color theory Crossword Puzzles
Hope Theory 2022-05-01
Across
- People with higher levels of this tend to be flexible thinkers, able to come up with alternative routes to their goals if they encounter barriers
- Hope is framed as a __ set rather than an emotion
- The second seminal year; also a palindrome
- Goal-directed energy; the motivation to use the routes to reach goals
- One of the two key theorists; rhymes with Heider
- Dixson et al. (2017) used __ analysis to provide basic empirical support for the theory
- Creating different routes to goals
- The first seminal year; a palindrome
- These are said to reflect responses to perceptions about how one is doing in goal pursuit activities
Down
- Some of the initial empirical support for the theory came from Snyder et al. (1991) who administered Snyder's Hope Scale to different __, finding that hope scores differed between college students and people receiving psychological treatment
- One of the two key theorists; rhymes with pope says
- Although Hope Theory was initially focused on applicability across __, it is now sometimes applied in specific areas such as math or employment
- True or false: Hope Theory is still used today, with no major changes to the original theory structure
- Hope is always directed at specific __
- Hope Theory is an __ process, meaning the pathways influence each other
- Hope theory has mainly correlational support, with evidence for hope levels predicting loneliness (Sympson, 1999), adjustment to physical health changes (Kwon, 2002), and __ achievement (Snyder et al., 1999)
- For people lower in hope, this tends to produce rumination and self-doubt rather than leading to improvements in goal pursuit
17 Clues: Creating different routes to goals • The first seminal year; a palindrome • Hope is always directed at specific __ • The second seminal year; also a palindrome • One of the two key theorists; rhymes with Heider • Hope is framed as a __ set rather than an emotion • One of the two key theorists; rhymes with pope says • ...
Cell Theory 2022-06-10
Across
- vesicle for temporary storage of materials within the cell
- cells with a nucleus and membrane bound organelles
- organelle containing chlorophyll where photosynthesis occurs
- specialized membrane-bound structures that carry out specific cell functions
- folded membrane where protein synthesis occurs
- protein that speeds up the rate of a chemical reaction
- cells without a nucleus or membrane bound organelles
- the orderly structure shown by living things
Down
- boundary that controls what enters and leaves the cell
- makes energy in the form of ATP
- contains genetic material for the cell
- inflexible barrier that provides support and protection for plant cells
- the basic unit of life
- stack of tubular membranes that modifies and packages proteins for distribution outside the cell
- organelle that makes proteins
- fluid that fills the cell
- contains digestive enzymes
17 Clues: the basic unit of life • fluid that fills the cell • contains digestive enzymes • organelle that makes proteins • makes energy in the form of ATP • contains genetic material for the cell • the orderly structure shown by living things • folded membrane where protein synthesis occurs • cells with a nucleus and membrane bound organelles • ...
Theory 1 2020-06-17
Across
- cultural studies tend to be?
- he put forth the idea of 'heresy of paraphrase'.
- he is the author of 'What is an Author'?
- this epic poem was analyzed from a Reader Response perspective by Stanley Fish.
- culture is?
- this critic is associated with the archetypal approach
- this theory explores the questions of the role of spatial setting in a poem.
Down
- this is defined as the error of evaluating a poem by its effects upon the reader
- Aesthetic Ideology was a term applied by this theorist.
- the term New Historicism was coined by?
- this school of theory shows a particular interest for the role of testimony in literature.
- This term was coined by the feminist Showlater
- the term ecological Imperialism was coined by?
- Who called Chaucer the father of English poetry?
- this critic is not concerned with Queer theory.
- There is nothing outside the text, said by?
- what is the relation between texts that inflicted by means of quotations and allusions?
17 Clues: culture is? • cultural studies tend to be? • the term New Historicism was coined by? • he is the author of 'What is an Author'? • There is nothing outside the text, said by? • This term was coined by the feminist Showlater • the term ecological Imperialism was coined by? • this critic is not concerned with Queer theory. • he put forth the idea of 'heresy of paraphrase'. • ...
Cell Theory 2024-11-12
Across
- All cells come from preexisting cells
- Stated all plants are made of cells
- Heredity material found in a cell
- The process of converting light energy into food
- Made by the Rough ER
- Does not contain a cell wall
- This type of cell has a nucleus
- Surrounds plant cells
- The brains of the cell
- First to describe the nucleus
Down
- Provides energy for the cell
- Stores food and water in cells
- Named cells
- This type of cell does not have a nucleus
- Leeuwenhoek named these tiny organisms he found in a drop of water
- Is the UPS of the cell
- Concluded that all animals are made of cells
17 Clues: Named cells • Made by the Rough ER • Surrounds plant cells • Is the UPS of the cell • The brains of the cell • Provides energy for the cell • Does not contain a cell wall • First to describe the nucleus • Stores food and water in cells • This type of cell has a nucleus • Heredity material found in a cell • Stated all plants are made of cells • All cells come from preexisting cells • ...
Cell Theory 2025-09-26
Across
- chemical reactions inside the cell
- smallest structural and functional unit of an organism
- concluded that all animal tissues are composed of cells too
- proposed that all cells result from the division of previously existing living cells
- obtaining food to provide energy for growth
- perceiving and responding to changes in the environment
- contains cytoplasm and a nucleus enclosed in a membrane
- developed the microscope lens to see greater magnification
- observed bark of cork trees under a microscope
- producing offspring (sexually or asexually)
Down
- keeping conditions inside the organism within tolerable limits (balanced)
- all organisms are composed of cells, cells are the basic unit of life, all cells come from the division of previous existing cells
- all organism are composed of cells and cells are the basic unit of life
- concluded all plant tissues are composed of cells
- increase in size
- contains cytoplasm in a membrane no nucleus
- protection against enemies
17 Clues: increase in size • protection against enemies • chemical reactions inside the cell • contains cytoplasm in a membrane no nucleus • obtaining food to provide energy for growth • producing offspring (sexually or asexually) • observed bark of cork trees under a microscope • concluded all plant tissues are composed of cells • ...
Keywords Chapter 4 2024-04-19
Across
- Another term for intermediate colors.
- An image that persists after the visual stimulus that first produced it has ceased.
- A pattern of closely spaced dots or small marks used to create a sense of three-dimensionality on a flat surface, especially in drawing and printmaking.
- Having only one color. Descriptive work in which one hue-perhaps with variations of value and intensity- predominates.
- Italian for "light/dark". In two-dimensional, representational art, the technique of using values to record light and shadow, especially as they provide information about three-dimensional form.
- Shape that is perceived as the background shape in a figure-ground relationship.
- A two-dimensional area having identifiable boundaries, created by lines, color or value changes, or some combination of these.
- The range of colors used by an artist or group of artists, either generally or in a specific work.
- Three-dimensional form, often implying bulk, density, and weight.
- The relative purity or brightness of a color. Also called chroma or intensity.
- A color scheme based in three hues equidistant from one another on the color wheel, such as yellow-orange, blue-green, and red-violet.
- Lines that are suggested by changes in color, tone and texture or by the edges of shapes.
- The "family name" of a color, independent of its particular vale or saturation.
- The literal surface of a painting imagined as a window, so that objects depicted in depth are spoken of as behind or receding, and objects in the extreme foreground are spoken of as up against.
- Range of colors used by an artist limited to a few colors and their mixtures, tints, and shades.
- A color darker than a hue's normal value.
- Shape that is perceived as dominant in a figure-ground relationship.
- Having to do with motion, incorporates real or apparent movement.
- The relative purity or brightness of a color. Also called chroma or saturation.
- The visual phenomenon whereby an elongated object projecting toward or away from a viewer appears shorter than its actual length, as though compressed.
- A painting or some other two-dimensional work in which the subject matter is an arrangement of objects-fruit, flowers, tableware, pottery, and so forth- brought together for their pleasing contrasts of shape, color, and texture. Also, the arrangement of objects itself.
- In linear perspective, the point on the horizon where parallel lines appear to converge.
- A circular arrangement of hues used to illustrate a particular color theory or system.
- A hue that, in theory, cannot be created by a mixture of other hues.
Down
- Colors ranged along the orange curve of the color wheel, from red through yellow.
- Range of colors used by an artist in which all colors are permitted.
- A color lighter than a hue's normal value.
- A quasi-scientific painting technique of the late 19th century, developed and promulgated by Georges Seurat and his followers, in which pure colors were applied in regular, small touches that blended through optical color mixture when viewed at a certain distance.
- A hue created by combining two primary colors.
- A system for portraying the visual impression of three-dimensional space and objects in it on a two-dimensional surface. Based on the observation that parallel lines appear to converge as they recede from the viewer.
- lines used to indicate these perceived edges in two-dimensional art.
- The juxtaposition of hues that contain the same color in differing proportions, such as red-violet, pink and yellow-orange, all which contain red.
- Layers of hatching superimposed, with each new layer set at an angle to the one(s) beneath to achieve darker values.
- In figurative drawing, painting, and printmaking, simulating the effects of light and shadow to portray optically convincing masses.
- The relative lightness or darkness of a hue, or of a neutral varying from white to black.
- The tendency of the eyes to blend patches of individual colors placed near one another so as to perceive a different, combined color.
- The relative purity or brightness of a color. Also called intensity or saturation.
- Based on the observation that distant objects appear less distinct, paler, and bluer than nearby objects because of the way moisture in the intervening atmosphere scatters light.
- Uses diagonal lines to convey recession, but parallel lines do not converge. It is principally used in Asian art, which is not based in a fixed viewpoint.
- Closely spaced parallel lines that mix optically to suggest values. A linear technique for modeling forms according to the principles of chiaroscuro.
- A system for portraying the visual impression of three-dimensional space and objects in it on a two-dimensional surface.
- Colors ranged along the blue curve of the color wheel, from green through violet.
- The perceptual phenomenon whereby complementary colors appear most brilliant when set side by side.
- Hues that intensify each other when juxtaposed and dull each other when mixed (as pigment). On a color wheel, situated directly opposite each other.
- Colors made by mixing a primary color with a secondary color adjacent to it on the color wheel. Also known as tertiary colors.
- Shapes of the ground in a figure-ground relationship.
- The bending of a ray of light, for example, when it passes through a prism.
- A mark that forms part of the formal design of a picture.
- Figure shapes in a figure-ground relationship.
49 Clues: Another term for intermediate colors. • A color darker than a hue's normal value. • A color lighter than a hue's normal value. • A hue created by combining two primary colors. • Figure shapes in a figure-ground relationship. • Shapes of the ground in a figure-ground relationship. • A mark that forms part of the formal design of a picture. • ...
AP Psych Unit 3 (Module 20): Basic Concepts of Sensation and Perception 2022-12-04
Across
- failing to notice changes in the environment (a form of inattentional blindness)
- the minimum difference between two stimuli required for detection
- a mental predisposition to perceive one thing and not another
- the theory that the spinal cord contains a neurological "gate" that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass on to the brain
- Sensory nerve endings that respond to stimuli
- the distance from the peak of one light/sound wave to the next.
- a depth cue -such as interposition or linear perspective- available to either eye alone
- the theory that opposing retinal processes enable color vision
- below ones absolute threshold for conscious awareness
- constructs perceptions from this sensory input by drawing on your experience and expectations
- the innermost part of the ear containing the cochlea, semicircular canals, and vestibular sacs
- the activation of certain associations thus predisposing one's perception of memory or response
- retinal receptors that detect black and white, and are sensitive to movement, found in retina's outer regions
- the theory that the rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, thus enabling us to sense its pitch
- a coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear that travels sound waves through its fluid to trigger nerve impulses
- to separate faces from their backgrounds; perceiving any object as distinct from its surroundings
- the theory that links the pitch we hear with the place where the cochlea's membrane is stimulated
- an organized whole. our tendency to integrate pieces of information into meaningful wholes
- the eye's clear protective outer layer, where light enters and then bends to provide focus
- the ability to adjust to changed sensory input
- The process when our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus from our environment
- the sense or act of hearing
- the amount of energy in a light/sound wave; Intensity is determined by the wave's amplitude
- the influence of bodily sensations, gestures, and other states on cognitive preferences and judgments
- the minimum stimulus energy needed to detect a particular stimulus 50% of the time
- a tone's experienced highness or lowness; depends on the frequency
- our system for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts
- the point when the optic nerve leaves the eye because no receptor cells are located in that spot
- a test of depth perception in infants and young animals
- an illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on and off in quick succession
- the study of relationships between the physical characteristics of stimuli and our psychological experience of them
- perceiving objects as unchanging even as retinal images change; such as consistent color, brightness, shape, and size
- our sense of body movement and position that enables our sense of balance
- a less common hearing loss caused by damage to the mechanical system that conducts sound waves to the cochlea
- a theory predicting how and when we will detect faint stimulus amid background stimulus
Down
- the sense of smell
- the study of paranormal phenomena (including ESP and psychokinesis)
- the perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into coherent groups
- the process when the eyes lens changes shape to focus near or far objects on the retina
- conversion of one form of energy to another; converting stimulus energies into neural impulses our brain can interpret
- retinal receptor cells that function in daylight or in well-lit conditions. The cones detect fine detail and give rise to color sensations.
- a device for converting sounds into electrical signals and stimulating the auditory nerve through electrodes threaded into the cochlea
- transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to focus images on the retina
- processing many aspects of a problem simultaneously
- claim that perception can occur apart from sensory input (includes telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition)
- nerve cells in the brain's visual cortex that respond to specific features of the stimulus such as shape, angle, or movement
- the ability to see objects in three dimensions although the images strike the retina as two dimensional
- failing to see visible objects when our attention is directed elsewhere
- the principle that two different stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage
- a depth cue -such as retinal disparity- that depends on the use of two eyes
- perceiving familiar objects as having consistent color, even if changing illumination alters wavelengths reflected by the object
- the process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, enabling us to recognize objects and events
- diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation
- a small adjustable opening in the center of the eye where light enters
- multilayer tissue on the eye's inner surface, contains rods and cones and layers of neurons that process visual info
- the focusing of conscious awareness of a particular stimulus
- hearing loss caused by damage to the cochleas receptor cells or auditory nerves
- the theory that the retina contains three different types of color receptors; red, green, and blue; which when combined can produce the perception of any color
- a binocular for perceiving depth; our two eyes show the same image from different angles, and the brain computes the distance between them
- the chamber between the eardrum and cochlea containing three tiny bones that concentrate the vibrations of the eardrum on the cochleas oval window
- processing that starts at your sensory receptors and works up to higher levels of processing
- the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain
- the central focal point in the retina around which the eyes cones cluster
- the number of complete wavelengths that pass a point in a given time
- A colored muscle that dilates or constricts in response to light intensity
- the dimension of color determined by the wavelength of light
66 Clues: the sense of smell • the sense or act of hearing • Sensory nerve endings that respond to stimuli • the ability to adjust to changed sensory input • processing many aspects of a problem simultaneously • below ones absolute threshold for conscious awareness • a test of depth perception in infants and young animals • ...
Theory 2026-02-28
Across
- Book of first entry
- An item with long term value
- When money is owed to another person it is called ____
- Assets - ______ = Net worth
- When expenses are less than the income
Down
- Which concept is applied when items are highlighted to be seen separately by the reader.
- _____have a negative effect on a person's net worth
- When the owner gives money to the business we call it ____
- Proof of payment
- Proof of an online payment
10 Clues: Proof of payment • Book of first entry • Proof of an online payment • Assets - ______ = Net worth • An item with long term value • When expenses are less than the income • _____have a negative effect on a person's net worth • When money is owed to another person it is called ____ • When the owner gives money to the business we call it ____ • ...
Atomic Theory 2021-11-30
Across
- A unit of calculation that describes the sum of the mass of a substance per mole.
- A stable subatomic particle occurring in all atomic nuclei, with a positive electric charge.
- The total number of protons and neutrons in a nucleus.
- A standard scientific unit for measuring large quantities of very small entities such as atoms, molecules, or other specified particles.
- The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom, which determines the chemical properties of an element and its place in the periodic table.
- The positively charged central core of an atom, consisting of protons and neutrons and containing nearly all its mass.
- A stable subatomic particle with a charge of negative electricity, found in all atoms and acting as the primary carrier of electricity in solids.
- Two or more forms of the same element that contain equal numbers of protons but different numbers of neutrons in their nuclei.
- A particle representing a quantum of light or other electromagnetic radiation.
Down
- A Greek word that means unable to be cut or divide.
- Unified atomic mass unit , another name for atomic mass unit.
- A negatively charged particle, located in the outermost shell of an atom.
- A location where an electron is likely to be found in an atom.
- An unstable form of a chemical element that releases radiation as it breaks down and becomes more stable.
- The positive charged metal plate at the end of a vacuum tube.
- A subatomic particle of about the same mass as a proton but without an electric charge.
- The negative charged metal plate at the end of a vacuum tube.
17 Clues: A Greek word that means unable to be cut or divide. • The total number of protons and neutrons in a nucleus. • Unified atomic mass unit , another name for atomic mass unit. • The positive charged metal plate at the end of a vacuum tube. • The negative charged metal plate at the end of a vacuum tube. • A location where an electron is likely to be found in an atom. • ...
Havighurst Theory 2021-11-18
Across
- is primarily influenced by heredity
- It is a critical period in setting the pattern for personal and emotional adjustments.
- are modified by interactions with family, experiences at school, and acculturation.
- refers to the process of biological maturation inheritance and maturation.
- is typically viewed as a continual and cumulative process.
- implies personality traits present during infancy
- adulthood period adults are at the peak of physical health,strengthh and energy.
- view sees development as more abrupt-a succession of changes
Down
- this stage of development has some predictable physical milestone
- has identified critical developmental tasks
- is a process that creates growth, progress, and positive change.
- refers to the impact of the environment, which involves the process of learning through experiences
- is transformed into a walking,talking toddler within a relatively short period of time.
- 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.
- can be defined as the period that extends from conception to death.
- period that ranges from conception to birth.
- adulthood period people experience stress due to the double responsibility of caring for the aged parents and the growing children.
17 Clues: is primarily influenced by heredity • has identified critical developmental tasks • period that ranges from conception to birth. • implies personality traits present during infancy • is typically viewed as a continual and cumulative process. • view sees development as more abrupt-a succession of changes • ...
Havighurst Theory 2021-11-18
Across
- is primarily influenced by heredity
- It is a critical period in setting the pattern for personal and emotional adjustments.
- are modified by interactions with family, experiences at school, and acculturation.
- refers to the process of biological maturation inheritance and maturation.
- is typically viewed as a continual and cumulative process.
- implies personality traits present during infancy
- adulthood period adults are at the peak of physical health,strengthh and energy.
- view sees development as more abrupt-a succession of changes
Down
- this stage of development has some predictable physical milestone
- has identified critical developmental tasks
- is a process that creates growth, progress, and positive change.
- refers to the impact of the environment, which involves the process of learning through experiences
- is transformed into a walking,talking toddler within a relatively short period of time.
- 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.
- can be defined as the period that extends from conception to death.
- period that ranges from conception to birth.
- adulthood period people experience stress due to the double responsibility of caring for the aged parents and the growing children.
17 Clues: is primarily influenced by heredity • has identified critical developmental tasks • period that ranges from conception to birth. • implies personality traits present during infancy • is typically viewed as a continual and cumulative process. • view sees development as more abrupt-a succession of changes • ...
Cell Theory 2021-09-24
Across
- Cells are the basic building blocks of ___.
- Organisms made of many cells.
- This scientist studied animals and identified that all animals are made of cells.
- Scientist who first discovered and named the cell.
- Scientist who observed living cells under the microscope.
- Organisms made of one cell.
Down
- This scientist studied plants and identified that all plants are made of cells.
- Science tool that made it possible to discovery cells.
- Scientist who stated that all cells come from pre-existing cells.
- Type of cell that Schleiden studied.
- The building block of all living things.
- All living things are made of ___ or more cells.
- All cells come from ___ cells.
- Inferred explanations in science, strongly supported by evidence.
- Robert Hooke viewed this under a microscope and first identified cells.
- Type of cell that Schwann studied.
- A unicellular organism Anton van Leeuwenhoek observed.
17 Clues: Organisms made of one cell. • Organisms made of many cells. • All cells come from ___ cells. • Type of cell that Schwann studied. • Type of cell that Schleiden studied. • The building block of all living things. • Cells are the basic building blocks of ___. • All living things are made of ___ or more cells. • Scientist who first discovered and named the cell. • ...
Atomic Theory 2021-08-25
Across
- Subatomic particle with neutral charge
- a mathmatical expression to find wave functio
- means atom in greek
- atom or molecule that gained or lost electron
- Who descredited Leucippus and democritus
- Subatomic particle with negative charge
- experiment to find charge and mass of electron
- the sum of protons and neutrons on perodic table
Down
- who discovered the electron
- the scientist who in invented the "Billiard Ball Mode"
- electrons at the out edge of the shell
- a chemical bond of two elements
- rejected the idea of only four elements
- chemist that discovered orbital model
- same element,different mass
- subatomic particle with positive charge
- substance that cannot be broken down into a smaller substance
17 Clues: means atom in greek • who discovered the electron • same element,different mass • a chemical bond of two elements • chemist that discovered orbital model • Subatomic particle with neutral charge • electrons at the out edge of the shell • rejected the idea of only four elements • subatomic particle with positive charge • Subatomic particle with negative charge • ...
Music Theory 2019-11-06
Across
- the highest instrument in the string orchestra
- slightly higher
- the lowest instrument in the string orchestra
- one beat of sound
- to play loudly
- two even sounds on one bear
- clef used for the cello and bass
- clef used for the viola
- two beats of silence
Down
- to play plucking the strings
- one beat of silence
- to play quietly
- five lines four spaces
- two beats of sound
- clef used for the violin
- slightly lower
- to play using the bow
17 Clues: to play loudly • slightly lower • slightly higher • to play quietly • one beat of sound • two beats of sound • one beat of silence • two beats of silence • to play using the bow • five lines four spaces • clef used for the viola • clef used for the violin • two even sounds on one bear • to play plucking the strings • clef used for the cello and bass • ...
CH3 Sensation and Perception 2022-09-14
Across
- The sense that informs us about the positions and motion of parts of out bodies
- An area near the center of the retina that is dense with cones and here vision is consequently most acute
- Stimuli suggestive of depth that can be perceived with only one eye
- The minimal amount of energy that can produce a sensation
- The view that the perception of sensory stimuli involves the interaction of physical, biological and physiological factors
- A person who is sensitive to black white, and either red green, or blue yellow and hence is partially color-blind
- The type of sensory adaptation in which we become more sensitive to stimuli that are low in magnitude; positive adaptation
- The theory that the pitch of sound is determined by the section of the basilar membrane that vibrates in response to the sound
- The minimal difference in intensity required between two sources of energy so that they are perceived as being different
- A condition characterized by brittleness of the lens
- The process by which sensations are organized into an inner representation of the world
- motion, The visual illusion in which the perception of motion is generated by a series of stationary images presented in rapid succession
- The theory that the pitch of a sound is reflected in the frequency of the neural impulses that are generated in response to the sound
- The fraction of the intensity by which a source of physical energy must be increased or decreased so that a difference in intensity will be perceived
- A person who is sensitive to black and white only and hence color-blind
- A muscular membrane whose dilation regulates the amount of light that enters the eye
- A monocular cue for depth based on the perception that nearby objects appear to move more rapidly in relation to our own motion
- The black-looking opening in the center of the iris, through which light that enters the eye
- fate, The tendency to perceive elements that move together as belonging together
- A membrane that lies coiled within the cochlea
- The theory that color vision is made possible by three types of cones, some of which respond to red light, some to green, and some to blue
- Transparent tissue forming the outer surface of the eyeball
Down
- stimuli suggestive of depth that involve simultaneous perception by both eyes
- The theory that color vision is made possible by three types of cones, some of which respond to red or green light, some to blue or yellow, and some to the intensity of light
- The type of sensory adaptation in which we become less sensitive to constant stimuli; negative adaptation
- The minimal amount by which a source of energy must be increased or decreased so that a difference in intensity will be perceived
- The inner ear
- A unit expressing the frequency of soundwaves
- A transparent body behind the iris that focuses an image on the retina
- The axon bundle that transmits neural impulses from the organ of the Corti to the brain
- A person with normal color vision
- Sensory stimulation below a person's absolute threshold for conscious perception
- The lingering visual impression made by a stimulus that has been removed
- A binocular cue for depth based on the inward movement of the eyes as they attempt to focus on an object that is drawing nearer
- A unit expressing the loudness of a sound
- perception of objects or events through means other than the recognized sensory objects
- The nerve that transmits information concerning odors form olfactory receptors to the brain
- cells, Neurons whose axons from the optic nerve
- The nerve that transmits sensory information from the eye to the brain
- The area of the inner surface of the eye that contains rods and cones
- The stimulation of sensory receptors and the transmission of sensory information to the central nervous system
- The sense of equilibrium that informs us about our bodies' positions relative to gravity
42 Clues: The inner ear • A person with normal color vision • A unit expressing the loudness of a sound • A unit expressing the frequency of soundwaves • A membrane that lies coiled within the cochlea • cells, Neurons whose axons from the optic nerve • A condition characterized by brittleness of the lens • The minimal amount of energy that can produce a sensation • ...
Chapter 6 Vocabulary 2021-10-11
Across
- the process of forming ions
- a negatively charged OH group due to the hydrogen atom sharing its electron with the oxygen atom
- The point at which there are equal numbers of acid and base molecules
- a positively charged hydrogen ion
- a hydrogen atom bonded to a water molecule
- usually written in scientific notation as 6.02×10^23
- substances that produce hydrogen or hydronium ion in water-based solutions and also has a positive charge
- is the process of adding a base with a known pH to an acid or adding an acid with a known pH to a base
- According to the Bronsted-Lowry theory, are compounds that easily accept protons
- The deadliest type of food borne illness and is caused by a toxin produced by the bacteria Clostridium botulinum
- is the measure of parts of one substance to the known volume of another
- Avogadro’s number of particles of any substance
- are substances that produce hydroxide ions in water based solutions and also have a negative charge
Down
- another term for the endpoint
- are naturally occurring color pigments that change color when exposed to acids or bases
- is the point at which all ions in a solution have combined chemically
- substances like pure water have an equal number of positive and negative charges
- are ingredients that are added to baked goods to lighten or aerate the finished product
- scientists measure solute concentrations in terms of M
- states that acids are proton donors and bases are proton acceptors
- demonstrate through color change the degree of acidity of a solution
- According to the Bronsted-Lowry theory, are compounds that easily give up the proton from a hydrogen atom
- is a compound that helps stabilize pH by absorbing excess acids or bases in a solution
- a compound created when acids and bases form a compound with ionic bonds
- was developed to express the degree of concentration of hydrogen or hydronium ions present in a solution
25 Clues: the process of forming ions • another term for the endpoint • a positively charged hydrogen ion • a hydrogen atom bonded to a water molecule • Avogadro’s number of particles of any substance • usually written in scientific notation as 6.02×10^23 • scientists measure solute concentrations in terms of M • states that acids are proton donors and bases are proton acceptors • ...
Unit 3, Part 2: Sensation & Perception 2023-09-12
Across
- the organization of the visual field into objects (the figures) that stand out from their surroundings (the ground).
- the distance from the peak of one light or sound wave to the peak of the next. Electromagnetic wavelengths vary from the short blips of cosmic rays to the long pulses of radio transmission.
- on the cochlea’s oval window.
- a mental predisposition to perceive one thing and not another.
- a branch of psychology that explores how people and machines interact and how machines and physical environments can be made safe and easy to use.
- the process by which the eye’s lens changes shape to focus near or far objects on the retina.
- in vision, the ability to adjust to an artificially displaced or even inverted visual field.
- and cochlea containing three
- in hearing, the theory that links the pitch we hear with the place where the cochlea’s membrane is stimulated.
- bones (hammer, anvil, and stirrup)
- retinal receptor cells that are concentrated near the center of the retina and that function in daylight or in well-lit conditions. The cones detect fine detail and give rise to color sensations.
- information processing guided by higher-level mental processes, as when we construct perceptions drawing on our experience and by our expectations
- nerve the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain.
- the study of relationships between the physical characteristics of stimuli, such as their intensity, and our psychological experience of them.
- the point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, creating a “blind” spot because no receptor cells are located there.
- the principle that one sense may influence another, as when the smell of food influences its taste.
- a tone’s experienced highness or lowness; depends on frequency.
- ear the chamber between the
- the sense or act of hearing
- an illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on and off in quick succession.
- the study of paranormal phenomena, including ESP and psychokinesis.
- the adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters.
- [kin-ehs-THEE-sehs] the system for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts.
- the theory that the spinal cord contains a neurological “gate” that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass on to the brain. The “gate” is opened by the activity of pain signals traveling up small nerve fibers and is closed by activity in larger fibers or by information coming from the brain.
- the minimum stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus 50 percent of the time.
- [KOHK-lee-uh] a coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear through which sound waves trigger nerve impulses.
- a theory predicting how and when we detect the presence of a faint stimulus (signal) amid background stimulation (noise). Assumes there is no single absolute threshold and that detection depends partly on a person’s experience, expectations, motivation, and level of fatigue
- the perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into coherent groups.
- perception (ESP) the controversial claim that perception can occur apart from sensory input; includes telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition.
- the number of complete wavelengths that pass a point in a given time(for example, per second).
- concentrate the vibrations of the
- hearing loss caused by damage to the cochlea’s receptor cells or to the auditory nerves; also called nerve deafness.
- the transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to help focus images on the retina.
Down
- an organized whole. Gestalt psychologists emphasized our tendency to integrate pieces of information into meaningful wholes.
- a device for converting sounds into electrical signals and stimulating the auditory nerve through electrodes threaded into the cochlea.
- perceiving familiar objects as having consistent color, even if changing illumination alters the wavelengths reflected by the object.
- hearing loss caused by damage to the mechanical system that conducts sound waves to the cochlea.
- the theory that the retina contains three different color receptors—one most sensitive to red, one to green, one to blue—which, when stimulated in combination, can produce the perception of any color.
- the dimension of color that is determined by the wavelength of light; what we know as the color names blue, green, and so forth.
- the principle that, to be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage (rather than a constant amount)
- diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation
- ear the innermost part of the ear, containing the cochlea, semicircular canals,and vestibular sacs
- the central focal point in the retina, around which the eye’s cones cluster.
- retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray; necessary for peripheral and twilight vision, when cones don’t respond.
- the theory that opposing retinal processes (redgreen, yellow-blue, white-black) enable color vision. For example, some cells are stimulated by green and inhibited by red; others are stimulated by red and inhibited by green.
- the amount of energy in a light or sound wave, which we perceive as brightness or loudness, as determined by the wave’s amplitude.
- in hearing, the theory that the rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, thus enabling us to sense its pitch.
- below one’s absolute threshold for conscious awareness.
- perceiving objects as unchanging (having consistent shapes, size, lightness, and color) even as illumination and retinal images change.
- the minimum difference between two stimuli required for detection 50 percent of the time
- analysis that begins with the sensory receptors and works up to the brain’s integration of sensory information.
- 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 processing of many aspects of a problem simultaneously; the brain’s natural mode of information processing for many functions, including vision. Contrasts with the stepby-step (serial) processing of most computers and of conscious problem solving.
- the sense of body movement and position, including the sense of balance.
- the process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events.
- the activation, often unconsciously, of certain associations, thus predisposing one’s perception, memory, or response.
- conversion of one form of energy into another. In sensation, the transforming of stimulus energies, such as sights, sounds, and smells, into neural impulses our brains can interpret
- 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 process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment
60 Clues: ear the chamber between the • the sense or act of hearing • and cochlea containing three • on the cochlea’s oval window. • concentrate the vibrations of the • bones (hammer, anvil, and stirrup) • below one’s absolute threshold for conscious awareness. • a mental predisposition to perceive one thing and not another. • ...
Sociology and Values 2025-10-20
Across
- Late-modern theory that argues society is fragmented, media-saturated, and unstable.
- strand that blames capitalism for female oppression.
- Theory that sees gender inequality as the key division in society.
- Theory that focuses on how individuals are labelled and stereotyped.
- Concept describing the dominance of men in society.
- Theory arguing that society is based on shared norms, values and integration.
- Postmodern concept where signs and images become more real than reality itself.
- strand critical of men and patriarchy rather than capitalism or culture.
Down
- concept where institutions work together like organs in the body.
- Theory that focuses on how individuals construct meanings through social interaction.
- that emphasises qualitative understanding and empathetic insight.
- A structural theory that sees society as a system working toward stability and consensus.
- A conflict theory that argues society is divided by class inequality and exploitation.
- Theory arguing individuals learn norms and deviance through observing others.
- Marxist idea that the ruling class manipulate ideas to maintain power.
15 Clues: Concept describing the dominance of men in society. • strand that blames capitalism for female oppression. • concept where institutions work together like organs in the body. • that emphasises qualitative understanding and empathetic insight. • Theory that sees gender inequality as the key division in society. • ...
communism crossword 2022-10-28
Across
- Supreme Leader of North Korea
- a political theory derived from Karl Marx
- a color associated with communism
- all private property belongs to the government
- there are no differences between the rich and the poor
Down
- another word for communism
- nickname for communism
- keeps everything equal
- opposite of communism
- place that is close to communism
10 Clues: opposite of communism • nickname for communism • keeps everything equal • another word for communism • Supreme Leader of North Korea • place that is close to communism • a color associated with communism • a political theory derived from Karl Marx • all private property belongs to the government • there are no differences between the rich and the poor
communism crossword 2022-10-28
Across
- Supreme Leader of North Korea
- a political theory derived from Karl Marx
- a color associated with communism
- all private property belongs to the government
- there are no differences between the rich and the poor
Down
- another word for communism
- nickname for communism
- keeps everything equal
- opposite of communism
- place that is close to communism
10 Clues: opposite of communism • nickname for communism • keeps everything equal • another word for communism • Supreme Leader of North Korea • place that is close to communism • a color associated with communism • a political theory derived from Karl Marx • all private property belongs to the government • there are no differences between the rich and the poor
Economics 2025-11-06
Across
- Studied
- Productivity
- Profit Helps Society
- Main Problem
- Free Market
- Birthplace
- Limited Government
- University
- Wealth of
- Market Phrase
- Protect Property
- Field of Study
- Taught
- Opposed Theory
- Publication Year
- Death Year
- Global Bank
- Publication Year
Down
- Moral Book
- Birthplace
- Gov Spending Theory
- Economic Recessions
- Nationality
- Father of Economics
- Wrote General Theory
- Economic Decline
- Gold System
- Crisis Advised
- Policy Tool
- Helped Design
30 Clues: Taught • Studied • Wealth of • Moral Book • Birthplace • Birthplace • University • Death Year • Nationality • Free Market • Gold System • Policy Tool • Global Bank • Productivity • Main Problem • Market Phrase • Helped Design • Crisis Advised • Field of Study • Opposed Theory • Economic Decline • Protect Property • Publication Year • Publication Year • Limited Government • Gov Spending Theory • Economic Recessions • ...
AP Psych 2023-04-13
Across
- Studied theory of attachment in infant Rhesus monkeys
- said that humans have an inborn native ability to develop language
- differences between the habitual moral judgments of men and women
- developed one of the first projective tests, the Inkblot test
- Conducted a study on obedience when he had a subject shock a patient to the extent that they would be seriously injuring the patient
- The theory that facial expressions are universal
- Theory of evolution
- His theory states there are 3 levels of moral reasoning, and each level can be divided into 2 stages
- Study on conformity
- Triarchic theory of intelligence
- She maintained that Kohlberg’s work was developed only observing boys and overlooked
- Classical conditioning-An unconditional stimulus naturally elicits a reflexive behavior called an unconditional response
- first to conduct scientific studies on forgetting
- established an intelligence test especially for adults
- introspection-psychology became the scientific study of conscious experience
- Hierarchy of needs
Down
- Founder of behaviorism
- Conducted the famous Stanford Prison experiment
- Observational Learning
- Theory of multiple intelligences
- Humanistic psychology-the theory that emphasizes the unique quality of humans especially their freedom and potential for personal growth
- Neo Freudian, believed that childhood social not sexual tensions are crucial for personality
- People evolve through 8 stages over the life span
- personality and ability depend almost entirely on genetic inheritance
- general I.Q. tests
- Law of effect
- He concluded that all cognitive abilities showed a common core which he labeled “g”, for general ability
- Four-stage theory of cognitive development
- Operant conditioning-techniques to manipulate the consequences of an organism’s behavior in order to observe the effects of subsequent behavior
- Psychoanalytical theory that focuses on the unconscious- Id-Ego-Superego
- She said that personality is continually mold by current fears and impulses, rather than being determined solely by childhood experiences and instincts
31 Clues: Law of effect • general I.Q. tests • Hierarchy of needs • Theory of evolution • Study on conformity • Founder of behaviorism • Observational Learning • Theory of multiple intelligences • Triarchic theory of intelligence • Four-stage theory of cognitive development • Conducted the famous Stanford Prison experiment • The theory that facial expressions are universal • ...
Visual and Sensory Information 2014-11-12
Across
- They are abundant in the periphery of the human retina.
- It is the intensity of a sound wave
- This cell receives messages from the bipolar cells.
- The ganglion cells in the fovea of humans and other primates are called ________ ganglion cells because each is small and responds to just a single cone.
- This visual cortex processes the information further and transmits it to additional areas.
- This window is the membrane of the inner ear.
- The ganglion cell axons form this type of nerve, which exists through the back of the eye.
- This theory states: like keys on a piano, each area along the basillar membrane of the cochlea can only respond to a specific frequency.
- Voluntary eye movements.
- Sensory information is coded by which type of cells
- The smaller the dot, the farther you have to move it into your _______ field.
- The rods and cones of the retina make synapses with _______ cells and bipolar cells.
- About 70% of all infants have blurring of vision for lines in one direction, which is caused by an asymmetric curvature of the eyes.
- The ability to respond in limited ways to visual information without perceiving it consciously.
- It is the perception of the intestate of a sound wave
- Both rods and cones contain _______.
- Cells that are located closer to the center of the eye and send their messages to ganglion cells.
- Neurons with small cell bodies and small receptive fields are mostly in or near the fovea.
- The trichromatic theory and the opponent-process theory cannot easily explain color _______, the ability to recognize colors despite changes in lighting.
- This is better described as color vision deficiency.
- An inability to recognize objects despite otherwise satisfactory vision is called visual _______ (meaning "visual lack of knowledge").
- It is the number of compressions per second of a sound, measured in hertz.
- Loudness is determined by the number of _______ cells.
- The inability to recognize faces due to damage of several brain areas.
- This stream through the temporal cortex is called the "what" pathway, because ti is specialized for identifying and recognizing objects.
- This part of the inner ear contains three fluid filled tunnels.
- Light striking the rods and cones _______ their spontaneous output.
- This stream goes through the parietal cortex.
- Cells in the _______ temporal cortex respond to identifiable objects.
- Light enters the eye through and opening in the center of the iris.
- What results from the stimulation of structures on the taste buds?
- This type of deafness can be inherited or caused by prenatal problems and early childhood disorders.
- senses allow animals to find food, avoid danger, and even find mates.
- This wave is a compression of air, water, or another medium (like gas or plasma)
Down
- A gyrus brain area of the inferior temporal cortex that recognizes faces.
- Stereoscopic depth perception requires the brain to detect __________ disparity.
- Certain children are born with this, it's known as the "lazy eye," a condition in which the eyes do not point in the same direction.
- It is an input stimulation from both eyes.
- Unlike simple cells, this cell does not respond to the exact location of a stimulus.
- This is a type of detector-neurons whose responses indicate the presence of a particular feature.
- This cell has a receptive field with fixed excitatory and inhibitory zones.
- The cell type of visual cortex cell that resembles complex cells; responds best to stimuli of a precisely limited type, anywhere in a large receptive field, with a strong inhibitory field at one end of its field.
- Each cell in the visual system of the brain has a _______ field, which is the area in visual space that excites or inhibits it.
- In this theory, the color is perceived through the relative rates of response by three kinds of cones, each one maximally sensitive to a different set of wavelengths.
- This blindness is an impaired ability to perceive movement.
- These cells are the auditory receptor.
- Neurons with larger cell bodies and receptive fields and are distributed evenly throughout the retina.
- This is a frequent or constant ringing in the ear.
- The familiar structure of flesh and cartilage attached to each side of the head.
- This cell gets its information from bipolar cells and send it to other bipolar, and ganglion cells.
- Secondary Auditory Cortex corresponds to what?
- Sound waves enter the auditory canal and strike this membrane.
- This is a color after-image, that results of staring at a colored object for a prolonged length of time and the looking at a white surface, the image is seen as a negative image, with a replacement of red with green, green with red, yellow and blue with each other, and black and white with each other.
- This deafness is the failure of the bones of the middle ear to transmit sound waves properly to the cochlea.
- It is the perception of the frequency of a sound wave.
- Hair cells are rooted in the _______ membrane.
- For each aspect of visual experience, researchers identify a __________ period.
- Most ganglion cell axons go to the lateral _______ nucleus, part of the thalamus.
- This process theory perceives color on a continuum from red to green, another from yellow to blue, and another from white to black.
- when a horizontal cell is excited, it _______ the bipolar cells.
- This theory is a combination of the words retina and cortex.
- are abundant in and near the fovea, are less active in dim light, more useful i bright light, and essential for color vision.
- A tiny area specialized for acute, detailed vision.
- This spot has no receptors.
64 Clues: Voluntary eye movements. • This spot has no receptors. • It is the intensity of a sound wave • Both rods and cones contain _______. • These cells are the auditory receptor. • It is an input stimulation from both eyes. • This window is the membrane of the inner ear. • This stream goes through the parietal cortex. • Secondary Auditory Cortex corresponds to what? • ...
Color Blindness 2023-01-30
Across
- the smallest parts of substances that can exist by themselves, made of one or more atoms
- natural compounds that undergo chemical changes when they absorb light
- the distances between the consecutive high or low points of a wave
- weaknesses, imperfections, or failures
- of or relating to genetic traits passed from parents to offspring
- tissue at the back of the eye that receives images and transmits them to the brain
- cells in the eye's retina that are color sensitive and work best in bright light
Down
- an inherited physical condition that is caused by a problem in one or more genes
- serving to complete, balance, or improve something else
- family members and relations from past times
- a clear object that bends light so that it separates into a rainbow of colors
- cells in the eye's retina that are light sensitive and work best in dim light
12 Clues: weaknesses, imperfections, or failures • family members and relations from past times • serving to complete, balance, or improve something else • of or relating to genetic traits passed from parents to offspring • the distances between the consecutive high or low points of a wave • natural compounds that undergo chemical changes when they absorb light • ...
Color Terms 2023-04-19
Across
- This is what we call light waves reflected off a surface.
- This means the brightness or dullness of a hue.
- This means the lightness or darkness of a hue.
- The group of colors such as red, yellow, and orange.
- The color scheme made up of colors next to each other on the color wheel which share a common color.
- The term for the name of a color.
- One of these is made when white is added to a color.
Down
- Any three colors on the color wheel that are equally spaced apart.
- The color scheme made up of one color plus the tints and shades.
- The colors opposite or directly across from each other on the color wheel.
- The group of colors such as blue, blue-violet, purple, green, and blue-green.
- One of these is made when a small amount of black is added to a color.
12 Clues: The term for the name of a color. • This means the lightness or darkness of a hue. • This means the brightness or dullness of a hue. • The group of colors such as red, yellow, and orange. • One of these is made when white is added to a color. • This is what we call light waves reflected off a surface. • ...
Color Words 2020-11-30
Across
- a deep shade of green, like grass
- a bright shade of yellow
- a way to say purple, also a flower
- a bright and happy shade of green
- a bright greenish-blue
Down
- a bluish-purple color
- a yellowish shade of white
- a bright purplish-pink
- a dark shade of green, like army clothes
- a shade of white
- a dark shade of blue
- a dark yellow color
12 Clues: a shade of white • a dark yellow color • a dark shade of blue • a bluish-purple color • a bright purplish-pink • a bright greenish-blue • a bright shade of yellow • a yellowish shade of white • a deep shade of green, like grass • a bright and happy shade of green • a way to say purple, also a flower • a dark shade of green, like army clothes
Color Schemes 2022-10-07
Across
- Scheme using any three colors which are of equal distance apart on the color wheel. There are four triads: Primary, Secondary, Intermediate red-orange, yellow-green, blue-violet, and Intermediate red-violet, yellow-orange, and blue-green.
- Color shaded or darkened by the addition of gray.
- That oppose one another on the color wheel: red and green, blue and orange, and yellow and violet.
- Colors suggesting coolness: green, blue, and violet.
- Refers to a color scheme involving the use of only one hue that can vary in value or intensity.
Down
- Colors that are created by mixing one primary color with one secondary color.
- The painting pigments of red, yellow, and blue.
- Refers to closely related colors; a color scheme that combines several hues that fall next to each other on the color wheel.
- Color darkened by the addition of black.
- Colors that are mixture of two primary hues; orange, made from red and yellow; green made from yellow and blue; violet made from blue and red.
- Colors suggesting warmth: red, orange, and yellow.
- Color lightened by the addition of white.
12 Clues: Color lightened by the addition of white. • The painting pigments of red, yellow, and blue. • Color darkened by the addition of black. • Color shaded or darkened by the addition of gray. • Colors suggesting warmth: red, orange, and yellow. • Colors suggesting coolness: green, blue, and violet. • ...
Unit 3 Sensation and Perception 2022-12-05
Across
- the processing of many aspects of a problem simultaneously; the brain's natural mode of information processing for many functions, including vision
- 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 sense of body movement and position that enables our sense of balance
- theory) in hearing, the theory that the rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, thus enabling us to sense its pitch
- threshold the minimum stimulation needed to detect a stimulus (light, a sound, a pressure, taste odor) 50% of the time
- a mental tendency to perceive one thing and not another
- the organization of the visual field into objects (the figures) that stand out from their surroundings (the ground).
- analysis that begins with the sensory receptors and works up to the brain's integration of sensory information
- in hearing, the theory that links the pitch we hear with the place where the cochlea's membrane is stimulated
- a theory predicting how and when we detect the presence of a faint signal amid background noise. Assumes there is no single absolute threshold and that detection depends partly on a person's experience, expectations, motivation, and alertness.
- the distance from the peak of one light or sound wave to the peak of the next. Electromagnetic wavelengths vary from the short blips of cosmic rays to the long pulses of radio transmission
- an illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on and off in quick succession
- the transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to help focus images on the retina
- the perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into logical groups
- the process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment
- the adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters
- a sensory nerve ending that responds to a stimulus
- nerve cells in the brain that respond to specific features of the stimulus, such as shape, angle, or movemen
- the focusing of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus
- a coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear; sound waves traveling through the cochlear fluid trigger nerve impulses
- 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 point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, creating a "blind" spot because no receptor cells are located there
- a binocular cue for perceiving depth by comparing images from the retinas in the two eyes, the brain computes distance—the greater the disparity (difference) between the two images, the closer the object.
- sense of smell
- the number of complete wavelengths that pass a point in a given time (Ex- per second)
- perceiving familiar objects as having consistent color, even if changing illumination alters the wavelengths reflected by the object
- the study of relationships between the physical characteristics of stimuli, such as their intensity, and our psychological experience of them
- the theory that the retina contains three different color receptors—one most sensitive to red, one to green, one to blue—which, when stimulated in combination, can produce the perception of any color.
- a device for converting sounds into electrical signals and stimulating the auditory nerve through electrodes threaded into the cochlea
- the study of paranormal phenomena, including ESP and psychokinesis
Down
- a tone's experienced highness or lowness; depends on frequency
- less common form of hearing loss caused by damage to the mechanical system that conducts sound waves to the cochlea
- minimum difference between two stimuli that can be detected at least 50% of the time.
- diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation
- the influence of bodily sensations, gestures, and other states on cognitive preferences and judgements
- ability to adjust to a changed sensory input, including an artificially displaced or even inverted visual field
- the chamber between the eardrum and cochlea containing three tiny bones (hammer, anvil, and stirrup) that concentrate the vibrations of the eardrum on the cochlea's oval window
- failing to notice changes in the environment,a form of inattentional blindness
- a depth cue, such as interposition and linear perspective, available to either eye alone
- perception (ESP) the controversial claim that perception can occur apart from sensory input; includes telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition
- the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain
- the theory that opposing retinal processes (red-green, yellow-blue, white-black) enable color vision.ex- some cells are stimulated by green and inhibited by red; others are stimulated by red and inhibited by green
- hearing loss caused by damage to the cochlea's receptor cells or to the auditory nerves; also called nerve deafness
- information processing guided by higher-level mental processes, as when we construct perceptions drawing on our experience and expectations
- the dimension of color that is determined by the wavelength of light; what we know as the color names blue, green, and so forth
- a depth cue, such as retinal disparity, that depends on the use of two eyes
- the eye's clear, protective, outer layer, covering the pupil and the iris
- the sense or act of hearing
- failing to see visible objects when our attention is directed elsewhere
- perceiving objects as unchanging (having consistent lightness, color, shape, and size) even as illumination and retinal images change
- conversion of one form of energy into another. In sensation, it's the transforming of stimulus energies like sights, sounds, and smells, into neural impulses our brains can interpret
- 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 process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events
- the principle that, to be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage
- the theory that the spinal cord contains a neurological "gate" that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass on to the brain. The "gate" is opened by the activity of pain signals traveling up small nerve fibers and is closed by activity in larger fibers or by information coming from the brain.
- the activation, often unconsciously, of certain associations, thus predisposing one's perception, memory, or response
- a laboratory device for testing depth perception in infants and young animals
- the principle that one sense may influence another, as when the smell of food influences its taste
- retinal receptor cells that are concentrated near the center of the retina and that function in daylight or in well-lit conditions. The cones detect fine detail and give rise to color sensations.
- the innermost part of the ear, containing the cochlea, semicircular canals, and vestibular sacs
- the process by which the eye's lens changes shape to focus near or far objects on the retina
- the ability to see objects in three dimensions although the images that strike the retina are two-dimensional; allows us to judge distance
- our movement sense-- system that keeps us aware of the position and movement of individual body parts
- an organized whole. Gestalt psychologists emphasized our tendency to integrate pieces of information into meaningful wholes.
- below one's absolute threshold for conscious awareness
- the central focal point in the retina, around which the eye's cones cluster
- retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray; necessary for peripheral and twilight vision, when cones don't respond
67 Clues: sense of smell • the sense or act of hearing • a sensory nerve ending that responds to a stimulus • below one's absolute threshold for conscious awareness • a mental tendency to perceive one thing and not another • the focusing of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus • a tone's experienced highness or lowness; depends on frequency • ...
Unit 8 - Motivation and Emotion 2024-03-04
Across
- this theory of motivation argues that we engage in behaviors for the rewards we get afterwards
- this type of motivation is present only when reinforcers are available
- this part of the brain is heavily involved with motivation to eat
- one of the more difficult "universal emotions" to identify
- this biological influence on hunger determines how quickly we burn calories
- this type of social motivation explain why those in solitary confinement report extremely high levels of depression
- culture specific customs that regulate when it is appropriate to show express emotion visibly
- this nervous system returns your body to a resting state
- reason for eating when the bell rings for lunch
Down
- this theory would argue that if you are feeling depressed you should try to smile as much as possible to change your mood
- effect defined as the reduction in intrinsic motivation when external reward is provided
- this theory of emotion argues that are motivations are driven by pre-wired genetic drives
- Paul Ekman researched remote tribes to establish that there are 7 basic emotions in this theory
- one of the major topics of this unit
- this nervous system is triggered when you experience fear
- this theory of motivation argues that humans don’t always seek to reduce drives but actually seek out excitement
- this theory of emotion argues that how you label physiological responses with your mind is what creates emotion (e.g. Schacter-Singer).
- second level on maslow’s pyramid
- theory that holds humans experience emotion at the same time as physiological responses.
- this theory of motivation that we seek to return to homeostasis
- this law argues that the optimal level of arousal depends on the difficulty of the task
- this guy is the architect of the hierarchy of needs
- this type of motivation is present without reinforcers
- this theory would support the idea that my racing heart causes anxiety
- the other major topic of this unit
25 Clues: second level on maslow’s pyramid • the other major topic of this unit • one of the major topics of this unit • reason for eating when the bell rings for lunch • this guy is the architect of the hierarchy of needs • this type of motivation is present without reinforcers • this nervous system returns your body to a resting state • ...
Unit 8 - Motivation and Emotion 2024-03-04
Across
- one of the more difficult "universal emotions" to identify
- effect defined as the reduction in intrinsic motivation when external reward is provided
- this theory of motivation that we seek to return to homeostasis
- Paul Ekman researched remote tribes to establish that there are 7 basic emotions in this theory
- theory that holds humans experience emotion at the same time as physiological responses.
- this theory would argue that if you are feeling depressed you should try to smile as much as possible to change your mood
- this nervous system is triggered when you are stressed
- one of the major topics of this unit
- this theory of motivation argues that humans don’t always seek to reduce drives but actually seek out excitement
Down
- this biological influence on hunger determines how quickly we burn calories
- this theory of motivation argues that we engage in behaviors for the rewards we get afterwards
- this law argues that the optimal level of arousal depends on the difficulty of the task
- this theory of emotion argues that how you label physiological responses with your mind is what creates emotion (e.g. Schacter-Singer).
- this type of social motivation explain why those in solitary confinement report extremely high levels of depression
- this theory would support the idea that my racing heart causes anxiety
- this type of motivation is present only when reinforcers are available
- this part of the brain is heavily involved with motivation to eat
- this nervous system returns your body to a resting state
- this theory of emotion argues that are motivations are driven by pre-wired genetic drives
- this type of motivation is present without reinforcers
- this guy is the architect of the hierarchy of needs
- culture specific customs that regulate when it is appropriate to show express emotion visibly
- second level on maslow’s pyramid
- the other major topic of this unit
24 Clues: second level on maslow’s pyramid • the other major topic of this unit • one of the major topics of this unit • this guy is the architect of the hierarchy of needs • this type of motivation is present without reinforcers • this nervous system is triggered when you are stressed • this nervous system returns your body to a resting state • ...
Crim 2021-05-09
Across
- tends to relate two or more variable
- okay siya
- okay lang
- most influential theory
- produced grater goods
- omcm
- sige lang
- sige
- Reason for exposing punishment
- "subsidiary of
- emphasize free will
Down
- eguls
- act that the law make punishable
- based on fundamental tenets
- actions becomes morally right
- one of the earliest theory in criminology
- sige ba
- olats
- omegle
- eguls
20 Clues: omcm • sige • eguls • olats • eguls • omegle • sige ba • okay siya • okay lang • sige lang • "subsidiary of • emphasize free will • produced grater goods • most influential theory • based on fundamental tenets • actions becomes morally right • Reason for exposing punishment • act that the law make punishable • tends to relate two or more variable • one of the earliest theory in criminology
direction and co-ordination 2013-08-26
Across
- distinct channels of communication
- needs theory
- latin word for motivation
- crosswise communication is also known as.......
- leadership studies on 3 different styles, autocratic, democratic, lassez faire
- of direction supervision, motivation, leadership, communication
- parent child transaction
- taught concept of life
- robert blake and jane mouton
- said "harmony of objectives"
Down
- response to transactional stimulus
- unity of command cannot exist without unity in direction but does not flow from it.
- theory x theory y
- man is essentially economic
- types of co-ordination
- neurosurgeon from mcgill university
- felt concept of life
- comparing their efforts and rewards with others
- thought concept of life
- herzbergs theory
20 Clues: needs theory • herzbergs theory • theory x theory y • felt concept of life • types of co-ordination • taught concept of life • thought concept of life • parent child transaction • latin word for motivation • man is essentially economic • robert blake and jane mouton • said "harmony of objectives" • response to transactional stimulus • distinct channels of communication • ...
Puzzle 30: Famous Scientists 2025-09-09
Across
- – Population growth effects.
- – Evolutionary biology.
- – Paleontology studies.
- – Chemotherapy research.
- – Ancient anatomist.
- – Early classification of organisms.
- – X-ray crystallography of DNA.
- – Example of evolution observation.
- – Studied anatomy.
- – Taxonomy system.
- – Identified disease bacteria.
- – Pasteurization and germ theory.
- – Sociobiology and ants.
- – Geologist influencing evolution theory.
- – Observed microorganisms.
- – Developed natural selection theory.
Down
- – Father of genetics.
- – Neuroscientist and psychologist.
- – Microbial research.
- – Co-discovered DNA structure.
- – Proved life doesn’t spontaneously arise.
- – Co-discovered DNA structure.
- – Father of geology (influenced biology indirectly).
- – Studied plant and light effects.
- – Natural selection co-discoverer.
- – Early evolution theory.
- – Modern biology contributions.
- – Studied radioactivity.
- – Discovered cells.
- – Circulation of blood.
30 Clues: – Studied anatomy. • – Taxonomy system. • – Discovered cells. • – Ancient anatomist. • – Father of genetics. • – Microbial research. • – Evolutionary biology. • – Paleontology studies. • – Circulation of blood. • – Chemotherapy research. • – Studied radioactivity. • – Sociobiology and ants. • – Early evolution theory. • – Observed microorganisms. • – Population growth effects. • ...
communism crossword 2022-10-28
Across
- Supreme Leader of North Korea
- a political theory derived from Karl Marx
- a color associated with communism
- all private property belongs to the government
- there are no differences between the rich and the poor
Down
- another word for communism
- nickname for communism
- keeps everything equal
- opposite of communism
- place that is close to communism
10 Clues: opposite of communism • nickname for communism • keeps everything equal • another word for communism • Supreme Leader of North Korea • place that is close to communism • a color associated with communism • a political theory derived from Karl Marx • all private property belongs to the government • there are no differences between the rich and the poor
Economics 2025-11-06
Across
- Studied
- Productivity
- Profit Helps Society
- Main Problem
- Free Market
- Birthplace
- Limited Government
- University
- Wealth of
- Market Phrase
- Protect Property
- Field of Study
- Taught
- Opposed Theory
- Publication Year
- Death Year
- Global Bank
- Publication Year
Down
- Moral Book
- Birthplace
- Gov Spending Theory
- Economic Recessions
- Nationality
- Father of Economics
- Wrote General Theory
- Economic Decline
- Gold System
- Crisis Advised
- Policy Tool
- Helped Design
30 Clues: Taught • Studied • Wealth of • Moral Book • Birthplace • Birthplace • University • Death Year • Nationality • Free Market • Gold System • Policy Tool • Global Bank • Productivity • Main Problem • Market Phrase • Helped Design • Crisis Advised • Field of Study • Opposed Theory • Economic Decline • Protect Property • Publication Year • Publication Year • Limited Government • Gov Spending Theory • Economic Recessions • ...
Darin & Jen 2025-04-01
Across
- City where they are going to go for their honeymoon
- Groom's favorite soccer team
- The seat Darin prefers when flying
- City where the couples favorite park is located
- Dating website where they met
- Jen's middle name
- Color of Bride's eyes
- Name of company Darin works for
Down
- The couples favorite conspiracy theory
- Darin's middle name
- Patch Place Darin told Jen he loved her
- Favorite kind of restaurant the bride & groom enjoy
- Grade the bride teaches
- City the Bride & Groom will reside in
- Number of kids the couple has between them
- State Darin was born in
16 Clues: Jen's middle name • Darin's middle name • Color of Bride's eyes • Grade the bride teaches • State Darin was born in • Groom's favorite soccer team • Dating website where they met • Name of company Darin works for • The seat Darin prefers when flying • City the Bride & Groom will reside in • The couples favorite conspiracy theory • Patch Place Darin told Jen he loved her • ...
Theorist Review Activity 2023-09-09
Across
- created the Multiple Intelligence Theory. (Hint: Last name)
- theory created by B. F. Skinner to make preferred behavior permanent.
- Erik Erikson's theory of a child's personality.
- Abraham Maslow's theory of level of education.
- created the theory that social/cultural experiences affect a child's learning.(Hint: Last name)
- Created the theory: Children as Experts. (Hint: Last name)
- Ivan Pavlov's Classical Conditioning theory which tellus a childs (...) leads to how they response?
Down
- David Kolb's theory that children observe and reflect what they learn.
- Jerome Bruner's theory that using contextualization is vital for a child's learning.
- Jean Piaget's theory for developing the brain.
- Created the Social Cognitive Theory. (Hint: Last name)
- Lawrence Kohlberg's theory that Moral development means, "Each level involves different ways of thinking".
12 Clues: Jean Piaget's theory for developing the brain. • Abraham Maslow's theory of level of education. • Erik Erikson's theory of a child's personality. • Created the Social Cognitive Theory. (Hint: Last name) • Created the theory: Children as Experts. (Hint: Last name) • created the Multiple Intelligence Theory. (Hint: Last name) • ...
Famous Scientists 2024-07-07
16 Clues: - Buoyancy • - AC power • - Black holes • - Germ theory • - Laws of motion • - Atomic structure • - Electromagnetism • - Planetary motion • - Evolution theory • - Quantum mechanics • - Telescope pioneer • - Expanding universe • - Light bulb inventor • - Theory of relativity • - Computer programming • - Radioactivity pioneer
Color Monsters 2020-02-03
12 Clues: Fresh, Purity • Love, Softness • Fear, Toughness • Calm, Sad, Upset • Angry, Mad, Love • Royalty, Peaceful • Energized,Excited • Happy, Bright, Sunshine • Nature, Calm, Life, Luck • Book about emotions by Anna Llenas • Showing one's thoughts or feelings • Who was all "mixed up" in the book?
Soil Color 2020-04-08
Across
- the color of soil that has high organic matter content
- a sedimentary stone found in cream soil
- inorganic material that makes up Earth's rocks, sands, and soils
- particles of small size left as sediment from water
- means that something is made of living things
- the color of soil with high iron content
- a metal element that makes soil red
Down
- the color of soil with high amounts of lime
- a mineral in soil that is sticky and moldable when wet
- the color of soil from sandstone
- a sedimentary rock made of compacted sand
- the color of soil made from ancient seabeds
12 Clues: the color of soil from sandstone • a metal element that makes soil red • a sedimentary stone found in cream soil • the color of soil with high iron content • a sedimentary rock made of compacted sand • the color of soil with high amounts of lime • the color of soil made from ancient seabeds • means that something is made of living things • ...
Color Products 2025-06-12
Across
- is an oxidizing agent that supplies oxygen gas for the development of color molecules when mixed with an oxidative haircolor product.
- also known as no-lift, deposit-only hair colors, are longer lasting than semipermanent colors.
- This Color Product color is acidic, creating a physical change rather than a chemical change in the hair shaft
- colors are no-lift, deposit-only haircolor products. Self-penetrating colors tend to make a mild chemical change as well as a physical change.
- are also known as aniline derivative tints, penetrating tints, synthetic-organic tints, and amino tints.
- dyes that are not professional haircoloring products
Down
- the term is used to denote the different strengths of hydrogen peroxide
- are chemical compounds that lighten hair by dispersing, dissolving, and decolorizing the natural hair pigment (melanin)
- these type of tints also known as natural haircolors, are haircoloring products made from various plants, such as herbs and flowers
- are mixed with developers (hydrogen peroxide). When the hair grows, a touch-up or retouch application is required to blend the new growth with the previously colored hair
- these dyes are metallic or mineral dyes combined with a vegetable tint.
- is a permanent haircoloring product that is applied to pre-lightened hair for the purpose of achieving the desired color or tones in the hair or to neutralize unwanted undertones (contributing pigment)
12 Clues: dyes that are not professional haircoloring products • the term is used to denote the different strengths of hydrogen peroxide • these dyes are metallic or mineral dyes combined with a vegetable tint. • also known as no-lift, deposit-only hair colors, are longer lasting than semipermanent colors. • ...
Color Psychology 2024-11-14
Across
- Can be used in design to influence mood and behavior
- Romance, Nurturing, Femininity
- Calm, Sadness, Peace
- New Beginnings, Nature, Harmony
- Love, Passion, Anger
- Mysterious, Elegance, Evil
Down
- Nature,Earthiness,Stability
- Moody, Comfort, Maturity
- Purity, Cleanliness, Virtue
- Happiness, Hope, Joy
- Energy, Happiness, Warmth
- Royalty, Wealth, Noble
12 Clues: Happiness, Hope, Joy • Calm, Sadness, Peace • Love, Passion, Anger • Royalty, Wealth, Noble • Moody, Comfort, Maturity • Mysterious, Elegance, Evil • Nature,Earthiness,Stability • Purity, Cleanliness, Virtue • Energy, Happiness, Warmth • New Beginnings, Nature, Harmony • Romance, Nurturing, Femininity • Can be used in design to influence mood and behavior
CRIM 260 - Review for Exam 1 2014-02-09
Across
- This develops through interactions with parents and others and represents the conscience and the moral rules that are shared by most adults.
- Social _______ Theories tie delinquency rates to socioeconomic conditions and cultural values; areas that experience high levels of poverty and social disorganization will also have high delinquency rates.
- According to this theory, social behavior is determined by the way society reacts to individuals and the way individuals react to society
- Under this movement, children were placed in the care of adults who trained them in specific skills.
- Social ______ Theory assumes that all people have the potential to commit crimes but are kept in check by their attachments to society.
- This theory focuses on the association between biological makeup, environmental conditions, and antisocial behaviors.
- These nineteenth-century reformers developed programs for troubled youth and influenced legislation creating the juvenile justice system; today some critics view them as being more concerned with control of the poor than with their welfare.
- This pathway begins at an early age with stubborn behavior; it leads to defiance and then to authority avoidance.
- This theory best reflects the branch of psychology that holds that the human personality is controlled by unconscious mental processes developed early in childhood.
- Social _______ Theory attributes delinquent behavior patterns to childhood socialization and pro- or antisocial attachments over the life course.
- Compiled by the FBI, this is the most widely used source of national crime and delinquency statistics reporting crimes known to the police and the number of persons arrested.
Down
- This theory suggests that delinquent behavior is a dynamic process, influenced by individual characteristics as well as social experiences.
- According to this theory, predatory crimes are influenced by the intersection of three variables: availability of suitable targets, the presence of motivated offenders, and the absence of capable guardians.
- This theory, developed by Lombroso, reflects the idea that delinquents manifest physical anomalies that make them biologically and physiologically similar to our primitive ancestors, savage throwbacks to an earlier stage of human evolution.
- These are young people who are extremely vulnerable to the negative consequences of school failure, substance abuse, and early sexuality.
- These allowed for the appointment of overseers to place destitute or neglected children as servants in the homes of the affluent, where they were trained in agricultural, trade, or domestic services.
- _______ Theory is a developmental theory that modifies social control theory by integrating concepts from biosocial, psychological, routine activities, and rational choice theories.
- This pathway describes a situation where a delinquent career begins with minor, underhanded behavior and eventually escalates into more serious criminality.
- _______ Theory argues that youths will choose to engage in delinquent and criminal behavior after weighing the consequences and benefits of their actions.
- According to this theory, delinquency is a function of personal predispositions such as temperament, personality, hormones, or genetics.
20 Clues: Under this movement, children were placed in the care of adults who trained them in specific skills. • This pathway begins at an early age with stubborn behavior; it leads to defiance and then to authority avoidance. • This theory focuses on the association between biological makeup, environmental conditions, and antisocial behaviors. • ...
cells and genetics crossword 2026-03-31
Across
- theory that all living things are made up of cells
- the powerhouse of the cell
- gives plants there green color
- the control center of the cell
- converts sunlight, water, and CO2 into sugar,performs photosynthesis
- translates genetic code into proteins
- keeps plants standing upright
Down
- surrounds all living cells
- has a nucleus
- critical for cell division
- does NOT have a nucleus
- thick jelly like substance that fills the interior of a cell
12 Clues: has a nucleus • does NOT have a nucleus • surrounds all living cells • critical for cell division • the powerhouse of the cell • keeps plants standing upright • gives plants there green color • the control center of the cell • translates genetic code into proteins • theory that all living things are made up of cells • thick jelly like substance that fills the interior of a cell • ...
Conflict Theory 2013-04-07
Across
- Those who have it seek to keep it away from those who don't
- Last name of the theory founder
- One of the three units in this course
- One of the main powers
- Unlike the conflict theory
- Large group of people who live in the same area and who share distinctive culture and institutions.
- The theory
Down
- One of the main powers
- First name of the theory founder
- Conflict _____
- The power _______ between men and women in society)
- The conflict theory generally focuses on economic power imbalance between wealthy and the _______
- Is a result of the constant struggle between those who have power and those who don't.
- The conflict theory generally focuses on economic power imbalance between ______ and the poor.
- Can also be applied to the conflict theory along with gender.
15 Clues: The theory • Conflict _____ • One of the main powers • One of the main powers • Unlike the conflict theory • Last name of the theory founder • First name of the theory founder • One of the three units in this course • The power _______ between men and women in society) • Those who have it seek to keep it away from those who don't • ...
BIRDS OF COLOR 2020-06-03
Across
- I have an orange stomach
- I have MANY colors.
- I am big and am a _______ falcon.
- I am yellow and my wings are black
- I say, "Who? Who?" at night
- I am blue and I have a box here
- I am big and white and brown
- I have a v-shaped neckline
- I am a ___________ crane
- I am red and have many songs
- My chest is rose.
- I am a ___________ warbler.
Down
- I wear a rusty belt.
- I am big but I am black
- I am a woodpecker and I have a crest
- A baseball team stole my name.
- A lot of us live in New York
- I say, Quack, quack."
- I robbed the bluebird box
19 Clues: My chest is rose. • I have MANY colors. • I wear a rusty belt. • I say, Quack, quack." • I am big but I am black • I have an orange stomach • I am a ___________ crane • I robbed the bluebird box • I have a v-shaped neckline • I say, "Who? Who?" at night • I am a ___________ warbler. • A lot of us live in New York • I am big and white and brown • I am red and have many songs • ...
Color Basics Puzzle 2022-06-02
Across
- Refers to only one color including its variations in value and intensity.
- The pure color at the base of all variations of a color.
- Color combinations based on color wheel relationships which are widely considered to create pleasing and balanced color schemes.
- The colors from yellow through orange to red on the color wheel. These colors remind us of sun and fire. They seem to advance and are energizing.
- The three hues red, yellow, and blue which form the foundation of the color wheel and from which all other hues are made.
- The duller or desaturated version of a hue created by adding gray.
- Hues created by mixing a primary hue and a secondary hue.
- Lighter value of a hue created by adding white.
- Describes the lightness or darkness of a color.
- Describes the brightness or dullness of a color. (starts with 'i')
Down
- A choice of colors to be used in combination.
- Occurs when a color appears different under one light source than it does under another.
- The colors from green through blue to violet on the color wheel. These colors remind us of water and sky. They seem to recede and are calming and soothing.
- Hues located opposite each other on the color wheel.
- Hues created by mixing two primary hues
- Hues located next to each other on the color wheel.
- Darker value of a hue created by adding black.
- A diagram of the spectrum of hues in a continuous circle representing their relationship to each other.
- Colors with no hue; such as black, white, gray, brown, tan, ivory, beige (achromatic)
19 Clues: Hues created by mixing two primary hues • A choice of colors to be used in combination. • Darker value of a hue created by adding black. • Lighter value of a hue created by adding white. • Describes the lightness or darkness of a color. • Hues located next to each other on the color wheel. • Hues located opposite each other on the color wheel. • ...
imagen y color 2024-05-05
19 Clues: suceso • método • cristal • / tintes • anuncios • / apagado • / luminosa • / hipótesis • distracción • / epicentro • representación • puntualización • nos permite ver • segmento de puntos • / arco en el cielo • forma poliédrica regular • reproducción de una forma • / nos permite ver con claridad • Restringir en una dirección una onda
Existence - Life 2025-06-11
Across
- A theory mentioned that suggests data might be more fundamental than matter
- Someone who talked about the Big Bang Theory
- What memory could be instead of truth
- Something you think you have, but could be fake
- Something created when a star collapses
- Tiny things that might’ve randomly come together to make “you”
- If you're reading this, then you definitely do this
- "Let's play with blocks!" (name the theory you think of when reading that line)
- Something you gained from this presentation
- Do you exist?
- Something that happens forever
- What memory might contain, or not
- The first concept shown on screen
Down
- The faster you move, the slower time flows. The closer you are to a huge object, a planet, a star, a black hole, the more time itself warps around you.
- Someone who talked about the Information theory
- The theory we named
- The first theory that we talked about in this presentation
- Something we question throughout the presentation
18 Clues: Do you exist? • The theory we named • Something that happens forever • What memory might contain, or not • The first concept shown on screen • What memory could be instead of truth • Something created when a star collapses • Something you gained from this presentation • Someone who talked about the Big Bang Theory • Someone who talked about the Information theory • ...
The Color Purple 2016-04-26
Across
- What color of dress did Shug donate to Celie for the quilt?
- How many kids does Celie have?
- How many days is Mr.___ gone for to go get Shug?
- Mr.____'s mistress
- What does Harpo do a lot to get big like Sofia?
- Celie's sister
- Mr.___ first name
- Rapes and abuses Celie
- Harpo's wife
- Mr._____'s son
- Husband to Celie
Down
- Main character
- Celie's daughter, she saw her at the store
- Where does Sofia go to when she leaves Harpo?
- Who does Celie nurse back to health?
- What does Shug sing in?
- What is Mr.___'s brother name?
- What is Sofia working on at her house?
- ast
- How many kids does Mr.___ have?
20 Clues: ast • Harpo's wife • Main character • Celie's sister • Mr._____'s son • Husband to Celie • Mr.___ first name • Mr.____'s mistress • Rapes and abuses Celie • What does Shug sing in? • How many kids does Celie have? • What is Mr.___'s brother name? • How many kids does Mr.___ have? • Who does Celie nurse back to health? • What is Sofia working on at her house? • ...
Color of Water 2017-05-22
Across
- Where did Ruth meet Rocky?
- Ruth's childhood best friend.
- Ruth's first husband's name.(two words)
- What do you call a Jewish school?
- Ruth's symbol of mobility.
- Place where James found his passion for music.
- What did black folks call Tateh?
- Ruth's real name.
- God is the ____ of ____.
- Language Ruth's family speaks.
Down
- Substance James was addicted to.
- Place Ruth goes during most summers.(two words)
- The wise and drunk man on the corner.
- How many children were in James' family?
- Ruth's hometown.
- Ruth's favorite aunt's name.(two words)
- Black Power group.(two words)
- Ruth's brother's name.
- Jazz saxophonist who improvised in his works.(two words)
- Ruth's mother had this disease?
20 Clues: Ruth's hometown. • Ruth's real name. • Ruth's brother's name. • God is the ____ of ____. • Where did Ruth meet Rocky? • Ruth's symbol of mobility. • Ruth's childhood best friend. • Black Power group.(two words) • Language Ruth's family speaks. • Ruth's mother had this disease? • Substance James was addicted to. • What did black folks call Tateh? • What do you call a Jewish school? • ...
Intro to Color 2022-01-05
Across
- a set of colors or color combination
- We need _____ to see color.
- a color scheme that uses several values of only one color
- how light or dark a color is
- a green surface absorbs all visible light except ____
- red + green
- a color scheme that uses colors that are next to each other on the color wheel
- colors that cannot be produced by mixing colors
- colors that are produced by mixing primary colors
- colors that are produced by mixing a primary color with a secondary color
- a color + grey
Down
- a color + black
- red + blue
- red + orange
- a color scheme that uses a color and the two colors next to that color's complimentary color
- an arrangement of colors in a spectrum
- a color scheme that uses colors that are opposite each other on the color wheel
- blue + violet
- the way we see light reflected from a surface
- red + yellow
- yellow + blue
- also known as intensity, how bright or dull a color is
- the name of a color such as red, green, blue, etc...
- a color scheme that uses three hues on the color wheel that are separated by an equal number of hues - they are split by 1, split by 2, or split by 3
- a color + white
25 Clues: red + blue • red + green • red + orange • red + yellow • blue + violet • yellow + blue • a color + grey • a color + black • a color + white • We need _____ to see color. • how light or dark a color is • a set of colors or color combination • an arrangement of colors in a spectrum • the way we see light reflected from a surface • colors that cannot be produced by mixing colors • ...
Oxidative Color Products 2021-07-30
Across
- another name for long-lasting semi-permanent
- Permanent color with a consistency between liquid and cream
- Long-lasting semi's are safe for clients with this kind of hair
- Permanent color has this added ingredient
- Used to neutralize
- Pastel color used to add warmth or coolness
- Provide and even base color in pourous hair
- During oxidative color the strand does this
- Long-lasting semi's can only
- The thinneset for of permanent color
- Oxidative color can both deposit and
- Considered off-scalp lightener
Down
- Lightener with added conditioning agents
- Used to brighten or neutralize tones
- Milder form of lightener
- Permanent color can only be removed by this means
- Fillers are used to replace what colors
- Used to brighten
- Used to decolorize, remove, or diffuse pigment
- Oxidative color is mixed with a
- The size of the molecule that enters the cortex with long-lasting semi's
- The stronger the what increases lift
- This test is required for oxidative color
- What your natural hair goes through when lightened
- The neutalizing base for a lightened level 10
- Permanent color with conditioners and thickening agents
26 Clues: Used to brighten • Used to neutralize • Milder form of lightener • Long-lasting semi's can only • Considered off-scalp lightener • Oxidative color is mixed with a • Used to brighten or neutralize tones • The stronger the what increases lift • The thinneset for of permanent color • Oxidative color can both deposit and • Fillers are used to replace what colors • ...
Guess the color? 2021-02-19
Across
- "X, X, bow wow wow"
- Forgetful fish
- Dye from a plant
- Military branch
- Blue tree common in Colorado
- A little round snack for the Tsai kids
- Meryl Streep's monologue in The Devil Wears Prada
- An American performance art company
- Surname
- Misty's city
- Blue-yellow color blindness
- An additive color model used to reproduce a broad array of colors.
- Spindle curse adjuster
- __, __, __, water do we have here?
- Out of the blue
- Something above
- Our hard, ocean-side hike after Egghead Cafe
- The best water Pokemon
- Wonka gum chewer
Down
- A lubricant that's derived from a mixture of water and olive oil
- An engraver and a skillful workman and a weaver in blue and in purple (biblical)
- Fleet
- A small flower you "want to remember"
- A river used in a Waltz
- The original blue ranger was Billy _____
- Channel with many clues
- Blue-blooded arthropod
- Precious gemstone, floor where Moses and Aaron saw God
- Online diamond retailer
- Has a smelly blue variety
- "I'm blue da ba ____"
- A modern coffee shop in California that features a simple design and is loved by young people
- The C in CMYK
- "Turkish", in France
- This dairy product can come in shades of blue...find it in salad dressings, creamy dips, or crumbly toppings!
- Our favorite place on earth
- Famous Baby Middle Name
- Thought to be caused by an excess of black bile
- Good at math
- Beauregarde
- The professor of this econ class may have made you feel quite blue, but resulted in one of the most epic course reviews in the Blue Book
- 90's yodeling country singer
- Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends
- Ruby, but blue. A gemstone in Scripture.
44 Clues: Fleet • Surname • Beauregarde • Misty's city • Good at math • The C in CMYK • Forgetful fish • Military branch • Out of the blue • Something above • Dye from a plant • Wonka gum chewer • "X, X, bow wow wow" • "Turkish", in France • "I'm blue da ba ____" • Blue-blooded arthropod • Spindle curse adjuster • The best water Pokemon • A river used in a Waltz • Channel with many clues • Online diamond retailer • ...
Color and Numbers 2023-09-26
31 Clues: one • six • red • two • ten • pen • five • glue • pink • desk • nine • four • blue • table • chair • brown • eight • seven • white • green • three • black • yellow • binder • orange • numbers • stapler • teacher • backpack • scissors • classroom
Creators without color 2024-01-27
Across
- Determine a particular trait
- Pigment genes
- Without these it's hard to spot prey or predators difficult
- Inherited condition
- Regular color
- Can’t keep warm the typical way without the risk of sunburn
- Need the sun to get warm
- Carry the trait
- Study genetics and family traits
- Don't have colored eyes
- Shown with a capital letter
- Albino orangutan
Down
- Shown with a lowercase letter
- Can give skin cancer
- Gives a brown color
- Gives color
- Genes
- No color
- Endangered species
- Colored white
20 Clues: Genes • No color • Gives color • Pigment genes • Regular color • Colored white • Carry the trait • Albino orangutan • Endangered species • Gives a brown color • Inherited condition • Can give skin cancer • Don't have colored eyes • Need the sun to get warm • Shown with a capital letter • Determine a particular trait • Shown with a lowercase letter • Study genetics and family traits • ...
The Color Purple 2024-04-22
Across
- To be excluded from a society or group
- When a character speaks directly to the audience expressing their inner thoughts
- The act of speaking negatively about God or sacred things.
- Without paying attention to what you are doing.
- A method of catching fish with a net.
- An old time term used for a record player.
- Shaped with folds or waves.
- Type of soured milk with yogurt-like consistency
- Respectable, quiet, serious.
- A tank for storing water.
Down
- Lacking energy or spirit.
- A person who eats too much.
- Having a fever.
- A building or group of buildings used to house laborers.
- Act or process of scarring as body modification or body art.
- Lacking in quantity
- Wailing sound.
- An old, now offensive, term meaning impaired intellectual ability.
- Using more words than are needed.
- A popular hairstyle among African American men (1920s), the act of straightening hair.
20 Clues: Wailing sound. • Having a fever. • Lacking in quantity • Lacking energy or spirit. • A tank for storing water. • A person who eats too much. • Shaped with folds or waves. • Respectable, quiet, serious. • Using more words than are needed. • A method of catching fish with a net. • To be excluded from a society or group • An old time term used for a record player. • ...
The Color Purple 2023-02-17
Across
- Who did Nettie fall in love with?
- a person who lives in the country, regarded as being unintelligent or provincial.
- Man the main character married
- difficult to control; unruly.
- Main character's sister
- Corrine's daughter
- a scented ointment or oil applied to the hair.
- Where did Nettie get sent to as a missionary?
- a single length of hair or other flexible material made up of three or more interlaced strands; a braid.
- Samuel's first wife
- Celie wants to start her own business making ___
- Shug's "last fling"
- a light fuel oil obtained by distilling petroleum, used especially in jet engines and domestic heaters and lamps and as a cleaning solvent.
- a small beetle with an elongated snout, the larvae of which typically develop inside seeds, stems, or other plant parts. Many are pests of crops or stored foodstuffs.
- Novel's author
- Shug sang a ____ inspired by Celie
- the soul of a dead person thought of especially as appearing to living people
Down
- the offspring of a donkey and a horse (strictly, a male donkey and a female horse), typically sterile and used as a beast of burden.
- a combination of wardrobe and chest of drawers.
- Corrine's son
- Olivia's friend and Adam's love interest
- Harpo's little girlfriend's nickname
- "You better not tell no one but ___, it'd kill your mammy"
- Title of the novel
- What profession did Sofia's second husband do
- genre of the novel
- having a healthy red color
- a great deal
- a room in a public building for receiving guests
- Main character
- strong and thick
- Albert has been hiding the ___ written by Nettie from Celie
- the skill or activity of mending a hole in knitted material by interweaving yarn.
- What does Celie love to do?
- Woman that Celie had a crush on
35 Clues: a great deal • Corrine's son • Main character • Novel's author • strong and thick • Title of the novel • genre of the novel • Corrine's daughter • Samuel's first wife • Shug's "last fling" • Main character's sister • having a healthy red color • What does Celie love to do? • difficult to control; unruly. • Man the main character married • Woman that Celie had a crush on • ...
Color Your World 2025-05-01
Across
- Opposite of white; worn at formal events
- Spanish painter known for Cubism
- Dutch master of light and shadow
- Japanese artist famous for “The Great Wave”
- Associated with peace or surrender
- Painted the Sistine Chapel ceiling
- Impressionist known for scenes of Parisian life
- GOGH Painted "Starry Night"
- Bold pinkish-purple shade
- Known for ballet dancers in motion
- Style associated with Picasso
- Surrealist with melting clocks
- VINCI Renaissance man behind the "Mona Lisa"
- Royal color often made from mixing red and blue
- A translucent painting medium
- Thick application of paint
- Clue
- Used by van Gogh and Rembrandt
- Color of a first-place medal
- Where an artist mixes colors
- The color of sunshine or cowardice
- Tool used for painting strokes
- The last color in a rainbow
- Deep blue-purple shade, between blue and violet
- Art style aiming to depict life as it is
- Wall painting technique with wet plaster
Down
- Dreamlike, often illogical art movement
- Quick, rough drawing
- A fruit and a color
- Mexican artist known for self-portraits
- Place to display art
- Eco-friendly color, or jealousy symbol
- Large wall painting
- What a painter paints on
- French painter who used bold color and shapes
- Art that doesn’t try to represent reality
- Stand that holds a canvas
- Style of Monet and Renoir
- Abstract Expressionist known for drip paintings
- Pop artist famous for soup cans
- Impressionist who painted water lilies
- First name of artist O’Keeffe, known for floral paintings
- The color of passion or a stop sign
- Broad term for contemporary or experimental art
- Feeling down, or a primary color
45 Clues: Clue • A fruit and a color • Large wall painting • Quick, rough drawing • Place to display art • What a painter paints on • Bold pinkish-purple shade • Stand that holds a canvas • Style of Monet and Renoir • Thick application of paint • GOGH Painted "Starry Night" • The last color in a rainbow • Color of a first-place medal • Where an artist mixes colors • Style associated with Picasso • ...
Unit 3 Study Guide 2021-02-25
Across
- use small muscles like hands, wrists
- personality development occurs during 8 stages of life
- The theorist that made operant conditioning
- processes involving thought and knowledge
- Theory says that people tend to do behaviors that have a positive result
- way people change and improve in their ability to think and lean
- children are social beings and develop their minds through interactions with parents, teachers, and other students
- use large muscles like legs, arms
Down
- to achieve self-actualization one must have other needs met first.
- Theorist that made the Social cognitive theory
- Theorist who made the Sociocultural theory
- Developed the Hierarchy of needs
- refers to the fact that something can remain the same even if the way it looks changes
- Theorist who made the Cognitive Theory
- Believed that people observe and imitate behavior of others
- Behaviors are associated with responses
- Theorist who made Psychosocial Theory
- Theory states that we all go through 4 stages of cognitive development and all have thinking skills that are similar
- The scientist that studied classical conditioning
- the ability to place objects in order by a characteristic, such as smallest to largest. Its from the environment
20 Clues: Developed the Hierarchy of needs • use large muscles like legs, arms • use small muscles like hands, wrists • Theorist who made Psychosocial Theory • Theorist who made the Cognitive Theory • Behaviors are associated with responses • processes involving thought and knowledge • Theorist who made the Sociocultural theory • The theorist that made operant conditioning • ...
Chapter 32 2013-04-19
Across
- Identifying a computer problem may involve questioning the computer user.
- Last step in the CompTIA troubleshooting process
- Use __________ to attempt to retrieve a screw dropped into a computer case
- After problem is resolved and solution is implemented, verify system _______________.
- this screwdriver fits a screw with a single slot
- After identifying the problem, establish a _________ of probable cause.
- Once your theory is confirmed, determine steps to ___________ problem
- computer spare parts carried by a technician to a job site
- After establishing a theory of probable cause, _______ the theory
Down
- this screwdriver fits a screw with two slots crossing at right angles
- Establish plan of action to resolve problem and ____________ the plan.
- software tool set by Mark Russinovich
- where calculations are done and decisions are made
- a popular file compression/extraction tool
- If your theory is not confirmed, establish a new theory or ___________ the problem.
- a common input device
- This screwdriver fits a screw with six-points in a star pattern
- software tools
- The first troubleshooting step is to _______ (or confirm) the problem.
- When trying to determine the probable cause of a problem, check the _____________.
20 Clues: software tools • a common input device • software tool set by Mark Russinovich • a popular file compression/extraction tool • Last step in the CompTIA troubleshooting process • this screwdriver fits a screw with a single slot • where calculations are done and decisions are made • computer spare parts carried by a technician to a job site • ...
Color Wheel Review 2017-02-09
Across
- This color does not exist on the color wheel
- Three colors next to each other on the color wheel
- A technique used for drying your paintbrush correctly
- Mixing red and blue
- Primary colors come form this.
- There are this many secondary colors on the color wheel
- Mixing red and yellow
- A color wheel is a circular ___________ of color
- Mixing blue and green
Down
- Swiping your brush across white paper allows you to do this to your brush
- This reflects of an object and bounces back into your eye allowing you to see color
- When making yellow orange you need more of this color
- The type of paintbrush used to paint inside the lines
- Washing your brush properly means you are __________ the bristles
- Colors you cannot get by mixing
- A color made by mixing a primary with a secondary
- Mixing a primary with a primary
- Yellow and blue make this color
- This is how many colors are in the color wheel
19 Clues: Mixing red and blue • Mixing red and yellow • Mixing blue and green • Primary colors come form this. • Colors you cannot get by mixing • Mixing a primary with a primary • Yellow and blue make this color • This color does not exist on the color wheel • This is how many colors are in the color wheel • A color wheel is a circular ___________ of color • ...
Resistor Color Bands 2023-09-06
Across
- multiplier of yellow
- multiplier of brown
- what is the digit that represents brown?
- multiplier of violet
- what is the digit that represents orange?
- what is the digit that represents red?
- multiplier of red
- silver band tolerance
- what is the digit that represents green?
- what is the digit that represents violet?
- what is the digit that represents gray?
- what is the digit that represents yellow?
Down
- multiplier of green
- what is the digit that represents white?
- what is the digit that represents black?
- multiplier of orange
- Gold band tolerance
- 3 band tolerance
- multiplier of blue
- multiplier of black
- multiplier of grey
- what is the digit that represents blue?
22 Clues: 3 band tolerance • multiplier of red • multiplier of blue • multiplier of grey • multiplier of green • multiplier of brown • Gold band tolerance • multiplier of black • multiplier of yellow • multiplier of orange • multiplier of violet • silver band tolerance • what is the digit that represents red? • what is the digit that represents blue? • what is the digit that represents gray? • ...
Temporary Hair Color 2026-02-23
Across
- This is one of the secondary colors.
- Hair coloring products are mixed and used according to ___________ directions.
- When hair has ______ tones, green is used to balance for color correction.
- The actions of permanent happen in the hair _________.
- It is important to consult and _________ for best color result.
- _________ is created by a combination of equal parts blue and yellow.
- Unpigmented hair is also called __________ hair.
- An _______ brush and bowl, gloves or bottles can be used to color hair.
- A primary color.
- How the color penetrates the hair shaft, depends on the _____________ of the hair.
- _______ or hue speaks to the warmth or coolness of a color.
Down
- The _________ molecules in temporary hair color are too large to penetrate the cuticle.
- A type of hair color that lasts a short time on the hair.
- _________ is the pigment that is found in hair that gives brown to black hues or tones.
- Temporary hair is applied before ____________ the hair.
- __________is a combination of equal parts red and yellow.
- Hair _________ is the amount of hairs per square inch on the head.
- For color correction we refer to the color ___________.
- A ______ test is required for permanent and demi-permanent hair colors.
19 Clues: A primary color. • This is one of the secondary colors. • Unpigmented hair is also called __________ hair. • The actions of permanent happen in the hair _________. • Temporary hair is applied before ____________ the hair. • For color correction we refer to the color ___________. • A type of hair color that lasts a short time on the hair. • ...
PSY5.1-3 Crossword Puzzle 2022-02-13
Across
- A theory that explains colour vision with cones
- theory A proposition that color information is identified by comparing the activation of different cones in the retina
- Cues that require comparing an image as it falls on both eyes in order to understand how far away an object is from the viewer
- The physical distance from one energy cycle to the next, in which changes are often perceived as changes in color
- Difference between where the same object falls on both retinas
- Also known as pictorial cues, these depth cues only require one eye to understand messages of depth
Down
- A suggestion that cells in the visual pathway increase their activation when receiving information from one kind of cone and decrease their activation when they see a second color
- A theory that explains colour vision with ganglion cells
- Difference between the retinal image that falls on both eyes, with the brain using disparity to calculate the distance between an individual and an object
9 Clues: A theory that explains colour vision with cones • A theory that explains colour vision with ganglion cells • Difference between where the same object falls on both retinas • Also known as pictorial cues, these depth cues only require one eye to understand messages of depth • ...
NURSEWORD PUZZLE 2023-11-17
Across
- In Peplau's Theory,this is a time when the patient and nurse come to know each other as people and each other’s expectations and roles are understood.
- An Era where Nursing education shifted from hospital baseddiploma programs into colleges and universities.
- She developed the middle-range theory entitled, "Human-to-Human Relationship Model".
- In the THEORY OF HUMAN BECOMING by Rosemarie Rizzo Parse, ______ is the process of knowing and coming to know as persons accept and reject ideas,values, belies, and practices consistent with their worldview.
- Hildegard Peplau's theory focuses on the nurse-patient_______.
- It is the main focus for Newman’s theory of expanding consciousness.
- Empirical precision is the degree in which the defined concepts are observable in actual setting, is also known as _________.
- She developed The Theory of Human Caring.
- She is the "First Truly International Nurse".
- Promotes helping behavior that calls for a nurturing
Down
- LYDIA HALL represented her theory of nursing by drawing three interlocking circles; each circle representing a particular aspect of nursing: CARE, ______, AND CURE.
- Statements supposed to be true without proof or demonstration.
- In most of Nightingale's writings, she referred to the person as a ___.
- It is responsive to individuals who. suffer or anticipate a sense of helplessness.
- A nurse that has the ability to recognize patterns on the basis of deep experiential background.
- When the word is defined specifically according to the framework within it is used.
- Metaparadigm is derived from Greek words 'meta' which means '____' and 'paradeigma' means 'pattern'.
- The theory of caritative caring was developed by (1943-2019) since the mid-1970s.
- Excretion of waste products.
- Watson defined the characteristics needed in helping-trust relationships which are emphathy, ______, congruence.
20 Clues: Excretion of waste products. • She developed The Theory of Human Caring. • She is the "First Truly International Nurse". • Promotes helping behavior that calls for a nurturing • Statements supposed to be true without proof or demonstration. • Hildegard Peplau's theory focuses on the nurse-patient_______. • ...
TFN CROSSWORD 2022-01-12
Across
- The theory of Lydia Hall?
- Martha Roger’s Theory?
- She used Henderson's 14 basic human needs to establish classification of the nursing problems.
- Katie Erikkson’s theory?
- It includes purpose, content and process, breaking down the “whole” and analyzing the parts.
- In her metaparadigm of nursing, she defined person as an organism that lives in an unstable balance of a given system.
- “First Lady of Nursing”/ “First Truly International Nurse”
- She believes that health and disease are part of the same entity and are manifested in the pattern of the human being.
- Callista Roy’s theory?
- Theorist of Advance Nurse Practitioner’s COMPOSURE Behavior and Patient’s Wellness Outcome/ COMPOSURE Model
- She is called as “the Lady with the Lamp” and constructed the Environmental Theory.
- Rosemarie Rizzo Parse’s theory?
Down
- One of America’s foremost nursing theorists.
- She defined nursing’s primary goal is to foster equilibrium within the individual, which allows for the practice of nursing individuals at any point in the health-illness continuum.
- The theory of Dr. Letty G. Kuan?
- She was the past president of the National League for Nursing.
- She defined nursing as a learned humanistic and scientific profession and discipline which is focused on human care phenomena and activities in order to assist, support, facilitate, or enable individuals or groups to maintain and regain their well- being or health in culturally meaningful and beneficial ways, or to help people face or handicap or death.
- In her metaparadigm in nursing, she defined health as “what can be assessed”.
- The theorist of the Change Theory?
- She is an expert in MS Nursing, subspecialty in Oncologic Nursing?
20 Clues: Martha Roger’s Theory? • Callista Roy’s theory? • Katie Erikkson’s theory? • The theory of Lydia Hall? • Rosemarie Rizzo Parse’s theory? • The theory of Dr. Letty G. Kuan? • The theorist of the Change Theory? • One of America’s foremost nursing theorists. • “First Lady of Nursing”/ “First Truly International Nurse” • ...
Psychology-Themed Crossword ⋆ ˚。⋆౨ৎ˚ 2025-03-12
Across
- – A psychologist who studies workplace behavior
- – The mental process of thinking and understanding
- – Mental framework used to organize information
- – The study of how the brain affects behavior
- – Theory comparing the brain to a computer
- – Known as the father of psychoanalysis
- – A theory that focuses on observable actions
- – Developed the stages of cognitive development
- – A psychologist who focuses on learning and teaching
- – A psychologist who helps people with personal issues
- – A psychologist who works in law and criminal cases
- – Theory stating we learn better with words and images
Down
- – The study of the brain and nervous system
- – A psychologist who treats mental health disorders
- – Theory that learning happens through neural networks
- – Awareness of thoughts, feelings, and surroundings
- – How we interpret what we see, hear, or feel
- – The ability to store and recall information
- – Psychologist who challenged Freud’s views on women
- – Theory that learning happens by building knowledge
- – Treatment that helps people with mental health issues
- – Studied love, freedom, and human nature
- – What drives people to act and achieve goals
- – Created the triarchic theory of intelligence
- – The process of gaining new knowledge or skills
25 Clues: – Known as the father of psychoanalysis • – Studied love, freedom, and human nature • – Theory comparing the brain to a computer • – The study of the brain and nervous system • – How we interpret what we see, hear, or feel • – The ability to store and recall information • – The study of how the brain affects behavior • – What drives people to act and achieve goals • ...
Lab laugh logic 2025-09-13
Across
- Known for the Uncertainty Principle
- Discovered the Chandrasekhar limit for white dwarfs
- Soviet physicist, Nobel Prize for work in condensed matter physics
- Nobel laureate for electroweak unification theory
- Nobel laureate, co-founder of quantum electrodynamics
- Founder of quantum electrodynamics and Dirac equation
- Chinese-American experimental physicist, famous for parity violation experiment
- Only physicist to win Nobel Prize twice, superconductivity & semiconductors
- Developed Feynman diagrams and quantum electrodynamics
- Pioneer in radioactivity and Nobel laureate in Physics & Chemistry
- Indian woman physicist, pioneer in cosmic ray and particle physics
- Indian physicist, known for V-A theory and quantum optics
- Japanese physicist, Nobel Prize for meson theory
Down
- Known for Noether’s theorem linking symmetries & conservation laws
- Known for the Ramachandran plot in structural biology & physics
- Developed Bohr model of the atom
- Pioneer of Bose–Einstein statistics
- Nobel laureate for parity violation in weak interactions
- Indian astrophysicist, known for steady state theory
- Known for nuclear reactor development and beta decay theory
- Indian scientist, contributions in chemistry and physics education
- Father of the Indian space program
- Known for thermal ionization and Saha ionization equation
- Indian theoretical physicist known for string theory
24 Clues: Developed Bohr model of the atom • Father of the Indian space program • Known for the Uncertainty Principle • Pioneer of Bose–Einstein statistics • Japanese physicist, Nobel Prize for meson theory • Nobel laureate for electroweak unification theory • Discovered the Chandrasekhar limit for white dwarfs • Indian astrophysicist, known for steady state theory • ...
Macroeconomic Schools of Thought Puzzle 2025-10-10
Across
- Level of unemployment during the Great Depression.
- A major concern in 1970s economic policy.
- Changing realities that led to new schools of thought.
- Tools used by governments in macroeconomic management.
- Describes the type of market monetarists emphasized.
- Economist who revolutionized thinking after the 1930s.
- Another term used for the neoclassical school.
- When inflation and unemployment rise together.
- Theory that reemerged and adapted classical ideas post-1970s.
- Description of classical models during the 1930s crisis.
- School led by Milton Friedman.
Down
- Followers of John Maynard Keynes.
- Area of economics focused on by Keynesians.
- Economist who challenged Keynesian theory in the 1970s.
- Type of economic theory associated with controlling inflation.
- Publication by Adam Smith which marked the beginning of classical theory.
- Period of economic shrinkage and inactivity.
- Condition of economies during the 1930s global crisis.
- Refers to a system of economic beliefs or theories.
- Approach within classical economics emphasizing production.
- A key focus of neoclassical and monetarist policy.
- The economic theory that dominated from the 1750s onwards.
- People who follow and develop economic theories.
- Major issue addressed by Keynesian theory.
- What early economic theories were rich in.
25 Clues: School led by Milton Friedman. • Followers of John Maynard Keynes. • A major concern in 1970s economic policy. • Major issue addressed by Keynesian theory. • What early economic theories were rich in. • Area of economics focused on by Keynesians. • Period of economic shrinkage and inactivity. • Another term used for the neoclassical school. • ...
test test 2021-11-19
19 Clues: fxi • leda • frok • ndee • samsh • cavre • lcince • mkaeup • srting • rspetc • theory • dsegin • otuput • cuerrnt • ceromny • evennig • seletcion • intageton • cmopteiton
COLOR CODES 2012-10-08
12 Clues: FIRE • DISASTER • SEVERE WEATHER • MISSING PERSON • INFANT ABDUCTION • MEDICAL EMERGENCY • BUILDING LOCKDOWN • HAZARDOUS EMERGENCY • ACTIVE SHOOTER ON CAMPUS • COMBATIVE VISITOR/PATIENT • MEDICAL ASSISTANCE NEEDED • SIGNIFICANT UTILITY FAILURE
Color Recognition 2020-10-07
Across
- A color between black & white.
- The color of a monarch butterfly.
- The darkest color.
- The color of pigs.
- The lightest color.
- The color of the sky & water.
Down
- A color that is darker than one color and lighter than the other.
- The color of the grass.
- The color of chocolate.
- The color of a school bus.
- The color of grapes.
- The color of strawberries.
12 Clues: The darkest color. • The color of pigs. • The lightest color. • The color of grapes. • The color of the grass. • The color of chocolate. • The color of a school bus. • The color of strawberries. • The color of the sky & water. • A color between black & white. • The color of a monarch butterfly. • A color that is darker than one color and lighter than the other.
Color Vocabulary 2024-03-21
Across
- Colors yellow orange and red.
- The intensity or vibrance of a color.
- Colors initially created by mixing primary colors.
- Color scheme when colors are next to each other on the wheel.
- Colors opposite on the color wheel.
Down
- Colors that can create all other colors.
- A pure pigment with white added.
- A pure pigment of color.
- Color scheme of multiple shades, tints, and tones of the same hue.
- Colors blue green and purple
- A pure pigment with black added
- A pure pigment with gray added.
12 Clues: A pure pigment of color. • Colors blue green and purple • Colors yellow orange and red. • A pure pigment with black added • A pure pigment with gray added. • A pure pigment with white added. • Colors opposite on the color wheel. • The intensity or vibrance of a color. • Colors that can create all other colors. • Colors initially created by mixing primary colors. • ...
Color Schemes 2026-03-04
Across
- consists of a base color and the two colors directly adjacent to its complement (opposite) on the color wheel
- a darker version of a color (hue) created by adding black to it
- a color produced by mixing a base hue with white, resulting in a lighter, paler, or pastel version of the original color
- uses four colors arranged into two complementary pairs, forming a rectangle on the color wheel
- a color resulting from the mixing of two primary colors.
- a color resulting from mixing a primary color with an adjacent secondary color on the color wheel
Down
- the foundation for creating other colors. They cannot be created by mixing other colors together.
- using pairs of colors directly opposite each other on the color wheel
- a deliberate, structured combination of colors selected from the color wheel
- using only one color and its tints and shades
- a color scheme utilizing three hues evenly spaced around the color wheel, forming an equilateral triangle
- five colors located adjacent to each other on the color wheel (e.g., blue, blue-green, and green)
12 Clues: using only one color and its tints and shades • a color resulting from the mixing of two primary colors. • a darker version of a color (hue) created by adding black to it • using pairs of colors directly opposite each other on the color wheel • a deliberate, structured combination of colors selected from the color wheel • ...
Chapter #2 2014-12-21
Across
- The scientific study of victimization, including the relationships between victims and offenders.
- A possible explanation for an observed occurrence that can be tested by further investigation.
- An explanation that is based on observation, experimentation, and reasoning.
- The study of how certain traits or qualities are transmitted from parents to their offspring.
- Anything that produces an effect.
- Sigmund Freud's theory that attributed our thoughts and actions to unconscious motives.
- An approach to drug addiction that treats drug abuse as a mental or physical illness.
- An approach to drug abuse that treats illegal drug use as a criminal act.
- A chemical substance that controls certain cellular and bodily function such as growth and reproduction.
- Considers criminal behavior to be the predictable result of a persons interaction with his or her environment.
- Refers to the repeated criminal victimization of a person, household, place, business, vehicle or other target however defined.
- A school of the social sciences that sees criminal and delinquent behavior as the result of biological, physiological, and social forces.
- Theory stating that members of certain sub-cultures reject the values of the dominant culture through deviant behavior patterns.
- The belief that the more powerful groups use their power in order to exploit groups with less power.
- A group exhibiting certain values and behavior patterns that distinguish it from the dominant culture.
Down
- The hypothesis that society created crime and criminals by labeling certain behavior and certain people as deviant.
- Concept that people engage in criminal behavior unless strong moral, social, and/or retributive deterrents are in effect.
- A product of the Enlightenment, theorizing that people exercise free will and are responsible for their actions.
- Natural science concerned with the study of life and living organisms.
- A theory that deviant behavior is more likely in communities where social institutions fail to exert control over the population.
- Defined as maximizing total benefit and reducing suffering or the negatives.
- The scientific study of crime and the causes of criminal behavior.
- The scientific study of mental processes and behavior.
- The idea that crime is caused by frustration of individuals who cannot reach their financial and personal goals through legitimate means.
- A specialist in the field of crime and the causes of criminal behavior.
- A mutual relationship or connection between two or more things.
- The idea that delinquents and criminals must be taught both the practical and emotional skills necessary to participate in illegal activity.
- Individuals make logical decisions with the greatest benefit or satisfaction.
28 Clues: Anything that produces an effect. • The scientific study of mental processes and behavior. • A mutual relationship or connection between two or more things. • The scientific study of crime and the causes of criminal behavior. • Natural science concerned with the study of life and living organisms. • ...
Paddock AP Psychology 4.6-4.7 Crossword 2025-03-23
Across
- Hormone secreted by an empty stomach; sends 'I'm hungry' signals to the brain.
- _ Theory: The search for experiences and feelings that are varied, novel, complex, and intense.
- _ Conflicts: Conflict that results from having to choose between two distasteful alternatives.
- _ Theory: A theory of motivation that is concerned with the beneficial effects of intrinsic motivation and the harmful effects of extrinsic motivation.
- A neural structure lying below the thalamus; directs several maintenance activities (eating, drinking, body temperature), helps govern the endocrine system via the pituitary gland, and is linked to emotion and reward.
- Hormone secreted by fat cells; when abundant, causes brain to increase metabolism and decrease hunger.
- A desire to perform a behavior to receive promised rewards or avoid threatened punishment.
- A response of the whole organism, involving (1) physiological arousal, (2) expressive behaviors, and (3) conscious experience.
- _ Theory: A theory that states that behavior is motivated by a desire for reinforcement or incentives.
- Pursuing activities that provide a rush of adrenaline.
- _ Theory of Emotion: Theory proposing that happiness predisposes us to think more openly.
- A complex behavior that is rigidly patterned throughout a species and is unlearned.
- Stimuli that trigger emotional responses.
- The tendency to maintain a balanced or constant internal state; the regulation of any aspect of body chemistry, such as blood glucose, around a particular level.
Down
- The human emotional need to be an accepted member of a group.
- Basic emotions that are expressed by all cultures around the world such as happiness, sadness, fear, disgust, anger, and surprise.
- _ Theory: A theory that describes situations in which conflicting motivations produce indecision and difficulty.
- The idea that facial expressions can influence emotions as well as reflect them.
- _ Theory: The theory that people are motivated to maintain an optimal level of alertness and physical and mental activation.
- The principle that performance increases with arousal only up to a point, beyond which performance decreases.
- A broad range of feelings that people experience.
- Tendency to experience boredom and frustration when not engaged in stimulating activities.
- A desire to perform a behavior effectively for its own sake.
- Culturally determined rules about which nonverbal behaviors are appropriate to display.
- _ Conflicts: Conflict that results when a single action or event has both attractive and unattractive features.
- Engaging in unusual and exciting activities.
- _ Conflicts: Conflict that results from having to choose between two attractive alternatives.
- The endocrine system's most influential gland. Under the influence of the hypothalamus, the pituitary regulates growth and controls other endocrine glands.
- _ Theory: The idea that a physiological need creates an aroused tension state (a drive) that motivates an organism to satisfy the need.
- Acting impulsively, without considering the consequences.
30 Clues: Stimuli that trigger emotional responses. • Engaging in unusual and exciting activities. • A broad range of feelings that people experience. • Pursuing activities that provide a rush of adrenaline. • Acting impulsively, without considering the consequences. • A desire to perform a behavior effectively for its own sake. • ...
Unit 3 Study Guide 2021-02-25
Across
- the ability to sort items by one or more characteristics they have in common
- Who is the creator of classical conditioning?
- Who is the creator of psychosocial theory?
- something can remain the same even if the way it looks changes
- refers to physical changes, increasing in height or weight
- Who developed sociocultural theory?
- to achieve self-actualization one must have other needs met first
- How many areas of developments are there?
Down
- Who is the creator of cognitive development?
- Who is the maker of social cognitive theory?
- what kind of doll was in Bandura's experiment?
- running,jumping,kicking,skipping,etc. are what kind of skills
- Which stage was Trust vs. Mistrust in Erikson's theory?
- painting,writing, cutting, etc. Need good hand-eye coordination
- What was the main thing in Pavlov's experiment?
- Which theory has 4 stages?
- Who created operant conditioning?
- What was the first stage in Piaget's theory?
- Who was the maker of the hierarchy of needs?
- place objects in order by a characteristic such as smallest to largest
- How many motivation needs are there in the Hierarchy of Needs?
21 Clues: Which theory has 4 stages? • Who created operant conditioning? • Who developed sociocultural theory? • How many areas of developments are there? • Who is the creator of psychosocial theory? • Who is the creator of cognitive development? • Who is the maker of social cognitive theory? • What was the first stage in Piaget's theory? • ...
personality and attitude 2017-10-06
Across
- if behaviour is learnt it has often been copied from which type of person
- main way in which attitudes are formed
- if an action or behaviour is .... it is more likely to be remembered and copied
- social learning theory is learned through ... reinforcement
- what is the acronym SEC used for?
- which theory is learnt behavior?
- B=(P) what is the formula used for?
- this theory states that characteristics are innate
- behaviour is more likely to be copied if it is...
Down
- what object is a belief is aim towards
- according to the trait theory behaviours are said to be stable, enduring and...
- 'I do not feel confident when playing hockey' this is an example of which component of attitude
- B=(E)what is this formula used for?
- something you are born with
- what does the trait theory not take into account
- three components of an attitude come together as a?
- who created the formula B=(P x E)?
- 'a new swimming technique is difficult to master', this is an example of which component of attitude
- communication must be clear, understandable, timing and...
- what does social learning theory not take into account
20 Clues: something you are born with • which theory is learnt behavior? • what is the acronym SEC used for? • who created the formula B=(P x E)? • B=(E)what is this formula used for? • B=(P) what is the formula used for? • what object is a belief is aim towards • main way in which attitudes are formed • what does the trait theory not take into account • ...
Theory and Theorists 2022-02-15
Across
- Setting a solid foundation and providing support for a child to learn.
- Father of pragmatism
- Innermost section of Urie Brofenbrenner’s Ecological systems theory
- Number of substages within the sensorimotor stage
- Brofenbrenner's final level
- Stage in cognitive development that children ages 2 to 7 are in according to Piaget
- Piaget’s last stage of cognitive development is ____ operational.
- An approach, not a theory
- Need at the bottom of the hierarchy
- Eliciting a desired behavior
Down
- An explanation of how the facts fit together
- Father of social learning theory
- One of the nine types of intelligence, those in this category can sense and feel others emotions and motives
- Categories of knowledge that help us to interpret and understand the world
- Style of thinking where children can only focus on one feature of a problem
- Understanding something stays the same in quantity, even if it’s appearance changes
- Dr.Leonard's least favorite theorist
- First stage of vygotsky’s speech development theory
- Process of taking in new information
- Thinking about thinking
- Father of behavioral theory
- Chomsky believes all children are born with this, helps them master language skills
- Individual who created the Hierarchy of Needs
23 Clues: Father of pragmatism • Thinking about thinking • An approach, not a theory • Brofenbrenner's final level • Father of behavioral theory • Eliciting a desired behavior • Father of social learning theory • Need at the bottom of the hierarchy • Dr.Leonard's least favorite theorist • Process of taking in new information • An explanation of how the facts fit together • ...
NURSEWORD PUZZLE 2021-12-12
Across
- explains why the theory was formulated and specifies the context and situation in which it should be applied.
- patterns or models used to show a client relationship among the existing theoretical works in nursing
- consistency, semantics, and structure
- addresses the person’s state of well-being
- theory has few concepts
- refers to a theory about a theory
- basic settings where nursing care is provided.
- The unique function of the nurse is to assist the individual, sick or well.
- limited by time and space and are observable in reality, directly observed, tangible
Down
- not clearly observable, directly or indirectly and must be defined in terms of observable concepts; intangible
- a statement that specifies the relationship or connection of factual concepts or phenomena or those which the researcher or theorist holds as TRUTH and therefore are excluded from measurement and testing
- taking six steps without assistance
- Examine the scope of concepts and goals within the theory
- theory that is achieved when the relationships of concepts under a certain conditions are able to describe future outcomes consistently
- set of statement that tentatively describe, explain or predict relationships among concepts that have been systematically selected and organized as an abstract representation of some phenomenon
- refers to all human beings.
- permit classifications of dimensions or gradation of phenomena on a continuum
- a basic generalization that is accepted as true and can be used as a basis for reasoning or conduct.
- schematic representations of some aspects of reality
- theory that relates concepts to one another, describe the interrelationships among concepts or propositions and specify the associations or relationships among concepts.
20 Clues: theory has few concepts • refers to all human beings. • refers to a theory about a theory • taking six steps without assistance • consistency, semantics, and structure • addresses the person’s state of well-being • basic settings where nursing care is provided. • schematic representations of some aspects of reality • ...
Chapter 7 Vocab Crossword 2016-03-08
Across
- Group Ways to encourage conformity to society's norms
- The process of changing or reforming a criminal through socialization
- Deviance Deviance that becomes lifestyle and part of an individual's identity
- Justice System A system compromising institutions and processes responsible for enforcing criminal statuses
- Punishment intended to make criminals pay compensation for their acts
- Deviance Behavior that under-conforms to accepted norms
- A repetition of, or return to, a criminal behavior
- An undesirable label used to deny a deviant acceptance
- Association Theory / The theory that individuals learn deviance in a proportion to the number of deviant acts and norms to which they are exposed
- Theory The theory that society creates deviance by identifying particular members as deviant
- Theory The theory that deviance is more likely to occur when a gap exists between cultural goals and the ability to achieve them
Down
- An act committed in violation of the law
- Discounting The process of reducing the seriousness of the crimes that injure people of lower status
- Deviance Only occasional breaking or norms
- Theory The theory that compliance with social norms requires strong bonds between individuals and society
- A person who breaks significant societal or group norms
- Collar Crime A job related crime committed by high status people
- A method of protecting society from criminals by keeping them in prison
- / Behavior that departs from societal or group norms
- Punishment intended to make criminals pay monetary compensation to make up for the financial damaged caused by their acts
- A social condition in which norms are weak, conflicting, or absent
- Discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment
- Deviance Behavior that over-conforms to social expectations
23 Clues: An act committed in violation of the law • Deviance Only occasional breaking or norms • A repetition of, or return to, a criminal behavior • / Behavior that departs from societal or group norms • Discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment • Group Ways to encourage conformity to society's norms • An undesirable label used to deny a deviant acceptance • ...
Chapter 7 Vocab - Rylee Hockenberry 2024-01-05
Across
- Crime Job-related crimes committed by high-status people
- Discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment
- Punishment intended to make criminals pay compensation for their acts
- A social condition in which norms are weak, conflicting, or absent
- Deviance- Behavior that overconforms to accepted normas
- Deviance Only occasional breaking of norms
- Bahavior that departs from societal or group norms
- Discounting The process of reducing the seriousness of the crimes that injure people of lower status
- Sanctions Rewards or punishments that encourage conformity to social norms
- Theory The theory that society creates deviance by identifying particular members as deviant
Down
- Theory The theory that compliance with social norms requires strong bonds between individuals and society
- Deviance Bahvior that overconforms to social expectations
- Punishment intended to make criminals pay monetary compenstaion to make up for the finanical damage caused by their acts
- A method of protecting society from criminals by keeping them in prison
- The process of changing or reforming a criminal through socialization
- An act committed in violation of the law
- Theory The theory that deviance is more likely to occur when a gap exists between cultural goals and the ability to achieve them
- Deviance Deviance that becomes a lifestyle and part of an individual's identity
- Association Theory The theory that individuals learn deviant acts and norms to which they are exposed
- An undesirable label used to deny a deviant acceptance
- A repetition of, return to, criminal behavior
- Justice System A system comprising institutions and processes responsible for enforcing criminal statutes
- A person who breaks significant societal or group norms
23 Clues: An act committed in violation of the law • Deviance Only occasional breaking of norms • A repetition of, return to, criminal behavior • Bahavior that departs from societal or group norms • Discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment • An undesirable label used to deny a deviant acceptance • Deviance- Behavior that overconforms to accepted normas • ...
Nursing Theorist 2021-04-07
Across
- This nurse’s theory is patient-centered and has interrelated the concepts of health, nursing problems, and problem-solving. It focuses on nursing practice and individual patients.
- this theorists model of nursing focuses on that nurse-patient relationship and identifies the different roles nurses take on wImogene Kinghen working with patients.
- This theorists theory is centered around 3 themes: meaning, rhythmicity, and transcendence and focuses on seeing the patient as a person not as different parts of a whole.
- This theorist came up with the idea of all relationships consisting of a helper and a helpee.
- This theorist developed a model that has 3 major concepts; driving forces, restraining forces, and equilibrium, along with 3 steps; unfreezing, changing, and refreezing.
- This theorist nurse is famous for her contribution to nursing of her Adaptation Model that asks three major questions; Who is the focus of nursing care? What is the target of nursing care? and When is nursing care indicated?
- This nurse’s theory has an assumption that illness and suffering are spiritual encounters as well as emotional and physical experiences.
- This theorist developed a theory that divided into 2 concepts, the science of nursing and the art of nursing, and addressed that a patient cannot be separated from their environment when addressing health and treatment.
- this theorist is responsible for creating the Deliberative Nursing Process, this theory is responsible for allowing nurses to create an effective nursing care plan that can also be easily adapted when and if any complications arise with the patient
- This nurses theory focused on how to show care and compassion to patients. Her theory not only parallels the scientific research process it also consisted of 4 major concepts: human being, health, environment/society, and nursing.
- This nurse’s theory is a comprehensive holistic and system-based approach to nursing. It focuses on the patient’s response to environmental stressors and what nurses can do to prevent the patient from stress.
- Often seen with first-time mothers and foster mothers, this theory’s impetus was to train nurses how to boost maternal identity confidence in a woman
- An assumption about this theorist’s model was that system balance reflects adjustments and adaptations that are successful in some way and to some degree.
Down
- This nurse is known for her theory that is the most widely-used model of nursing in the United kingdom. Her theory is based upon daily activities that promote maximum independence for the patient.
- This nurse’s theory focused on patient comfort and how comfort existed in three forms. Relief, ease, and transcendence.
- The theory made by her was referred to as “The three C’s of *theorists name*”. It refers to her job as a nurse ro nurture the patient.
- This nurse’s theory helped to address the issues concerning patients being able to take care of themselves after being released from medical care.
- This theorist developed a model to show integral nursing. Shows a deeper understanding of the holistic side and the connections of nursing. The theory focuses on the deeper parts about our knowing, doing, and being
- This theorist developed a model for Child Health Assessments. Her theory is meant to improve the health of infants and their families. Her theory helped shape public policy and cognitive development for infants. Founder of the NCAST (Nursing Child Assessment Satellite Training Project)
- This theorist is one of the most famous nursing theorists who helped pave the way for all other nursing theories to follow by providing vital information that has helped shape the nursing profession.
- This theorist nurse was influenced by Ida Orlando and is famous for her contribution to nursing of her model; “The Helping Art Of Clinical Nursing”.
- This theorist developed a model where the nurse works with the patient to set goals for their health to achieve.
22 Clues: This theorist came up with the idea of all relationships consisting of a helper and a helpee. • This theorist developed a model where the nurse works with the patient to set goals for their health to achieve. • This nurse’s theory focused on patient comfort and how comfort existed in three forms. Relief, ease, and transcendence. • ...
Learning Theory and Evolutionary Theory 2014-05-02
Across
- Where did Schaffer and Emerson carry out their study?
- These people found that 39% of first attachments were not to providers of physical care, challenging learning theory.
- A template for future relationships.
- Attachment is innate for the purpose of....
- These researchers proposed an update of learning theory to include operant conditioning.
- An example of this is when, in learning theory, an infant repeats behaviour that removes an unpleasant feeling such as hunger or being cold.
- Which of the wire "mothers" did the monkeys prefer in Harlow and Harlow's 1962 study?
- The idea of having a special attachment to one person only.
- Something we are all born with, a strong feeling of desire eg hunger which needs to be satisfied.
Down
- The means by which Pavlov made his dog salivate by the sound of a bell.
- What produce a response in the care giver to form an attachment?
- The species of monkey used by Harlow and Harlow in their study which challenges learning theory.
- The time in which attachments must be formed.
- This criticism of learning theory suggests that the idea of stimulus, response and reinforcement is too simple.
- A study that provides a link between childhood experiences and romantic relationships.
- THis man came up with evolutionary theory.
- A child needs this to explore from.
17 Clues: A child needs this to explore from. • A template for future relationships. • THis man came up with evolutionary theory. • Attachment is innate for the purpose of.... • The time in which attachments must be formed. • Where did Schaffer and Emerson carry out their study? • The idea of having a special attachment to one person only. • ...
NURSEWORD PUZZLE 2023-11-17
Across
- It is the main focus for Newman’s theory of expanding consciousness.
- LYDIA HALL represented her theory of nursing by drawing three interlocking circles; each circle representing a particular aspect of nursing: CARE, ______, AND CURE.
- In the THEORY OF HUMAN BECOMING by Rosemarie Rizzo Parse, ______ is the process of knowing and coming to know as persons accept and reject ideas,values, belies, and practices consistent with their worldview.
- Metaparadigm is derived from Greek words 'meta' which means '____' and 'paradeigma' means 'pattern'.
- Promotes helping behavior that calls for a nurturing
- Watson defined the characteristics needed in helping-trust relationships which are emphathy, ______, congruence.
- In Peplau's Theory,this is a time when the patient and nurse come to know each other as people and each other’s expectations and roles are understood.
- Statements supposed to be true without proof or demonstration.
- Hildegard Peplau's theory focuses on the nurse-patient_______.
- She developed the middle-range theory entitled, "Human-to-Human Relationship Model".
Down
- She developed The Theory of Human Caring.
- Empirical precision is the degree in which the defined concepts are observable in actual setting, is also known as _________.
- It is responsive to individuals who. suffer or anticipate a sense of helplessness.
- She is the "First Truly International Nurse".
- The theory of caritative caring was developed by (1943-2019) since the mid-1970s.
- When the word is defined specifically according to the framework within it is used.
- Excretion of waste products.
- An Era where Nursing education shifted from hospital baseddiploma programs into colleges and universities.
- A nurse that has the ability to recognize patterns on the basis of deep experiential background.
- In most of Nightingale's writings, she referred to the person as a ___.
20 Clues: Excretion of waste products. • She developed The Theory of Human Caring. • She is the "First Truly International Nurse". • Promotes helping behavior that calls for a nurturing • Statements supposed to be true without proof or demonstration. • Hildegard Peplau's theory focuses on the nurse-patient_______. • ...
Chapter 7 2025-01-09
Across
- deviance that becomes a lifestyle and part of an individual’s identity
- behavior that departs from societal or group norms
- behavior that overconforms to social expectations
- the theory that deviance is more likely to occur when a gap exists between cultural goals and the ability to achieve them
- the theory that individuals learn deviance in proportion to the number of deviant acts and norms to which they are exposed
- a social condition in which norms are weak, conflicting, or absent
- job-related crime committed by high-status people
- an act committed in violation of the law
- an undesirable label used to deny a deviant acceptance
- behavior that underconforms to accepted norms
- a repition of, or return to, criminal behavior
- a person who breaks significant societal or group norms
Down
- discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment
- the theory that complience with social norms requires strong bonds between individuals and society
- a system comprising institutions and processes responsible for enforcing criminal statutes
- only occasional breaking of norms
- rewards or punishments that encourage conformity to social norms
- the process of changing of reforming a criminal through socialization
- the process of reducing the seriousness of the crimes that injure people of lower status
- punishment intended to make criminals pay compensation for their acts
- ways to encourage conformity to society’s norms
- the theory that society creates deviance by identifying particular members as deviant
- punishment intended to make ciminals pay monetary compensation to make up for the financial damaged caused by their acts
- a method of protecting society from criminals by keeping them in prison
24 Clues: only occasional breaking of norms • an act committed in violation of the law • behavior that underconforms to accepted norms • a repition of, or return to, criminal behavior • ways to encourage conformity to society’s norms • behavior that overconforms to social expectations • job-related crime committed by high-status people • ...
Vision II Review 2025-10-21
Across
- the ability to percieve objects as 3D
- depth cues that depend on the combination of the images in the left and right eye and on the way the two eyes work together
- sensations that remain after a stimulus is removed
- the perception that a stationary object is moving
- the theory stating that cells in the visual system respond to complementary pairs of red-green and blue-yellow colors
- a locations at which a sudden change of brightness occurs
- a school of thought interested in how people naturally organize their perceptions according to certain patterns
- when we see objects as a unit when they are near eachother
- powerful depth cues available from the image in one eye
Down
- the recognition that objects are constant and unchanging even though sensory input about them is changing
- when we see objects as a unit when they are similar
- the principle by which we organize the perceptual field into stimuli that stand out and those that are left over
- a binocular cue to depth and distance in which muscle movements in an individual's two eyes provide info about how deep or far away something is
- when we fill in spaces and see incomplete figures as complete
- the theory stating that color perception is produced by three types of cone receptors in the retina that are particularly sensitive to different, but overlapping, ranges of wavelengths
- atypical color vision, in which people can see some colors but not others
16 Clues: the ability to percieve objects as 3D • the perception that a stationary object is moving • sensations that remain after a stimulus is removed • when we see objects as a unit when they are similar • powerful depth cues available from the image in one eye • a locations at which a sudden change of brightness occurs • ...
personality and attitude 2017-10-06
Across
- what is the acronym SEC used for?
- something you are born with
- if behaviour is learnt it has often been copied from which type of person
- main way in which attitudes are formed
- if an action or behaviour is .... it is more likely to be remembered and copied
- what object is a belief is aim towards
- B=(P) what is the formula used for?
- according to the trait theory behaviours are said to be stable, enduring and...
- which theory is learnt behavior?
- what does the trait theory not take into account
Down
- 'I do not feel confident when playing hockey' this is an example of which component of attitude
- social learning theory is learned through ... reinforcement
- what does social learning theory not take into account
- three components of an attitude come together as a?
- communication must be clear, understandable, timing and...
- 'a new swimming technique is difficult to master', this is an example of which component of attitude
- B=(E)what is this formula used for?
- this theory states that characteristics are innate
- who created the formula B=(P x E)?
- behaviour is more likely to be copied if it is...
20 Clues: something you are born with • which theory is learnt behavior? • what is the acronym SEC used for? • who created the formula B=(P x E)? • B=(E)what is this formula used for? • B=(P) what is the formula used for? • main way in which attitudes are formed • what object is a belief is aim towards • what does the trait theory not take into account • ...
Crim 2021-05-09
Across
- omegle
- act that the law make punishable
- eguls
- Reason for exposing punishment
- okay siya
- actions becomes morally right
- omcm
- emphasize free will
- sige
- "subsidiary of routineactivitytheory"
- okay lang
- eguls
- one of the earliest theory in criminology
- sige ba
Down
- based on fundamental tenets
- olats
- most influential theory
- produced grater goods
- sige lang
- tends to relate two or more variable
20 Clues: omcm • sige • olats • eguls • eguls • omegle • sige ba • okay siya • sige lang • okay lang • emphasize free will • produced grater goods • most influential theory • based on fundamental tenets • actions becomes morally right • Reason for exposing punishment • act that the law make punishable • tends to relate two or more variable • "subsidiary of routineactivitytheory" • ...
Unit 3 Review 2023-10-26
Across
- the ability to see objects in three dimensions, although the images that strike the retina are two-dimensional; allows us to judge distance
- an illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on and off in quick succession
- processing many aspects of a problem simultaneously; the brain's natural mode of information processing for many functions, including vision
- the minimum difference between two stimuli required for detection 50 percent of the time. We experience the difference threshold as a just noticeable difference
- a mental predisposition to perceive one thing and not another
- conversion of one form of energy into another. In sensation, the transforming of stimulus energies, such as sights, sounds, and smells into neural impulses our brain can interpret
- the organization of the visual field into objects that stand out from their surroundings
- perceiving familiar objects as having consistent color, even if changing illumination alters the wavelengths reflected by the object
- the sense of smell
- the theory that the retina contains three different types of color receptors - one receptive to red, one to green, and one to blue - which, when stimulated in combination, can produce the perception of any color
- retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray, and are sensitive to movement
- the amount of energy in a light wave or sound wave, which influences what we perceive as brightness or loudness. Determined by the wave's amplitude (height)
- nerve cells in the brain's visual cortex that respond to specific features of the stimulus, such as shape, angle, or movement
- the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain
- the transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to help focus images on the retina
- the point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, creating a "blind" spot because no receptor cells are located there
- analysis that begins with the sensory receptors and works up to the brain's integration of sensory information
- the number of complete wavelengths that pass a point in a given time
- the focusing of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus
- a tone's experienced highness or lowness; depends on frequency
Down
- a theory predicting how and when we detect the presence of a faint stimulus (signal) amid background stimulation (noise). Assumes there is no single absolute threshold and that detection depends partly on a person's experience, expectations, motivation, and alertness
- the process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment
- a ring of muscle tissue that forms the colored portion of the eye around the pupil and controls the size of the pupil opening
- the dimension of color that is determined by the wavelength of light; what we know as the color names blue, green, and so forth
- the theory that the spinal cord contains a neurological "gate" that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass on to the brain. The "gate" is opened by the activity of pain signals traveling up small nerve fibers and is closed by activity in larger fibers or info coming from the brain
- the distance from the peak of one light or sound wave to the peak of the next
- our movement sense - our system for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts
- 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
- pereiving objects as unchanging (having consistant color, brightness, shape, and size) even as illumination and retinal images change
- the eye's clear, protective outer layer, covering the pupil and iris
- the ability to adjust to changed sensory input, including an artificially displaced or even inverted visual field
- retinal receptors that are concentrated near the center of the retina and that function in daylight or in well-lit conditions
- an organized whole; our tendency to integrate pieces of information into meaningful wholes
- the theory that opposing retinal processes (red-green, blue-yellow, white-black) enable color vision; for example, some cells are stimulated by green and inhibited by red; others are stimulated by red and inhibited by green
- the process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events
- the adjustable opening in the center of the eye through which light enters
- the central focal point in the retina, around which the eye's cones cluster
- a coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear; soundwaves traveling through it trigger nerve impulses
- our sense of body movement and position that enables our sense of balance
- the minimum stimulus energy needed to detect a particular stimulus 50 percent of the time
- diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation
- information processing guided by higher-level mental processes, as when we construct perceptions drawing on our experience and expectations
- the perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into coherent groups
43 Clues: the sense of smell • the focusing of conscious awareness on a particular stimulus • a mental predisposition to perceive one thing and not another • a tone's experienced highness or lowness; depends on frequency • diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation • the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain • ...
Evolution 2021-03-03
Across
- the name of the ship
- scientist who proposed these ideas
- allows animals to blend in
- the name of the islands
- a trait that we call a variation
- the study of DNA
Down
- the ocean the islands are in
- animals change with the environment
- the part of an embryo that turns into the ear
- what was different about the birds
- changes to animal traits
- parts of DNA that can switch traits
- the theory that animals are related
13 Clues: the study of DNA • the name of the ship • the name of the islands • changes to animal traits • allows animals to blend in • the ocean the islands are in • a trait that we call a variation • scientist who proposed these ideas • what was different about the birds • animals change with the environment • parts of DNA that can switch traits • the theory that animals are related • ...
Theatre History Review 2024-05-15
Across
- summary of scenario
- definition of renaissance
- dramatic form that disregards history
- the confidant was the ______ to help support the goal of Reality
- physical bits of humor
- stuffing added to clothing
- classical form of Japanese theatre, mixing dramatic performance with traditional dance
- In Kabuki the actors' faces were painted this color
- audience members who stood at the Globe
- decorative cuts in clothing
- worn on the face to portray a stock character
- themes must be true of all locations and times
- age of lovers
- Pantalone's costume color
- Appearance of Truth
- documented many scenarios
- type of theatre that was on the South Bank and was more inexpensive
- our existence is like babytalk
Down
- author of Dr. Faustus
- held up the ruff
- Shakespeares winter theatre
- modern form originating out of Darwinian Theory
- appeared without a mask and usually in contrasting pairs of two
- 17th Earl of Oxford
- silly servant characters
- "green room" for the actors at the Globe
- Dottore's profession
- Kyd, Lyly, Marlowe, Greene
- reality, morality, universality
29 Clues: age of lovers • held up the ruff • summary of scenario • 17th Earl of Oxford • Appearance of Truth • Dottore's profession • author of Dr. Faustus • physical bits of humor • silly servant characters • definition of renaissance • Pantalone's costume color • documented many scenarios • stuffing added to clothing • Kyd, Lyly, Marlowe, Greene • Shakespeares winter theatre • ...
Eye, Light, & Color 2012-03-16
Across
- absorbs most amount of heat
- initials for the colors in a rainbow
- light bounces off an object
- bending of light
- process which light passes through an object
- opening in the center of the eye in which light enters
- cells that respond to and detect color
- peak of a wave
- layer of cells that line the inside of the eye
Down
- height of a wave
- protective transparent front surface of the eye
- cells that detect dim light
- changes the shape of the lens
- light scatters as it passes through an object
- process in which an object takes in all light
- short thick nerve that carries signals from eye to brain
- curved transparent material in eye that bends light
- ring of muscle that controls the size of pupil
- light cannot pass through this object
19 Clues: peak of a wave • height of a wave • bending of light • absorbs most amount of heat • light bounces off an object • cells that detect dim light • changes the shape of the lens • initials for the colors in a rainbow • light cannot pass through this object • cells that respond to and detect color • process which light passes through an object • ...
Nonoxidative Color Products 2021-07-30
Across
- The most common vegetable dye
- One of the major classifications
- Mettalic dye with a purple cast
- Semi-permanent colors can cover a small amount of what
- What color shows in hennas purest form
- Temporary colors have large color molicules that coat what
- Mettalic dye with a red cast
- What kind of change does temporary color have on the hair
- Another name for mettalic dyes
- Semi-permanent won't leave a line of what
- Not mixed with
Down
- Type of temporary color a weekly ____
- To get other colors henna is mixed with what kind of salts
- Mettalic dyes are not considered this
- This test is not required for temporary color
- Semi-permanent color cannot do this
- One of the major classifications
- Nonoxidative color can only do this with color
- Metallic dye with a green cast
- What type of derivitive requires a PD test?
20 Clues: Not mixed with • Mettalic dye with a red cast • The most common vegetable dye • Metallic dye with a green cast • Another name for mettalic dyes • Mettalic dye with a purple cast • One of the major classifications • One of the major classifications • Semi-permanent color cannot do this • Type of temporary color a weekly ____ • Mettalic dyes are not considered this • ...
The Color Purple 2023-05-25
Across
- What does Celie sell at the end of the book?
- One of Sofia's children
- What do Celie and Sofia make together?
- girlfriend to Arthur's son; nicknamed Squeak
- Who does Arthur truly love?
- Celie's daughter
- Why does Sofia go to jail?
- Who hid Nettie's letters from Celie?
Down
- Celie's sister
- Father of Celie's children
- married to Arthur's son
- famous singer; Celie's lover
- main character
- Nettie's lover
- Mary Agnes' newfound passion
- Celie's son
- Celie's husband
- Celie put her trust in...
- Arthur's son
- Adam's lover
20 Clues: Celie's son • Arthur's son • Adam's lover • Celie's sister • main character • Nettie's lover • Celie's husband • Celie's daughter • married to Arthur's son • One of Sofia's children • Celie put her trust in... • Father of Celie's children • Why does Sofia go to jail? • Who does Arthur truly love? • famous singer; Celie's lover • Mary Agnes' newfound passion • Who hid Nettie's letters from Celie? • ...
Color & Interior Design 2021-09-03
Across
- design of the inside of a room is called an __________ design.
- color associated with love or anger
- color harmony consisting of the tints and shades of only one hue.
- a color changes from one color of the rainbow to a different color of the rainbow, the __________ of the color is changing.
- a color is either changed to grayscale or to bright neon colors, the __________ of the color is changing.
- that are on opposite sides of the Color Wheel.
- are arranged on a __________ to show how to mix different colors from the primary colors.
- the lightness or darkness of a color changes, the __________ of the color is changing.
- + __________ = Blue
Down
- color with no wavelength
- colors that can’t be found on a color wheel are the __________ colors.
- calming and trusting color
- Blue, and Yellow are traditionally considered to be __________ colors.
- color comes next on the Color Wheel: red, red-orange, orange, yellow-orange, yellow, yellow-green, __________?
- you mix 2 primary colors together it makes a __________ color like orange.
- psychology is how colors can affect a human’s behavior or ¬__________.
- called intermediate color, red-orange and blue-green are considered __________ colors.
- joyful and passive color
- color harmony consisting of colors that are right next to each other on the Color Wheel.
19 Clues: + __________ = Blue • color with no wavelength • joyful and passive color • calming and trusting color • color associated with love or anger • that are on opposite sides of the Color Wheel. • design of the inside of a room is called an __________ design. • color harmony consisting of the tints and shades of only one hue. • ...
Psychology Review 2014-04-09
Across
- Oedipus complex
- Taste aversion
- Hierarchy of needs
- Emotion
- Hypnosis
- Binet-Simon scale
- Parenting
- Heuristics
- Memory
- Attachment theory
- Classical conditioning
- Triarcbic theory of intelligence
- Skinner box
- Cognitive development stages
- Questioned Freud's theories
Down
- Collective unconscious
- Functionalism
- Cognitive therapy
- Humanistic approach
- Temperament
- Milgram experiment
- Linguistics
- Behaviorism
- Serial position effect
- Bobo doll experiment
- Stages of development
- Theory of multiple intelligences
- Monkey
28 Clues: Memory • Monkey • Emotion • Hypnosis • Parenting • Heuristics • Temperament • Linguistics • Behaviorism • Skinner box • Functionalism • Taste aversion • Oedipus complex • Cognitive therapy • Binet-Simon scale • Attachment theory • Hierarchy of needs • Milgram experiment • Humanistic approach • Bobo doll experiment • Stages of development • Collective unconscious • Serial position effect • Classical conditioning • ...
Psychology Review 2014-04-09
Across
- Oedipus complex
- Taste aversion
- Hierarchy of needs
- Emotion
- Hypnosis
- Binet-Simon scale
- Parenting
- Heuristics
- Memory
- Attachment theory
- Classical conditioning
- Triarcbic theory of intelligence
- Skinner box
- Cognitive development stages
- Questioned Freud's theories
Down
- Collective unconscious
- Functionalism
- Cognitive therapy
- Humanistic approach
- Temperament
- Milgram experiment
- Linguistics
- Behaviorism
- Serial position effect
- Bobo doll experiment
- Stages of development
- Theory of multiple intelligences
- Monkey
28 Clues: Memory • Monkey • Emotion • Hypnosis • Parenting • Heuristics • Temperament • Linguistics • Behaviorism • Skinner box • Functionalism • Taste aversion • Oedipus complex • Cognitive therapy • Binet-Simon scale • Attachment theory • Hierarchy of needs • Milgram experiment • Humanistic approach • Bobo doll experiment • Stages of development • Collective unconscious • Serial position effect • Classical conditioning • ...
Sociology chapter 7- Cierra 2022-01-04
Across
- discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment
- theory- the theory that society creates deviance by identifying particular members as deviant
- theory- theory that deviance is more likely to occur when a gap exists between cultural goals and the ability to achieve them
- crime-job-related crimes committed by high-status people
- deviance-deviance in which an individual's life and identity are organized around breaking society's norms
- discounting-the process of reducing the seriousness of the crimes that injure people of lower status
- justice system-a system comprising institutions and processes responsible for enforcing criminal statutes
- the process of changing or reforming a criminal through socialization
- association theory-the theory that individuals learn deviance in proportion to the number of deviant acts and norms in which they are exposed
- a repetition of, or return to, criminal behavior
- behavior that departs from societal or group norms
- who breaks significant societal or group names
- control- ways to encourage conformity to society's norms
Down
- punishment intended to make criminals pay monetary compensation to make up for the financial damage caused by their acts
- deviance-deviance involving occasional breaking of norms that is not a part of a person's lifestyle or self-concept
- theory- theory that compliance with social norms requires strong bonds between individuals and society
- sanctions- rewards or punishments that encourage conformity to social norms
- an undesirable label that is used to deny a deviant social acceptance
- Social conditions in which norms are weak, conflicting, or absent
- an act committed in violation of the law
- deviance- behavior that under conforms to accepted norms
- a method of protecting society from criminals by keeping them in prison
- punishment intended to make criminals pay compensation for their acts
- deviance- behavior that over conforms to social expectations
24 Clues: an act committed in violation of the law • who breaks significant societal or group names • a repetition of, or return to, criminal behavior • behavior that departs from societal or group norms • discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment • crime-job-related crimes committed by high-status people • deviance- behavior that under conforms to accepted norms • ...
