color theory Crossword Puzzles
Chapter 3 2023-09-24
Across
- Theory Five Enviornmental systems
- Foundation that makes dropout rates lower
- Getting information out of memory stage
- Mnemonic device example
- Freedom of children choosing activities
- Influence children attitude towards school
- Ecological system developer
- Learning theory
- Intimacy versus Identity
Down
- Stages of Piaget's theory
- The mental process of organizing information
- Three main process involved in memory
- Memory that holds sensory information
- Information in long term memory
- Examples of metacognition
- Childs self-esteem higher
- Types of peer status
- Founders of Google
- Human developmental stages
- Psychologist associated with cognitive.
20 Clues: Learning theory • Founders of Google • Types of peer status • Mnemonic device example • Intimacy versus Identity • Stages of Piaget's theory • Examples of metacognition • Childs self-esteem higher • Human developmental stages • Ecological system developer • Information in long term memory • Theory Five Enviornmental systems • Three main process involved in memory • ...
Psych 3360 vocabulary 2 2023-09-11
Across
- Located in the occipital lobe of the cerebral cortex; contains many modules, each of which codes a variety of information (depth, orientation, color, etc.) about a specific location on the visual field.
- Views at which objects are most easily recognized, typically those which reveal the most information about an object’s features or component shapes.
- Refers to the topographic organization of the primary visual cortex, in which adjacent areas of the cortex respond to adjacent locations of the visual field.
- Better visual recognition of letters when they are presented in a word context, compared to when a single letter is presented alone
- Context-, expectation-, or theory-based processing, e.g., using knowledge of the context in which a stimulus occurs to help recognize it.
- The area of the visual field to which a given cell (e.g., in the optic nerve or visual cortex) responds; stimulating some parts of this area may cause an inhibitory response while stimulating other parts may cause an excitatory response.
Down
- Processes a specific type of information (e.g., shape, movement, color) over the entire visual field.
- Short for “recognition-by-components”; a theory of visual pattern recognition that assumes that objects are analyzed and represented in terms of simple 3D geometrical shapes.
- A connectionist model of visual pattern recognition that features both excitatory and inhibitory connections, and in which activation can flow from the top down (word level to letter level) as well as from the bottom up (features to letters, letters to words).
- A theory of pattern recognition that claims that people recognize objects by first extracting their simple or basic properties (edges, corners, etc.) and relationships among these properties.
- Neurons leading from the eye to the superior colliculus and the lateral geniculate nucleus; axons make up the optic nerve.
- 3D geometrical forms such as cones, cylinders, spheres, and so on; a small vocabulary of such forms could be used to represent the shapes of many familiar objects.
- One of two types of photoreceptors in the eye; functions best at light levels, high resolution, color, most concentrated in the center of the visual field (fovea).
- Data-driven processing, e.g., recognizing a stimulus based only on the physical information it contains.
- one of the two types of photoreceptors in the eye; functions at low light levels, poor resolution, black and white, most concentrated in the periphery of the visual field
15 Clues: Processes a specific type of information (e.g., shape, movement, color) over the entire visual field. • Data-driven processing, e.g., recognizing a stimulus based only on the physical information it contains. • Neurons leading from the eye to the superior colliculus and the lateral geniculate nucleus; axons make up the optic nerve. • ...
TFN- Laila Maer Ong 2019-11-18
Across
- defined as human being
- care, core and cure model
- nursing process theory
- imogene born on?
- perception by five senses, automatic thoughts, automatic feeling, action
- unseen
- subjective and objective
- who proposed the adaption model
- it is ability to establish relationships/trust
Down
- behioral system model
- describes why and how people care for themselves
- helping profession
- environment theory
- self care deficit nursing theory
- human-to-human relationship model
- it is the body and sensation and body image
- stressora from the environment
- psychodynamic nursing
- 21 nursing problem
19 Clues: unseen • imogene born on? • helping profession • environment theory • 21 nursing problem • behioral system model • psychodynamic nursing • defined as human being • nursing process theory • subjective and objective • care, core and cure model • stressora from the environment • who proposed the adaption model • self care deficit nursing theory • human-to-human relationship model • ...
Ancient Mayans 2023-10-02
Across
- What city was the temple located at?
- What was the deity's name?
- When was the temple built?
- What color was the box that was next to a body?
- What animal was the deity?
- When was the temple researched?
Down
- What royal furniture was found inside the temple?
- What was below the temple?
- What covered the temple as time went by?
- What is the main theory to why the Mayans disappeared.
10 Clues: What was below the temple? • What was the deity's name? • When was the temple built? • What animal was the deity? • When was the temple researched? • What city was the temple located at? • What covered the temple as time went by? • What color was the box that was next to a body? • What royal furniture was found inside the temple? • ...
Anthropology 161 2023-08-26
Across
- The father and mother both contribute genetic material that mixes to determine the characteristics of their offspring.
- The theory that life could not have come to be by chance, that it was created as such by a higher being.
- A volcanic island that is one of the many small islands that make up the Galapagos Island.
- The evolution or similar adaptation in unrelated groups of animals (Homoplasy).
- A bar chart to represent continuous data.
- A balance by opposing forces (Think of overly large beaks and tiny beaks).
- Extremely distinct variation with no intermediates (achondroplasia).
- Small changes over time that become a selective advantage.
- Organisms that adapt to their environment to increase their species’ chances of survival and reproduction.
- Variants that are continuous, that go from one extreme to another (short to tall). i.e., height.
- Selective breeding to develop or enhance certain traits.
Down
- A finch originating from the Galapagos islands, specifically a medium ground finch.
- A change that allows an organism to survive and reproduce.
- Model of evolution that theorizes that evolution is slow, steady, and gradual.
- Where a trait is favored, meaning they have a greater chance at reproduction and survival.
- The distance between the top and bottom of a birds (finch’s) beak.
- Animals that rear their young in external pouches.
- Stage that occurs between evolutionary development.
- The population stabilizes on a non-extreme trait (think of finch’s beaks once more).
- An organism’s size, shape, and composition.
- The belief that underlying nature constitutes and differentiates social categories.
- A statement accepted as true and used for the basis of theory and argument.
- Bones found by Darwin showing the variation in species and how the environment contributes to this change.
- Characteristic that a species adorns such as color, beak size, eye color, etc…
- The ability to produce offspring.
25 Clues: The ability to produce offspring. • A bar chart to represent continuous data. • An organism’s size, shape, and composition. • Animals that rear their young in external pouches. • Stage that occurs between evolutionary development. • Selective breeding to develop or enhance certain traits. • A change that allows an organism to survive and reproduce. • ...
Earth and Space Science - Q1, Ch. 1- 3 2023-01-19
Across
- Provides heat/energy for Earth's system
- Having to do with the elevation on a map
- The Mohs scale is a measure of this
- This type of mineral will fizz
- This is a type of metamorphic rock
- Erosion causes this type of rock to form
- Some types of this include air and water
- The "building blocks" of matter
Down
- How light is reflected from a mineral
- Includes the oceans, lakes, and streams
- NOT reliable to determine minerals
- One way that minerals can form
- A tested and supported hypothesis
- Minerals/Native elements make up these
- Molten rock that forms under the crust
15 Clues: One way that minerals can form • This type of mineral will fizz • The "building blocks" of matter • A tested and supported hypothesis • NOT reliable to determine minerals • This is a type of metamorphic rock • The Mohs scale is a measure of this • How light is reflected from a mineral • Minerals/Native elements make up these • Molten rock that forms under the crust • ...
chapter 13 crossword 2013-04-19
Across
- basket/ a representative collection of goods and services
- that is out of control
- price index/ a price index determined by measuring the price of a standing group of goods meant to represent the market basket
- unemployment/ unemployment due to the result of harvest or vacation
- rate/ the rate of unemployed in the nation
- employment/the level of employment reached when there is no cyclical unemployment
- a general increase of price
- pull theory/ theory that inflation occurs when demand exceeds supplies
- unemployment/ unemployment that rises during an economic downturn
Down
- a job for which one is over qualified, or when working part time when full is required
- an official count of the population
- rate/the percent rate of change in price level over time
- workers/ a person who has given up looking for work
- power/ the means and funds to purchase and item
- inflation rate/ the rate of inflation excluding the except on food and water and energy prices
- theory/ theory that to much money in the economy causes inflation
- unemployment/ when the skills of the workers do not match the skill of the job required
- index/the measurement that shows how the average prat of a standard group of goods change over time
- unemployment/ unemployment that occurs when people take time to find a job
- push theory/ theory that inflation occurs when producers raise price to meet cost
20 Clues: that is out of control • a general increase of price • an official count of the population • rate/ the rate of unemployed in the nation • power/ the means and funds to purchase and item • workers/ a person who has given up looking for work • rate/the percent rate of change in price level over time • basket/ a representative collection of goods and services • ...
chapter 13 crossword 2013-04-19
Across
- an official count of the population
- a job for which one is over qualified, or when working part time when full is required
- workers/ a person who has given up looking for work
- rate/the percent rate of change in price level over time
- rate/ the rate of unemployed in the nation
- basket/ a representative collection of goods and services
- a general increase of price
- inflation rate/ the rate of inflation excluding the except on food and water and energy prices
- unemployment/ when the skills of the workers do not match the skill of the job required
- unemployment/ unemployment that occurs when people take time to find a job
Down
- that is out of control
- push theory/ theory that inflation occurs when producers raise price to meet cost
- unemployment/ unemployment due to the result of harvest or vacation
- pull theory/ theory that inflation occurs when demand exceeds supplies
- power/ the means and funds to purchase and item
- unemployment/ unemployment that rises during an economic downturn
- price index/ a price index determined by measuring the price of a standing group of goods meant to represent the market basket
- index/the measurement that shows how the average prat of a standard group of goods change over time
- employment/the level of employment reached when there is no cyclical unemployment
- theory/ theory that to much money in the economy causes inflation
20 Clues: that is out of control • a general increase of price • an official count of the population • rate/ the rate of unemployed in the nation • power/ the means and funds to purchase and item • workers/ a person who has given up looking for work • rate/the percent rate of change in price level over time • basket/ a representative collection of goods and services • ...
AP Psychology review 2015-04-16
Across
- Humanistic psychologist who created a hierarchy of needs
- Founded Social Development Theory
- Known for his theory of cognitive development in children
- Founded Behaviorism and conducted baby Albert experiment
- Introduced self-efficacy and social learning theory
- Discovered spacing effect and pioneered memory experiments, as well as introducing learning curve
- Conducted first psychology experiment in first psych lab
- Conducted a taste experiment with rats that lead to them being conditioned to avoid sickness
- Studied attachment in monkeys with fake artificial mothers
- Created g-factor/general intelligence concept
- Founded a law that says the just noticeable magnitude is proportional to stimulus magnitude
- 8 stage theory of psychosocial development
- Operant conditioning and involved with reinforcement ('skinner' box)
- Created Functionalist school of thought
Down
- Founded REBT (Rational Emotive behaviour therapy)
- Classical conditioning through study involving dogs salivating to stimulus
- Described cognitive dissonance
- Him and 7 others went into hospital to show the dangers of labeling mental illnesses
- Continued Freudian work on dream interpretation
- Conducted a prison experiment that showed how situations can affect behaviour
- Worked in developmental psychology by observing infant's attachment to parent
- Created the first intelligence test
- Founded successful intelligence theory/Triarchic theory of intelligence
- Supported the idea of multiple intelligences
- Critique of Freudian principles
- Explored the study of micro expressions to detect lying and emotions
- Developed "Client-Centered" therapy
- Chomsky Theorised about 'critical period' in languages
- Famous for conformity experiments and effect of group pressure
29 Clues: Described cognitive dissonance • Critique of Freudian principles • Founded Social Development Theory • Created the first intelligence test • Developed "Client-Centered" therapy • Created Functionalist school of thought • 8 stage theory of psychosocial development • Supported the idea of multiple intelligences • Created g-factor/general intelligence concept • ...
Advanced Debate Crossword 2025-04-09
Across
- Acquisition Theory Nozick's idea about the fair initial acquisition of property.
- of Ignorance Rawls' thought experiment for determining justice without bias.
- Trolley Problem Ethical dilemma involving a choice between sacrificing one to save many.
- Value Theory Idea that value comes from the labor used to produce something.
- Rawls Philosopher of justice known for the theory of fairness.
- Philosophical attitude of doubting knowledge claims.
- Philosopher known for duty-based ethics and the categorical imperative.
- Ergo Sum Latin for "I think, therefore I am."
- The system of reasoning used to evaluate arguments.
- Contract Theory that people give up some freedoms for societal protection.
- Hominem Attacking the person instead of the argument.
- Realism View that politics is governed by self-interest and power.
- Hobbes' book advocating for absolute authority to ensure peace.
- The study of fundamental questions about existence, knowledge, and ethics.
Down
- Ethical theory that promotes actions that maximize happiness for the most people.
- Man Misrepresenting an argument to make it easier to attack.
- Nozick Libertarian philosopher who argued for minimal state and property rights.
- Hobbes Philosopher who believed in a strong sovereign to avoid anarchy.
- Economic system based on private ownership and free markets.
- and Bust Cycle Economic pattern of rapid growth followed by downturn.
- Fallacy A flaw in reasoning that weakens an argument.
- Ethical theory focused on rules and duties.
- Markets Economic system with minimal government intervention.
- Hume Philosopher known for empiricism and the problem of induction.
- Locke Enlightenment thinker who argued for natural rights and limited government.
- Stuart Mill Philosopher who refined utilitarianism and emphasized individual liberty.
26 Clues: Ethical theory focused on rules and duties. • Ergo Sum Latin for "I think, therefore I am." • The system of reasoning used to evaluate arguments. • Philosophical attitude of doubting knowledge claims. • Fallacy A flaw in reasoning that weakens an argument. • Hominem Attacking the person instead of the argument. • ...
Theories of the Causation of Crime 2025-11-21
Across
- This theory says that people learn crime when associating with those involved in crime.
- This theory suggests that crime occurs as a part of a daily routine. Suggests that crime only needs a motivated offender, an absence of a capable guardian and a suitable target.
- These are crimes that we decide as a society are bad. They are not necessarily wrong but they are criminal
- This theory suggests that when social bonds are weakened or broken, people are more likely to commit crime. Social ties control the urge to commit crime.
- These are crimes that are wrong by their very nature--these crimes are bad in all situations
- theory This theory suggests that those with power may be labeled as deviant by the elites in society as a way to control others
- Credited with creating avatism. Believes that criminals are born.
Down
- This theory suggests that criminals are born. Criminals have specific physical traits. Criminals are less evolved a represent an earlier version of humans
- This is the violation of a norm. It is not necessarily always a criminal.
- The idea that all actions should create the most good for the most amount of people
- This theory suggests that when there is strain between what a person wants to achieve and the means to achieve it, they will commit a crime.
- This theory says that behavior is learned and will be maintained or stopped with rewards or punishment
- The theory that people make the active choice to commit crime--a criminal weighs the costs and benefits of committing a crime
- This perspective says that the people agree on the laws. They have come to a consensus about what the laws should be
- This perspective suggests that crime is the result of a power struggle. The laws are influenced by people in power
- This theory suggests that by labeling someone a criminal, they will continue to engage in criminal activity
- Says that human behavior is controlled by biological, psychological and social factors, not by free will
- This theory suggests that criminal behavior could be explained by looking at someone's entire life.
18 Clues: Credited with creating avatism. Believes that criminals are born. • This is the violation of a norm. It is not necessarily always a criminal. • The idea that all actions should create the most good for the most amount of people • This theory says that people learn crime when associating with those involved in crime. • ...
enlightenment 2023-09-26
Across
- used simple mathematics to formulate three laws of planetary motion
- Analytical geometry
- Idea of checks and balances
- Vaccine for smallpox
- Created the heliocentric theory
- a person who rules with absolute power
- Everyone should be born with life, liberty, and property
- Invented the telescope
- Laws of gravity
- believed government should be formed by the people
- to know something one did not know before
Down
- theory that the earth is the center of the solar system
- women's rights
- theory that the sun is the center of the solar system
- Believed that France would benefit from modeling the English parliamentary system
- Believed government should seek the greatest good for the greatest number of people
- Created boyles law
- parties where people met to discuss new idea
- the people who presented new ways of thinking during the enlightenment
- influential formulation of the social contract theory
20 Clues: women's rights • Laws of gravity • Created boyles law • Analytical geometry • Vaccine for smallpox • Invented the telescope • Idea of checks and balances • Created the heliocentric theory • a person who rules with absolute power • to know something one did not know before • parties where people met to discuss new idea • believed government should be formed by the people • ...
earth 2024-02-08
Across
- when two plates move away from eacother
- it is the space between the crust and mantle
- this happens when a oceanic plate collides with a continental plate
- what the earth contains.
- when two plates slide past eachother
- These make up the surface of the earth
- apart of the earths atmosphere
- transform boundarys cause this
- it is in the center of the earth
- it includes the mantle and crust
- it is on the outside of the core
Down
- Alfred Wegener came up with this theory and continental drift theory
- when two plates move towards eachother
- Alfred Wegener made this theory
- the lithosphere and asthenosphere are both apart of this
- the earths core is a solid because of this
- it is 66% of earth
- Harry Hess came up with this theory
- we live on this part of earth
- another word of the core
20 Clues: it is 66% of earth • what the earth contains. • another word of the core • we live on this part of earth • apart of the earths atmosphere • transform boundarys cause this • Alfred Wegener made this theory • it is in the center of the earth • it includes the mantle and crust • it is on the outside of the core • Harry Hess came up with this theory • ...
Jean Piaget 2021-09-08
Across
- Children can solve problems logically
- Sensorimotor is the stage from birth to ____ years?
- Critics claim that Piaget used _____ research for his theory
- The preoperational stage is characterized by
- The sensorimotor stage involves the ______
- Effective ______ have stemmed from Piaget's theory
- The laboratory Piaget worked in that sparked his interest in psychoanalysis?
- Children develop the use of language during the _______ stage
- Piaget's theory focuses on child _________
- Children sort their knowledge into
Down
- Children have to learn how to __________
- The concrete-operational stage is during the ages ____
- Piaget believed children learn through
- A child enters the formal operational stage at age _____
- There are _____ stages of mental development
- Piaget's work had an important impact on _____
- Jean Piaget was a ______ psychologist
- What is the first stage of development?
- Some think Piaget ______ the intelligence of young children with his theory
- Children learn _______ than adults
20 Clues: Children learn _______ than adults • Children sort their knowledge into • Children can solve problems logically • Jean Piaget was a ______ psychologist • Piaget believed children learn through • What is the first stage of development? • Children have to learn how to __________ • The sensorimotor stage involves the ______ • Piaget's theory focuses on child _________ • ...
Learning, Motivation and Performance: Process Theories 2015-04-02
Across
- A persons motivation to do something is strongly affected by the percieved outcomes (good or bad) of that decision. This describes what type of process theory?
- When someone learns to associate the ring of a bell with lunch time, this is what type of process theory?
- When your behavior results in something unpleasant or undesirable being taken away this an example of what type of reinforcement?
Down
- An outcomes subjective value is referred to as?
- You always buy green house decor because the color green makes you happy; however, over the years the color green no longer brings you joy and you stop buying green items, this situation describes which type of consequence that can result from behavior?
- If an individual behavior is followed by a satisfying experience the behavior is more likely to be repeated in the future. What type of process theory is this describing?
- If a dog learns to associate the sound of a buzzer with food, the buzzer acts as what type of stimulus?
7 Clues: An outcomes subjective value is referred to as? • If a dog learns to associate the sound of a buzzer with food, the buzzer acts as what type of stimulus? • When someone learns to associate the ring of a bell with lunch time, this is what type of process theory? • ...
D&P U1.5 2024-07-08
Across
- Humanist psychologist who emphasized self-actualization.
- Observable actions and responses.
- Individual patterns of thinking, feeling, and behaving.
- Personal encounters influencing development.
- Evaluation of one's own worth or value.
- Processes related to thinking, reasoning, and problem-solving.
- Theory explaining personality through genetic and physiological factors.
- Conditions affecting personality development.
- Theory emphasizing the role of unconscious conflicts in shaping personality.
- Relating to interactions with others.
- According to dispositional theorists, personality is formed using traits called.
- The theory that includes Erik Erikson’s “stages of psychosocial development”.
Down
- Act of watching and learning from others.
- External factors shaping personality development.
- Major theory categorizing personality into openness, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism.
- Approach emphasizing personal growth and self-actualization.
- Enduring characteristics influencing behaviour.
- Genetic transmission of traits influencing personality.
- Controls values and morality.
- Psychologist known for stages of psychosocial development.
- Approach emphasizing observable behavior and environmental factors.
- Behavioral psychologist known for operant conditioning.
- Process of learning through stimulus and response associations.
- Based on or verified by observation or experience.
- Theory emphasizing learning through observation and modeling.
- Psychologist associated with the three-factor model of personality.
26 Clues: Controls values and morality. • Observable actions and responses. • Relating to interactions with others. • Evaluation of one's own worth or value. • Act of watching and learning from others. • Personal encounters influencing development. • Conditions affecting personality development. • Enduring characteristics influencing behaviour. • ...
"Spring and All" 2022-05-22
Across
- literary movement that emphasized imagery
- tone of the poem
- recurring theme/ image about life and death
- the career of William Carlos Williams
- first name of the founder of the Imagist movement
Down
- opening image of the poem
- literary theory examining nature
- the color used to represent dreariness in the first half of the poem
- initial imagery that marks re-birth
- the war that "Spring and All" references
10 Clues: tone of the poem • opening image of the poem • literary theory examining nature • initial imagery that marks re-birth • the career of William Carlos Williams • the war that "Spring and All" references • literary movement that emphasized imagery • recurring theme/ image about life and death • first name of the founder of the Imagist movement • ...
7 2018-05-08
Across
- TWINS WHO DEVELOP FROM A SINGLE (MONOZYGOTIC) FERTILIZED EGG THAT SPLITS IN TWO, CREATING TWO GENETICALLY IDENTICAL ORGAN- ISMS.
- PRESCRIBED MEDICATIONS OR PROCEDURES THAT ACT DIRECTLY ON THE PERSON’S PHYSIOLOGY.
- THE INNERMOST PART OF THE EAR, CONTAINING THE COCHLEA, SEMI- CIRCULAR CANALS, AND VESTIBULAR SACS.
- INCORPORATING MISLEADING INFORMATION INTO ONE’S MEMORY OF AN EVENT.
- AN INTEGRATED APPROACH THAT INCORPORATES BIOLOGICAL, PSYCHOLOGICAL, AND SOCIAL-CULTURAL LEVELS OF ANALYSIS.
- THREADLIKE STRUCTURES MADE OF DNA MOLECULES THAT CONTAIN THE GENES.
- PIAGET’S THEORY, THE STAGE (FROM BIRTH TO ABOUT 2 YEARS OF AGE) DURING WHICH INFANTS KNOW THE WORLD MOSTLY IN TERMS OF THEIR SENSORY IMPRESSIONS AND MOTOR ACTIVITIES.
Down
- A MOOD DISORDER IN WHICH A PERSON EXPERIENCES, IN THE ABSENCE OF DRUGS OR ANOTHER MEDICAL CONDITION, TWO OR MORE WEEKS OF SIGNIFICANTLY DEPRESSED MOODS OR DIMINISHED INTEREST OR PLEASURE IN MOST ACTIVITIES, ALONG WITH AT LEAST FOUR OTHER SYMPTOMS.
- THE THEORY THAT OPPOSING RETINAL PROCESSES (RED-GREEN, YELLOW-BLUE, WHITE-BLACK) ENABLE COLOR VISION. FOR EXAMPLE, SOME CELLS ARE STIMULATED BY GREEN AND INHIBITED BY RED; OTHERS ARE STIMULATED BY RED AND INHIBITED BY GREEN.
- A GRAPHED CLUSTER OF DOTS, EACH OF WHICH REPRESENTS THE VALUES OF TWO VARIABLES. THE SLOPE OF THE POINTS SUGGESTS THE DIRECTION OF THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE TWO VARIABLES. THE AMOUNT OF SCATTER SUGGESTS THE STRENGTH OF THE CORRELATION (LITTLE SCATTER INDICATES HIGH CORRELATION).
- BELOW ONE’S ABSOLUTE THRESHOLD FOR CONSCIOUS AWARENESS.
- THE PROCESS BY WHICH, ACCORDING TO FREUD, CHILDREN INCORPORATE THEIR PARENTS’ VALUES INTO THEIR DEVELOPING SUPEREGOS.
- THE CENTRAL FOCAL POINT IN THE RETINA, AROUND WHICH THE EYE’S CONES CLUSTER.
- A THEORY OF DEATH-RELATED ANXIETY; EXPLORES PEOPLE’S EMOTIONAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES TO REMINDERS OF THEIR IMPENDING DEATH.
- A NERVE CELL; THE BASIC BUILDING BLOCK OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM.
- IN PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY, THE BASIC DEFENSE MECHANISM THAT BANISHES ANXIETY-AROUSING THOUGHTS, FEELINGS, AND MEMORIES FROM CONSCIOUSNESS.
- MEMORY AIDS, ESPECIALLY THOSE TECHNIQUES THAT USE VIVID IMAGERY AND ORGANIZATIONAL DEVICES.
- ORGANIZING ITEMS INTO FAMILIAR, MANAGEABLE UNITS; OFTEN OCCURS AUTOMATICALLY.
18 Clues: BELOW ONE’S ABSOLUTE THRESHOLD FOR CONSCIOUS AWARENESS. • A NERVE CELL; THE BASIC BUILDING BLOCK OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM. • INCORPORATING MISLEADING INFORMATION INTO ONE’S MEMORY OF AN EVENT. • THREADLIKE STRUCTURES MADE OF DNA MOLECULES THAT CONTAIN THE GENES. • THE CENTRAL FOCAL POINT IN THE RETINA, AROUND WHICH THE EYE’S CONES CLUSTER. • ...
Personality, characteristics of a person 2022-03-31
Across
- Certain specific means by which the ego unconsciously protects itself against unpleasant impulses or circumstances
- Jung founded analytical psychology
- The part of the personality that is in touch with reality and strives to meet the demands of the id and the superego in socially acceptable ways
- Original models from which later forms developed in Jung's personality theory, archetypes are primitive images or concepts that reside in the collective unconscious
- In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism by which an individual finds justifications for unacceptable thoughts, impulses, or behavior repression-In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism that removes anxiety-arousing thoughts, feelings, and memories from one's consciousness repression In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism that removes anxiety-arousing thoughts, feelings, and memories from one's consciousnessDenial- This is a coping mechanism that gives you time to adjust to distressing situations
- He coined the phrase identity crisis
- The process of displacing one's feelings onto a different person, animal, or object
- founder of psychoanalysis
- The tendency of a repressed wish or feeling to be expressed at a conscious level in a contrasting form.
- Theory This is the theory of personality organization and the dynamics of personality development that guides psychoanalysis, a clinical method for treating psychopathology
- Parts of your personality you hide from yourself and others
Down
- Mask you show others.
- is a psychological defense mechanism in which a person redirects a negative emotion from its original source to a less threatening recipient
- In psychoanalytic theory, a defense mechanism by which an individual retreats to an earlier stage of development when faced with anxiety
- Jung's concept of a shared, inherited body of memory that all humans have
- is The part of the personality that is the source of conscience and inhibits the socially undesirable impulses of the id
- This is a coping mechanism that gives you time to adjust to distressing situations
- characteristics of a person
- In psychoanalytic, theory, that reservoir of unconscious psychic energy that strives to satisfy basic sexual and aggressive drives
- The part of the mind that contains material of which we are unaware but that strongly influences conscious processes and behaviors
20 Clues: Mask you show others. • founder of psychoanalysis • characteristics of a person • Jung founded analytical psychology • He coined the phrase identity crisis • Parts of your personality you hide from yourself and others • Jung's concept of a shared, inherited body of memory that all humans have • ...
Personality, characteristics of a person 2022-03-31
Across
- Certain specific means by which the ego unconsciously protects itself against unpleasant impulses or circumstances
- Jung founded analytical psychology
- The part of the personality that is in touch with reality and strives to meet the demands of the id and the superego in socially acceptable ways
- Original models from which later forms developed in Jung's personality theory, archetypes are primitive images or concepts that reside in the collective unconscious
- In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism by which an individual finds justifications for unacceptable thoughts, impulses, or behavior repression-In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism that removes anxiety-arousing thoughts, feelings, and memories from one's consciousness repression In psychoanalytic theory, the defense mechanism that removes anxiety-arousing thoughts, feelings, and memories from one's consciousnessDenial- This is a coping mechanism that gives you time to adjust to distressing situations
- He coined the phrase identity crisis
- The process of displacing one's feelings onto a different person, animal, or object
- founder of psychoanalysis
- The tendency of a repressed wish or feeling to be expressed at a conscious level in a contrasting form.
- Theory This is the theory of personality organization and the dynamics of personality development that guides psychoanalysis, a clinical method for treating psychopathology
- Parts of your personality you hide from yourself and others
Down
- Mask you show others.
- is a psychological defense mechanism in which a person redirects a negative emotion from its original source to a less threatening recipient
- In psychoanalytic theory, a defense mechanism by which an individual retreats to an earlier stage of development when faced with anxiety
- Jung's concept of a shared, inherited body of memory that all humans have
- is The part of the personality that is the source of conscience and inhibits the socially undesirable impulses of the id
- This is a coping mechanism that gives you time to adjust to distressing situations
- characteristics of a person
- In psychoanalytic, theory, that reservoir of unconscious psychic energy that strives to satisfy basic sexual and aggressive drives
- The part of the mind that contains material of which we are unaware but that strongly influences conscious processes and behaviors
20 Clues: Mask you show others. • founder of psychoanalysis • characteristics of a person • Jung founded analytical psychology • He coined the phrase identity crisis • Parts of your personality you hide from yourself and others • Jung's concept of a shared, inherited body of memory that all humans have • ...
Evidence 3 2022-11-29
Across
- is the theory proposed by Karl Marx (1818-1883) and Friedrich Engels
- seeks to analyze society through a general theoretical system
- was developed since 1923 in Germany, because a group of German neo Marxists
- group of facts and circumstances that complicate the achievement of an objective.
- is the study of complex nonlinear systems of social complexity
- Some of these ........ make people think in a similar way
- talks to us of lack of knowledge there is about the system
- Set of individual experiences.
Down
- is widely regarded as the father of structural anthropology
- The pioneer in developing the chaos theory
- Set of all interpersonal relationships.
- Balance inside the system
- part that each person plays in society and is a consequence of a certain status
- proposes that many cultural elements such as myths, stories, language structures or behaviors are common to all human civilizations
- the separation of things that naturally belong together, or antagonism between those who are properly in harmony
- is developed from chaos theory and represents the body of research on systems about the systems that have complex characteristics
- is related to the different nature of the parts of a system
- was born in Prussia in a wealthy family
18 Clues: Balance inside the system • Set of individual experiences. • Set of all interpersonal relationships. • was born in Prussia in a wealthy family • The pioneer in developing the chaos theory • Some of these ........ make people think in a similar way • talks to us of lack of knowledge there is about the system • is widely regarded as the father of structural anthropology • ...
Natural Selection 2023-03-17
Across
- developing organism
- How organisms with variations are better suited for survival
- The scientist that developed the theory of natural selection
- Organisms that have similar adaptations because they have a common ancestor
- The timeline of Earth's history
- The name of the earliest horse fossil
- The name of Mr.Ray's class
- Rayland rule #2
Down
- Rayland rule #1
- butterfly like organism that changes color to match it's environment
- Organisms that have similar adaptations only because they are in a similar environment
- Major change in the horse
- The name of a fossil that looks like a horseshoe crab
- organisms suited for their environment
- Not all offspring are the same
15 Clues: Rayland rule #1 • Rayland rule #2 • developing organism • Major change in the horse • The name of Mr.Ray's class • Not all offspring are the same • The timeline of Earth's history • The name of the earliest horse fossil • organisms suited for their environment • The name of a fossil that looks like a horseshoe crab • How organisms with variations are better suited for survival • ...
Politics and Governance 2026-01-22
Across
- Approach focused on what "ought to be."
- Theory that the state evolved from the family.
- Approach focused on formal structures.
- Latin origin of the word "state."
- Related to the "Divine Right" theory of state origin.
- The mass of population living within a state.
- Prerequisite for achieving political objectives.
- Theory that states satisfy financial needs.
- To measure data in scientific research.
- Approach analyzing the past to understand reality.
- The branch of government that makes laws.
- Title of Machiavelli's famous political book.
- First to use the term "state" in writing.
- you like me to generate a crossword puzzle grid using these specific words and clues?
- Objective and value-free political approach.
- Plan of action guiding the government.
- The Greek word for "city-state."
- The definite portion of the earth's surface.
Down
- The voluntary agreement in Social Contract theory.
- A community of persons with territory and government.
- Adjective from which "politics" originates.
- A group united by shared culture or history.
- The "Father of Political Science."
- The agency that formulates the will of the state.
- Approach focused on the judiciary and laws.
- One of the modern leaders often studied regarding power.
- Theory of the strong dominating the weak.
- Theory that political involvement is natural.
- Traditional perspective on political morals.
- Methods used to analyze daily human activities.
- Supreme power to command and enforce obedience.
31 Clues: The Greek word for "city-state." • Latin origin of the word "state." • The "Father of Political Science." • Approach focused on formal structures. • Plan of action guiding the government. • Approach focused on what "ought to be." • To measure data in scientific research. • Theory of the strong dominating the weak. • The branch of government that makes laws. • ...
Movement of the Earth Crossword Puzzle 2014-11-19
Across
- The _________ is an example of fossil evidence.
- Alfred Wegener created his theory in the _______ century.
- The mantle is _______ which allows the the plates to move.
- Plate __________ is Alfred Wegeners theory.
- _______ evidence states that ancient plants and animals were found on opposite sides of the oceans.
- The Earth is made up of many ______.
- Glacial _________ formed about 300 million years ago.
- When continents are reassembled as one land mass the fossils form a continues _________ pattern.
Down
- The plates ride next to each other on _______.
- Glacieral __________ are scratches in bedrock made by rocks embedding in ice as glaciers move.
- Pieces of the _________ mountain are found on many different land masses.
- Other scientists thought Wegener was crazy because he had no _______.
- Glaciers flowed from a _______ central point.
- Fossil evidence was found on oppisite sides of the _________ ocean
- Wegener said South America and West Africa were once connected like a _______.
- Rocks and _______ are part of the geological fit piece of Alfred Wegener's theory.
- Alfred Wegener found ______ pieces of evidence to prove his theory.
- The theory of continental ______ was made years after Wegeners death.
- The continents were once connected. This land mass was called ______.
- Plates are made of ______ rock.
20 Clues: Plates are made of ______ rock. • The Earth is made up of many ______. • Plate __________ is Alfred Wegeners theory. • Glaciers flowed from a _______ central point. • The plates ride next to each other on _______. • The _________ is an example of fossil evidence. • Glacial _________ formed about 300 million years ago. • ...
Philosophy and Thinkers 2 2023-11-26
Across
- The belief that the divine is present in all things.
- Ethical theory asserting inherent rights based on human nature.
- Ethical theory that pleasure is the highest good.
- Concept in Plato's "Republic" proposing a ruler with philosophical wisdom.
- Political philosophy concept regarding the legitimacy of authority.
- Philosophical system combining elements of Plato and other traditions.
- Ethical theory emphasizing the development of moral character.
- The belief in the existence of a single substance or reality.
- Philosophical tradition based on the teachings of Aristotle.
- Philosophical view that knowledge is derived from experience.
- Philosophical position denying the existence of abstract entities.
- Ethical theory that actions are right if they promote the greatest happiness.
- Philosophical approach emphasizing analysis of language and concepts.
Down
- Philosophical view that reason is the primary source of knowledge.
- Ethical theory evaluating actions based on their outcomes.
- Buddhist tradition emphasizing meditation and intuition.
- The belief in the existence of two distinct substances, often mind and body.
- Term used by Martin Heidegger for human existence.
- Philosophical school of thought advocating a simple and ascetic lifestyle.
- Philosophical attitude of doubt or suspension of judgment.
20 Clues: Ethical theory that pleasure is the highest good. • Term used by Martin Heidegger for human existence. • The belief that the divine is present in all things. • Buddhist tradition emphasizing meditation and intuition. • Ethical theory evaluating actions based on their outcomes. • Philosophical attitude of doubt or suspension of judgment. • ...
Enlightenment Crossword Puzzle 2021-09-23
Across
- places where people met to discuss new ideas
- scientific method
- fought for the freedom of religion and speech
- someone who rules with absolute power
- are usually based on battle scenes and reality
- is an art style based on wealthy aristocrats and their lifestyle
- invented the telescope
- "" laws of physics
- small pox vaccine
- laws were to pressure social order not avenge crime
- scientific method
- created the microscope
- believed women education was just as important as men
- said that rulers need total power, made a social contract
Down
- created the heliocentric theory
- proved the heliocentric theory with telescope of his own
- theory that earth is the center of the universe
- believed in separation of powers
- people who presented new ways of thinking during the enlightenment
- said people were all born equal and could govern for themselves or the government
- theory that the sun is the center of the universe
- good governments were freely formed by people
- the theory of the governed and the governing agreeing that they lose rights but have more say in government
- logical procedure gathering and testing ideas
- father of modern chemistry
25 Clues: scientific method • small pox vaccine • scientific method • "" laws of physics • invented the telescope • created the microscope • father of modern chemistry • created the heliocentric theory • believed in separation of powers • someone who rules with absolute power • places where people met to discuss new ideas • fought for the freedom of religion and speech • ...
Chapter 9 Vocab 2022-02-10
Across
- basic human needs to be satisfied
- 4 day period which an employee works 40 hours
- an inner drive that directs a persons behavior toward goals
- management philosophy that stress the employee in all aspects of the companies decision making
- mcgregors theory saying workers like their work and will seek responsibility
- need to be the best one can be
- an employers attitude towards their job
- a theory that arranges the five basic needs of people
- benefits or recognition received from someone else
- need to protect oneself from physical and economic harm
Down
- addition of more tasks to a job
- refers to the impact that setting goals has on performance
- herzberg's theory that focus on the content of the work
- performance of one full time job by two people on part time hours
- the need for respect
- herzberg's theory that focus on the work setting
- the personal satisfaction and enjoyment felt after completing a goal
- study of the behavior of individuals and groups in organizational settings
- the need for love,companionship,and friends
- Mcgregors theory saying workers dislike work and have to be forced
20 Clues: the need for respect • need to be the best one can be • addition of more tasks to a job • basic human needs to be satisfied • an employers attitude towards their job • the need for love,companionship,and friends • 4 day period which an employee works 40 hours • herzberg's theory that focus on the work setting • benefits or recognition received from someone else • ...
Test 2 review 2023-03-27
Across
- Physical expression of a gene
- Known for the inferiority complex
- Being overly demanding as a parent
- Has a theory of moral development
- Being warm and responsive as a parent, but having standards
- The conscience
- This type of conditioning means making an association between two previously unrelated stimuli
- The genetic makeup
- Name of the baby who was conditioned to fear a white rat
Down
- Came up with a psychosocial theory of development
- This type of conditioning involves rewards and punishments
- The most widely used forced-choice personality test
- The second stage of fetal development
- His theory of child development is cognitive
- Chemicals that can harm a fetus
- Came up with theory on parenting styles
- Difference types of genes
- The "me want food" part of personality
- The mediator
- Known for the collective unconscious
- The "girls/boys are gross and have cooties" stage
21 Clues: The mediator • The conscience • The genetic makeup • Difference types of genes • Physical expression of a gene • Chemicals that can harm a fetus • Known for the inferiority complex • Has a theory of moral development • Being overly demanding as a parent • Known for the collective unconscious • The second stage of fetal development • The "me want food" part of personality • ...
Learning, Motivation and Performance: Process Theories 2015-04-02
Across
- A persons motivation to do something is strongly affected by the percieved outcomes (good or bad) of that decision. This describes what type of process theory?
- When someone learns to associate the ring of a bell with lunch time, this is what type of process theory?
- When your behavior results in something unpleasant or undesirable being taken away this an example of what type of reinforcement?
Down
- An outcomes subjective value is referred to as?
- You always buy green house decor because the color green makes you happy; however, over the years the color green no longer brings you joy and you stop buying green items, this situation describes which type of consequence that can result from behavior?
- If an individual behavior is followed by a satisfying experience the behavior is more likely to be repeated in the future. What type of process theory is this describing?
- If a dog learns to associate the sound of a buzzer with food, the buzzer acts as what type of stimulus?
7 Clues: An outcomes subjective value is referred to as? • If a dog learns to associate the sound of a buzzer with food, the buzzer acts as what type of stimulus? • When someone learns to associate the ring of a bell with lunch time, this is what type of process theory? • ...
Dunneane's crossword puzzle 2022-02-11
Across
- The most basic human needs to be satisfied such as water, food, shelter, and clothing.
- Aspects of Herzberg's theory of motivation that focus on the content of the work itself; these aspects include achievement, recognition, involvement, responsibility, and advancement.
- The need for respect both self respect and respect from others.
- An inner drive that directs a person's behavior toward goals.
- the addition of more tasks to a job instead of treating each task as separate.
- the incorporation of motivational factors, such as opportunity for achievement, recognition, responsibility, and advancement, into a job.
- Money is the sole motivator for workers.
- Performance of one full time job by two people on part time hours.
- The need to protect oneself from physical and economic harm.
- A theory that arranges the five basic needs of people being physicological, security, social, esteem, and self-actualization into the order in which people strive to satisfy them.
- The personal satisfaction and enjoyment felt after attaining a goal.
- McGregor's traditional view of management whereby it is assumed that workers generally dislike work and must be forced to do their jobs.
- An employee's attitude toward his or her job, employer, and colleagues.
- The need to be the best one can be; at the top of Maslow's hierarchy.
- The need for love, companionship, and friendship, is the desire for acceptance by others.
- The study of the behavior of individuals and groups in organizational settings.
- refers to the impact that setting goals have on performance.
Down
- The assumption that motivation depends not only on how much a person wants something but also on how likely he or she is to get it.
- movement of employees from one job to another in an effort to relieve the boredom often associated with job specialization.
- Changing behavior and encouraging appropriate actions by relating the consequences of behavior to the behavior itself.
- A four day (or shorter) period during which an employee works 40 hours.
- is the theory that behavior can be strengthened or weakened through the use of rewards and punishments.
- Aspects of Herzberg's theory of motivation that focus on the work setting and not the content of the work; these aspects include adequate wages, comfortable, and safe working conditions, fair company policies, and job security.
- a program that allows employees to choose their starting and ending times, provided that they are at work during a specified core period.
- Benefits and/or recognition received from someone else.
- An assumption that how much people are willing to contribute to an organization depends on their assessment of the fairness, or equity, of the rewards they will receive in exchange.
- A management philosophy that stresses employee particiaption in all aspects of company decision making.
- McGregor's humanistic view of management whereby it is assumed that workers like to work and that under proper conditions employees will seek out the responsibility in an attempt to satisfy their social, esteem, and self actualization needs.
28 Clues: Money is the sole motivator for workers. • Benefits and/or recognition received from someone else. • The need to protect oneself from physical and economic harm. • refers to the impact that setting goals have on performance. • An inner drive that directs a person's behavior toward goals. • The need for respect both self respect and respect from others. • ...
Realism and Liberalism Review 2022-01-11
Across
- the main objective of states in a realist system
- _________ Peace Theory- theory born out of liberalism
- the main actors in the theory of realism
- ____-____ actors have a role in liberalism
- the main actors in the theory of liberalism
- states exist in a system of ________
- theorist who wrote Two Treatises of Government 1689
- signifies existence of independent community
- theorist who wrote The Leviathan
- concern for power is overridden by a concern for _______ and political considerations
Down
- states compete for ________
- states compete for _________
- state________ is one instrument realists utilize
- theorist who wrote Perpetual Peace 1795
- international ________ are of great importance
- one of the key aspects to the liberalist theory
- idea that states are connected
- idea that no other state can be relied upon
- spread of _______ organizations is a key belief of liberalism
- the world is a _______ community
20 Clues: states compete for ________ • states compete for _________ • idea that states are connected • the world is a _______ community • theorist who wrote The Leviathan • states exist in a system of ________ • theorist who wrote Perpetual Peace 1795 • the main actors in the theory of realism • ____-____ actors have a role in liberalism • the main actors in the theory of liberalism • ...
Leadership 2021-04-20
Across
- Theory that leaders will rise to the occasion in certain situations
- Theory that leaders motivate followers for the good of the team
- Someone becomes a leader because other people are unwilling to become a leader
- Encourages, empowers, inspires people
- Works diligently to get things done, doesn't quit
- Comes up with creative solutions to fix problems
- Brave
- Learn easily and have prior knowledge
- Someone becomes a leader by "paying their dues"
- Work well with others
- Theory that leaders are motivated by risk and reward
- Have strong feelings about what they do, will work hard to achieve the related goals
- Kind, compassionate, concerned for others
- Makes quick, good decisions without second thoughts
Down
- Someone becomes a leader by have the certification needed
- Faithful to their supporting team, trustworthy
- Theory that leaders are born with certain qualities and traits that make them suited for leadership
- Know how to get point across
- Devoted to what they do
- Theory that leaders are made not born
- Deserve recognition but do not promote themselves, don't boast
- Willing to help other people
- Understand the feelings of others
- Don't get frustrated with an inconvenience, can work slowly to do things right
- Theory that leaders are born, not made
- Someone becomes a leader by campaigning for the position
- Opinion does not waver
- Someone becomes a leader by being recognized in the community
- Have an incentive to do well
- Always tells the truth
30 Clues: Brave • Work well with others • Opinion does not waver • Always tells the truth • Devoted to what they do • Know how to get point across • Willing to help other people • Have an incentive to do well • Understand the feelings of others • Encourages, empowers, inspires people • Theory that leaders are made not born • Learn easily and have prior knowledge • ...
Politics and Governance 2026-01-22
Across
- Theory that political involvement is natural.
- Related to the "Divine Right" theory of state origin.
- Adjective from which "politics" originates.
- Title of Machiavelli's famous political book.
- Latin origin of the word "state."
- Theory that states satisfy financial needs.
- A group united by shared culture or history.
- The Greek word for "city-state."
- Plan of action guiding the government.
- Approach focused on what "ought to be."
- Objective and value-free political approach.
- To measure data in scientific research.
- Approach focused on formal structures.
- Traditional perspective on political morals.
- Approach focused on the judiciary and laws.
Down
- First to use the term "state" in writing.
- The agency that formulates the will of the state.
- The voluntary agreement in Social Contract theory.
- Methods used to analyze daily human activities.
- Supreme power to command and enforce obedience.
- The mass of population living within a state.
- Approach analyzing the past to understand reality.
- The definite portion of the earth's surface.
- Theory that the state evolved from the family.
- Prerequisite for achieving political objectives.
- A community of persons with territory and government.
- One of the modern leaders often studied regarding power.
- Theory of the strong dominating the weak.
- you like me to generate a crossword puzzle grid using these specific words and clues?
- The "Father of Political Science."
- The branch of government that makes laws.
31 Clues: The Greek word for "city-state." • Latin origin of the word "state." • The "Father of Political Science." • Plan of action guiding the government. • Approach focused on formal structures. • Approach focused on what "ought to be." • To measure data in scientific research. • First to use the term "state" in writing. • Theory of the strong dominating the weak. • ...
Politics and Governance 2026-01-22
Across
- Traditional perspective on political morals.
- The Greek word for "city-state."
- A community of persons with territory and government.
- Plan of action guiding the government.
- The branch of government that makes laws.
- Theory that political involvement is natural.
- To measure data in scientific research.
- The "Father of Political Science."
- Approach focused on formal structures.
- Title of Machiavelli's famous political book.
- One of the modern leaders often studied regarding power.
- The voluntary agreement in Social Contract theory.
- The agency that formulates the will of the state.
- Theory of the strong dominating the weak.
- The mass of population living within a state.
- First to use the term "state" in writing.
Down
- Related to the "Divine Right" theory of state origin.
- Supreme power to command and enforce obedience.
- Methods used to analyze daily human activities.
- Adjective from which "politics" originates.
- Objective and value-free political approach.
- Latin origin of the word "state."
- A group united by shared culture or history.
- Prerequisite for achieving political objectives.
- Approach analyzing the past to understand reality.
- Theory that the state evolved from the family.
- Approach focused on what "ought to be."
- Theory that states satisfy financial needs.
- you like me to generate a crossword puzzle grid using these specific words and clues?
- The definite portion of the earth's surface.
- Approach focused on the judiciary and laws.
31 Clues: The Greek word for "city-state." • Latin origin of the word "state." • The "Father of Political Science." • Plan of action guiding the government. • Approach focused on formal structures. • To measure data in scientific research. • Approach focused on what "ought to be." • The branch of government that makes laws. • Theory of the strong dominating the weak. • ...
Unit #3 2021-02-25
Across
- one undertands two objects can extend to a third?
- who is mrs. freelands favorite?
- who had the pyramid
- what stage is trust vs mistrust?
- what stage is identity vs role confusion?
- who invented operant conditioning?
- who had the dog?
- what stage is autonomy vs shame and doubt?
- remains the same even if looks change?
- who had 4 stages
- who invented Hierachy of needs?
Down
- objects in order by smallest to largest?
- what was bandura doll name?
- who came up with psychosocial theory
- who came up with cognitive theory
- process of physical changes in a child's body
- who invented classical conditioning?
- who invented socialcultural theory?
- theory that behavior is determined by the enviornment?
- what name is physical changes in size?
20 Clues: who had the dog? • who had 4 stages • who had the pyramid • what was bandura doll name? • who is mrs. freelands favorite? • who invented Hierachy of needs? • what stage is trust vs mistrust? • who came up with cognitive theory • who invented operant conditioning? • who invented socialcultural theory? • who came up with psychosocial theory • who invented classical conditioning? • ...
Earthquakes and Volcanoes 2023-11-28
Across
- Something that flows slowly has _____ viscosity
- This is common at every boundary
- San Andreas Fault is at a ______ boundary
- ___ is an example of fossil fuels
- ____ Earthquakes tend to be more severe
Down
- When liquid rock is below the surface
- ______ rebound theory explains how Earthquakes form
- Lighter color, higher viscosity and more explosive eruptions
- Resource that brings us important metals like copper and iron
- When liquid rock is above the surface
10 Clues: This is common at every boundary • ___ is an example of fossil fuels • When liquid rock is below the surface • When liquid rock is above the surface • ____ Earthquakes tend to be more severe • San Andreas Fault is at a ______ boundary • Something that flows slowly has _____ viscosity • ______ rebound theory explains how Earthquakes form • ...
Colors 2023-06-25
Across
- A bright pinkish-purple color
- A cheerful color like the color of a ripe banana
- The color of grass and leaves
- A deep blue color that is darker than royal blue
- A warm pinkish-orange color
- A pale purple color with a hint of pink
- People like the color of this shiny thing.
- A pure color like the color of fresh snow
- A neutral color like the color of a rainy day
- A warm color like the color of chocolate
Down
- A royal color like the color of lavender flowers
- A dark color like the color of night
- A deep reddish-brown color
- The color of the sky on a sunny day
- A bright color like the color of ripe strawberries
- A shiny color like the color of a shiny metal
- If you mix red and yellow
- A greenish-blue color like the color of a tropical ocean
- A soft color like the color of cotton candy
- A vibrant blue-green color like the color of tropical waters
20 Clues: If you mix red and yellow • A deep reddish-brown color • A warm pinkish-orange color • A bright pinkish-purple color • The color of grass and leaves • The color of the sky on a sunny day • A dark color like the color of night • A pale purple color with a hint of pink • A warm color like the color of chocolate • A pure color like the color of fresh snow • ...
Crossword 4 2025-02-10
Across
- The negative emotion most likely to lead to criminal behavior, according to Agnew
- The institutional-anomie theory is a ____-level theory as it seeks to explain why US has a higher rate of serious crime than other developed nations.
- Merton’s anomie theory can only explain ____ crimes.
- People who choose this mode of adaptation seek to reform the system by creating their own goals and means.
- The name of Cohen’s theory influenced by Merton: ____ ____
- Breakdown in social norms caused by excessive emphasis on economic success
- The cultural ideal that anyone can achieve material success, regardless of background or socioeconomic status
- The theorist who developed general strain theory: Robert ____
Down
- According to Cloward & Ohlin’s opportunity theory, response to economic strain varies by access to ____ ____ to earn money.
- Accepting culturally-defined goals AND the institutional means
- The only criminal adaptation to strain
- The mode of adaptation that involves rejecting culturally-defined goals but accepting the institutional means
- According to Agnew, strain has an ____ effect on crime.
- America’s national bird
- Anomie and deviance are mutually ____.
- Pressure produced by the disconnect between cultural expectations and what society makes possible, according to Merton
- The process of using thoughts and behaviors to manage stressful situations
- The mode of adaptation that involves withdrawing from society
18 Clues: America’s national bird • The only criminal adaptation to strain • Anomie and deviance are mutually ____. • Merton’s anomie theory can only explain ____ crimes. • According to Agnew, strain has an ____ effect on crime. • The name of Cohen’s theory influenced by Merton: ____ ____ • The mode of adaptation that involves withdrawing from society • ...
Crossword 4 2025-02-07
Across
- The negative emotion most likely to lead to criminal behavior, according to Agnew
- The institutional-anomie theory is a ____-level theory as it seeks to explain why US has a higher rate of serious crime than other developed nations.
- Merton’s anomie theory can only explain ____ crimes.
- People who choose this mode of adaptation seek to reform the system by creating their own goals and means.
- The name of Cohen’s theory influenced by Merton: ____ ____
- Breakdown in social norms caused by excessive emphasis on economic success
- The cultural ideal that anyone can achieve material success, regardless of background or socioeconomic status
- The theorist who developed general strain theory: Robert ____
Down
- According to Cloward & Ohlin’s opportunity theory, response to economic strain varies by access to ____ ____ to earn money.
- Accepting culturally-defined goals AND the institutional means
- The only criminal adaptation to strain
- The mode of adaptation that involves rejecting culturally-defined goals but accepting the institutional means
- According to Agnew, strain has an ____ effect on crime.
- America’s national bird
- Anomie and deviance are mutually ____.
- Pressure produced by the disconnect between cultural expectations and what society makes possible, according to Merton
- The process of using thoughts and behaviors to manage stressful situations
- The mode of adaptation that involves withdrawing from society
18 Clues: America’s national bird • The only criminal adaptation to strain • Anomie and deviance are mutually ____. • Merton’s anomie theory can only explain ____ crimes. • According to Agnew, strain has an ____ effect on crime. • The name of Cohen’s theory influenced by Merton: ____ ____ • The mode of adaptation that involves withdrawing from society • ...
oml 2022-09-22
18 Clues: DNA • Data • Bias • Evolve • Theory • Biology • Stimulus • Inference • Hypothesis • Metabolism • Observation • Homeostasis • Group Control Group • Variable Dependent Variable • Variable Independent Variable • experiment Controlled experiment • Reproduction Sexual Reproduction • Reproduction Asexual Reproduction
Light and Color 2024-02-21
Across
- /the color made when all light is reflected
- /the color made when all light is absorbed
- /when light bounces off of an object and you can see it
- /the letters of the visible color spectrum
- /the power of a wave, affects the brightness of light
- /the particles that light is made of
- /the greek word for "light"
- /the way all energy travels
Down
- /the speed of a wave, affects the color of light
- /the fastest visible color of light
- /the slowest visible color of light
- /the bending of light
- /the way plants use light to make food
- /the main source of natural light on Earth
- /colors that you can't see are _______ into the object
- /breaks up light into the visible color spectrum
- /when light travels in a straight path
17 Clues: /the bending of light • /the greek word for "light" • /the way all energy travels • /the fastest visible color of light • /the slowest visible color of light • /the particles that light is made of • /the way plants use light to make food • /when light travels in a straight path • /the color made when all light is absorbed • /the letters of the visible color spectrum • ...
NURSEWORD PUZZLE 2023-12-04
Across
- Science of Unitary Human beings
- From Novice to Expert
- The sense of being part of an ethnic group of culture.
- Forming image in the mind.
- Conceptual System and Middle Range Theory of Goal Attainment
- Psychodynamic Nursing
- Relationship between an individual’s therapeutic self-care demand & his powers of self-care agency.
- Is a feeling of displeasure which ranges from simple transitory mental, physical or spiritual discomfort to extreme anguish and to those phases beyond.
- Are the lowest level of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs.
- Consists of seeing causal relationship between events that occur at about the same time, but which are not logically related.
Down
- Theory of Caritative Caring
- In which the person makes use of the nurse's help.
- Transcultural Nursing Theory
- Self-care Deficit Nursing Theory
- Care, Core, and Cure Model
- Environmental Theory
- The processes and outcome whereby thinking and feeling persons as individuals or groups, use conscious awareness and choice to create human and environmental integration.
- Describes the unpredictable but continuous, nonlinear evolution of energy field as evidenced by nonrepeating rhythmicities.
- Adaptation Model
- The person has no background experience of the situation in which he or she is involved.
20 Clues: Adaptation Model • Environmental Theory • From Novice to Expert • Psychodynamic Nursing • Care, Core, and Cure Model • Forming image in the mind. • Theory of Caritative Caring • Transcultural Nursing Theory • Science of Unitary Human beings • Self-care Deficit Nursing Theory • In which the person makes use of the nurse's help. • Are the lowest level of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. • ...
Unit 1 Vocab 2020-09-30
Across
- A group of people governing a
- Creator of Social Contract Theory
- Governed by group, 1 person has ultimate power
- Has the most freedom of the three types of colonies
- The power belongs to a ruling family, ruler has TOTAL authority of the government
- Power is given to small ruling class (aristocrats)
- Unitary individual states join together under united government
- Government is created by God
- No cruel and unusual punishments, speedy trial
- Founding father, drafted declaration of independence
- Government where power comes from the people
- Nation is ruled by 1 person
Down
- "Fake Democracy", can only vote for 1 party
- Legislature with 2 houses
- Royal charter of rights agreed to by King John
- Government grew out of FAMILY authority
- King of Great Britain during the American Independence
- Document written by colonists requesting independence from Britain
- Government began with conquest
- Democracy where EVERYONE votes on all matters
- The people behind the scenes have the most power
- Power is shared between central and local government
22 Clues: Legislature with 2 houses • Nation is ruled by 1 person • Government is created by God • A group of people governing a • Government began with conquest • Creator of Social Contract Theory • Government grew out of FAMILY authority • "Fake Democracy", can only vote for 1 party • Government where power comes from the people • Democracy where EVERYONE votes on all matters • ...
minimualism 2026-02-24
Across
- A rejection of perspective and the creation of depth, emphasizing the two-dimensional or literal three-dimensional nature of the artwork.
- A structured, orderly arrangement of lines or shapes.
- The use of repeated, similar elements to create a sequence.
- Materials that are mass-produced or commercially available (e.g., steel, neon tubes, plywood), often factory-made rather than handcrafted.
- Using a single color or shades of a single color.
- Art that does not depict or imitate the real world.
Down
- A term coined by Donald Judd to describe works that are neither painting nor sculpture, but simply objects.
- A theory applied to minimalism where the viewer perceives the entire, overall structure as a single "whole" rather than just its individual parts.
- Refers to artwork with constituent parts that can be rearranged, separated, or recombined.
- The idea that the artwork is simply a physical object, not a representation of something else.
- The use of identical forms repeated in a balanced manner
- Precise, clean, and sharp edges between areas of color.
- Stripping away emotional or narrative content to reach the essential, basic form.
13 Clues: Using a single color or shades of a single color. • Art that does not depict or imitate the real world. • A structured, orderly arrangement of lines or shapes. • Precise, clean, and sharp edges between areas of color. • The use of identical forms repeated in a balanced manner • The use of repeated, similar elements to create a sequence. • ...
chapter 3 2024-01-10
Across
- an approch to crime that is ground in the consept of ratinal choises
- a theory maintaing that crime will occur if crime opportunity are easy to commit
- a crime reporting system in which police decribe each offence that occures during a crime
- the argument that people are most likley to engage in criminal behavior is they have traits associated with crime
- theory that explains the element necessary for a crime
- a theory that argues criminal behavoirs is caused by feeling of strain
- a theory that decribes criminal behaviors as a desires to seek pleasure
- a theroy contending that labeling a person as a defendent or crimianl makes that person more likely to ingage in future events
- in the FBI uniform crime reporting scheme the pratice whereby only the most serous of offences are commited
- a theory that explainscrime as a outcome of conflicting intrest beween groups in society
- a frame work consiting of a group of theories that propse simlier explantions
- a theory assering that criminal behavior are learnd from associating with others
- a school of thought that argues science can be used to discover the true couse of a crime
Down
- a prespetive indicating that people free will to choose between criminal and lawful behaviors
- criminology reaserch that looks at whether adopted childern share criminal tendecies and lawful behaviors
- a random servay of the U.S household thar measure crime agenst victums
- a therory mantaing that neighborhood charterictes including poverty
- the number of reported crimes divided by the population of the jurisdtion and multiplied by 100,000
- a theory that explains how gender equality affects female offenders
19 Clues: theory that explains the element necessary for a crime • a therory mantaing that neighborhood charterictes including poverty • a theory that explains how gender equality affects female offenders • an approch to crime that is ground in the consept of ratinal choises • a random servay of the U.S household thar measure crime agenst victums • ...
Crossword 4 2025-02-07
Across
- America’s national bird
- People who choose this mode of adaptation seek to reform the system by creating their own goals and means.
- According to Cloward & Ohlin’s opportunity theory, response to economic strain varies by access to ____ ____ to earn money.
- The institutional-anomie theory is a ____-level theory as it seeks to explain why US has a higher rate of serious crime than other developed nations.
- According to Agnew, strain has an ____ effect on crime.
- The mode of adaptation that involves rejecting culturally-defined goals but accepting the institutional means
- Breakdown in social norms caused by excessive emphasis on economic success
- Anomie and deviance are mutually ____.
- The process of using thoughts and behaviors to manage stressful situations
Down
- The mode of adaptation that involves withdrawing from society
- The only criminal adaptation to strain
- Pressure produced by the disconnect between cultural expectations and what society makes possible, according to Merton
- The negative emotion most likely to lead to criminal behavior, according to Agnew
- Merton’s anomie theory can only explain ____ crimes.
- The theorist who developed general strain theory: Robert ____
- The name of Cohen’s theory influenced by Merton: ____ ____
- Accepting culturally-defined goals AND the institutional means
17 Clues: America’s national bird • The only criminal adaptation to strain • Anomie and deviance are mutually ____. • Merton’s anomie theory can only explain ____ crimes. • According to Agnew, strain has an ____ effect on crime. • The name of Cohen’s theory influenced by Merton: ____ ____ • The mode of adaptation that involves withdrawing from society • ...
ES Q1 Crossword 2019-12-07
Across
- the study of the origin, history, and structure of Earth
- the scientific study of the oceans and oceanic phenomena
- A naturally occurring solid mixture of one or more minerals or organic matter
- a method of procedure that has characterized natural science since the 17th century, consisting in systematic observation, measurement, and experiment, and the formulation, testing, and modification of hypotheses.
- substance formed by the chemical combination of two or more elements in definite proportions
- a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition
- Formed when one or more electrons are transferred from one atom to another
- A model for the origin of the solar system that supposes a rotating nebula of dust and gases that contracted to form the Sun and planets.
- Mass per unit volume, or the compactness of matter
- The way a mineral reflects light from its surface
- The property possessed by an object of producing different sensations on the eye as a result of the way it reflects or emits light.
- the splitting of a mineral along smooth, flat surfaces
- A table that classifies elements by their physical and chemical properties; rows are called periods; columns are called groups;
- The color of a mineral in powdered form
- Electrons on the outermost energy level of an atom
Down
- science dealing with the atmosphere and weather
- 3 subatomic particles of an atom possessing a positive (+), neutral, and negative (-) charge respectively
- A measure of how easily a mineral can be scratched
- A testable prediction, often implied by a theory
- The way a mineral looks when it breaks apart in an irregular way
- Basic unit of matter
- A chemical bond that involves sharing a pair of electrons between atoms in a molecule
- a bond formed by the attraction between positively charged metal ions and the electrons around them
- positively and negatively charged atoms
- common or characteristic shape of individual crystals or aggregates of crystals
- A pure substance made of only one kind of atom
- the force that holds two atoms together
- the study of minerals and their properties
- the number of protons and electrons in the nucleus of an electrically neutral atom
- The study of the moon, stars, and other objects in space
- Center of an atom
- well-tested explanation that unifies a broad range of observations
32 Clues: Center of an atom • Basic unit of matter • positively and negatively charged atoms • the force that holds two atoms together • The color of a mineral in powdered form • the study of minerals and their properties • A pure substance made of only one kind of atom • science dealing with the atmosphere and weather • A testable prediction, often implied by a theory • ...
AP PSYC Final Review 2024-01-10
Across
- the extent to which a test measures or predicts what it is supposed to
- a technique for revealing bloodflow show brain function as well as its structure
- a neurotransmitter’s reabsorption by the sending neuron
- interpreting our new experiences in terms of our existing schemas
- the process by which certain animals form strong attachments during an early-life critical period
- effect experimental results caused by expectations alone
- the process of observing and imitating a specific behavior
- a neuron’s bushy, branching extensions that receive messages and conduct impulses toward the cell body
- the way an issue is posed; how an issue is framed can significantly affect decisions and judgments
- the postexperimental explanation of a study, including its purpose and any deceptions, to its participants
- the brain’s ability to change, especially during childhood, by reorganizing after damage or by building new pathways based on experience
- giving priority to the goals of one’s group (often one’s extended family or work group) and defining one’s identity accordingly
- the system for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts
- the dimension of color that is determined by the wavelength of light; what we know as the color names blue, green, and so forth
- in psychoanalytic theory, the basic defense mechanism that banishes from consciousness anxiety-arousing thoughts, feelings, and memories.
- a testable prediction, often implied by a theory
- the level of stimulation required to trigger a neural impulse
Down
- impairment of language, usually caused by left-hemisphere damage either to Broca’s area (impairing speaking) or to Wernicke’s area (impairing understanding)
- the process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events
- the central focal point in the retina, around which the eye’s cones cluster
- brain tissue destruction
- retinal receptor cells that are concentrated near the center of the retina and that function in daylight or in welllit conditions
- the most frequently occurring score(s) in a distribution
- a complex, unlearned behavior that is rigidly patterned throughout a species
- 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 discomfort and distress that follow discontinuing an addictive drug or behavior
- the part of personality that, according to Freud, represents internalized ideals and provides standards for judgment (the conscience) and for future aspirations
- in Piaget’s theory, the preoperational child’s difficulty taking another’s point of view
28 Clues: brain tissue destruction • a testable prediction, often implied by a theory • a neurotransmitter’s reabsorption by the sending neuron • the most frequently occurring score(s) in a distribution • effect experimental results caused by expectations alone • the process of observing and imitating a specific behavior • ...
Unit 1 Words 2025-09-25
Across
- a form of a gene that is expressed only when a dominant allele is not present
- the process of one species developing into two or more species that can no longer mate
- an organism's particular genetic makeup
- the specific way a feature is expressed in an individual organism, for example, blue and green are traits for eye color
- a gene composted of two identical alleles
- a vertebrate with four limbs
- variations of genes that determine traits in organisms
- a trait that helps identify an organism
- belonging to the same group or family
- a well-tested scientific explanation
- a rock that preserves evidence such as animal tracks or impressions
- any living plant, animal, fungus, or bacterium
- a form of a gene that is expressed as the trait whenever it is present
- any remains, trace, or imprint of animal or plant life preserved in Earth's crust
- a diagram based on shared characteristics
- a structure, characteristic, or behavior of an organism, such as eye color, plant height or pattern of migration
- all the fossils on Earth
- pieces of weathered rock such as sand, deposited by wind, water, and ice
- the process by which the individuals best adapted to their environment tend to survive and pass down their traits to subsequent generations
- a scientist who studies fossils
Down
- no longer having any living members of the species
- a theory that says sedimentary rocks on the bottom of a stack are older than the rocks above them
- the traits produced by the genotype; the expression of genes
- all the individuals of one kind in a specified area at one time
- a molecule that is part of cells and cell structures; determines the traits of an organism
- an organism from the past that is related to all the organisms in the group
- an organism related to an organism that lived before
- the passing of traits from parent to offspring
- the theory that all species are descended from common ancestors who have changed over time by means of natural selection
- a structure made of coiled DNA that transfers hereditary information to the next generation
- a molecule that contains an organism's genetic information
- a fossil made from parts of an organism such as bones or teeth
- the range of expression of a trait within a population
33 Clues: all the fossils on Earth • a vertebrate with four limbs • a scientist who studies fossils • a well-tested scientific explanation • belonging to the same group or family • an organism's particular genetic makeup • a trait that helps identify an organism • a gene composted of two identical alleles • a diagram based on shared characteristics • ...
Natural Selection 2022-04-08
Across
- a body part, feature,or behavior that helps a living thing survive ans function better in it's environment
- occurs
- the theory of the evolution of species by natural selection advanced by Charles Darwin.
- of evolution he theory of evolution is a shortened form of the term “theory of evolution by natural selection,”
- selection the process whereby organisms better adaption to their environment tend to survive and produce more offspring
- Breeding the process by which humans choose a plant or animal to breed based on specific traits
- the surroundings or condition in which a person,animal or plant lives
- the action or fact of carefully choosing someone or something as being the best or most suitable.
- law a body of unchanging moral principles regarded as a basis for all human conduct.
- individual animal, plant, or single-celled life form
Down
- the continued existence of organisms which are best adapted to their environment, with the extinction of others, as a concept in the Darwinian theory of evolution.
- evolution is the change in inherited traits over successive generations in populations of organisms. Evolutionary modification of
- politics reflected the law of the jungle"
- the action or process of adapting or being adapted.
- of the jungle the principle that those who are strong and apply ruthless self-interest will be most successful.
- modified organism whose DNA has been altered using genetic engineering techniques.
- the process by which different kinds of living organisms are thought to have developed and diversified from earlier forms during the history of the earth.
- selection is the identification by humans of desirable traits in plants and animals
- theory is a theory of biological evolution developed by the English naturalist Charles Darwin
- the state or fact of continuing to live or exist, typically in spite of an accident, ordeal, or difficult circumstances
20 Clues: occurs • politics reflected the law of the jungle" • the action or process of adapting or being adapted. • individual animal, plant, or single-celled life form • the surroundings or condition in which a person,animal or plant lives • modified organism whose DNA has been altered using genetic engineering techniques. • ...
It's Game Time! 2021-03-09
Across
- Intelligence, a person's general knowledge vocabulary and reasoning based on acquired information
- Position Effect, tendency to remember the beginning (primacy effect) and the end (recency effect) of the list best
- Effect, the more people around the less likely we are to help someone in need
- Prison Experiment, Classic “experiment” where individuals were assigned to be guards / prisoners. Within days they took on their roles and went too far. Highly unethical
- Potential, movement of Na and K ions across membrane sends an electrical charge down the axon
- Theory, three cones for receiving color (blue, red, green). Explains color blindness - they are missing a cone type
- Phenomenon, tendency for people to believe that the world is just and therefore ppl get what they deserve
- Loafing, tendency for people in a group to exert less effort when pooling their effort together
- free will + choice + ideal + actualization
- learned, reinforced approach
- Heuristic, make inferences based on your experience (like a stereotype)
- Theory, we explain others behaviors by crediting the situation or the person’s disposition
- Adding or taking away something in order to DECREASE the likelihood of a behavior
- getting information into the memory
Down
- Chemicals released in synaptic gap, received by neurons
- of Effect, Behaviors followed by positive outcomes are strengthened and negative outcomes weaken a behavior
- used introspection (act of looking inward to examine mental experience) to determine the underlying structures of the mind
- Process Theory, complementary colors are processed in ganglion cells – explains why we see an after image
- System, sends hormones throughout the body
- societal and cultural influence on behavior
- Nervous System, Brain and Spinal Cord
- need to analyze the purpose of behavior
- Conditioning, a learning process that occurs when two stimuli are repeatedly paired; a response that is at first elicited by the second stimulus is eventually elicited by the first stimulus alone.
- Threshold, detection of signal 50% of time
- Processing Model, Sensory memory, short term memory, long term memory mode
- Psychology, Whole is greater than the sum of its parts
- Conditioning, a type of associative learning process through which the strength of a behavior is modified by reinforcement or punishment
- Basic cell of the nervous system
- Adaptation, diminished sensitivity as a result of constant stimulation
- Adding or taking away something in order to INCREASE the likelihood of a behavior
30 Clues: learned, reinforced approach • Basic cell of the nervous system • getting information into the memory • Nervous System, Brain and Spinal Cord • need to analyze the purpose of behavior • System, sends hormones throughout the body • Threshold, detection of signal 50% of time • free will + choice + ideal + actualization • societal and cultural influence on behavior • ...
Famous AP Psychology Names 2015-04-16
Across
- Best known for "Weber's Law"
- 8-stage theory of Psychosocial Development
- Famous for the "Little Albert" experiments on fear conditioning
- Theory of cognitive development in children
- "Social Development Theory"
- Described concept of cognitive dissonance
- Developmental Psychologist, creator of the first intelligence test
- Theory of moral development in children; made use of moral dilemmas in assessment
- Studied attachment in infants using the "strange situation" model. Label infants “secure" “insecure" in attachment
- Theory of "multiple intelligences"
- “collective unconscious" and wrote books on dream interpretation
- Parenting styles had three main types (permissive, authoratative, & authoritarian)
- Conformity experiment that required subjects to match lines.
- Universal facial expressions
- Conducted experiments with dogs that led to the concept of "learned helplessness"
- Investigated the use of heuristics in decision-making
- Taste aversion in rats led to knowledge that sickness and taste preferences can be conditioned
- Stanford prison experiment
- Famous for the Rosenhan Experiment
- Shock experiments
- Developed "client-centered" therapy
- Studied attachment in monkeys with artificial mothers
- Conducted first psychology experiments in first psych laboratory
Down
- Father of modern psychiatry
- Creator of "successful intelligence" theory (3 types)
- Memorized nonsense syllables in early study on human memory
- Process of operant conditioning
- Classical conditioning after experiments with dogs
- Humanistic psychologist known for his "Hierarchy of Needs" and the concept of "self-actualization"
- Developmental Psychologist, challenged the universality of Kohlberg's moral development theory
- Conducted the "HE-ART" experiments with split brain patients
- Universality of facial expressions
- Developed cognitive-behavior therapy
- Created Functionalist school of thought
- Conducted longitudinal studies on temperament (infancy to adolescence)
- General intelligence concept
- Stanford professor, pain control
- Theorized the critical-period hypothesis for language acquisition
- Bobo Doll experiments on observational learning & influence in the Socio-Cognitive Perspective
- Offered feminist critique of Freud's theory
- Developed "rational emotive behavior therapy" (REBT)
- Research on memory construction and the misinformation effect created doubts about the accuracy of eye-witness testimony
42 Clues: Shock experiments • Stanford prison experiment • Father of modern psychiatry • "Social Development Theory" • Best known for "Weber's Law" • Universal facial expressions • General intelligence concept • Process of operant conditioning • Stanford professor, pain control • Theory of "multiple intelligences" • Universality of facial expressions • Famous for the Rosenhan Experiment • ...
Famous AP Psychology Names 2020-05-02
Across
- Best known for "Weber's Law"
- 8-stage theory of Psychosocial Development
- Famous for the "Little Albert" experiments on fear conditioning
- Theory of cognitive development in children
- "Social Development Theory"
- Described concept of cognitive dissonance
- Developmental Psychologist, creator of the first intelligence test
- Theory of moral development in children; made use of moral dilemmas in assessment
- Studied attachment in infants using the "strange situation" model. Label infants “secure" “insecure" in attachment
- Theory of "multiple intelligences"
- “collective unconscious" and wrote books on dream interpretation
- Parenting styles had three main types (permissive, authoratative, & authoritarian)
- Conformity experiment that required subjects to match lines.
- Universal facial expressions
- Conducted experiments with dogs that led to the concept of "learned helplessness"
- Investigated the use of heuristics in decision-making
- Taste aversion in rats led to knowledge that sickness and taste preferences can be conditioned
- Stanford prison experiment
- Famous for the Rosenhan Experiment
- Shock experiments
- Developed "client-centered" therapy
- Studied attachment in monkeys with artificial mothers
- Conducted first psychology experiments in first psych laboratory
Down
- Father of modern psychiatry
- Creator of "successful intelligence" theory (3 types)
- Memorized nonsense syllables in early study on human memory
- Process of operant conditioning
- Classical conditioning after experiments with dogs
- Humanistic psychologist known for his "Hierarchy of Needs" and the concept of "self-actualization"
- Developmental Psychologist, challenged the universality of Kohlberg's moral development theory
- Conducted the "HE-ART" experiments with split brain patients
- Universality of facial expressions
- Developed cognitive-behavior therapy
- Created Functionalist school of thought
- Conducted longitudinal studies on temperament (infancy to adolescence)
- General intelligence concept
- Stanford professor, pain control
- Theorized the critical-period hypothesis for language acquisition
- Bobo Doll experiments on observational learning & influence in the Socio-Cognitive Perspective
- Offered feminist critique of Freud's theory
- Developed "rational emotive behavior therapy" (REBT)
- Research on memory construction and the misinformation effect created doubts about the accuracy of eye-witness testimony
42 Clues: Shock experiments • Stanford prison experiment • Father of modern psychiatry • "Social Development Theory" • Best known for "Weber's Law" • Universal facial expressions • General intelligence concept • Process of operant conditioning • Stanford professor, pain control • Theory of "multiple intelligences" • Universality of facial expressions • Famous for the Rosenhan Experiment • ...
Nursing Theorists 2022-03-21
Across
- his top contributions in moral education are Dilemma Discussions, Just Community Schools, and Moral Exemplars
- known for her Behavior System Model of Nursing
- her publications include Better Nursing Care Through Nursing Research and Patient-Centered Approaches to Nursing
- her theory was developed to serve as a framework for nurses to provide appropriate health care interventions for nontraditional mothers in order for them to successfully adopt a strong maternal identity
- she has published nine books, including From Novice to Expert, Nursing Pathways for Patient Safety, and The Primacy of Caring
- the most recognized name in the field of nursing
- she developed her Health Promotion model
- her theory was first published in her book, Modeling and Role Modeling: A Theory and Paradigm for Nursing
Down
- her theory allows nurses to create an effective nursing care plan that can also be easily adapted when and if any complications arise with the patient
- colleagues with Sigmund Freud
- his theory established the factors that cause a high or low level of self-efficacy
- the basic concept of her theory is that the nurse and patient communicate information, set goals together, and then take actions to achieve those goals
- served as a joint director of nursing of a clinical research center, as well as an assistant professor of nursing at the University of Tennessee in Memphis
- she developed the Four Conservation Principles
- her theory guides nurses to focus on quality of life from each person’s own perspective as the goal of nursing
- she is well known for her definition of nursing, which says, “The unique function of the nurse is to assist the individual, sick or well, in the performance of those activities contributing to health or its recovery (or to peaceful death) that he would perform unaided if he had the necessary strength, will or knowledge.”
- the United Kingdom’s first professor of psychiatric nursing at Newcastle University
- according to her model, patients have the capacity to participate knowingly in the process of change
- her theory addresses how nurses express care to their patients
- her model looks at the patient from a holistic perspective
20 Clues: colleagues with Sigmund Freud • she developed her Health Promotion model • known for her Behavior System Model of Nursing • she developed the Four Conservation Principles • the most recognized name in the field of nursing • her model looks at the patient from a holistic perspective • her theory addresses how nurses express care to their patients • ...
Government 2021-03-14
Important Psychology Figures 2015-04-16
Across
- Positive psychology; learned helplessness theory
- Neo-Freudian who developed Feminist Psychology
- Father of Behaviorism (psychology as a study of behavior)
- Rational Emotive Behavior Theory (REBT); confrontational approach to treating disorders
- Monkey studies (studies of attachment)
- Father of cognitive therapy; developed self-report measures of depression and anxiety
- Attachment Theory (how closely attached a child is depends on nurturing environment)
- Showed the benefits of hypnosis in psychology treatment
- Stages of moral development (pre-conventional, conventional, post-conventional)
- Framing effect (word order matters)
- Parenting styles (authoritative, authoritarian, permissive)
- Theorized the presence of general intelligence in different human abilities
- Known for research in taste aversion learning (rat experiment)
- Agreed with Maslow's assumptions; growth through genuineness, acceptance, and empathy
- Father of modern psychology (focus on analyzing consciousness)
- Developed the first practical intelligence test
Down
- Studied how biological conditionals increased a child's vulnerability to emotions
- Conformity experiments (social psychology experiment)
- Zone of Proximal Development (what learner can/cannot do with help)
- Experiment showed the negative effects of psychiatric diagnoses
- Research on obedience (electric shock experiment)
- Stages of psychosocial development (trust vs. mistrust, autonomy vs. shame, etc.)
- Discovered the "forgetting curve" and the spacing effect (memory)
- All humans share linguistic roots regardless of language
- Social Learning Theory (Bobo doll experiment)
- Developed analytical psychology (personal quest for wholeness)
- Theory of cognitive development (sensorimotor, pre-operational, concrete operational, formal operational)
- Developed "Just-Noticeable Difference" theory
28 Clues: Framing effect (word order matters) • Monkey studies (studies of attachment) • Social Learning Theory (Bobo doll experiment) • Developed "Just-Noticeable Difference" theory • Neo-Freudian who developed Feminist Psychology • Developed the first practical intelligence test • Positive psychology; learned helplessness theory • ...
Enlightenment 2023-09-26
Across
- Studied the laws of motion, and gravitational pull
- Believed that people were wicked and selfish. He also thought that absolute monarchy was important, but that you should listen to your citizens.
- Theory that the sun was at the center of the universe.
- Believed that women should have equal rights, and get a better education.
- Believed in individual freedom and built onto the ideas of Hobbes and Locke.
- Developed the experimental method, and believed that science and God went together.
- Created the first vaccine; it was a vaccine for smallpox.
- Discovered analytical geometry
- Theory that the earth was at the center of the universe.
- Believed that the government should have a separation of power.
Down
- People presented new ways of thinking during the Enlightenment.
- Mathematically proved the heliocentric theory true, and found that planets orbit was elliptical.
- Discovered the heliocentric theory,and waited publish his findings until he was on his death bed.
- Known as the father of modern chemistry, and gave us knowledge about what our earth is made up of.
- A person who rules with absolute power
- Used the microscope to study microorganisms.
- Believed in freedom of speech, religion, tolerance, and reason.
- Believed in the heliocentric theory and observed the moons of Jupiter.
- Theory that there was an agreement between the governing and governed.
- Favored the idea of a self government and criticized absolute monarchs.
- Believed that laws are made to create order.
21 Clues: Discovered analytical geometry • A person who rules with absolute power • Used the microscope to study microorganisms. • Believed that laws are made to create order. • Studied the laws of motion, and gravitational pull • Theory that the sun was at the center of the universe. • Theory that the earth was at the center of the universe. • ...
The Enlightenment 2023-02-21
Across
- a process using logic and reasoning to prove or disprove a hypothesis or theory
- the people who presented new ways of thinking during the Enlightenment
- made the first microscope to look at bacteria and cells
- a period in which philosophes created many new ideas about the world
- proposed the idea of a heliocentric theory (sun is the center of the universe)
- made the first vaccine for smallpox using another, less harmful disease called cowpox
- created the laws of gravity
- the theory that the earth is at the center of the universe
Down
- a person who rules with absolute power
- the two philosophes who pioneered the scientific method (B name first then D name)
- a female philosophe said that women deserve the same education as men
- proposed the idea of checks and balances
- proposed that people have a right to self-government but under the social contract still
- the theory that there is an agreement between the governing and the governed
- proposed that people hand their rights to a strong ruler under the social contract
- the theory that the sun is at the center of the universe
- a system in which multiple groups share decision-making power
- parties where people met to discuss new ideas
- proved the idea of the heliocentric theory using mathematics (sun is the center of the universe)
- believed that there should not be cruel and unusual punishment
20 Clues: created the laws of gravity • a person who rules with absolute power • proposed the idea of checks and balances • parties where people met to discuss new ideas • made the first microscope to look at bacteria and cells • the theory that the sun is at the center of the universe • the theory that the earth is at the center of the universe • ...
Sociology MidTerm Chapter 7 2023-01-16
Across
- System
- The theory that individuals learn deviance in proportion
- Discounting
- job related crimes committed by high status people
- A social condition in which norms are weak
- Rewards or punishments that encourage conformity
- Behavior That underconforms to accepted norms
Down
- Behavior that departs from societal or group norms
- Deviance
- the theory that society creates deviance by labeling them as deviant
- Punishment to make criminals pay compensation
- A label used to deny a deviant acceptance
- Behavior that overconforms to social expectations
- Discouraging criminal acts
- and act commited in violation of the law
- The theory that deviance is more likely to occur when a gap exists
- Ways to encourage conformity to society's norms
- The theory that compliance with social norms requires strong bonds
- Deviance
- A person who breaks significant societal or group norms
20 Clues: System • Deviance • Deviance • Discounting • Discouraging criminal acts • and act commited in violation of the law • A label used to deny a deviant acceptance • A social condition in which norms are weak • Punishment to make criminals pay compensation • Behavior That underconforms to accepted norms • Ways to encourage conformity to society's norms • ...
Colors 2022-05-19
Across
- a color that represents calm
- a color that represents the sky
- a color that represents authority
- a color that represents justice
- a color that represents spirituality
- a color that represents selfcontrol
- a color that represents braveness
- a color that represents death
Down
- a color that represents pureness
- a color that represents the sun
- a color that represents stability
- a color that represents neutrality
- a color that represents innocence
- a color that represents elegance
- a color that represents war
- a color that represents harmony
- a color that represents peace
- a color that represents happiness
- a color that represents protection
- a color that represents power
20 Clues: a color that represents war • a color that represents calm • a color that represents peace • a color that represents power • a color that represents death • a color that represents the sun • a color that represents the sky • a color that represents justice • a color that represents harmony • a color that represents pureness • a color that represents elegance • ...
Colors 2025-02-05
Across
- The color of a coin
- The color of pigs
- The color of blue vitriol
- The color of grapes
- The color of tulips
- The color of a tree trunk
- The color of a mint
- The color of tangerines
- The color of oil
Down
- The color of the clothes you wear on a funeral
- The color of the clouds
- The color of a lime
- The color of the sun
- The color of the grass
- The color of a disco ball
- The color of the skin
- The color of roses
- The color of the ocean
- The color of a sky
- The color of a donkey
20 Clues: The color of oil • The color of pigs • The color of roses • The color of a sky • The color of a coin • The color of a lime • The color of grapes • The color of tulips • The color of a mint • The color of the sun • The color of the skin • The color of a donkey • The color of the grass • The color of the ocean • The color of the clouds • The color of tangerines • The color of blue vitriol • ...
Crossword 4 2025-02-07
Across
- The name of Cohen’s theory influenced by Merton: ____ ____
- Accepting culturally-defined goals AND the institutional means
- The theorist who developed general strain theory: Robert ____
- According to Cloward & Ohlin’s opportunity theory, response to economic strain varies by access to ____ ____ to earn money.
- The cultural ideal that anyone can achieve material success, regardless of background or socioeconomic status
- Breakdown in social norms caused by excessive emphasis on economic success
- People who choose this mode of adaptation seek to reform the system by creating their own goals and means.
- Anomie and deviance are mutually ____.
- On Tuesday's class, I read a letter by ____ ____.
Down
- The only criminal adaptation to strain
- Merton’s anomie theory can only explain ____ crimes.
- America’s national bird
- Pressure produced by the disconnect between cultural expectations and what society makes possible, according to Merton
- The negative emotion most likely to lead to criminal behavior, according to Agnew
- The mode of adaptation that involves withdrawing from society
- According to Agnew, strain has an ____ effect on crime.
- The institutional-anomie theory is a ____-level theory as it seeks to explain why US has a higher rate of serious crime than other developed nations.
- The process of using thoughts and behaviors to manage stressful situations
- The mode of adaptation that involves rejecting culturally-defined goals but accepting the institutional means
19 Clues: America’s national bird • The only criminal adaptation to strain • Anomie and deviance are mutually ____. • On Tuesday's class, I read a letter by ____ ____. • Merton’s anomie theory can only explain ____ crimes. • According to Agnew, strain has an ____ effect on crime. • The name of Cohen’s theory influenced by Merton: ____ ____ • ...
AWL Review 2020-04-02
30 Clues: data • legal • major • occur • export • issues • method • assess • income • define • theory • policy • obtain • source • factors • process • concept • analyse • research • identify • estimate • specific • evidence • creation • interpret • authority • establish • assumption • requirement • consistently
Crossword Puzzle 2012-11-05
30 Clues: acre • theory • gallon • weapon • stumble • quarrel • erosion • fossils • extinct • struggle • punctual • peculiar • familiar • calender • evidence • accordion • councilor • passenger • specimens • youngster • messenger • artificial • excavation • administer • geologists • ambassador • chancellor • hypotheses • paleontologist • extracurricular
Crossword Puzzle 2024-09-15
30 Clues: direct • global • deiver • theory • torture • anarchy • indirect • reactive • analysis • layering • dispense • policing • scanning • monarchy • violence • anarchism • terrorist • placement • autocracy • democracy • anarchists • corpocracy • pornography • integration • aristocracy • presidential • intelligence • parliamentary • transnational • international
Initial Voiceless TH 2023-07-20
75 2023-08-28
Colors 2025-03-11
Across
- A light pink-orange color, like the fish.
- A dark blue color, like some uniforms.
- The color of treasure.
- The color of snow.
- A bright green color, like the fruit.
- The color of the ocean.
- The color of a pumpkin.
- A bright blue-green color, like the sky.
- A deep blue color, like the night sky.
- The color of chocolate.
- A dark purple color, like the fruit.
- A light purple color, like the flower.
- A dark green color, like the fruit.
- The color of grass.
- The color of coal.
- The color of a shiny coin.
- A bright pink-purple color, like the flower.
Down
- A light blue color, like water.
- The color of the sun.
- A bright pink-purple color, like some flowers.
- A deep red color, like a rose.
- A light purple color, like the flower.
- The color of an apple.
- A light brown color, like some walls.
- The color of a candy bar.
- A blue-green color, like the gemstone.
- The color of sand.
- The color of grapes.
- The color of bubblegum.
- The color of a cloudy sky.
- A light brown color, like some uniforms.
31 Clues: The color of snow. • The color of sand. • The color of coal. • The color of grass. • The color of grapes. • The color of the sun. • The color of treasure. • The color of an apple. • The color of the ocean. • The color of a pumpkin. • The color of chocolate. • The color of bubblegum. • The color of a candy bar. • The color of a cloudy sky. • The color of a shiny coin. • ...
Mathematicians 2013-04-19
Across
- magnets
- generality of algebra
- father of geometry
- triangles
- Indian autodidact
- Italian mathematician
- greek philosopher
- fibonacci number
- Norwegian mathematician
- french lawyer
- gravity
- German philosopher
Down
- gas laws
- elliptic functions
- the stupidest name ever
- french philosopher
- german number theory
- greek teacher
- set theory
- Swiss physicist
20 Clues: magnets • gravity • gas laws • triangles • set theory • greek teacher • french lawyer • Swiss physicist • fibonacci number • Indian autodidact • greek philosopher • elliptic functions • french philosopher • father of geometry • German philosopher • german number theory • generality of algebra • Italian mathematician • the stupidest name ever • Norwegian mathematician
Theoretical approaches linked to positivism and quantitative research methods 2013-02-14
15 Clues: Marx • Theory • Marxism • Parsons • Durkheim • Sociology • socialfacts • Qualitative • Positivists • Quantitative • objectivefacts • Communistsociety • Theoreticalmodel • Dialeticalmaterialism • structuralfunctionalism
History of art 2023-05-29
15 Clues: branch • theory • Feature • concept • Original • monument • Analysis • character • Tradition • formation • development • Romanticism • Architecture • Installation • Historiography
2 2023-12-18
Biology 2026-01-08
15 Clues: cell • theory • biology • control • science • dependent • inference • quantitive • hypothesis • adaptation • homeostasis • qualitative • independent • observation • experimental
Psy 101 Exam #3 2017-11-05
Across
- When an adult adjusts the amount of guidance provided to match a child’s current ability?
- In Lawrence Kohlberg’s Theory of Moral Development, what is the preconventional level based on?
- The coping styles that is a direct response aimed at reducing, modifying, or eliminating the stressor. (Hint: ________- Focused Coping)
- What theory of emotional feelings result when an individual becomes aware of a physiological response to an emotion-provoking stimulus? (Hint: two words, no space)
- How many stages are in Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development?
- The processes that initiate, direct, and sustain behavior.
- What is the type of motivation that is the desire to behave in a certain way in order to gain some external reward or to avoid some undesirable consequence?
- What is the type of motivation that is the desire to behave in a certain way because it is enjoyable or satisfying in and of itself?
- What model is a perspective that focuses on health as well as illness and holds that both are determined by a combination of biological, psychological, and social factors?
- The psychologist who developed the sociocultural approach to human development (Last Name only).
- _______- reduction theory states that people are motivated to reduce tension created by biological drives.
Down
- The number of stages in Erik Erikson's Theory of Psychosocial Development?
- What theory suggests that people are motivated to maintain an optimal level of alertness and physical/mental activation?
- The realization that objects continue to exist, even when they can no longer be perceived by the child.
- The concept that a given quantity of matter remains the same despite being rearranged or changed in appearance.
- What theory of emotional feelings results when the emotion of fear occurs at the same time you feel the physiological arousal? (Hint: two words, no space)
- The psychologist who theorized the Theory of Psychosocial Development (Last name only).
- The type of emotions that are unlearned and universal.
- The belief that the adolescent is, or will be, the focus of attention in social situations?(Hint: ________ Audience)
- What humanist psychologist developed the Hierarchy of Needs? (Last name only)
20 Clues: The type of emotions that are unlearned and universal. • The processes that initiate, direct, and sustain behavior. • How many stages are in Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development? • The number of stages in Erik Erikson's Theory of Psychosocial Development? • What humanist psychologist developed the Hierarchy of Needs? (Last name only) • ...
It's Game Time! 2021-03-09
Across
- Conditioning, a type of associative learning process through which the strength of a behavior is modified by reinforcement or punishment
- Process Theory, complementary colors are processed in ganglion cells – explains why we see an after image
- Chemicals released in synaptic gap, received by neurons
- learned, reinforced approach
- Loafing, tendency for people in a group to exert less effort when pooling their effort together
- System, sends hormones throughout the body
- Theory, three cones for receiving color (blue, red, green). Explains color blindness - they are missing a cone type
- societal and cultural influence on behavior
- Effect, the more people around the less likely we are to help someone in need
- Adding or taking away something in order to INCREASE the likelihood of a behavior
- free will + choice + ideal + actualization
- Intelligence, a person's general knowledge vocabulary and reasoning based on acquired information
- Position Effect, tendency to remember the beginning (primacy effect) and the end (recency effect) of the list best
- Prison Experiment, Classic “experiment” where individuals were assigned to be guards / prisoners. Within days they took on their roles and went too far. Highly unethical
- Phenomenon, tendency for people to believe that the world is just and therefore ppl get what they deserve
Down
- Heuristic, make inferences based on your experience (like a stereotype)
- need to analyze the purpose of behavior
- Adding or taking away something in order to DECREASE the likelihood of a behavior
- Processing Model, Sensory memory, short term memory, long term memory mode
- Psychology, Whole is greater than the sum of its parts
- Threshold, detection of signal 50% of time
- Adaptation, diminished sensitivity as a result of constant stimulation
- getting information into the memory
- Conditioning, a learning process that occurs when two stimuli are repeatedly paired; a response that is at first elicited by the second stimulus is eventually elicited by the first stimulus alone.
- Basic cell of the nervous system
- Theory, we explain others behaviors by crediting the situation or the person’s disposition
- used introspection (act of looking inward to examine mental experience) to determine the underlying structures of the mind
- Potential, movement of Na and K ions across membrane sends an electrical charge down the axon
- of Effect, Behaviors followed by positive outcomes are strengthened and negative outcomes weaken a behavior
- Nervous System, Brain and Spinal Cord
30 Clues: learned, reinforced approach • Basic cell of the nervous system • getting information into the memory • Nervous System, Brain and Spinal Cord • need to analyze the purpose of behavior • Threshold, detection of signal 50% of time • System, sends hormones throughout the body • free will + choice + ideal + actualization • societal and cultural influence on behavior • ...
PSYC HW#3 2017-05-09
Across
- Mental representation of categories
- Meaning of words of words or sentences
- This form of memory involves remembering to do something in the future like submitting this assignment before the deadline
- Grouping individual units of information into larger units for improved retention in the memory
- The ___________ approach over-simplifies cognitive processes and thus fails to explain the complexities of the mind.
- The whole > the sum of parts
- Smallest unit of meaning
- Joined sensations like seeing sounds, tasting colors etc
- The state one is working toward in trying to solve a problem.
- Thinking about one’s thinking or cognition about cognition
- executive The supervisory system in Baddeley and Hitch’s model of the working memory
- A vivid and detailed recollection of a shocking or memorable event
- We tend to interpret stimuli as simple, clear and orderly rather than as complex and incomplete
- Inability to comprehend and formulate language due to brain damage. Literal translation is ‘without speech’.
- Recognition of an object
Down
- This theory states that we decide whether an item belongs to a category by comparing it to a prototype
- According to the ___________ effect, we recognize letters much more easily when they're placed in a known word.
- This effect states that items at the beginning of a list are easily recalled
- Inability to create mental images
- Rules about possible combination of words in a language
- Ability to respond to visual information without consciously seeing it
- According to the reduction by components theory, all physical objects are fundamentally composed of basic 3D shapes called _____
- Face blindness
- People take longer to name a color when it’s name is printed in a different color. This
- This effect is characterized by the inability to see better solutions and be to predisposed to solve a problem in a specific manner
- Auditory memory characterised by lower capacity but greater persistence w.r.t to iconic memory
- priming People respond faster to an item if it was preceded by an item with similar meaning compared to an unrelated item
- This effect states that more prominent destinations seem closer than their less prominent counterparts
- Smallest distinct unit of sound in a language
- Survey, Question, Read, Recite and Review
- According to the theory of _______ coding, a mental representation that is very similar to the physical object is made in the mind.
- Knowledge about situation or event or a person
32 Clues: Face blindness • Smallest unit of meaning • Recognition of an object • The whole > the sum of parts • Inability to create mental images • Mental representation of categories • Meaning of words of words or sentences • Survey, Question, Read, Recite and Review • Smallest distinct unit of sound in a language • Knowledge about situation or event or a person • ...
Sociological Theories 2022-11-29
Across
- The complexity of a system is related to the number of interconnections and its
- chaos theory is the study of complex nonlinear systems of
- is found in many different kinds of systems such as traffic flows, cell differentiation, population dynamics, and turbulence
- he said the systems are
- suggest that there is a hidden reality in whole cultural expressions
- emerged around the eighties in a field of study in mathematics
- is a theory started by Talcott Parsons
- marx’s theory is known as Marxism in which the proletariat is the creator of a
- is ruled by a mathematical equiation to determinate its behavior
Down
- is the theory proposed by Karl Marx
- lévi-strauss proposed methodological means of discovering these rules by identifying
- means the separation of things that naturally belong together, or antagonism between those who are properly in harmony
- set of all interpersonal relationships
- is developed from chaos theory and represents the body of research on systems about the systems that have complex characteristics
- was developed since 1923 in Germany
- studies evolved from the structures of kinship systems and marriage to his study of the structure of the human mind
- another representative of the structural functionalism theory is
- This approach gave a lot of importance to criticism and
18 Clues: he said the systems are • is the theory proposed by Karl Marx • was developed since 1923 in Germany • set of all interpersonal relationships • is a theory started by Talcott Parsons • This approach gave a lot of importance to criticism and • chaos theory is the study of complex nonlinear systems of • emerged around the eighties in a field of study in mathematics • ...
Crossword 4 2025-02-07
Across
- The negative emotion most likely to lead to criminal behavior, according to Agnew
- The institutional-anomie theory is a ____-level theory as it seeks to explain why US has a higher rate of serious crime than other developed nations.
- Merton’s anomie theory can only explain ____ crimes.
- People who choose this mode of adaptation seek to reform the system by creating their own goals and means.
- The name of Cohen’s theory influenced by Merton: ____ ____
- Breakdown in social norms caused by excessive emphasis on economic success
- The cultural ideal that anyone can achieve material success, regardless of background or socioeconomic status
- The theorist who developed general strain theory: Robert ____
Down
- According to Cloward & Ohlin’s opportunity theory, response to economic strain varies by access to ____ ____ to earn money.
- Accepting culturally-defined goals AND the institutional means
- The only criminal adaptation to strain
- The mode of adaptation that involves rejecting culturally-defined goals but accepting the institutional means
- According to Agnew, strain has an ____ effect on crime.
- America’s national bird
- Anomie and deviance are mutually ____.
- Pressure produced by the disconnect between cultural expectations and what society makes possible, according to Merton
- The process of using thoughts and behaviors to manage stressful situations
- The mode of adaptation that involves withdrawing from society
18 Clues: America’s national bird • The only criminal adaptation to strain • Anomie and deviance are mutually ____. • Merton’s anomie theory can only explain ____ crimes. • According to Agnew, strain has an ____ effect on crime. • The name of Cohen’s theory influenced by Merton: ____ ____ • The mode of adaptation that involves withdrawing from society • ...
McG Hill Ch 1.1 Foundations of Government Vocabulary 2025-09-15
Across
- ...theory; theory that government evolved from the family unit
- one who engages in the pursuit of wisdom
- theory that states are formed when a powerful individual or group used force, coercion, or warfare to establish control over a territory and its population, forcing them to submit to the new rule (two words)
- ...theory; the idea that people surrender to the state the power needed to maintain order and the in turn agrees to protect its citizens (two words)
- an institution through which leaders exercise powers to make and enforce laws affecting the people under its control
Down
- ...theory; the idea that people are chosen by a god or gods to rule (two words)
- a political community that occupies a definite territory and has an organized government
- a state without government and laws
- a group of people united by bonds of race, language, customs, tradition, and sometimes religion
- refined the social contract theory with the belief that people have natural rights and the purpose of government was to protect those rights
- the supreme and absolute authority with territorial boundaries
- speculation based upon study or research
- political community that occupies a definite territory and has an organized government
- developer of the social contract theory
14 Clues: a state without government and laws • developer of the social contract theory • one who engages in the pursuit of wisdom • speculation based upon study or research • ...theory; theory that government evolved from the family unit • the supreme and absolute authority with territorial boundaries • ...
Wig Theory 2021-07-23
Across
- The creation of this fiber brought wigs back in the 50s/60s
- Hair that is most expensive
- THis era had the aristocracy adorn wigs with precious gems
- Wore wigs to varying degrees, depending on the fashions
- Combination of hand-tied and machine-made wigs
- Wigs consisting of elasticized mesh-fiber base where hair is attached
Down
- Used wigs to protect from the sun
- Most popular type of wig
- Artificial hair items designed to cover the entire head
- Hair used for theatrical wigs
- Consists of hair fiber sewn into long strips called wefts
- Wigs that are attached at close intervals; simulate natural growth
- Height was this which showed the extremes of the French Revolution
- Technical name for synthetic hair
14 Clues: Most popular type of wig • Hair that is most expensive • Hair used for theatrical wigs • Used wigs to protect from the sun • Technical name for synthetic hair • Combination of hand-tied and machine-made wigs • Artificial hair items designed to cover the entire head • Wore wigs to varying degrees, depending on the fashions • ...
set theory 2022-03-18
Set Theory 2021-07-14
Across
- No common elements are there in a set
- No. of elements in a set are finite or limited.
- When two sets have equal no. of elements
- ____ is denoted by U
- A non-empty set of all the subsets under consideration
- Set of all possible subsets
- ____ letters are used to represent sets
Down
- The ____ in which elements appear isn't important
- A set that has only one element.
- Another name for the objects in a set
- A set that is represented by {}
- Two sets are said to be ____ when every element of A & B are the same
- Every element of Set A is an element of Set B
- Sets that intersect are drawn this way
14 Clues: ____ is denoted by U • Set of all possible subsets • A set that is represented by {} • A set that has only one element. • No common elements are there in a set • Another name for the objects in a set • Sets that intersect are drawn this way • ____ letters are used to represent sets • When two sets have equal no. of elements • Every element of Set A is an element of Set B • ...
Set theory 2021-09-29
Across
- Disepakatai AFTA pada bulan
- salah satu sumber devisa negara
- Perbatasan negara Kamboja
- Negara penghasil padi terbesar di Asean
- ASEAN Economic community
- tempat pelaksanaan KTT II APEC
- Mata pencharian utama penduduk vietnam
- masyarakat ekonomi Asean
Down
- negara transit teramai di Asia
- Salah satu barang ekspor singapura
- North American Free trade Area
- sungai yang mengaliri kamboja
- penghasil kelapa sawit terbesar di Asia
- ASEAN Free Trade Area adalah
- Asia pacific cooperation
15 Clues: ASEAN Economic community • Asia pacific cooperation • masyarakat ekonomi Asean • Perbatasan negara Kamboja • Disepakatai AFTA pada bulan • ASEAN Free Trade Area adalah • sungai yang mengaliri kamboja • negara transit teramai di Asia • North American Free trade Area • tempat pelaksanaan KTT II APEC • salah satu sumber devisa negara • Salah satu barang ekspor singapura • ...
Music Theory 2018-11-02
Across
- A group of notes that sound together
- The chords used in this scale make the piece seem dark and miserable
- Also known as the F clef
- The name of the note with the value of four crotchet beats
- Name given for the difference between two white notes on a piano
- Half a tone
- The note you have to count in 'e + a'
Down
- How high or low
- Also known as the G clef
- How loud or quiet
- Goes up
- The chords used in this scale make the piece seem bright and happy
- Goes down
- Speed
14 Clues: Speed • Goes up • Goes down • Half a tone • How high or low • How loud or quiet • Also known as the G clef • Also known as the F clef • A group of notes that sound together • The note you have to count in 'e + a' • The name of the note with the value of four crotchet beats • Name given for the difference between two white notes on a piano • ...
game theory 2018-09-09
Across
- The …….value for which each player in a game always selects the same strategy is called the equilibrium point.
- Game theory is the study of selecting ……… strategy.
- The calling population is assumed to be infinite when arrivals are ….. of each other.
- Games which involve more than two players are called …..person games.
- The utilization factor is a key operating characteristic for a ………system.
- The …….. queue discipline may be classified as pre-emptive or non-pre-emptive.
- It is a …….. strategy game where both player select their optimal strategy.
Down
- A game is said to be fair if both upper and lower values of the game are same and ……..
- It is a point where minimax value is equal to maximin value.
- This Principal is used to reduce the size of the payoff matrix of a game.
- Customer behaviour in which he moves from one queue to another in a multiple channel situation is……..
- This symbol describes the interarrival time distribution.
- The Service Mechanism in a queuing system is characterized by server’s………..
- Algebraic/Matrix/Graphical method can be used to solve ……… strategy game.
14 Clues: Game theory is the study of selecting ……… strategy. • This symbol describes the interarrival time distribution. • It is a point where minimax value is equal to maximin value. • Games which involve more than two players are called …..person games. • This Principal is used to reduce the size of the payoff matrix of a game. • ...
game theory 2018-09-09
Across
- The …….value for which each player in a game always selects the same strategy is called the equilibrium point.
- Game theory is the study of selecting ……… strategy.
- The calling population is assumed to be infinite when arrivals are ….. of each other.
- Games which involve more than two players are called …..person games.
- The utilization factor is a key operating characteristic for a ………system.
- The …….. queue discipline may be classified as pre-emptive or non-pre-emptive.
- It is a …….. strategy game where both player select their optimal strategy.
Down
- A game is said to be fair if both upper and lower values of the game are same and ……..
- It is a point where minimax value is equal to maximin value.
- This Principal is used to reduce the size of the payoff matrix of a game.
- Customer behaviour in which he moves from one queue to another in a multiple channel situation is……..
- This symbol describes the interarrival time distribution.
- The Service Mechanism in a queuing system is characterized by server’s………..
- Algebraic/Matrix/Graphical method can be used to solve ……… strategy game.
14 Clues: Game theory is the study of selecting ……… strategy. • This symbol describes the interarrival time distribution. • It is a point where minimax value is equal to maximin value. • Games which involve more than two players are called …..person games. • This Principal is used to reduce the size of the payoff matrix of a game. • ...
Atomic Theory 2019-01-24
Across
- This man's experiments provided the first evidence that atoms are made of smaller particles
- This relationship between elements in compounds is always the same
- The negatively charged particle in an atom
- This shows the most likley locations for electrons in an atom
- This man's experiments focussed on electrons and their positions
- This exists because an atom can have different number of neutrons
Down
- The man who created the Gold Foil experiment and theorised that all of an atom's positive charge is concentrated in its nucleus
- The positively charged particle in the nucleus
- This number shows the number of electrons in an atom
- Name of the person who proposed that all elements are composed of atoms
- James Chadwick designed an experiment to show that these exist
- The most stable electron configuration
- Electrons change this level as they gain or lose energies
- This is the region of space around the nucleus where an electon is likley to be found
14 Clues: The most stable electron configuration • The negatively charged particle in an atom • The positively charged particle in the nucleus • This number shows the number of electrons in an atom • Electrons change this level as they gain or lose energies • This shows the most likley locations for electrons in an atom • ...
Atomic Theory 2019-01-24
Across
- This number shows the number of electrons in an atom
- The man who created the Gold Foil experiment and theorised that all of an atom's positive charge is concentrated in its nucleus
- Electrons change this level as they gain or lose energies
- James Chadwick designed an experiment to show that these exist
- The most stable electron configuration
- The negatively charged particle in an atom
- This is the region of space around the nucleus where an electon is likley to be found
- The positively charged particle in the nucleus
Down
- This exists because an atom can have different number of neutrons
- This man's experiments focussed on electrons and their positions
- This shows the most likley locations for electrons in an atom
- This man's experiments provided the first evidence that atoms are made of smaller particles
- This relationship between elements in compounds is always the same
- Name of the person who proposed that all elements are composed of atoms
14 Clues: The most stable electron configuration • The negatively charged particle in an atom • The positively charged particle in the nucleus • This number shows the number of electrons in an atom • Electrons change this level as they gain or lose energies • This shows the most likley locations for electrons in an atom • ...
hair theory 2015-11-01
Across
- Outer layer of skin
- Forms the lower part of the hair root
- pili Muscle attached to the base of hair the follicle
- Each hair is situated in this
- The pigment in the hair
Down
- Small cone shape area that fits into the hair bulb
- gland Secretes oily substance called sebum
- hair Found on certain parts of the body
- The outer layer of the hair
- Phase Transitional phase of hair growth
- Phase Final stage where no further growth happens
- Found on a foetus
- This is the middle layer of the hair
- Phase Active growth phase of hair follicle
14 Clues: Found on a foetus • Outer layer of skin • The pigment in the hair • The outer layer of the hair • Each hair is situated in this • This is the middle layer of the hair • Forms the lower part of the hair root • Phase Transitional phase of hair growth • hair Found on certain parts of the body • gland Secretes oily substance called sebum • ...
Colour Theory 2023-10-25
Across
- When you add grey to a colour.
- 3 pigment colours that cannot be mixed or formed by any combination of other colours.
- Which colours are vivid and energetic?
- The _____ colour scheme is a variation of the complementary colour scheme.
- Black, Grey and White and considered to be ____ colours.
- These are the colours formed by mixing two primary colors.
Down
- colours are any two colours which are directly opposite each other on the colour wheel.
- This colour scheme uses colours that are next to each other on the colour wheel.
- These are the colours formed by mixing a primary and a secondary colour.
- When you add black to a colour.
- These colours give an impression of calm.
- Tints, tones and shades of the same colour.
- ____ colour scheme uses colours that are evenly spaced around the colour wheel.
- When you and white to a colour.
14 Clues: When you add grey to a colour. • When you add black to a colour. • When you and white to a colour. • Which colours are vivid and energetic? • These colours give an impression of calm. • Tints, tones and shades of the same colour. • Black, Grey and White and considered to be ____ colours. • These are the colours formed by mixing two primary colors. • ...
Atomic Theory 2024-02-06
Across
- A neutrally charged subatomic particle
- The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom
- An atom or molecule with a net electric charge due to the loss or gain of electrons
- The weighted average mass of the atoms in a naturally occurring sample of the element
- Atoms with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons
- The basic unit of a chemical element
- the total number of protons and neutrons in a nucleus
- The area around an atom's nucleus where electrons are most likely to be found
- A pure chemical compound is always made up of the same elements combined together in a tied (or definite) proportions of mass
Down
- The central most important part of something
- The amount of matter stays the same, even when matter changes form
- When two elements form more than one compound the ratios of the masses of the second element that combine with the first element will always be ratios of small whole numbers
- A positively charged subatomic particle
- A Negatively charged subatomic particle
14 Clues: The basic unit of a chemical element • A neutrally charged subatomic particle • A positively charged subatomic particle • A Negatively charged subatomic particle • The central most important part of something • The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom • the total number of protons and neutrons in a nucleus • ...
Music Theory 2023-02-16
Across
- A note that equals one beat (Ta)
- A note that equals half a beat (Two equals Ti-Ti)
- A dotted half note equals this many beats (In between a half note and whole note)
- A rest that equals two silent beats
- A clef that is used for upper voices
- A rest that equals half a silent beat
Down
- A rest that equals one silent beat
- A rest that equals four silent beats
- A note that equals four beats (Ta-a-a-a)
- A note that equals two beats (Ta-a)
- A clef that is used for lower voices
- I am in this class with Ms.Garver
- The five lines and four spaces in music
- The musical term used to describe how long or short a note/rest lasts
14 Clues: A note that equals one beat (Ta) • I am in this class with Ms.Garver • A rest that equals one silent beat • A note that equals two beats (Ta-a) • A rest that equals two silent beats • A rest that equals four silent beats • A clef that is used for lower voices • A clef that is used for upper voices • A rest that equals half a silent beat • ...
Music Theory 2024-02-19
Across
- 2/4 4/4 3/4
- Flat, Sharp, Natural
- Gradually faster
- To create or write a melody
- Hold the note longer than its original value
- mp (Dynamic Marking)
- 4 Beats
Down
- Gradually Slower
- Play the note detatched
- Another name for 4/4 time signature
- f (Dynamic Marking
- Gradually Louder
- p (Dynamic Marking)
- The 5 lines and 4 spaces
14 Clues: 4 Beats • 2/4 4/4 3/4 • Gradually Slower • Gradually faster • Gradually Louder • f (Dynamic Marking • p (Dynamic Marking) • Flat, Sharp, Natural • mp (Dynamic Marking) • Play the note detatched • The 5 lines and 4 spaces • To create or write a melody • Another name for 4/4 time signature • Hold the note longer than its original value
Set theory 2024-02-21
15 Clues: | • #A • A×B • A ∆ B • A \ B • (a,b) • A ∩ B • A ∪ B • A - B • A ⊆ B • Ø = { }. • all subsets of A. • a collection of elements. • meaning or definition of a∈A. • both sets have the same members.
Set Theory 2024-02-23
Learning Theory 2024-07-02
Across
- to decrease behavior
- refers to the number of responses or time between reinforcements, which varies or changes.
- a process of turning an abstract concept or idea into an observable and measurable one
- occurs after a certain amount of occurrences or a set amount of time
- a type of learning where the process of acquiring new and enduring information via the formation of bonds or connections between elements
- a marker that acts as a bridge between a desired behavior and the delivery of a primary reinforcer
- to increase behavior
- the schedule is based on the number of responses between reinforcements
Down
- the schedule is based on the time between reinforcements
- is a type of learning in which an organism’s behavior toward a specific stimulus changes over time without any evident link to consequences.
- Adding something to either decrease or increase behavior
- Removing something to either decrease or increase behavior
- a principle that an opportunity to engage in more probable behaviors will reinforce less probable behaviors
- reinforcement is previously provided that is discontinued to decrease or eliminate a behavior.
14 Clues: to decrease behavior • to increase behavior • the schedule is based on the time between reinforcements • Adding something to either decrease or increase behavior • Removing something to either decrease or increase behavior • occurs after a certain amount of occurrences or a set amount of time • the schedule is based on the number of responses between reinforcements • ...
Molecular Theory 2022-08-30
Across
- when water vapor turns into a liquid condensationpoint the temperature at which a material changes from a gas to a liquid
- when a solid turns into a liquid
- positive and negative charged particles
- when a liquid turns into a solid
- the liquid turns into a gas
- the temperature when a solid turns from a liquid
- particles that move fast and escape the container
- the temperature when a liquid turns into a solid
Down
- particles that vibrate in place
- particles that take the shape of the container and move around
- when liquid or a solid becomes water vapor
- anything takes up mass or space
- hotness or coldness of an object
- motion
14 Clues: motion • the liquid turns into a gas • particles that vibrate in place • anything takes up mass or space • when a solid turns into a liquid • hotness or coldness of an object • when a liquid turns into a solid • positive and negative charged particles • when liquid or a solid becomes water vapor • the temperature when a solid turns from a liquid • ...
Set Theory 2022-09-08
Cell Theory 2022-10-03
Across
- thin, flexible barrier that surrounds all cells
- in eukaryotic cells, all cellular contents outside the nucleus, in prokaryotic cells, all of the cells' contents
- organism whose cells contain a nucleus
- structure in an animal cell that helps to organize cell division
- in cells, structure that contains the cells genetic information
- basic unit of all forms of life
Down
- strong, supporting layer around the cell membrane in some cells
- cell organelle that stores materials such as water, salts, proteins, and carbohydrates
- fundamental concept of biology that states all living things are composed of cells
- network of protein filaments in a eukaryotic cell that gives the cell its shape and internal organization and is involved in movement
- organism whose cells do not contain a nucleus
- organelle found in cells of plants and some other organisms that captures the energy from sunlight and convert it into chemical energy
- cell organelle consisting of RNA and protein found throughout the cytoplasm in a cell; the site of protein synthesis
- specialized structure that performs important cellular functions
14 Clues: basic unit of all forms of life • organism whose cells contain a nucleus • organism whose cells do not contain a nucleus • thin, flexible barrier that surrounds all cells • strong, supporting layer around the cell membrane in some cells • in cells, structure that contains the cells genetic information • ...
Learning theory 2023-09-11
Across
- Conducted BOBO doll experiment
- The will to perform the behaviour
- Imitation is more likely to happen if role model is similar to the observer
- Used to see if our variables are responsible for results
- 4 elements of SLT
- When an individual observes a behaviour from a role model and copies it
- The extent to which we notice certain behaviours
- Unpleasant consequence of a behaviour
- Occurs when we avoid something unpleasant
Down
- Learning through association
- SLT is often described as what between cog and behaviourist approach
- How well the behaviour is remembered
- The ability of the observer to perform the behaviour
- Conditioned stimulus in Pavlov's experiment
14 Clues: 4 elements of SLT • Learning through association • Conducted BOBO doll experiment • The will to perform the behaviour • How well the behaviour is remembered • Unpleasant consequence of a behaviour • Occurs when we avoid something unpleasant • Conditioned stimulus in Pavlov's experiment • The extent to which we notice certain behaviours • ...
