory her outfits signal upcoming singles • Long-debunked rumor about hidden co-writers • Fans believe she’s holding back a major diss • Fan debate about a secret intended diss track • Debate on whether it ended early or still ongoing • ...
What color? 2012-04-23
Color Crossword 2020-11-26
Color 1 2023-09-05
Across
- It's a calming color that reminds people of the sky and sea.
- It's a soft shade of purple known for its soothing qualities.
- It's a soft color often associated with sweetness and love.
- It's a warm color that radiates energy and enthusiasm.
- It's a refreshing color that evokes a sense of tranquility.
Down
- It's a royal color that symbolizes luxury and creativity.
- It's a vibrant color often associated with love and passion.
- It's a powerful color that signifies strength and elegance.
- It's a natural color reminiscent of earth and stability.
- It's a bright and cheerful color that represents happiness.
- It's a pure color often associated with cleanliness and peace.
- It's the color of nature and symbolizes growth and renewal.
- It's a neutral color often associated with balance and calm.
13 Clues: It's a warm color that radiates energy and enthusiasm. • It's a natural color reminiscent of earth and stability. • It's a royal color that symbolizes luxury and creativity. • It's a powerful color that signifies strength and elegance. • It's a bright and cheerful color that represents happiness. • It's the color of nature and symbolizes growth and renewal. • ...
