mental Crossword Puzzles
Everything is Tuberculosis, By: John Green 2025-05-07
Across
- / John compares TB to this modern issue
- / Platform where the book started
- / The body system affected by TB
- / The nickname for tuberculosis
- / John reviews this bear known for its cuteness and vulnerability
- / The theme of the book
- / The time period we currently live in
- / Green emphasizes how we crave this from others
- / The state where John lives and often writes from
- / A feeling of admiration and gratitude for life
Down
- / What TB and mental illness both lack visibly
- / What TB was once romanticized as
- / Color often tied to sadness in the book
- / An emotion he reviews that connects past and present
- / John's mental health condition
- / Illness often blamed for unexplained symptoms in the 1800s
- / Hospital where John stayed during a breakdown
- / John says humans are flawed but still creates...
- / The human need to label things
- / A symbol of resilience discussed in nature essays
20 Clues: / The theme of the book • / The nickname for tuberculosis • / John's mental health condition • / The body system affected by TB • / The human need to label things • / Platform where the book started • / What TB was once romanticized as • / The time period we currently live in • / John compares TB to this modern issue • / Color often tied to sadness in the book • ...
Vocabulary crossword 2025-11-13
Across
- a second year undergraduate
- the distance traveled per unit time in One Direction
- referring back to itself
- a fervent and even militant proponent of something
- relating to the motion of material bodies and their forces
- administer or bestow as in small portions
- the act of imitating the behavior of some situation
- reflect deeply on a subject
- in a pensively sad manner
Down
- give back less money, then is due to someone who has overpaid
- a mistaken or unfounded opinion or idea
- constituting a separate entity or part
- the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders
- a specialist in the treatment of mental disorders
- a settle difference in meaning or opinion or attitude
- a continuous portion of a circle
- formed or developed from something else not original
- a personal belief or judgment
- a cry of sorrow and grief
- a relative position or degree of value in a graded group
20 Clues: referring back to itself • a cry of sorrow and grief • in a pensively sad manner • a second year undergraduate • reflect deeply on a subject • a personal belief or judgment • a continuous portion of a circle • constituting a separate entity or part • a mistaken or unfounded opinion or idea • administer or bestow as in small portions • ...
Vocab 2025-11-06
Across
- reflect deeply on a subject
- a subtle difference in meaning or opinion or attitude
- a specialist in mental disorders
- administer or bestow, as in small portions
- relating to the motion of material bodies and their forces
- a continuation portion of a circle
- give back less money then is due
- a cry of sorrow and grief
- a mistaken or unfounded opinion or idea
- the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders
Down
- distance travel per unit time in one direction
- referring back to itself
- the act of imitating the behavior of some situation
- a personal belief or judgement
- formed or devolped from something else; not original
- a fervent and even Milano proponent of something
- constituting a separate entity or part
- a second year undergraduate
- a relative position or degree of value in a graded group
- in a pensively sad manner
20 Clues: referring back to itself • in a pensively sad manner • a cry of sorrow and grief • reflect deeply on a subject • a second year undergraduate • a personal belief or judgement • a specialist in mental disorders • give back less money then is due • a continuation portion of a circle • constituting a separate entity or part • a mistaken or unfounded opinion or idea • ...
Cognitive Crossword 001 - Mindspan 2025-07-05
Across
- Example of overstimulating content for children
- Essential daily process for brain recovery
- Game recommended to boost cognition
- Lack of oxygen at birth that can cause brain damage
- A disease linked to cognitive decline
- The main theme of maintaining brain health as you age
- A lifestyle factor that harms brain health
- Harmful agents that may damage neurons
- A cognitive function that can decline with age
- Brain cells responsible for cognition and communication
- Mental focus, part of cognitive health
Down
- The central command center of the nervous system
- The sleep stage where dreams occur
- The brain's ability to adapt and rewire
- Activity that lowers risk of dementia and Alzheimer's
- An environmental factor that degrades neural longevity
- Abbreviation for Central Nervous System
- A neurodevelopmental disorder mentioned in the congenital risks
- The name of this newsletter
- The metaphor used instead of “rot” for mental decline
20 Clues: The name of this newsletter • The sleep stage where dreams occur • Game recommended to boost cognition • A disease linked to cognitive decline • Harmful agents that may damage neurons • Mental focus, part of cognitive health • The brain's ability to adapt and rewire • Abbreviation for Central Nervous System • Essential daily process for brain recovery • ...
Vocab 9-10 2025-12-18
Across
- in a pensively sad manner
- referring back to itself
- administer or bestow, as in small portions
- a second year undergraduate
- give back less money than is due to someone who has overpaid
- distance traveled per unit time in one direction
- a subtle difference in meaning or opinion or attitude
- formed or developed from something else; not original
- a specialist in the treatment of mental disorders
- a fervent and even militant proponent of something
Down
- reflect deeply on a subject
- a relative position or degree of value in a graded group
- a cry of sorrow and grief
- a mistaken or unfounded idea or opinion
- the act of imitating behavior of some situation
- a continous portion of a circle
- the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders
- a personal belief or judgement
- relating to the motion of material bodies and their forces
- constituting a separate entity or part
20 Clues: referring back to itself • in a pensively sad manner • a cry of sorrow and grief • reflect deeply on a subject • a second year undergraduate • a personal belief or judgement • a continous portion of a circle • constituting a separate entity or part • a mistaken or unfounded idea or opinion • administer or bestow, as in small portions • ...
Army Attributes 2024-01-14
16 Clues: Gym • Proud • Ethos • Humble • Emotion • Service • LDRSHIP • Tactics • Bearing • Bearing • Bounce back • Mental game • Accountability • Book by a cover • Creation of idea • Knowledge of something
chapter 7,8,9 2024-04-09
15 Clues: air • can • time • eyes • mind • person • picture • at last • gold,oil • abnormal • remember • bacteria • not common • to know what illness • underground place for mine
Vocabulary 1 2024-08-21
15 Clues: dryout • shorten • rapport • tiresome • mournful • abundant • composure • suspension • break easily • long repetitive • occur everywhere • everyday language • fervent fanatical • cultivation of land • mental physical pain
Strength terms 2022-07-18
Across
- the mental and moral qualities distinctive to an individual.
- a difficult or unpleasant situation.
- learning to cope with difficult and strange situations. It also helps deal with emotions and feelings
- traits or skills that are considered positive.
Down
- succeed in surviving or in achieving something despite difficult circumstances
- a state of mental or emotional strain or tension resulting from adverse or demanding circumstances.
- needs great mental or physical effort in order to be done successfully and therefore tests a person's ability
- an action or strategy which may be adopted in adverse circumstances.
- a feeling of worry, nervousness, or unease about something with an uncertain outcome.
- give assistance to
10 Clues: give assistance to • a difficult or unpleasant situation. • traits or skills that are considered positive. • the mental and moral qualities distinctive to an individual. • an action or strategy which may be adopted in adverse circumstances. • succeed in surviving or in achieving something despite difficult circumstances • ...
Autism Crossword 2025-05-12
Across
- A disorder similar to autism which was regarded as the same condition until 2012
- A behavior in many a symptom that means "over and over again"
- Two or more mental disorders
- A symptom in which affected do not speak
- How the number of people with autism is going, in statistics
- A misinterpretation/misconception/misrepresentation of a mental illness in the media or conversations
- A term for autism and any other mental disorder similar to it
Down
- Something autistic people usually struggle with while holding a conversation
- The age in which symptoms of autism usually manifest by
- The "scale" in which people with autism fall
10 Clues: Two or more mental disorders • A symptom in which affected do not speak • The "scale" in which people with autism fall • The age in which symptoms of autism usually manifest by • How the number of people with autism is going, in statistics • A behavior in many a symptom that means "over and over again" • A term for autism and any other mental disorder similar to it • ...
VOCABULARY 2021-09-23
16 Clues: FAKE • FILL • STRAY • VALLEY • BRIGHT • PREDICT • GRIEVING • DEFEATED • EXPRESSED • VILLAGERS • EAT HURRIEDLY • ABOUT TO HAPPEN • GENTLE AND KIND • A PRIEST'S HOUSE • DISORDER OR DISARRANGE • PHYSICAL OR MENTAL WEAKNESS
Module 15 2012-12-12
Across
- /A type of learning where a stimulus gains the power to cause a response because it pedicts another stimulus that already produces the response
- /Developed a new theory thart emphasizing the importance of cognitive process in classical conditioning
- /A relatively permanent change in behavior due to experience
- /In classical conditioning, the process of developing a learned response
- /Any behavior or action
- /Famous for discovery of classical conditioning
- /The view that pyschology should restrict its efforts to studying observable behaviors not mental processes
- /A process in which an organism produces different responses to two similar stimuli
Down
- /In classsical conditioning, the process od developing a learned response
- /In classical conditioning, the diminishing of the learned response, whaen an unconditioned stimulus does not follow a conditioned stimulus
- /In classsical conditioning the automatic response to the unconditioned stimulus
- /Anything in the enviroment that one can respond to
- /Mental processes; all the mental activities associated with thinking,knowing, and remembering
- /A process in which an organism produces the same reponses to two similar stimuli
- /Identified the phenomena of taste adversion which established that classical conditioning was influenced by biological predispostion
- /The reapperance after a rest period of an extinguised conditioned response
- /Graduate student of John Watson
17 Clues: /Any behavior or action • /Graduate student of John Watson • /Famous for discovery of classical conditioning • /Anything in the enviroment that one can respond to • /A relatively permanent change in behavior due to experience • /In classical conditioning, the process of developing a learned response • ...
PSYC 341 - Memory and Cognition Crossword 2017-05-09
Across
- The basic unit of a spoken language, we can translate 10-30 a second
- When a stimulus is unclear because of the simultaneous presence of another stimulus
- Knowledge of social rules that underline our language use
- Problem solving through learning and discovery
- Chain of processes operating on internal representations
- Simple and well-structured sequence of events that are categorized in a specific order and associated with a highly familiar activity
- This examines grammatical rules that govern how we organize words in our sentences
- A condition where you able to describe things, but not create mental images in your mind
- end This type of heuristic sees the problem solver envisioning the end to determine the best course of action
- The interpretation of a sensation
- Thinking about one's own mental processes
- Type of memory that has little depth and is mostly used for priming unconscious actions
- These are active and constantly changing organized representations that your mind stores about the world
- This limits cognitive processes due to divided attention
- Connecting one concept to another
- Near surfaces overlapping far surfaces
Down
- Responding to visual stimuli without consciously seeing it
- One of the Seven sins of Memory that is commonly known and considered prejudice toward one side over another
- Type of Amnesia that involves preexisting memories being lost
- The closer an object gets the more inward our eyes turn to focus on it
- When an object is incomplete or not fully enclosed, people perceive the whole by filling in missing information
- Stimulus leads to a response
- Initial reception of information from an environment
- Two sensations are joined into one
- Problem solving through a clearly defined set of instructions
- A tyoe of Aphasia where the patient cannot recall the names of everyday objects
- Type of memory that organizes and stores knowledge of the world
- Focus of mental effort on sensory/mental events
- effect When the reaction time of a task is interfered with
- Type of visual memory that is linked to The Sperling Task
30 Clues: Stimulus leads to a response • The interpretation of a sensation • Connecting one concept to another • Two sensations are joined into one • Near surfaces overlapping far surfaces • Thinking about one's own mental processes • Problem solving through learning and discovery • Focus of mental effort on sensory/mental events • ...
CME.H&B terms 2017-04-12
Across
- Mental absorption, a state of strong concentration that temporarily suspends the five hindrances
- Physical and mental calm
- Action based on kindness, respect, truthfulness, timeliness and wisdom
- Impermanent One of the three characteristics of existence. Buddhist teachings emphasize that all conditioned mental and physical phenomena are impermanent - nothing lasts, nothing stays the same.
- Compassion; one of the four Brahma-Viharas (sublime abodes)
- The pattern of conditioned habits that we mistake for a sense of self
- Symbolical position
- The breath of life;the vital breath or spirit
- The passing of the soul at death into another body
- A heavy club used as a weapon and a symbol of authority attribute of the Vishnu
- Spiritual friend. In the Theravada Buddhist meditation tradition, teachers are often referred to as spiritual friends.
- Enlightened one Someone whose mind is completely free from the defilement's; a person who is no longer bound to cyclic existence
- Special symbolic posture seated or standing used in yoga and in the representation of the gods
- the pleasant, unpleasant or neutral tone that arises with every experience; one of the five aggregates
- The ancient language of the scriptures of Theravada Buddhism
Down
- The spouse of a deity
- A gladdening of the mind and body. One of the seven factors of enlightenment
- To walk around in a complete circle; as a ritual of respect
- A mind that is open to the experience of the moment, free of conceptual overlays; first made popular by the Zen teacher Suzuki Roshi
- Awakening
- Serpent
- Law;religious or moral duty
- Worshiper of Shakti, the goddess
- Interest and inquiry into experience. One of the seven factors of enlightenment
- To me made flesh
- Appearance of a deity in a other form
- To be born again as another form of life or into another class of human society
- The auspicious power of wholesome action that brings positive karmic results
- Worshiper of Shiva; having to do with the worship of Shiva
- A three pronged spear;attribute of Shiva
- noting A technique used in meditation to help direct the mind to the object of meditation
31 Clues: Serpent • Awakening • To me made flesh • Symbolical position • The spouse of a deity • Physical and mental calm • Law;religious or moral duty • Worshiper of Shakti, the goddess • Appearance of a deity in a other form • A three pronged spear;attribute of Shiva • The breath of life;the vital breath or spirit • The passing of the soul at death into another body • ...
Cognition Crossword 1 2021-03-30
Across
- the tendency to be more confident than correct
- mental representation of a given place/situation
- our spoken,written or gestured works and the way we combine them to communicate meaning
- beginning at 3-4 months
- the set of rules by which we derive meaning from morphemes, words, and sentences in a given language
- - logical rule that guarantees solving a particular problem.
- the likelihood of things in terms of how well they seem to represent
- the ability to produce novel and valuable ideas
- speech early speech stage in which a child speaks using mostly nouns and verbs such as go car
- inlanguage,system of rules that enables us to communicate with and understand others.
- general frameworks,expectations of events,objects,what could happen
- what you think will happen
Down
- age 1-2 when a child speaks single words twowordstage at age 2 two word statements
- a mental grouping of similar objects, events, ideas, or people
- estimating the likelihood of events based on their availability in memory
- the tendency to think of things only in terms of their usual functions; an impediment to problem solving
- rules of combining words into grammatically sensible sentences given language
- open ended tests
- in language smallest unit that carries meaning(such as a prefix).
- a simple thinking strategy that often allows us to make judgments and solve problems efficiently
- a mental image or best example of a category. Matching new items to the prototype provides a quick and easy method for including items in a category
- the smallest distinctive sound unit.
- all the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating
- a sudden and often novel realization of the solution to a problem
- process by which some aspects of the world are viewed as important while others are virtually neglected
- the way an issue is posed; how an issue is framed can significantly affect decisions and judgments.
- a tendency to approach a problem in one particular way
- tendency to second guess a decision after the event has happened
28 Clues: open ended tests • beginning at 3-4 months • what you think will happen • the smallest distinctive sound unit. • the tendency to be more confident than correct • the ability to produce novel and valuable ideas • mental representation of a given place/situation • a tendency to approach a problem in one particular way • ...
Chapter 5 2023-10-30
Across
- process of using strategies to reduce the impact of the stress response and handle threatening situations in positive ways
- ideas or thoughts a person knows to be true, based on real experiences, scientific facts, or what a person has learned from others
- extreme stress due to deeply disturbing events, such as disasters, sexual assault, or violence
- practice of taking an active role in protecting your own health; involves eating healthy and getting plenty of sleep and physical activity
- ability to put yourself in someone else’s shoes, and to understand someone else’s wants, needs, and perspectives
- any factor that causes stress
- awareness skill of knowing which emotions you feel and why
- stress caused by repeated, long-lasting exposure to severe stressors, such as neglect and abuse, violence, or loss of a loved one
- ability to bounce back from traumatic or stressful events
- stress that causes negative feelings and harmful health effects
- reaction in which the body returns to its resting state after a stressful event
- body’s impulse to either fight off or flee from threatening situations
Down
- your mental picture of yourself, which includes how you look, how you act, your skills and abilities, and your weaknesses; also called self-concept
- how you feel about yourself
- patterns of thoughts and feelings that decrease mental and emotional health
- treating oneself with kindness and understanding, even when experiencing setbacks and disappointments
- who you are, which includes your physical traits, social connections, and internal thoughts and feelings
- skill of understanding, controlling, and expressing your emotions and sensing the emotions of others
- mental and emotional state in which negative thoughts interfere with daily function for a short amount of time
- physical, mental, and emotional reactions of your body to the challenges you face
- ability to keep a positive outlook and focus on the good aspects of stressful situations
- emotion that means being thankful or grateful
- moods or feelings you experience
- set ways a person thinks or feels about someone or something
- thoughts and feelings about oneself
- positive stress that encourages growth and motivation
26 Clues: how you feel about yourself • any factor that causes stress • moods or feelings you experience • thoughts and feelings about oneself • emotion that means being thankful or grateful • positive stress that encourages growth and motivation • ability to bounce back from traumatic or stressful events • awareness skill of knowing which emotions you feel and why • ...
Psycology 2024-09-27
Across
- an expert or specialist in psychology.
- the examination or observation of one's own mental and emotional processes.
- someone who supports the theory of behaviorism
- a supposition or proposed explanation made on the basis of limited evidence as a starting point for further investigation.Structuralism: a method of interpretation and analysis of aspects of human cognition, behavior, culture, and experience, which focuses on relationships of contrast between elements in a conceptual system.
- a system of psychological theory and therapy that aims to treat mental conditions by investigating the interaction of conscious and unconscious elements in the mind and bringing repressed fears and conflicts into the conscious mind by techniques such as dream interpretation and free association.
- a thing predicted; a forecast.
- able to be noticed or perceived; discernible.
- a method of interpretation and analysis of aspects of human cognition, behavior, culture, and experience, which focuses on relationships of contrast between elements in a conceptual system.
- vs. Nurture: Nature refers to how genetics influence an individual's personality, whereas nurture refers to how their environment influences an individual's personality
- a medical practitioner specializing in the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness.
- a person who believes or works in cognitive grammar.
Down
- the scientific study of the human mind and its functions, especially those affecting behavior in a given context.
- the theory that the design of an object should be determined by its function rather than by aesthetic considerations, and that anything practically designed will be inherently beautiful.
- relating to cognition.
- the branch of science that deals with the biological basis of behavior and mental phenomena.
- capacity to have an effect on the character, development, or behavior of someone or something, or the effect itself.
- a spoken or written representation or account of a person, object, or event.
- an advocate or follower of the principles of humanism.
- relating to the branch of biology that deals with the normal functions of living organisms and their parts.
- a statement or account that makes something clear.
20 Clues: relating to cognition. • a thing predicted; a forecast. • an expert or specialist in psychology. • able to be noticed or perceived; discernible. • someone who supports the theory of behaviorism • a statement or account that makes something clear. • a person who believes or works in cognitive grammar. • an advocate or follower of the principles of humanism. • ...
social emotional crossword puzzle. Zack w. and Peyton 2022-04-26
Across
- disorder that affects your mood and behavior
- having the ability to understand your strengths and limitations
- the ability to think and behave in a normal and rational manner
- a type of neurotransmitter that increases focus and happiness
Down
- the relationships we have and how we interact with others
- frame of mind
- the way in which two or more concepts, objects, or people are connected, or the state of being connected
- the healthy psychological state of someone with good judgment
- the imparting or exchanging of information
- a natural instinctive state of mind deriving from one's circumstances, mood, or relationships with others
10 Clues: frame of mind • the imparting or exchanging of information • disorder that affects your mood and behavior • the relationships we have and how we interact with others • the healthy psychological state of someone with good judgment • a type of neurotransmitter that increases focus and happiness • having the ability to understand your strengths and limitations • ...
Strength terms 2022-07-18
Across
- the mental and moral qualities distinctive to an individual.
- a difficult or unpleasant situation.
- learning to cope with difficult and strange situations. It also helps deal with emotions and feelings
- traits or skills that are considered positive.
Down
- succeed in surviving or in achieving something despite difficult circumstances
- a state of mental or emotional strain or tension resulting from adverse or demanding circumstances.
- needs great mental or physical effort in order to be done successfully and therefore tests a person's ability
- an action or strategy which may be adopted in adverse circumstances.
- a feeling of worry, nervousness, or unease about something with an uncertain outcome.
- give assistance to
10 Clues: give assistance to • a difficult or unpleasant situation. • traits or skills that are considered positive. • the mental and moral qualities distinctive to an individual. • an action or strategy which may be adopted in adverse circumstances. • succeed in surviving or in achieving something despite difficult circumstances • ...
crucigrama de hábitos de vida saludables 2025-09-08
Across
- Descanso diario necesario para recuperar energía y mantener el equilibrio físico y mental.
- Clave para una vida saludable: no en exceso ni en defecto.
- Beber suficiente agua cada día ayuda a que el cuerpo funcione bien
- Control en lo que se consume o hace; ni demasiado ni muy poco.
Down
- Mantener buenos hábitos a lo largo del tiempo, sin abandonarlos.
- Atención personal para mantener la salud y prevenir problemas.
- Conjunto de acciones que evitan enfermedades antes de que aparezcan.
- Base de la salud; debe ser variada, equilibrada y rica en nutrientes.
- Actividad física que fortalece el cuerpo y mejora la salud mental.
- Estado de sentirse bien física, mental y emocionalmente.
10 Clues: Estado de sentirse bien física, mental y emocionalmente. • Clave para una vida saludable: no en exceso ni en defecto. • Atención personal para mantener la salud y prevenir problemas. • Control en lo que se consume o hace; ni demasiado ni muy poco. • Mantener buenos hábitos a lo largo del tiempo, sin abandonarlos. • ...
Hinduism and Buddhism 2017-08-21
Across
- Defilement; unwholesome qualities; a factor of mind that obscures clear seeing; a hindrance to meditation; also know as afflictive emotion
- The ancient language of the scriptures of Theravada Buddhism
- suffering
- The teachings of the Buddha
- Concentration; a deep state of meditation
- Mental or physical formation
- The doctrine that all mental and physical phenomena arise and pass away depending on causes and conditions
- The qualities of character to be perfected in order to become a Buddha
- Path of the Elders
- awakening
- Physical and mental calm
- Extinction of the fires of attachment, hatred and delusion that cause suffering; liberation from cyclic existence
- Discipline; the rules and regulations governing the conduct of Buddhist monks and nuns
- The tree under which the Buddha attained enlightenment in Bodh Gaya, India – a fig tree popularly called Pipal
- One who is undertaking the spiritual path of awakening; a meditator
Down
- Wisdom
- compassion
- Interest and inquiry into experience
- Spiritual friend. In the Theravada Buddhist meditation tradition, teachers are often referred to as spiritual friends
- Mental absorption, a state of strong concentration that temporarily suspends the five hindrances
- A term referring to the group of meditation practices that aim at samadhi
- The community of practitioners of the Buddhist path, or those beings who have attained direct realization of the nature of reality
- Action based on kindness, respect, truthfulness, timeliness and wisdom
- The auspicious power of wholesome action that brings positive karmic results
- The six perceptual gates through which we experience the world
- A gladdening of the mind and body
- A spiritual path that avoids extremes of self-mortification and self-indulgence, as discovered and taught by the Buddha
- A technique used in meditation to help direct the mind to the object of meditation
- The practice of giving; generosity. Dana is the first of the ten paramis, or qualities to be perfected in order to become a Buddha
- The pattern of conditioned habits that we mistake for a sense of self
30 Clues: Wisdom • suffering • awakening • compassion • Path of the Elders • Physical and mental calm • The teachings of the Buddha • Mental or physical formation • A gladdening of the mind and body • Interest and inquiry into experience • Concentration; a deep state of meditation • The ancient language of the scriptures of Theravada Buddhism • ...
BCFP Inquiry Project For Ms. Hadley. Made by Chaylean Alexis 2025-01-23
Across
- An extremely difficult or dangerous point in a situation.
- Lacking the quality or quantity required for a purpose.
- To a higher degree than is usual or average.
- An inability to stop using a substance or engaging in a behavior even though it may cause psychological or physical harm.
- A person's mental or physical condition.
- Mainly or Mostly
- When a harmful or lethal amount of drugs are taken.
- Discrimination and prejudice against people based on their race or ethnicity.
- A group of people with similarities in location and lifestyle.
- An act of physical force that causes or is intended to cause harm.
- To cause (something previously considered abnormal or unacceptable) to be treated as normal.
- A mood disorder that causes a persistent feeling of sadness and loss of interest for long period of time.
- A practice of domination, which involves the subjugation of one people by another.
- An instance of leaving something or someone out.
- A drinking problem that leads to physical or mental health problems.
Down
- A mental health condition that some people develop after they experience or witness a traumatic event.
- Something that needs great mental or physical effort.
- Too large or too small in comparison with something else.
- Intentionally ending your own life.
- A standard or level that is considered to be typical or usual.
- A deeply distressing or disturbing experience.
- To encounter or undergo.
- The same in a lot of places or for a lot of people.
- Existing naturally or having always lived in a place.
- A person actively searches for employment but is unable to find work.
- The process of identifying a disease, condition, or injury from its signs and symptoms.
- Establishing and maintaining a mutually respectful relationship.
- To have a strong effect on someone or something.
- A state or situation in which a person or a group of people don't have enough money or the basic things they need to live.
29 Clues: Mainly or Mostly • To encounter or undergo. • Intentionally ending your own life. • A person's mental or physical condition. • To a higher degree than is usual or average. • A deeply distressing or disturbing experience. • To have a strong effect on someone or something. • An instance of leaving something or someone out. • ...
BCFP Inquiry Project - Chaylean Alexis 2025-01-23
Across
- An extremely difficult or dangerous point in a situation.
- Lacking the quality or quantity required for a purpose.
- To a higher degree than is usual or average.
- An inability to stop using a substance or engaging in a behavior even though it may cause psychological or physical harm.
- A person's mental or physical condition.
- Mainly or Mostly
- When a harmful or lethal amount of drugs are taken.
- Discrimination and prejudice against people based on their race or ethnicity.
- A group of people with similarities in location and lifestyle.
- An act of physical force that causes or is intended to cause harm.
- To cause (something previously considered abnormal or unacceptable) to be treated as normal.
- A mood disorder that causes a persistent feeling of sadness and loss of interest for long period of time.
- A practice of domination, which involves the subjugation of one people by another.
- An instance of leaving something or someone out.
- A drinking problem that leads to physical or mental health problems.
Down
- A mental health condition that some people develop after they experience or witness a traumatic event.
- Something that needs great mental or physical effort.
- Too large or too small in comparison with something else.
- Intentionally ending your own life.
- A standard or level that is considered to be typical or usual.
- A deeply distressing or disturbing experience.
- To encounter or undergo.
- The same in a lot of places or for a lot of people.
- Existing naturally or having always lived in a place.
- A person actively searches for employment but is unable to find work.
- The process of identifying a disease, condition, or injury from its signs and symptoms.
- Establishing and maintaining a mutually respectful relationship.
- To have a strong effect on someone or something.
- A state or situation in which a person or a group of people don't have enough money or the basic things they need to live.
29 Clues: Mainly or Mostly • To encounter or undergo. • Intentionally ending your own life. • A person's mental or physical condition. • To a higher degree than is usual or average. • A deeply distressing or disturbing experience. • To have a strong effect on someone or something. • An instance of leaving something or someone out. • ...
BCFP Inquiry Project 2025-01-23
Across
- An extremely difficult or dangerous point in a situation.
- Lacking the quality or quantity required for a purpose.
- To a higher degree than is usual or average.
- An inability to stop using a substance or engaging in a behavior even though it may cause psychological or physical harm.
- A person's mental or physical condition.
- Mainly or Mostly
- When a harmful or lethal amount of drugs are taken.
- Discrimination and prejudice against people based on their race or ethnicity.
- A group of people with similarities in location and lifestyle.
- An act of physical force that causes or is intended to cause harm.
- To cause (something previously considered abnormal or unacceptable) to be treated as normal.
- A mood disorder that causes a persistent feeling of sadness and loss of interest for long period of time.
- A practice of domination, which involves the subjugation of one people by another.
- An instance of leaving something or someone out.
- A drinking problem that leads to physical or mental health problems.
Down
- A mental health condition that some people develop after they experience or witness a traumatic event.
- Something that needs great mental or physical effort.
- Too large or too small in comparison with something else.
- Intentionally ending your own life.
- A standard or level that is considered to be typical or usual.
- A deeply distressing or disturbing experience.
- To encounter or undergo.
- The same in a lot of places or for a lot of people.
- Existing naturally or having always lived in a place.
- A person actively searches for employment but is unable to find work.
- The process of identifying a disease, condition, or injury from its signs and symptoms.
- Establishing and maintaining a mutually respectful relationship.
- To have a strong effect on someone or something.
- A state or situation in which a person or a group of people don't have enough money or the basic things they need to live.
29 Clues: Mainly or Mostly • To encounter or undergo. • Intentionally ending your own life. • A person's mental or physical condition. • To a higher degree than is usual or average. • A deeply distressing or disturbing experience. • To have a strong effect on someone or something. • An instance of leaving something or someone out. • ...
Unit 1 Test Review 2024-09-19
Across
- Your overall satisfaction with life is known as "_____ of life".
- If someone you know is struggling with their mental health, you should _____ a trusted adult
- A task that is both important and urgent should be done first, which makes it a top...
- Organizing your time and making the best use of it is known as time...
- A style of communication in which a person prioritizes others' needs and wants even at their own expense.
- the ________ system sends and receives messages throughout the body
- To improve self esteem you should make decisions based on your...
- If someone you know is struggling with their mental health, you should show the that you...
- The amount of time you can expect to live is known as "life...
- A simple time management strategy is to make a ____ of your responsibilities.
- An inherited trait that increases your chances of a disease is known as a "_____ risk factor"
- A style of communication in which a person expresses only their needs and ignore others.
- Any method used to manage, alleviate, or cure a health problem.
Down
- Something that increases your chances of injury, illness, or disease is known as a risk...
- In the article titled the Winning Touch, researchers observed NBA players touching teammates. What were the players communicating through touch?
- research has linked low self esteem to...
- a positive statement to yourself
- A style of communication in which a person values their needs and wants and those of others.
- When you think someone may have a mental health problem, first you should acknowledge the _____ signs.
- the way a person thinks and feel about their self is known as their...
- Our guest speaker this unit was from the National Alliance on _______ Illness
- A warning sign that the body is ill, injured, or not functioning correctly.
- the brain, spinal cord, and nerves are made of cells called...
- Setting and achieving goals can improve self esteem. An effective goal should be...
24 Clues: a positive statement to yourself • research has linked low self esteem to... • the brain, spinal cord, and nerves are made of cells called... • The amount of time you can expect to live is known as "life... • Any method used to manage, alleviate, or cure a health problem. • Your overall satisfaction with life is known as "_____ of life". • ...
Concepts of health and wellbeing 2023-12-14
Across
- An ancient system of medicine originating in India that focuses on achieving balance in the body, mind, and spirit through lifestyle, diet, and herbal remedies.
- Characterized by constant change, activity, or progress.
- In Buddhism, the ultimate state of liberation and freedom from suffering.
- A state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being, not merely the absence of disease or infirmity (World Health Organization definition).
- The quality of one's relationships, social interactions, and sense of belonging within a community.
- The overall state of an individual that encompasses physical, mental, emotional, social, and spiritual dimensions.
- Refers to the state of one's emotions and the ability to effectively manage and express them in a positive and balanced manner.
- Related to mental processes such as thinking, learning, and memory.
- The subjective evaluation of one's own worth and the degree to which one values themselves.
- The state of one's mental processes and the ability to effectively cope with stress, relate to others, and make decisions.
- A state of overall health, happiness, and prosperity that encompasses multiple dimensions of an individual's life.
- The ability to recognize, understand, and manage one's own emotions, as well as being aware of and responsive to the emotions of others.
- Events or occurrences beyond the realm of natural laws or processes, often attributed to divine or mystical forces.
- The individual's personal assessment of their overall life satisfaction, happiness, and fulfillment.
Down
- The sense of purpose, meaning, and connection to something greater than oneself, contributing to a sense of inner peace and harmony.
- The act of revealing personal information or experiences to others.
- The state of one's body, including physical fitness, nutrition, and overall bodily functioning.
- In Hinduism and Buddhism, the concept that one's actions in this life or previous lives influence future experiences and circumstances.
- A traditional Chinese medicine practice that involves inserting thin needles into specific points on the body to stimulate energy flow, promoting balance and well-being.
- A state of being physically or mentally weak, often due to illness or old age.
20 Clues: Characterized by constant change, activity, or progress. • The act of revealing personal information or experiences to others. • Related to mental processes such as thinking, learning, and memory. • In Buddhism, the ultimate state of liberation and freedom from suffering. • A state of being physically or mentally weak, often due to illness or old age. • ...
See the Signs - Understanding Stress 2025-03-17
Across
- The practice of trying to achieve a mentally and emotionally clear and stable state. This is commonly done in a distraction free space and utilizes mindfulness and breathing techniques. This is a great way to deal with stress.
- A joyous, content, and overall positive state of mind.
- The ability to overcome adversity or a source of significant stress.
- A professional that treats mental conditions through verbal communication. It helps to talk to somebody when feeling stressed!
- Your body’s main stress hormone.
- Structured physical activity that’s benefits include improved wellbeing that reduces levels of stress.
- A practice where one is fully engaged and present in the moment. This practice is used in meditation.
- A mental condition characterized by persistent sadness, irritability, and/or feelings of worthlessness.
- A feeling of emotional or physical tension.
Down
- Emotional, physical and/or mental exhaustion caused by excessive stress over an extended period of time. Working too much for a long period of time is a common cause of this.
- It is often referred to as the happy chemical. Your gut produces 95% of this chemical. A lack of this chemical can increase one’s risk for depression.
- Limiting the intake of this substance can help manage and decrease stress.
- Lack of exposure to this can increase stress levels, so get outside!
- A form of exercise that has you perform various poses and breathing techniques. This form of exercise improves mobility, and it helps reduce stress.
- Negative stress
- A general belief that future outcomes will be positive, favorable, and desirable. Individuals that maintain this attitude have less stress.
- Positive stress
- When you don’t get enough of this at night, it can negatively impact your ability to deal with stress, among other negative effects.
- In terms of stress, this is something that causes uncomfortable emotions or psychiatric symptoms.
- A mental condition characterized by excessive apprehensiveness about real or perceived threats. People with this condition tend to display avoidance behaviors and physical symptoms such as increased heart rate and muscle tension.
20 Clues: Negative stress • Positive stress • Your body’s main stress hormone. • A feeling of emotional or physical tension. • A joyous, content, and overall positive state of mind. • Lack of exposure to this can increase stress levels, so get outside! • The ability to overcome adversity or a source of significant stress. • ...
Health Ch.1 2022-08-17
Across
- process of identifying one's state of health and taking steps to improve it
- DNA segments that contain the blueprint for the structure and function of a person's cells; affect development, personality, and health
- state of excellent health and wellness, including physical, mental and emotional, and social health
- dimension of health that describes how a person observes and interprets information to make decisions, solve problems, and examine situations
- length of time a person is expected to live
- dimension of health that refers to how well a person gets along with others
- poor overall state of health in which a person cannot function normally; caused by factors such as disease, risky behaviors, hazardous substances, and concerns with mental or emotional health
- extent to which a person experiences a healthy, happy, and fulfilling life
- beliefs, values, customs, and arts of a particular group or society
- chemical that carries genetic information; found in chromosomes
- in-person and online communication channels, such as books, TV shows, movies, social media, and advertisements
- aspects of people's lives that increase the chances they will develop a disease or disorder or experience an injury or decline in health
- land features and any bodies of water present in an area
Down
- state of being without regular, consistent housing
- choices and behaviors that affect a person's chance of developing a disease, unhealthy condition, or injury
- circumstances, objects, or conditions that surround a person in everyday life
- person's ability to function positively and overall satisfaction that life's present conditions are good
- presence of waste in the environment
- dimension of health that refers to the expression of thoughts and feelings, including emotions, moods, feelings about one's self, and views about the world
- state of complete physical, mental and emotional, and social well-being
- actual number of years a person lives
- aspects of people's lives that reduce risk and increase the likelihood of optimal health
- health conditions that develop due to a person's genes; do not require the presence of other risk factors
- dimension of health that refers to how well the body functions
24 Clues: presence of waste in the environment • actual number of years a person lives • length of time a person is expected to live • state of being without regular, consistent housing • land features and any bodies of water present in an area • dimension of health that refers to how well the body functions • chemical that carries genetic information; found in chromosomes • ...
Nervous system and Mental health medical term 2 2022-11-28
Across
- the brief loss of consciousness caused by the decreased flow of blood to the brain.
- speak or speech
- inflammation of the meninges of the brain and spinal cord.
- potentially serious or deadly disorder in children characterized by vomiting and confusion, sometimes following a viral illness for which the child was treated with aspirin.
- a progressive autoimmune disorder characterized by inflammation that causes demyelination of the myelin sheath.
- membranes, meninges
- a chronic neurological condition characterized by recurrent episodes of seizures of varying severity.
- tremens-a disorder involving sudden and severe mental changes or seizures caused by abruptly stopping the use of alcohol.
- chemical substances that make it possible for messages to cross from the synapse of a neuron to the target receptor.
- a condition of abnormal and excessive sensitivity to touch, pain, or other sensory stimuli.
- root or nerve root
- having an affinity for
- abnormal fear
- mind
- a fluoroscopic and CT study of the spinal cord after the injection of a contrast medium through a lumbar puncture.
- brain
Down
- a condition in which a person acts as if he or she has a physical or mental illness when he or she is not really sick.
- the mental activities associated with thinking, learning, and memory.
- a condition in which excess cerebrospinal fluid accumulates within the ventricles of the brain.
- may develop after an event involving actual or threatened death or injury to the individual or someone else, during which the person felt intense fear, helplessness, or horror.
- madness
- is a chronic pain condition characterized by severe, lightning-like pain due to an inflammation of the fifth cranial nerve.
- a slowly progressive decline in mental abilities including memory, thinking and judgment that is often accompanied by personality changes.
- a chronic, degenerative central nervous system disorder characterized by fine muscle tremors, rigidity, and a slow or shuffling gait.
- a lowered level of consciousness marked by listlessness, drowsiness, and apathy.
25 Clues: mind • brain • madness • abnormal fear • speak or speech • root or nerve root • membranes, meninges • having an affinity for • inflammation of the meninges of the brain and spinal cord. • the mental activities associated with thinking, learning, and memory. • a lowered level of consciousness marked by listlessness, drowsiness, and apathy. • ...
Effect of Exercise on Mood 2022-06-10
Across
- Exercise can help give you a ________ outlook on life.
- It's important for people with mental illness
- ____ exercise is better than none
Down
- Regular exercise can help you sleep _____.
- There are _____ of ways that exercise can benefit your mental health
- Exercise _____ treat depression and anxiety
- People who exercise regularly do it simply because it makes them _____ good.
- People who exercise regularly have better ____ health
8 Clues: ____ exercise is better than none • Regular exercise can help you sleep _____. • Exercise _____ treat depression and anxiety • It's important for people with mental illness • People who exercise regularly have better ____ health • Exercise can help give you a ________ outlook on life. • There are _____ of ways that exercise can benefit your mental health • ...
Crossword Puzzle 2016-11-06
15 Clues: anxiety • human brain • life skills • adolescence • extroversion • interpersonal • mental illness • panic disorder • self-awareness • making decisions • conscientiousness • exploring options • career development • developmental task • emotional intelligence
PTSD 2022-03-31
15 Clues: mind • brain • after • school • sadness • set off • confusion • aggressive • disturbing • frightened • overwhelming • scary dreams • hostile manner • free from illness • happens to a lot of toxic relationships
PTSD 2022-03-31
15 Clues: mind • brain • after • school • sadness • set off • confusion • aggressive • disturbing • frightened • overwhelming • scary dreams • hostile manner • free from illness • happens to a lot of toxic relationships
Word Gen Review 2025-03-25
15 Clues: mind • fake • huge • copy • crime • money • alone • honesty • persuade • not willing • not giving up • bring together • back to normal • leaning towards • for a short time
[1학년] Lesson 1 words (~p.19) 2025-08-12
Memory and Cognition 2017-12-03
Across
- effect, testing yourself after learning new material is way better for your memory recall
- psychology, the human tendency to organize what we see and look at the whole rather than the sum of parts
- principle, We tend to remember and process pleasant memories more efficiently than unpleasant memories
- motivation, Bianca was only motivated to go to work because she knew she would be rewarded with money
- Meaning of words and sentences
- creating smaller units from larger units in order to better remember the information
- the mental activity that describes the acquisition, transformation, and use of knowledge
- Using prior knowledge in order to gather and interpret stimuli taken from the senses
- imagery, creating a mental representation of an object when it is not actually physically present
- task, Paying attention to two or more messages at the same time, for example: reading a book and listening to music
- effect, Tendency to recall information located in the beginning of list
- ability to fluently speak and understand two languages
- basic unit of spoken language
- process, A process by which connections are made at the same time rather serial or one by one
Down
- effect, Refers to our tendency to recall more items accurately that our last in our memory
- code, Suggests our mental images resemble the physical object
- memory, our memory of events that we experienced such as going on vacation with family
- damage to the speech areas of brain causes a language production deficit
- stimulus, actual object that you see in the environment ex. The coat on a bed
- cognition, we better remember information when we use hand gestures to express our knowledge
- the concentration of mental activity in order to focus on information available from both your senses and your memory
- party effect, We may hear our name being mentioned at a loud party in one conversation even if we are listening to another conversation
- memory, Memory for events and issues related to yourself
- memory, remembering information from our past
- search, trying all possible solutions to a problem
- memory, facts and generalized knowledge we store and organize
- a sequence of events we have such as
- effect, Ben tends to provide shorter estimates when he is traveling to a landmark such as DC
- congruence, If you are having a good day and feeling happy you will remember things that are congruent with your mood
- blindness, when we overuse top-down processing we may do things such as failing to detect a change in an object or a scene
30 Clues: basic unit of spoken language • Meaning of words and sentences • a sequence of events we have such as • memory, remembering information from our past • search, trying all possible solutions to a problem • ability to fluently speak and understand two languages • memory, Memory for events and issues related to yourself • ...
cmon 2017-11-30
Across
- 3-dimensional shape, used in the recognition-by-components theory
- _____ aphasia: characterized by slow and effortful speech with good language comprehension
- _______ memory: remembering you need to do something in the future
- the school of thought that believes psychological study must focus on observable and objective behavior
- _____ listening: when participants are instructed to listen to two different speakers at once.
- uses top-down knowledge and experience to interpret surrounding stimuli
- inability to recognize faces
- ______ models: describe connections or relationships between items
- ______ technique: acronyms and acrostics are examples of this mnemonic concept
- _____ psychology: refers to the belief that humans have an innate tendency to organize the world around them
- concentration of mental efforts on sensory or mental events
- the smallest unit of meaning in language
- ______ ambiguity: a sentence that may be ambiguous because of its sentence structure
- ____-task: when participants in a study are instructed to both drive and talk on the phone
- a type a schema that features a prototypical sequence of events
- employ a solution to an earlier similar problem to the one you are dealing with now
Down
- _____ effect: remembering items at the end of a list due to how recently you were exposed to them
- self-______: a memory technique in which the individual connects an idea or fact to some aspect of themselves, or some other thing they can personally relate to
- refers to the acquisition, storage, transformation, and use of knowledge
- units of language larger than a sentence
- ______ coding: your mental image is best described with a language-like description, not an analogous image
- ______ bias: people estimate difference between two points is larger if there is a border in between
- Theory of _____: the ability to think from someone else’s perspective; bilingual children are theorized to have this ability earlier than monolingual
- _____ theory: the idea that when people are asked to imagine a member of a certain category, they most often think of the most typical member of the category
- problem-solving strategy that is a mental shortcut
- processing information and representing it in your mind; part of long-term memory
- ______ cognition: using your own body and actions to express an idea or thought
- _______ memory: the aspect of long term memory that contains memory about events that occurred in your life
- _____ state: the end result/position you would like to be in when the problem is solved
- _____ method: create a mental image connecting a word you’re trying to learn with a word you think sounds similar
- _____ memory: a form of memory that includes the subsets of iconic and echoic memory
31 Clues: inability to recognize faces • units of language larger than a sentence • the smallest unit of meaning in language • problem-solving strategy that is a mental shortcut • concentration of mental efforts on sensory or mental events • a type a schema that features a prototypical sequence of events • 3-dimensional shape, used in the recognition-by-components theory • ...
Unit 2 Vocab 2021-10-13
Across
- n. Temptation to sin; attraction or charm.
- adj. Caused by mental or emotional problems rather than by physical illness
- n. A statement that does not follow logically from anything previously said
- v. Persuade, influence; bring about.
- n. soul, personality, mind
- in Latin means "madness"
- n. An estimate of what might happen in the future based on what is happening now.
- n./v. To guess.
- from the Latin verb ducere, meaning
- n. The curved path that an object makes in space, or that a thrown object follows as it rises and falls to earth
- v. To pull back into something larger or take back something said or written
- from the Latin verb sequi, meaning "to follow"
- n. The act of receiving; a social gathering where guests are formally welcomed.
- adj. Harmonious, ordered, rational, calm
- v. To stop, seize, or interrupt before arrival.
- adj. Having to do with sexual intercourse or diseases transmitted by it.
- from the Latin word for "end" or "boundary"
- adj. Resulting; important.
- adj. Extremely or immeasurably small
- v. To keep within limits or location.
- n. The friction that allows a moving thing to move over a surface without slipping
- adj. Following in time, order, or place; later.
- comes from trahere, the Latin verb
- adj. Arranged in order or in a series.
Down
- adj. Open to some influence; responsive; able to be submitted to an action or process.
- n. A mental illness in which a person has a strong desire to steal things.
- n. A person with an extreme and uncontrollable desire for alcohol.
- comes from the Greek word psyche, meaning "breath, life, soul"
- adj. Of or relating to a drug that produces abnormal and often extreme mental effects such as hallucinations
- n. One who treats mental or emotional disorders or related bodily ills by psychological means
- adj. Authoritative and final; specifying perfectly or precisely.
- adj. Having rapid and unpredictable changes of mood.
- adj. Frenzied, orgiastic
- adj. Delirious
- n. Subtraction; the reaching of a conclusion by reasoning.
- comes from Latin verb meaning "take, seize"
- v. Drawn out, continued, or extended
- adj. Tending to promote, encourage, or assist; helpful.
- adj. Unclear, ambiguous, or confusing
- n. A mental disorder marked by feelings of great personal power and importance.
- n. Someone who is extremely self-centered and ignores the problems of others.
- v. To interrupt a conversation with a comment or remark
- adj. Lofty, superior, and detached.
- adj. Having definite limits.
- adj. Noticeable or able to be felt by the senses.
- adj. Not easily handled, led, taught, or controlled.
- adj. Jolly, good-natured.
47 Clues: adj. Delirious • n./v. To guess. • in Latin means "madness" • adj. Frenzied, orgiastic • adj. Jolly, good-natured. • n. soul, personality, mind • adj. Resulting; important. • adj. Having definite limits. • comes from trahere, the Latin verb • from the Latin verb ducere, meaning • adj. Lofty, superior, and detached. • v. Persuade, influence; bring about. • ...
PSY 332 Final Exam - Last Lectures 2023-05-10
Across
- Withholding information or underlying intentions from another (i.e., lying or concealing a painful truth).
- specific systematic steps towards an answer
- plays a critical role in the bodily experience of emotion, as it is connected to other brain structures that regulate the body's autonomic functions
- mental sets make learning efficient (don't have to relearn strategies)
- a deep, useful understanding of the nature of a difficult problem
- The tendency of paying attention to only one dimension at a time
- process of absorbibg new information into existing mental/cognitive structures
- Low fear including stress-tolerance, toleration of unfamiliarity and danger, high self-confidence and social assertiveness
- a developmental brain disorder characterized by impaired social interaction, difficulty with theory of mind and impaired communication with restricted and repetitive behavior. These signs all begin before a child is three years old.
- process of changing cognitive structures in response to new experiences and new information
- the ability to change the attitude and opinion of other people
- thinking as many solutions as possible to solve a problem
- emotions associated with the ______ are fear and anger
- A subjective and relative experience. A function of fulfillment of both lower and higher level goals.
- Poor impulse control including problems with planning and foresight, lacking emotions and urge control, demand for immediate gratification, and poor behavioral restraints
Down
- Introverted, timid, cautious, fearful
- goal-directed and deliberately implemented mental operations used to aid in task performance
- of anger, sadness, happiness, disgust and fear emerge between 2 1/2 and 7 months of age
- mental sets may not apply to all situations and can prevent people from exploring alternative strategies in solving a problem
- Executive functioning processes are activated in order to transform the insights to an external product; furthermore, feedback from others are sought in order to confirm the creative breakthrough of the idea (i.e., peer review)
- one's ability to recognize and understand the emotion of another
- the desired end-point or solution of the problem-solving activity
- The set of legal moves
- An awareness of one's own thinking and memory processes
- profoundly uncomfortable emotion that can be associated with aggression
- Outgoing, bold, fearless
- Knowledge lies dormant or mind wandering is promoted
- mental shortcuts
- Inabliity to understand someone else's point of view. Children can't put themselves in another person's shoes
- lacking empathy and close attachments with others, disdain of close attachments, use of cruelty to gain empowerment, exploitative tendencies, defiance of authority, and destructive excitement seeking
- emerge at approximately 2 months
- Tendency to believe that inanimate objects are alive
32 Clues: mental shortcuts • The set of legal moves • Outgoing, bold, fearless • emerge at approximately 2 months • Introverted, timid, cautious, fearful • specific systematic steps towards an answer • Knowledge lies dormant or mind wandering is promoted • Tendency to believe that inanimate objects are alive • emotions associated with the ______ are fear and anger • ...
Winn-Dixie Ch. 11-15 2023-04-12
Across
- to cry with weak, broken, whining sounds
- less advanced in mental, physical, or social development
- person who has committed a crime
- when 3 or more roads join and traffic must go in a circle
- ability to please or delight
- relating to drama; exciting
Down
- sudden, violent physical reaction or a strong emotion
- regular or usual activities
- to pull or be pulled into pieces
- a claim that is legal
- stuck inside a small place
- involving physical or mental disease
- to have in mind as an aim or goal; plan
13 Clues: a claim that is legal • stuck inside a small place • regular or usual activities • relating to drama; exciting • ability to please or delight • to pull or be pulled into pieces • person who has committed a crime • involving physical or mental disease • to have in mind as an aim or goal; plan • to cry with weak, broken, whining sounds • ...
Drug / Use Abuse 2023-04-11
Across
- present member of social
- Mental health
- Large marsupial
- Body motions such as shrugs
- Person who brings appeal to court
- Against the law
Down
- is a mean person
- Some drink this to excess
- a lesson given my mainly speaking
- Blood Alcohol
- A term used to describe the physical and mental symptoms that a person has when they suddenly stop or cut back the use of an addictive substance, such as opiates and opioids, nicotine products, or alcohol.
- forbidden by law
- A drug 100x stronger than fentanyl
13 Clues: Blood Alcohol • Mental health • Large marsupial • Against the law • is a mean person • forbidden by law • present member of social • Some drink this to excess • Body motions such as shrugs • a lesson given my mainly speaking • Person who brings appeal to court • A drug 100x stronger than fentanyl • ...
LEY 1616 DEL 21 DE ENERO DE 2013 2022-09-27
Across
- Hace parte del equipo interdisciplinario de las instituciones prestadoras de salud.
- La ley 1616 de 21 de enero de 2013 da prioridad a.
- Se encarga de analizar y prestar acciones en promoción, prevención, estrategias y todo lo relacionado con salud y riesgos laborales.
- se define como un estado dinámico que se expresa en la vida cotidiana a través del comportamiento y la interacción.
- Es una de las modalidades de atención integral e integrada en salud mental.
Down
- Entidad que promueve políticas, planes, programas y demás proyectos en promoción y prevención en salud mental.
- Acontecimiento vital negativo o problema relacionado con el contexto en que se han desarrollado alteraciones experimentadas por una persona.
- La salud mental es considerada en Colombia como.
- Alteración de procesos cognitivos, afectivos del desenvolvimiento considerado como normal con respecto al grupo social de referencia del cuál proviene el individuo.
- Intervención tendiente a impactar en factores de riesgo.
- Documento que expedirá el Gobierno Nacional para el fortalecimiento de la Salud Mental de la población colombiana en concurso con los actores institucionales y sociales.
11 Clues: La salud mental es considerada en Colombia como. • La ley 1616 de 21 de enero de 2013 da prioridad a. • Intervención tendiente a impactar en factores de riesgo. • Es una de las modalidades de atención integral e integrada en salud mental. • Hace parte del equipo interdisciplinario de las instituciones prestadoras de salud. • ...
Mental Health Promotion Strategies 2021-11-01
Across
- Includes conflict resolution, realistic goal setting and stress management.
- A technique that teaches how to manage breathing, heart rate and blood flow to stop the stress response in its tracks.
- Beliefs about oneself.
- management Refers to the wide spectrum of techniques and Psychotherapies aimed at controlling a person's level of stress.
- Awareness allows a person to acknowledge their illness
- (true/false)Creating an environment that respects and protects basic civil, political, socio-economic and cultural rights is fundamental to mental health
- This stress management technique is a healing and relaxation technique that makes use of the scent of essential oils.
- Health a state of well-being in which the individual realizes his or her own abilities, can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work productively and fruitfully, and is able to make a contribution to his or her community.
- enhancement Assisting a patient to adapt to perceived stressors, changes, or threats that interfere with meeting life demands and roles.
Down
- Mental health promotion involves actions that improve psychological well-being.
- This stress management technique involves tensing and relaxing specific groups of muscles in a systematic way to break the vicious cycle of stress and muscle tension.
- group Organizations of people who share a common disorder and who meet together to discuss their experiences, share ideas, and provide emotional support for one another.
- Journaling, bibliotherapy, meditation, art therapy and sand trays are all techniques for
- (true/false)Being assertive allows persons to stand up for and empower themselves and be confident.
- Mental health is determined by two factors, environmental factors and?
15 Clues: Beliefs about oneself. • Awareness allows a person to acknowledge their illness • Mental health is determined by two factors, environmental factors and? • Includes conflict resolution, realistic goal setting and stress management. • Mental health promotion involves actions that improve psychological well-being. • ...
Mental and Emotional Health 2014-09-10
Across
- someone whose success or behavior serves as an example for you
- ability to adapt effectively and recover from disappointment, difficulty, or crisis
- having enough skills to do something
- non hostile comments that point out problems and encourage improvement
- you advocate for a safe and healthy environment at school and in your community
- the intentional use of unfriendly or offensive behavior
Down
- mental processes that protect individuals from strong or stressful emotions and situations
- to strive to be the best you can be
- the distinctive qualities that describe how a person things, feels, and behaves
- the ability to imagine and understand how someone else feels
- you are honest, loyal and reliable
- how much you value, respect, and feel confident about yourself
- a complex set of characteristics that makes you unique
- signals that tell your mind and body how to react
14 Clues: you are honest, loyal and reliable • to strive to be the best you can be • having enough skills to do something • signals that tell your mind and body how to react • a complex set of characteristics that makes you unique • the intentional use of unfriendly or offensive behavior • the ability to imagine and understand how someone else feels • ...
Mental Challenges - Coach V 2019-06-14
Across
- obsessions are ideas, images, and impulses that run through a person’s mind over and over again.
- a medical doctor who is licensed to treat people with mental health disorders.
- an emotional state characterized by feelings of hopelessness,helplessness, irritability, and/or worthlessness and by a lack of interest in daily life.
- a psychological state in which you feel excessive energy, happiness, and enthusiasm.
- disorder in which someone plucks out body hair from the roots.
- the chemical compound in the brain that gets released just before adrenaline into the blood in the fight-or-flight response.
- an extreme or irrational fear of or aversion to something.
Down
- an anxiety disorder in which people are troubled by persistent, upsetting thoughts (obsess
- such as the fear of dirt or germs.
- illness in which emotions swing between two (“bi”) opposite (“polar”) emotional states. It is the clinical term for manic depression.
- a mark of disgrace associated with a particular circumstance, quality, or person.
- repetitive behaviors
- the creation of a design on the skin with scars.
- frightening event out of one’s usual human experience. It may be a life-threatening event or the experience of witnessing death or injury.
14 Clues: repetitive behaviors • such as the fear of dirt or germs. • the creation of a design on the skin with scars. • an extreme or irrational fear of or aversion to something. • disorder in which someone plucks out body hair from the roots. • a medical doctor who is licensed to treat people with mental health disorders. • ...
Mental Health and Mindfulness 2024-11-18
Across
- A simple physical activity to clear the mind and reduce stress.
- Activities focused on maintaining personal well-being.
- Embracing quiet moments to reflect and recharge.
- Conscious control of inhales and exhales to calm the body.
- Gentle exercises to loosen tight muscles.
- A technique to connect with the present moment.
- Expressing yourself through art, music, or writing.
Down
- Acts that promote positivity and reduce stress.
- Taking a break from technology to recharge mentally.
- Positive statements used to challenge negative thoughts.
- Use of essential oils for relaxation and mental clarity.
- A state of calm and tranquility in mind and surroundings.
- Simple movements to relieve muscle tension and improve circulation.
- Directing attention to one task to reduce overwhelm.
- Letting go of resentment for mental peace.
15 Clues: Gentle exercises to loosen tight muscles. • Letting go of resentment for mental peace. • Acts that promote positivity and reduce stress. • A technique to connect with the present moment. • Embracing quiet moments to reflect and recharge. • Expressing yourself through art, music, or writing. • Taking a break from technology to recharge mentally. • ...
MENTAL HEALTH RISK FACTORS 2025-03-22
Across
- Events:
- Experiences of racism, sexism, or other forms of prejudice.
- or Abuse: Early childhood trauma, neglect, or abuse can have long-term effects.
- and Environmental Factors:
- Stress: High levels of stress from work, relationships, or finances.
- Abuse: Drugs or alcohol can exacerbate mental health problems.
- Illness: Conditions like diabetes or cancer can impact mental health.
Down
- or Poverty: Financial insecurity or lack of stable work.
- Chemistry: Imbalances in neurotransmitters can contribute.
- or Loss: Death of a loved one or significant life changes.
- Family history of mental health conditions can increase risk.
- Factors:
- Self-Esteem: Negative self-perception can increase vulnerability.
- Situations: Natural disasters, wars, or accidents.
- or Loneliness: Lack of social connections.
- Factors:
16 Clues: Events: • Factors: • Factors: • and Environmental Factors: • or Loneliness: Lack of social connections. • Situations: Natural disasters, wars, or accidents. • or Poverty: Financial insecurity or lack of stable work. • Chemistry: Imbalances in neurotransmitters can contribute. • or Loss: Death of a loved one or significant life changes. • ...
bruh 2017-11-30
Across
- 3-dimensional shape, used in the recognition-by-components theory
- ______ cognition: using your own body and actions to express an idea or thought
- problem-solving strategy that is a mental shortcut
- _____ state: the end result/position you would like to be in when the problem is solved
- units of language larger than a sentence
- _______ memory: remembering you need to do something in the future
- _____ effect: remembering items at the end of a list due to how recently you were exposed to them
- _____ aphasia: characterized by slow and effortful speech with good language comprehension
- Theory of _____: the ability to think from someone else’s perspective; bilingual children are theorized to have this ability earlier than monolingual
- the school of thought that believes psychological study must focus on observable and objective behavior
- _____ theory: the idea that when people are asked to imagine a member of a certain category, they most often think of the most typical member of the category
- ______ coding: your mental image is best described with a language-like description, not an analogous image
- ______ technique: acronyms and acrostics are examples of this mnemonic concept
- ______ ambiguity: a sentence that may be ambiguous because of its sentence structure
- a type a schema that features a prototypical sequence of events
Down
- processing information and representing it in your mind; part of long-term memory
- concentration of mental efforts on sensory or mental events
- _____ listening: when participants are instructed to listen to two different speakers at once.
- uses top-down knowledge and experience to interpret surrounding stimuli
- _______ memory: the aspect of long term memory that contains memory about events that occurred in your life
- ______ bias: people estimate difference between two points is larger if there is a border in between
- ____-task: when participants in a study are instructed to both drive and talk on the phone
- _____ method: create a mental image connecting a word you’re trying to learn with a word you think sounds similar
- _____ psychology: refers to the belief that humans have an innate tendency to organize the world around them
- inability to recognize faces
- _____ memory: a form of memory that includes the subsets of iconic and echoic memory
- self-______: a memory technique in which the individual connects an idea or fact to some aspect of themselves, or some other thing they can personally relate to
- employ a solution to an earlier similar problem to the one you are dealing with now
- the smallest unit of meaning in language
- refers to the acquisition, storage, transformation, and use of knowledge
- ______ models: describe connections or relationships between items
31 Clues: inability to recognize faces • units of language larger than a sentence • the smallest unit of meaning in language • problem-solving strategy that is a mental shortcut • concentration of mental efforts on sensory or mental events • a type a schema that features a prototypical sequence of events • 3-dimensional shape, used in the recognition-by-components theory • ...
Introduction to Philosophy of the Human Person 2017-10-16
Across
- The study of man values.
- It is a concept signifies the object as an accident.
- A term tha have partly the same.
- Terms tha have completely differences.
- Is a sentence that asserts or denies something and could either be true of false.
- Is a representation of an object by intellect through which man comprehends.
- Father of Mohism
- The conclusion of a conditional sentence.
- Known for the Theory of Tripartite Soul.
- Study of beauty and perfection.
- Argued for the existence of a Trinity in Christian Belief.
- Is the arguments of reasoning which are valid but are actually invalid.
- A mental act by which the gives direct attention to essentials or the basic similarities of an idea.
- A sentence of fact.
- Wrote the Nicomachean Ethics about practical ethics.
- Is a proposition that unites the subject and the predicate by means of affirmative copula.
- Is a sentence which affirms or denies of something.
- A term wherein one affirms what the other denies.
- Founder of the Eleatic school of philosophy.
- It is a mental act which affirms or denies something.
- Is a act by which the mind puts together two or more ideas to form a single idea.
- One of the founders of Western Philosophy.
Down
- A term that represents the two extremes among object of series belonging to the same class.
- It alludes to relationship between the subject and the oredicate term by their agreement or disagreement as expressed.
- It is being a spoken of a proposition and may also be classified.
- Is a proposition that unites the subject and the predicate by means of negative copula "is not".
- A mental act by which the mind fixes is consideration upon one particular object after having sensed it.
- The science that by natural light of reason studies the first causes ir highest principles of all things.
- It is speaks about the subject.
- It is a open new ideas or limits the biases.
- A mental act which the mind studies the physical characteristics or the individualizing notes of particular object.
- Is a sentence expressing a strong feeling.
- A concept signifies the object as an accident.
- It is the sum-total or particular.
- Helped bring the works and ideas of Aristotle to Europe.
- A mental act by which the mind notices the likeness and differences in the object having the same essence of belonging.
- Something that came before something else and may have influenced or caused it.
- Is a m sentence asking question.
- Philo means.
- Sophia means.
- Is a external sign of concept and the ultimate structural element proposition.
- Founder of Epicureanism school of philosophy.
42 Clues: Philo means. • Sophia means. • Father of Mohism • A sentence of fact. • The study of man values. • It is speaks about the subject. • Study of beauty and perfection. • A term tha have partly the same. • Is a m sentence asking question. • It is the sum-total or particular. • Terms tha have completely differences. • Known for the Theory of Tripartite Soul. • ...
Introduction to Philosophy of the Human Person 2017-10-17
Across
- Argued for the existence of a Trinity in Christian Belief.
- It is a open new ideas or limits the biases.
- Philo means.
- A mental act by which the gives direct attention to essentials or the basic similarities of an idea.
- Study of beauty and perfection.
- Is a sentence expressing a strong feeling.
- It is a concept signifies the object as an accident.
- Known for the Theory of Tripartite Soul.
- Is a sentence which affirms or denies of something.
- It is speaks about the subject.
- The conclusion of a conditional sentence.
- Is a act by which the mind puts together two or more ideas to form a single idea.
- A term tha have partly the same.
- Is a proposition that unites the subject and the predicate by means of affirmative copula.
- Is a representation of an object by intellect through which man comprehends.
- Something that came before something else and may have influenced or caused it.
- Wrote the Nicomachean Ethics about practical ethics.
- Is a sentence that asserts or denies something and could either be true of false.
- The study of man values.
- Is a external sign of concept and the ultimate structural element proposition.
Down
- The science that by natural light of reason studies the first causes ir highest principles of all things.
- Terms tha have completely differences.
- One of the founders of Western Philosophy.
- Sophia means.
- A mental act which the mind studies the physical characteristics or the individualizing notes of particular object.
- Founder of the Eleatic school of philosophy.
- A mental act by which the mind notices the likeness and differences in the object having the same essence of belonging.
- Helped bring the works and ideas of Aristotle to Europe.
- A sentence of fact.
- It is being a spoken of a proposition and may also be classified.
- A concept signifies the object as an accident.
- It is a mental act which affirms or denies something.
- Is a m sentence asking question.
- A term that represents the two extremes among object of series belonging to the same class.
- It alludes to relationship between the subject and the oredicate term by their agreement or disagreement as expressed.
- A mental act by which the mind fixes is consideration upon one particular object after having sensed it.
- It is the sum-total or particular.
- Father of Mohism
- Is a proposition that unites the subject and the predicate by means of negative copula "is not".
- Founder of Epicureanism school of philosophy.
- Is the arguments of reasoning which are valid but are actually invalid.
41 Clues: Philo means. • Sophia means. • Father of Mohism • A sentence of fact. • The study of man values. • Study of beauty and perfection. • It is speaks about the subject. • Is a m sentence asking question. • A term tha have partly the same. • It is the sum-total or particular. • Terms tha have completely differences. • Known for the Theory of Tripartite Soul. • ...
Unit 2 Vocab 2021-10-08
Across
- adj. Having to do with sexual intercourse or diseases transmitted by it.
- adj. Tending to promote, encourage, or assist; helpful.
- adj. Having definite limits.
- adj. Not easily handled, led, taught, or controlled.
- adj. Frenzied, orgiastic
- adj. Noticeable or able to be felt by the senses.
- in Latin means "madness"
- from the Latin word for "end" or "boundary"
- n. A person with an extreme and uncontrollable desire for alcohol.
- v. To stop, seize, or interrupt before arrival.
- adj. Harmonious, ordered, rational, calm
- comes from trahere, the Latin verb
- n./v. To guess.
- n. The curved path that an object makes in space, or that a thrown object follows as it rises and falls to earth
- adj. Of or relating to a drug that produces abnormal and often extreme mental effects such as hallucinations
- adj. Caused by mental or emotional problems rather than by physical illness
- from the Latin verb sequi, meaning "to follow"
- n. An estimate of what might happen in the future based on what is happening now.
- adj. Authoritative and final; specifying perfectly or precisely.
- adj. Lofty, superior, and detached.
- adj. Having rapid and unpredictable changes of mood.
- adj. Unclear, ambiguous, or confusing
- n. A mental illness in which a person has a strong desire to steal things.
- v. Persuade, influence; bring about.
Down
- n. The friction that allows a moving thing to move over a surface without slipping
- from the Latin verb ducere, meaning
- n. Someone who is extremely self-centered and ignores the problems of others.
- adj. Jolly, good-natured.
- n. A mental disorder marked by feelings of great personal power and importance.
- adj. Delirious
- n. A statement that does not follow logically from anything previously said
- n. The act of receiving; a social gathering where guests are formally welcomed.
- adj. Open to some influence; responsive; able to be submitted to an action or process.
- n. soul, personality, mind
- v. Drawn out, continued, or extended
- adj. Arranged in order or in a series.
- comes from the Greek word psyche, meaning "breath, life, soul"
- n. Subtraction; the reaching of a conclusion by reasoning.
- v. To interrupt a conversation with a comment or remark
- adj. Resulting; important.
- comes from Latin verb meaning "take, seize"
- n. One who treats mental or emotional disorders or related bodily ills by psychological means
- v. To keep within limits or location.
- adj. Following in time, order, or place; later.
- n. Temptation to sin; attraction or charm.
- adj. Extremely or immeasurably small
- v. To pull back into something larger or take back something said or written
47 Clues: adj. Delirious • n./v. To guess. • adj. Frenzied, orgiastic • in Latin means "madness" • adj. Jolly, good-natured. • n. soul, personality, mind • adj. Resulting; important. • adj. Having definite limits. • comes from trahere, the Latin verb • from the Latin verb ducere, meaning • adj. Lofty, superior, and detached. • v. Drawn out, continued, or extended • ...
Fad Diets 2024-06-15
8 Clues: 4 phases • False diet • celiac disease • Ancestors diet • fibre rich food • Favourite food in moderation • spiritual,mental, physical health • Causes bad breath,nausea, headaches,mental fatigue
Abnormal Psychology | Ch 1. Introduction and Historical Overview 2024-02-09
Across
- The ritualistic casting out of evil spirits.
- In Freud's theory, the part of the personality that acts as the conscience society's society's moral standards as learned from parents and teachers.
- A person's responses to his or her analyst that seem to reflect attitudes and ways of behaving toward important people in the person's past.
- In Freud's theory, the predominantly conscious part of the personality, responsible for decision-making and for dealing with reality.
- A therapeutic regimen whereby mentally ill patients were released from their restraints and were treated with compassion and dignity rather than with contempt and denigration.
- An individual who has earned a Ph.D. degree or a PsyD. degree and whose training has included an internship in a hospital or clinic.
- A state of unawareness without sensation or thought; in Freud's theory, the part of the personality, in particular, the id impulses or energy, of which the ego is unaware.
- the destructive beliefs and attitudes held by a society about groups considered different in some manner, such as people with mental illness.
- The DSM defines this as a clinically significant behavior or psychological syndrome or pattern. The definition includes a number of key features, including distress, disability, or impaired functioning, violation of social norms, and dysfunction.
- The strengthening os a tendency to exhibit desired behavior by rewarding responses in that situation with the removal of an aversive stimulus.
Down
- A mental health professional who holds a master of social work (M.S.W) degree.
- An approach originally associated with John B. Watson, who proposed focus on observable behavior rather than on consciousness or mental functioning.
- A basic form of learning, sometimes referred to as Pavlovian conditioning, in which a neutral stimulus is repeatedly paired with another stimulus (called the unconditioned stimulus, UCS) that naturally elicits a certain desired response (called the unconditioned response, UCR). After repeated trials, the neural stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus (CS) and evokes the same or a similar response, now called the conditioned response (CR).
- In Freud's theory, reality-distorting strategies unconsciously adopted to protect the ego from anxiety.
- A nurse who receives specialized training in mental illness. An advanced practice psychiatric nurse may prescribe ppsychiatric medications.
- A primarily verbal means of helping troubled individuals change their thoughts, feelings, and behavior to reduce distress and to achieve greater life satisfaction.
- The field concerned with the nature, development, and treatment of psychological disorders.
- Refuges established in western Europe in the 15th century to confine and provide for people with mental illness; forerunners of the mental hospital.
- A principle of learning that holds that behavior is acquired by virtue of its consequences.
- The elimination of a classically conditioned response by the omission of the unconditioned stimulus. In operant conditioning, the elimination of behavior by the omission of reinforcement.
- The strengthening of a tendency to exhibit desired behavior by rewarding responses in that situation with a desired reward.
- The acquisition or elimination of a response as a function of the environmental contingencies of reinforcemnt and punishment.
- Primarily the therapy procedures pioneered by Freud, entailing free association, dream analysis, and working through transference. The term can also refer to the numerous variations of basic Freudian therapy.
- A psychician (M.D) who completes medical training and also specialized postdoctoral training, called residency, in the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of psychological disorders.
- Learning by observing and imitating the behavior of others or teaching by demonstration and providing opportunities for initiation.
25 Clues: The ritualistic casting out of evil spirits. • A mental health professional who holds a master of social work (M.S.W) degree. • The field concerned with the nature, development, and treatment of psychological disorders. • A principle of learning that holds that behavior is acquired by virtue of its consequences. • ...
CRUCIGRAMA 2024-10-19
Across
- Representación teórica que explica un fenómeno en psicología.
- Método básico en la psicología empírica basado en la percepción directa.
- Estudio del crecimiento y cambio a lo largo de la vida.
- Disciplina que estudia los principios de la inferencia válida y el razonamiento.
- Creencia en algo sin necesidad de evidencia empírica, importante en la Edad Media.
- Tratamiento de problemas psicológicos mediante el diálogo con un terapeuta.
- Proceso mental que implica el conocimiento, la percepción y el razonamiento.
- Campo interdisciplinario que estudia los procesos mentales.
- Conjunto de conocimientos obtenidos mediante la observación y el razonamiento.
- Acción realizada para modificar un proceso o situación en psicología.
- Corriente de la psicología que estudia la función de la mente y la conducta.
- Filosofía basada en la observación directa y la experiencia sensorial.
- Conjunto de ideas que explican un fenómeno.
- Corriente filosófica que se basa en la razón y la lógica.
- Ciencia que estudia el comportamiento y los procesos mentales.
- Proceso mental que implica la creación de ideas o la resolución de problemas.
- Respuesta afectiva que incluye experiencias subjetivas, fisiológicas y conductuales.
- Manipulación de información por parte del cerebro para darle sentido.
- Conjunto de prácticas que definen una disciplina científica en un momento dado.
- Capacidad mental para concentrarse en un estímulo particular.
- Periodo histórico de revitalización de la ciencia y el arte, incluyendo avances en la psicología.
- Proceso de búsqueda de conocimientos nuevos o la comprobación de hipótesis.
- Método de investigación basado en la medición numérica de variables.
- Proceso de explicar o darle sentido a los resultados de una investigación.
Down
- Proceso de organizar el conocimiento de manera coherente y estructurada.
- Conjunto de procedimientos sistemáticos utilizados para alcanzar un fin.
- Procedimiento utilizado para medir una variable en psicología.
- Conjunto de pasos sistemáticos para la investigación científica.
- Suposición o conjetura que se plantea para explicar un fenómeno.
- Ciencia que se encarga de recolectar, organizar y analizar datos numéricos.
- Conjunto de acciones y reacciones de un ser vivo frente a estímulos.
- Conjunto de acciones y respuestas de un individuo frente a su entorno.
- Tratamiento aplicado para mejorar el estado emocional o mental.
- Conocimiento adquirido a través de la práctica o la observación.
- Proceso de adquisición de conocimientos, habilidades y conductas.
- Factores que pueden cambiar y que se estudian en la investigación.
- Pensamiento profundo sobre un asunto o situación.
- Estudio de los trastornos mentales y del comportamiento.
- Estudio detallado de un fenómeno o situación para entenderlo mejor.
- Periodo de la psicología en la Edad Media, centrado en la fe y la filosofía escolástica.
- Estudio de cuestiones generales sobre la existencia, el conocimiento y la mente.
- Conocimiento científico que se genera en la Edad Moderna.
- Elemento que provoca una respuesta en un organismo.
- Fuerza interna que impulsa a realizar acciones.
- Estudio del sistema nervioso y sus funciones.
- Proceso mental mediante el cual se llega a una conclusión.
- Estudio de la naturaleza y los límites del conocimiento.
- Proceso mental que permite la interpretación de los estímulos sensoriales.
- Etapa histórica que abarca desde las primeras formas de pensar sobre la mente y el alma.
- Proceso que se refiere a la detección de estímulos mediante los sentidos.
50 Clues: Conjunto de ideas que explican un fenómeno. • Estudio del sistema nervioso y sus funciones. • Fuerza interna que impulsa a realizar acciones. • Pensamiento profundo sobre un asunto o situación. • Elemento que provoca una respuesta en un organismo. • Estudio del crecimiento y cambio a lo largo de la vida. • Estudio de los trastornos mentales y del comportamiento. • ...
Psychological problems crossword 2025-12-14
Across
- Too much dopamine affects this which causes catatonic behaviour
- Too much dopamine affects this which is a temporary state of mind/feeling
- The racial/ethnic group with lower than average rate of schizophrenia diagnosis
- The gender that has a higher rate of mental health disorder diagnoses
- The non-amphetamine 'drug' used in Daniel et al's study
- The result of someone's beliefs which if irrational, can lead to depression
- The debate that explains behaviour by looking at the whole person/picture
- A symptom of depression where someone sleeps too much or too little
- A symptom of schizophrenia where you are awake but unresponsive
- The agonist used in Daniel et al's study
- The number of new cases of mental health problems occurring in a time period
- The global manual used to diagnose mental health disorders
- The debate that explains behaviour by reducing it down to one single cause
- How common mental health disorders are
- Patients were stabilised on this in Daniel et al's study
- Patients were checked to make sure they were not alcohol or drug addicts
- In the ABC model, these can be rational or irrational
- The cognitive task
- Issues in diagnosis due to psychiatrists typically being from a higher social class
- This is dysfunctional in someone with schizophrenia which causes problems in cognitive functioning
- How people act on their stigma
- A symptom of schizophrenia - these can be visual and/or auditory
Down
- A strong sense of disapproval of something
- The theory that schizophrenia is caused by too much of a certain neurotransmitter
- This is smaller because of reduced grey matter in someone with schizophrenia
- Symptoms of schizophrenia that remove daily functioning
- The US state in Daniel et al's study
- When the majority does not accept and actively excludes individuals with schizophrenia
- The idea that mental health exists on a spectrum
- Correlations are unable to find this out
- The theory that indiviudals float to the bottom of society when they have a mental health problem
- Treatment while living at home rather than staying in a hospital
- Symptoms of schizophrenia that add abnormal experiences
- The sensori-motor control task
- appetite A symptom of depression that can lead to weight loss
- The idea that people withdraw from normal activities considered important in society
- The number of controls used in Daniel et al's study
- The racial/ethnic group with highest rate of schizophrenia diagnosis
- People with schizophrenia have a higher number of this that receives dopamine
- A chemical that increases the amount of dopamine
- The hospital Daniel et al gathered their sample from
- The ABC model supports this debate as it believes people essentially choose to develop depression
- A symptom of schizophrenia when you believe someone/something else is controlling you
- The type of experimental measures design used in Daniel et al's study
- Too much dopamine affects this which causes delusions and hallucinations
- The social class most diagnosed with schizophrenia
- The situation that triggers an individual to develop depression
- This is deflated in someone with schizophrenia
- The number of patients in Daniel et al's study
49 Clues: The cognitive task • The sensori-motor control task • How people act on their stigma • The US state in Daniel et al's study • How common mental health disorders are • Correlations are unable to find this out • The agonist used in Daniel et al's study • A strong sense of disapproval of something • This is deflated in someone with schizophrenia • ...
HEALTH CROSSWORD 2013-11-17
Across
- The basic unit of society and includes two or more people joined by blood marriage adoption or a desire to support one another
- The sense of what to do or say to avoid offending others
- When both sides in a conflict agree to give up something in order to reach a solution that satisfies everyone
- Someone you see occasionally or know casually
- preassure The influence that your peer group has on you
- Places to get information, support, and advice
- To fulfill physical mental emotional and social needs
- communication Expressing feelings, thoughts, or experiences with words, either by speaking or writing
- Relationship with someone you know trust and regard with affection
- behaviors Actions or choices that may harm you or others
- disorder Extreme fears of real or imaginary situations that get in the way of normal activities
- language Postures, gestures, and facial expressions
Down
- The concious active choice not to participate in high risk behaviors
- disorder Mental and emotional problem in which person undergoes mood swings that seem extreme, inapropiate, or last a long time
- Exchange of information through the use of words or actions
- and emotional disorders Illnesses that affect a person´s thoughts feelings, and behavior
- response Declares your position strongly and confidently
- People close to you in age who are a lot like you
- Suggestion to seek help or information from another person or place
- The act of killing oneself on purpose
- communication Getting messages across without using words
21 Clues: The act of killing oneself on purpose • Someone you see occasionally or know casually • Places to get information, support, and advice • People close to you in age who are a lot like you • language Postures, gestures, and facial expressions • To fulfill physical mental emotional and social needs • preassure The influence that your peer group has on you • ...
PSYC341 Written Assignment 2017-05-08
Across
- basic unit of spoken language such as sounds a,k, and th
- 3D shapes that make up other shapes
- Deficits in episodic memory
- processes without intention, consciousness, or effort
- Mirror image of Prosopagnosia
- the initial reception of information.
- when near surfaces overlap far surfaces
- Joined sensations, i.e. seeing sound, hearing shapes, tasting colors
- when you can't tell faces apart after brain damage
- Interfering earlier memories
- understanding basic structures of cognition
- Study of how we create words by combining morphemes. Morphemes are the basic unit of meaning.
- concentration of mental effort on sensory or mental events
- Formant frequencies
- Condition where you cannot create mental images in your mind.
- the interpretation of sensation.
Down
- Area of psycholinguistics that examines the meaning of words and sentences
- effect of people take a long time to name the ink color when that color is used in printing an incongruent word
- Grammatical rules that govern how we organize word into sentences
- Internal Representations
- processes with conscious, required effort, and intention
- talks about purpose/function of thoughts
- Interfering later memories
- only interested in observable behavior
- simple well structured sequence of events in a specific order that are associated with a highly familiar activity
- looking inward
- when you repeat everything someone tells you on the phone
- organized and generalized knowledge of our world/situation/event/person/etc.
- recognition of the object.
- reality is organized or reduced to the simplest form possible
30 Clues: looking inward • Formant frequencies • Internal Representations • Interfering later memories • recognition of the object. • Deficits in episodic memory • Interfering earlier memories • Mirror image of Prosopagnosia • the interpretation of sensation. • 3D shapes that make up other shapes • the initial reception of information. • only interested in observable behavior • ...
Special care counselor 2020-10-17
Across
- what we need to live
- government in vote
- working with children
- a person who is welcoming and undersanting
- action made between two people who are having fun
- action of too much emotion
- verb
- even the criminals can make use of them
- gesture that our mouth makes
- activity that children do with each other
- appearance of a person
- contrary of young
- get a message across
- the sense of the wise
- way of acting
- there are 3 in elementary school
- be comfortable with the same person
- look at the person without talking
- two people who like each other
- opposite of sick
- a judgment made by a person
- two people joined together
- person with a drug problem
- what doctors find in people
Down
- courage of one person
- gesture made to a person to help him or her
- verb that produces
- mental illness of the elderly
- forget a few things
- gesture of a sexual nature
- stressful mental illness
- young humain
- friend in class
- opposite of sad
- listen attentively to what you have to say
- what angels don't have anymore
- insecure person
- the teachers teach them to us
- opposite of war
- Do it again
- no one on the street
- mental disorders
- opposite of cruel
- collaborative activity
- contrary of health
- waiting impatiently
- routine at the doctor's office
- synonymous with observation
48 Clues: verb • Do it again • young humain • way of acting • friend in class • opposite of sad • insecure person • opposite of war • mental disorders • opposite of sick • contrary of young • opposite of cruel • verb that produces • government in vote • contrary of health • forget a few things • waiting impatiently • what we need to live • no one on the street • get a message across • courage of one person • ...
Year 10 Psychology 2021-06-10
Across
- expressions, used to communicate without words
- explains a combination of how and what you need to complete your study
- observable patterns in humans and animals
- defining human behaviour under 7 categories
- goal, to understand, prescribe and predict and control human behaviour and mental processes.
- this is the result as it depends on something else
- someone with slightly more empathy but have experienced trauma
- refers to the likelihood of a person committing a serious act of violence with little provocation
- process, unobservable and often hard to assess
- the systematic study of the brain and mental processes including perception, cognition and emotion
- can prescribe medication but has to study for longer
- method, the seven steps used in psychological research
- a small group taken from your wider population
Down
- this is manipulated or changed
- expressions, tell us the truth before you attempt to lie
- explaining the aim and results of your study to participants after its over
- when people don't tell the truth
- any other variable that could impact the study
- a code of practice used by all Psychologists
- the entire group you're aiming to generalise your research too
- determining what you're going to test in a study
- someone who lacks empathy and is generally genetic.
- collected, analysed and interpreted in a study
- someone who is obsessed with themselves and has little regard for punishment
- a prediction about what is going to happen in the experiment
25 Clues: this is manipulated or changed • when people don't tell the truth • observable patterns in humans and animals • defining human behaviour under 7 categories • a code of practice used by all Psychologists • expressions, used to communicate without words • any other variable that could impact the study • collected, analysed and interpreted in a study • ...
Health 2022-10-21
Across
- humor;
- A feeling of constant tiredness or weakness
- Being scared of a particular thing
- in spirituality;
- How we react when we feel under pressure or threatened.
- Not functioning right
- feeling sadness or loneliness
- Not functioning normal
- disorders Having great amount of stress that is not normal
- Having changes in mood
- Practicing meditation and relaxation techniques;
- people experiencing normal grief and bereavement have a period of sorrow, numbness, and even guilt and anger.
- time with friends;
- deep sorrow, especially that caused by someone's death
- time to yourself;
- needs Feelings or conditions we need to feel happy, fulfilled, or at peace
- A hormone that indicates that you are in distress
Down
- Keeping track of your daily to-do list and getting things done on time
- someone who stresses
- Having a good worry
- The combination of characteristics or qualities that form an individual's distinctive character.
- Make something suitable
- What you feel
- Having a CERTAIN feeling.
- Mental health encompasses emotional, psychological, and social well-being
- the capacity to recover quickly from difficulties; toughness.
- Extreme anxiety, sorrow, or pain.
- time on your hobbies;
- How you feel about yourself
- confident about the future
- An idea of the self constructed from the beliefs one holds about oneself and the responses of others.
- in physical activity or exercise;
- In a stressful moment
- Fear and dread of something
34 Clues: humor; • What you feel • in spirituality; • time to yourself; • time with friends; • Having a good worry • someone who stresses • Not functioning right • time on your hobbies; • In a stressful moment • Not functioning normal • Having changes in mood • Make something suitable • Having a CERTAIN feeling. • confident about the future • How you feel about yourself • Fear and dread of something • ...
Memory and Cognition 2023-11-28
Across
- How close something is to the usual or most common example in a group
- The mental representation of a category.
- Occurs when the response to a stimulus increases with exposure
- non-verbal movements that express meaning or emotions.
- are memory aids that make it easier to remember information
- grouping information to make it easier to remember in short-term memory
- cognitive (or thinking) strategies that simplify decision making by using mental short-cuts
- your mental representation of a category
- An individual’s cognitive capability
- A term describing people who report experiencing very little to no mental imagery
- Repeating spoken words as you hear them
- When an idea or solution has a low probability of occurrence
Down
- Occurs when the response to a stimulus decreases with exposure.
- The systematic and predictable mistakes that influence the judgment of even very talented human beings.
- knowledge about situation/event/person/etc
- Group to which a person does not belong
- The smallest unit of sound
- The bias to be systematically affected by the way in which information is presented, while holding the objective information constant.
- the act of reflecting on and examining one's own thoughts, feelings, and experiences
- An example in memory that is labeled as being in a particular category.
- The fading of memories with the passage of time
- “rules” of a language
- The process of accessing stored information.
- Words and expressions
- things that “belong together” b/c share properties
25 Clues: “rules” of a language • Words and expressions • The smallest unit of sound • An individual’s cognitive capability • Group to which a person does not belong • Repeating spoken words as you hear them • The mental representation of a category. • your mental representation of a category • knowledge about situation/event/person/etc • The process of accessing stored information. • ...
Abnormal Psychology 2025-03-12
Across
- A cultural approach to therapy that assumes universal symptoms across cultures.
- The most commonly used classification system for mental disorders in the United States.
- A classification system for mental disorders created by the World Health Organization.
- A neurotransmitter often associated with depression like low levels are linked to mood disorders
- A cultural therapy approach that uses indigenous practices and beliefs.
- A type of antidepressant that selectively blocks serotonin reuptake.
- A study that tested the effectiveness of the Bench Intervention in Zimbabwe.
- A therapy that integrates mindfulness meditation with cognitive-behavioral techniques.
- A cognitive theory of depression that includes the negative triad and negative schema.
- A term for the process of repeatedly thinking about negative feelings and their causes.
- A type of antidepressant that increases levels of norepinephrine and serotonin.
Down
- A study that linked hippocampal volume to depression.
- A study that compared the effectiveness of CBT and antidepressants for adolescents.
- A psychological disorder marked by a loss of interest and a continuous sense of sadness.
- A type of therapy that focuses on changing negative thought patterns.
- A study by Kirmayer that proposed the cultural explanatory model for mental illness.
- A study that explored cultural influences on depression in Japan.
- A study that linked the 5-HTT gene to depression.
- A hormone released during stress that is linked to depression and reduced neurogenesis.
- A study that explored the effectiveness of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy.
20 Clues: A study that linked the 5-HTT gene to depression. • A study that linked hippocampal volume to depression. • A study that explored cultural influences on depression in Japan. • A type of antidepressant that selectively blocks serotonin reuptake. • A type of therapy that focuses on changing negative thought patterns. • ...
Chapter 3 & 4 Crossword Puzzleq 2025-09-12
Across
- ability to recover, or bounce back from extreme or prolonged stress
- negative stress
- Losing a loved one is an example of this type of stressor
- a mental disorder where a person binges and purges
- post traumatic stress disorder
- trained professionals who help people work through issues and challenges in their lives
- positive stress
- losing your home to a hurricane would be an example of this type of stressor
- breathing rate increases, sugar is released into blood, flow of blood to skin is reduced, sweating increases, muscles tense, more energy is produced
- this personality group often appears cold and distant, and cannot form close relationships
- obsessive compulsive disorder
- anxiety that is focused on a specific issue
- abnormal thoughts or feelings
Down
- think more negatively, and tend to dwell on stressful situations
- think more positively, and are more likely to move through stress efficiently
- stage of stress where the body adapts and lives with the stress
- a sudden episode of intense fear or anxiety that typically peaks within minutes
- this personality group appears selfish and demanding.
- the "thing" that causes stress
- this personaity group carries a strong need for approval
- anxiety that isn't associated with a specific thing.
- medical doctors who study medicine and mental health
- stage of stress where the body can no longer keep up with demands
- a mental disorder where the person avoids eating
24 Clues: negative stress • positive stress • obsessive compulsive disorder • abnormal thoughts or feelings • post traumatic stress disorder • the "thing" that causes stress • anxiety that is focused on a specific issue • a mental disorder where the person avoids eating • a mental disorder where a person binges and purges • anxiety that isn't associated with a specific thing. • ...
Wellness 2025-05-12
Across
- – The state of being healthy and comfortable, physically and mentally.
- – Limits that protect your energy and emotional well-being.
- – Professional mental health support for processing challenges.
- – A state of emotional, physical, and mental exhaustion.
- – Engaging in expressive outlets for emotional release.
- – Kind concern for others, and for yourself.
- – Supporting and speaking out for the rights of clients.
- – The act of releasing stress or tension after work.
- – Being present and fully engaged in the moment.
- – Essential for mental clarity and emotional regulation.
- – Fellow professionals who can offer peer support.
- – Regular professional support for reflection and guidance.
- – The process of nourishing your body with healthy foods.
- – The ability to understand and share the feelings of others.
- – The internal dialogue that influences self-perception.
- – Essential for separating personal and professional life.
Down
- – Something that helps bring back energy or well-being.
- – A natural response to loss, often encountered in the field.
- – A practice of recognizing and appreciating the positives.
- – A type of trauma experienced through others’ stories.
- – Keeps your personal space safe and respected.
- – The ability to manage work and personal life effectively.
- – The capacity to recover from stress or adversity.
- – A network that provides belonging and mutual care.
- – Thoughtful consideration of one’s experiences and actions.
- – A natural stress reliever and mood booster.
- – Emotional or practical help from others.
- – A technique used to calm the mind and reduce stress.
- – Physical activity that boosts both body and mood.
- – Staying physically and mentally alert by drinking water.
30 Clues: – Emotional or practical help from others. • – Kind concern for others, and for yourself. • – A natural stress reliever and mood booster. • – Keeps your personal space safe and respected. • – Being present and fully engaged in the moment. • – Fellow professionals who can offer peer support. • – The capacity to recover from stress or adversity. • ...
Chapter 21-23 Crossword 2025-09-18
Across
- A mental need for a drug to feel good or function.
- A type of drug that slows down the central nervous system.
- The use or sale of drugs that are illegal or not permitted.
- The improper or nonmedical use of chemical substances.
- The percentage of alcohol in a person’s bloodstream.
- A substance that temporarily increases alertness or energy.
- Addictive chemical in tobacco that affects the brain and nervous system.
- The chemical process where yeast converts sugars into alcohol.
- Any substance capable of causing cancer in living tissue.
- Smoke exhaled by a smoker, directly inhaled into the lungs.
- Sticky, dark substance in tobacco smoke that damages the lungs.
- r ugs Substances that cannot be lawfully manufactured, bought, or sold by anyone.
Down
- The type of alcohol found in beverages; a powerful and addictive drug.
- The physical and mental impairment caused by alcohol or another substance.
- A physical chemical need for a drug in the body.
- A dangerous or fatal reaction to taking too much of a drug.
- Tobacco product that is chewed, sniffed, or placed in the mouth, not burned.
- A chronic dependence—mental or physical—on a drug.
- An irrational suspiciousness or distrust of others.
- The body’s process of breaking down substances.
- A plant whose leaves, buds, and flowers are smoked for their effects.
- A gas exhaled by smokers and produced during combustion; colorless and odorless.
- Excessive use of alcohol, often starting before age 18.
23 Clues: The body’s process of breaking down substances. • A physical chemical need for a drug in the body. • A mental need for a drug to feel good or function. • A chronic dependence—mental or physical—on a drug. • An irrational suspiciousness or distrust of others. • The percentage of alcohol in a person’s bloodstream. • ...
Health Vocab 2025-09-03
Across
- Disorder An illness that involves mood extremes that interfere with everyday
- An ongoing dialogue between a patient and mental health
- due to their mental health issues.
- aimed at finding the cause of the problem.
- The act of intentionally taking one’s own life; a serious mental health issue.
- to perform acts that could be harmful to themselves or others.
- A deeply distressing or disturbing experience that can lead to emotional and
- A strong, irrational fear of something specific, such as heights or social
- accompanied by physical symptoms such as trembling and shortness of breath.
- problems.
- Anxiety Disorder (GAD) - A condition characterized by excessive worry
Down
- Therapy A treatment method designed to identify and correct distorted
- Disorder A condition marked by sudden and unexplained feelings of terror,
- or behavioral symptoms.
- rewards and reinforcements.
- The condition of feeling uneasy or worried about what may happen.Depression - A prolonged feeling of helplessness, hopelessness, and sadness, often
- Disorder A reaction to a specific life event that causes significant
- tension for no apparent reason.
- medical help.
- Therapy A treatment process that focuses on changing unwanted behaviors
- Control Disorder A condition where an individual has difficulty resisting
- such as depression and bipolar disorder.
- An irresistible urge to behave in a certain way, often related to obsessive
- A mark of shame or disapproval that results in an individual being shunned or
- patterns that can lead to troublesome feelings and behaviors.
25 Clues: problems. • medical help. • or behavioral symptoms. • rewards and reinforcements. • tension for no apparent reason. • due to their mental health issues. • such as depression and bipolar disorder. • aimed at finding the cause of the problem. • An ongoing dialogue between a patient and mental health • patterns that can lead to troublesome feelings and behaviors. • ...
Lengkapkan teka silang kata 2023-03-28
Across
- Daun... boleh dijadikan sebagai dadah
- ...ialah faktor pengambilan dadah
- Peratus...merosot merupakan akibat pengambilan dadah
- Ialah bahan kimia yang boleh menimbulkan perubahan terhadap psikologi, emosi atau tingkah laku seseorang
- Kesihatan diri...akibat pengambilan dadah
- ingatlah,dadah...negara
- Hilang...merupakan salah satu kesan negatifpengambilan dadah
Down
- Gas yang dibebaskan akibat merokok...
- ...Paru-paru merupakan salah satu penyakit saluran kronik
- ...jiwa ialah faktor pengambilan dadah
- Mata...merupakan kesan negatif pengambilan dadah
- dadah bukan sahaja memberikan kesan negatif ke atas mental malahan...mental dan fizikal diri
- Perasaan ingin...menyebabkan pengambilan dadah
13 Clues: ingatlah,dadah...negara • ...ialah faktor pengambilan dadah • Gas yang dibebaskan akibat merokok... • Daun... boleh dijadikan sebagai dadah • ...jiwa ialah faktor pengambilan dadah • Kesihatan diri...akibat pengambilan dadah • Perasaan ingin...menyebabkan pengambilan dadah • Mata...merupakan kesan negatif pengambilan dadah • ...
chapter 9-10 outsiders 2024-06-04
Across
- not enjoying the same standard of living or rights as the majority of people in a society.
- lacking movement action or change
- actions or procedures characterized by considerable flair or mental agility.
- unable to think clearly
- extreme mental or physical suffering
- cautious or wary due to suspicion
Down
- filled with awe and wonder
- an institution to which youthful offenders are sent as an alternative to prison; a reform school.
- feeling or expressing revulsion
- to make a facial expression
- make someone unable to breathe
- to be superior
- making fun of someone
13 Clues: to be superior • making fun of someone • unable to think clearly • filled with awe and wonder • to make a facial expression • make someone unable to breathe • feeling or expressing revulsion • lacking movement action or change • cautious or wary due to suspicion • extreme mental or physical suffering • actions or procedures characterized by considerable flair or mental agility. • ...
Drug / Use Abuse 2023-04-11
Across
- present member of social
- Mental health
- Large marsupial
- Body motions such as shrugs
- Person who brings appeal to court
- Against the law
Down
- is a mean person
- Some drink this to excess
- a lesson given my mainly speaking
- Blood Alcohol
- A term used to describe the physical and mental symptoms that a person has when they suddenly stop or cut back the use of an addictive substance, such as opiates and opioids, nicotine products, or alcohol.
- forbidden by law
- A drug 100x stronger than fentanyl
13 Clues: Blood Alcohol • Mental health • Large marsupial • Against the law • is a mean person • forbidden by law • present member of social • Some drink this to excess • Body motions such as shrugs • a lesson given my mainly speaking • Person who brings appeal to court • A drug 100x stronger than fentanyl • ...
Winn-Dixie Ch. 11-15 2023-04-12
Across
- relating to drama; exciting
- sudden, violent physical reaction or a strong emotion
- involving physical or mental disease
- regular or usual activities
- less advanced in mental, physical, or social development
- a claim that is legal
- to pull or be pulled into pieces
Down
- when 3 or more roads join and traffic must go in a circle
- to have in mind as an aim or goal; plan
- stuck inside a small place
- to cry with weak, broken, whining sounds
- ability to please or delight
- person who has committed a crime
13 Clues: a claim that is legal • stuck inside a small place • relating to drama; exciting • regular or usual activities • ability to please or delight • person who has committed a crime • to pull or be pulled into pieces • involving physical or mental disease • to have in mind as an aim or goal; plan • to cry with weak, broken, whining sounds • ...
Health Care Systems 2023-09-15
Across
- centers provide eye care
- health care provide health care in industries
- health care provide care in the home
- offices provides mouth care
- test samples taken at the doctor office
- treat a wide range of conditions and emergency care
Down
- facilities provide help with physical disabilities
- provide care for terminally ill
- offices have one or several doctors to treat patients
- health facilities treat patients with mental disorders
- hospitals treat certain conditions and emergency care
- health provide care in the school setting
- term care facilities provide care for residents
13 Clues: centers provide eye care • offices provides mouth care • provide care for terminally ill • health care provide care in the home • test samples taken at the doctor office • health provide care in the school setting • health care provide health care in industries • term care facilities provide care for residents • facilities provide help with physical disabilities • ...
Mind Matters 2025-11-25
Across
- State of emotional, psychological, and social well-being
- Positive phrase you repeat to encourage yourself
- Short mental break to reduce stress
- Close friend you can talk to about problems
- Emotion opposite of joy
- Professional who diagnoses mental illness and prescribes medication
- A healthy way to express feelings through writing or drawing
Down
- Physical activity often recommended for boosting mood
- A trained professional who provides therapy
- Practice of focusing on the present moment
- Persistent feeling of sadness or loss of interest
- Deep relaxation technique involving controlled breathing
- Overwhelming worry about future events
13 Clues: Emotion opposite of joy • Short mental break to reduce stress • Overwhelming worry about future events • Practice of focusing on the present moment • A trained professional who provides therapy • Close friend you can talk to about problems • Positive phrase you repeat to encourage yourself • Persistent feeling of sadness or loss of interest • ...
im zach and im a boss 2012-11-26
19 Clues: ask for • garbage • tied up • used up • distance • verified • draw back • to say no • a meeting • struggles • false name • quick look • usualmanner • isane person • thin porridge • working right • small in size • to stay clear of • mental suffering
PSYC341 Crossword 2017-12-04
Across
- Type of memory that focuses on specific events that have happened to you
- Condition that is associated with the inability to create mental images. People with this condition can describe what they can see, but they are not able to imagine it
- Mental strategies intended to improve recall. These could include things like the keyword method, method of loci, chunking, etc.
- Phenomenon where people take longer to identify a word when the ink color differs from the printed color. For example, seeing the word “Blue” but it is printed in a red ink
- A series of events or instructions that represent the layout of a familiar activity
- Monocular depth cue where close objects appear to move faster than objects that are far away
- Your knowledge about your cognition and cognitive processes
- This is an ideal or typical representation of a category. For example, a tabby would be a more typical representation of the category “cat” than a leopard would be
- a mental representation that is very similar to the actual object
- Principle which states that recall is best when in the same environment in which you first learned the material
- When taking memory tests, there is a better recall for information presented at the beginning of a list, possibly because there is more time to rehearse this material
- In language, the basic unit that conveys meaning
- Hypothesis that your ability to learn a new language is limited to certain times of your life. The evidence suggests an individual will have more success in learning another language if they do so before puberty
- Field of Psychology which says that a whole is better than its parts. This is the tendency of people to mentally organize what they see into its simplest form
- Term for a person who is fluent in two languages
- A problem solving strategy that is seen as a mental shortcut. These usually, but do not always, produce the correct answer
Down
- The most basic units of language. These are often sounds of syllables
- Our mental recreation of the environment that surrounds us
- The area of linguistics that focuses on the meaning of words
- This is the phenomenon where two or more senses are linked together. Examples may include seeing sounds or tasting colors
- Looking inward and objectively attempting to analyze one’s own sensations
- Problem-solving strategy in which you choose the path that seems to lead you most directly towards your goal
- You will remember more material if you spread your studying out over time
- Memory strategy where we break something large into smaller, more meaningful subgroups
- The rules of grammar that dictate how we structure our sentences
- Type of algorithm where you test out all possible solutions to the problem
- When taking memory tests, there is a better recall of information presented at the end of a list, possibly because it is most fresh in someone’s mind
- The gaining of knowledge and use of mental activities
- Type of stimulus which is known as the actual object in the environment
- A phenomenon where people claim to not be able to see an object, yet they can describe things about the objects location in space
30 Clues: In language, the basic unit that conveys meaning • Term for a person who is fluent in two languages • The gaining of knowledge and use of mental activities • Our mental recreation of the environment that surrounds us • Your knowledge about your cognition and cognitive processes • The area of linguistics that focuses on the meaning of words • ...
Cumulative Exam 2 Unit 5 2025-01-07
Across
- a language’s set of rules for deriving meaning from sounds
- language controls the way we think and interpret the world around us (2)
- passion and perseverance in the pursuit of long-term goals
- assessed by intelligence tests which present well-defined problems having a single right answer
- the ability to perceive understand manage and use emotions (2)
- a measure of memory that assesses the amount of time saved when learning material again
- processing many aspects of a problem simultaneously (2)
- a test designed to predict a person’s future performance or capacity to learn (2)
- a momentary sensory memory of auditory stimuli if attention is elsewhere lasting about 3 to 4 seconds
- set of rules for combining words into grammatically sensible sentences
- activated memory that holds a few items briefly (2)
- the process of getting information into the memory system
- the persistence of learning over time
- a system of rules that enables us to communicate with and understand others
- the immediate very brief recording of sensory information in the memory system (2)
- a methodical logical rule or procedure that guarantees solving a particular problem
- the smallest unit that carries meaning in a language
- a mental grouping of similar objects, events, ideas, or people
- the ability to learn from experience solve problems and use knowledge to adapt to new situations
- ability to adapt to new situations and generate novel ideas
- a statistical procedure that identifies clusters of related items on a test (2)
Down
- a tendency to search for information that supports our preconceptions and to ignore or distort contradictory evidence (2)
- encoding on a basic level (2)
- a method for assessing an individual’s mental aptitude and comparing them with those of others using a numerical score (2)
- all the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating
- the process of getting information out of memory storage
- in cognition the inability to see a problem from a new perspective
- a tendency to approach a problem in one particular way that has often been successful in the past (2)
- a test designed to assess what a person has learned (2)
- a mental image or best example of a category
- idea that language affects thought (2)
- in a language the smallest distinctive sound unit
- underlies all mental abilities and is therefore measured by every task on an intelligence test (2)
- a measure of memory in which the person identifies items previously learned
- a momentary sensory memory of visual stimuli lasting no more than a few tenths of a second
- the relatively permanent and limitless storehouse of the memory system (2)
- a condition in which a person otherwise limited in mental ability has an exceptional specific skill (2)
- the process of retaining encoded information over time
- a simple thinking strategy that often allows us to make judgments and solve problems efficiently
- required for everyday tasks that may be poorly defined and may have multiple solutions
- encoding semantically based on the meaning of the words (2)
- a measure of memory in which the person must retrieve information learned earlier
42 Clues: encoding on a basic level (2) • the persistence of learning over time • idea that language affects thought (2) • a mental image or best example of a category • in a language the smallest distinctive sound unit • activated memory that holds a few items briefly (2) • the smallest unit that carries meaning in a language • ...
Prior What?!!? 2025-09-09
Across
- Services that help a person with a mental or physical disability maintain or improve skills needed for daily living. These may be subject to different prior authorization rules than other services.
- The presence of both a mental health disorder and a substance use disorder in the same person. This can complicate the prior authorization process.
- A utilization management protocol that requires a patient to first try a less expensive or preferred medication or treatment before the insurance plan will cover a more expensive or non-preferred alternative.
- A mental health condition where the person's use of a substance, like alcohol or drugs, leads to health problems or an inability to meet their work, school, or home responsibilities.
- A formal request to an insurance company to reconsider a denied prior authorization request or claim.
- A broad term that encompasses both mental health and substance use disorders.
- The refusal by an insurance company to cover a specific service.
- Standardized letter and number combinations used by healthcare providers to classify and document a patient's diagnosis.
- An authorization for a service that has already been provided. This is usually only granted in specific circumstances, such as an emergency.
- Mental health care that requires a patient to stay overnight at a hospital or residential facility.
- A review process conducted after a patient has been admitted to a higher level of care to determine if continued services are medically necessary.
- A group of healthcare providers, hospitals, and clinics that have a contract with an insurance plan to provide services at a discounted rate.
Down
- A specific service or condition that is not covered by an insurance plan.
- Standardized codes used to describe the medical, surgical, and diagnostic services provided by a healthcare professional.
- The standard used by an insurance company to determine if a service or treatment is reasonable, necessary, and appropriate for a patient's condition. This is often based on clinical guidelines and evidence-based practices.
- The process of getting pre-approval from a health insurance plan before a patient receives a specific medical service, treatment, or medication. It's also known as preauthorization, precertification, or prior approval.
- A set of techniques used by health insurance plans to manage healthcare costs by influencing patient care decisions. Prior authorization is a key component of this.
- A written order from a primary care physician to a patient to see a specialist, which is often required by HMO plans.
- The first step in the prior authorization process where the insurance company reviews the request to ensure all necessary information has been submitted.
- A collaborative process where a professional helps a patient navigate the healthcare system, including accessing services, resources, and coordinating care.
- A decision by an insurance company to deny or reduce a requested service or treatment.
- The specific, evidence-based guidelines and standards that an insurance company uses to evaluate the medical necessity of a treatment.
- Mental health care services that a patient receives without being admitted to a hospital or residential facility, such as individual therapy, group therapy, or medication management.
- A healthcare provider or facility that does not have a contract with a patient's insurance plan. Prior authorization for out-of-network services can be more complex and costly.
24 Clues: The refusal by an insurance company to cover a specific service. • A specific service or condition that is not covered by an insurance plan. • A broad term that encompasses both mental health and substance use disorders. • A decision by an insurance company to deny or reduce a requested service or treatment. • ...
10 CODES 2023-09-15
Out of My Mind 2021-05-14
16 Clues: Sad • Leak • Guide • Swing • Tremble • Surround • Overcome • Very Fine • Objection • Preparation • Come into view • Too much pride • Brief or Abrupt • Done with hands • Recover quickly • Mental or Emotional strain
Breaks are important 2023-01-23
7 Clues: a pause in work • make someone unhappy • the state of being happy • delaying or postponing something • having had normal pattern disrupted • experiencing mental or emotional strain • a person’s condition with regard to their mental state
44444444 2024-01-08
8 Clues: in • back • a limit on • confine forcibly • harsh biting quilty • pain mental suffering • - separate from solids • exccessive physical or mental tension
Health 2017-02-23
Across
- setting the process of working towards something you want to accomplish
- who can diagnose a mental illness
- emotional sign of stress
- who is one person that influences your self-esteem
- faster what is a physical sign of stress
- messages taking responsibility of your feeling
- how you feel about yourself
- what is one body stress management
- attention what is one way of being an effective communicator
- what does S stand for in the smart goal model
- what is one roadblock to communication
- the exchange of thoughts feeling or beliefs between two or more people
- what is one mind stress management
- what is one of the roadblocks of communication
- what is one of the types of communication
- factors conditions that decrease the likelihood that people will deal with stress effectively
Down
- decision harder, takes a long time, greater impact
- making process of making a choice
- what is one way of communication
- factors conditions that help people deal more effectively with stressful situation
- what is one of listening
- the body's response to physical mental of emotional tension
- the way you view yourself
- what does the M stand for in the smart goal model
- what is one teen stressor
- who is most likely to get a mental illness
- anything that causes stress
- decision easy, no major, impact, very little thought
- message when your words say one thing but your body or tone says another
29 Clues: emotional sign of stress • what is one of listening • the way you view yourself • what is one teen stressor • how you feel about yourself • anything that causes stress • what is one way of communication • who can diagnose a mental illness • making process of making a choice • what is one body stress management • what is one mind stress management • ...
Buddhism and Hinduism ,Lance Hensley 2017-08-22
Across
- The ancient scriptures of Hinduism written in four major volumes
- A sacred religious prayer
- Extinction of the fires of attachment, hatred and delusion that cause suffering; liberation from cyclic existence
- A collection of some of the most influential Hindu texts, dealing with philosophy and mysticism
- One book of the early Vedas which describes sacrificial formula to be used in performing rites to the deities.
- Action based on kindness, respect, truthfulness, timeliness and wisdom
- The ritualistic worship of a deity
- Appreciative or empathetic joy
- Moral or ethical conduct
- A book of knowledge
- A wish usually granted by a god to any person
- The qualities of character to be perfected in order to become a Buddha
- The auspicious power of wholesome action that brings positive karmic results
- An act of violence
- Enlightened one;someone whose mind is completely free from the defilement
- Without Harm
- Wisdom
Down
- To join
- The physical and mental energy needed for diligent mindfulness practice
- The law of cause and effect
- Discipline
- Careful attention to mental and physical processes
- Physical and mental calm
- Awakened
- A rearrangement of sections of the Rig Veda in chant form
- A synonym for a curse, which comes true
- The pattern of conditioned habits that we mistake for a sense of self
- Service
- member of the preaching and praying class of humans
- An incarnation of a god on earth
30 Clues: Wisdom • To join • Service • Awakened • Discipline • Without Harm • An act of violence • A book of knowledge • Physical and mental calm • Moral or ethical conduct • A sacred religious prayer • The law of cause and effect • Appreciative or empathetic joy • An incarnation of a god on earth • The ritualistic worship of a deity • A synonym for a curse, which comes true • ...
Outside Reading Crossword Puzzle 2013-12-12
Across
- A contained habitat for smaller land animals, especially reptiles,amphibians, or terrestrial invertebrates.
- Long-term disorder that results in faulty perception, inappropriate actions and feeling, and withdrawal from society.
- Quietly, gently, and easily imposed on; submissively.
- A region of the middle of the brain that controls body temperature,thirst hunger, and other functions that regulate homeostasis.
- To collect or combine texts or papers in a proper order.
- The mental action or process of acquiring knowledge and understanding through thought, experience, and the senses.
- Primary or basic; related to or embodying the powers of nature.
- A mental disorder that persists of personality changes and impaired reasoning.
- The use of nuclear-magnetic resonance to produce images of the molecules that make up a substance.
Down
- The study of humankind.
- A breed of horse, usually small and energetic with a chestnut color.
- Slightly obscured; mental obscurity or confusion.
- A musical composition for a solo instrument or instruments accompanied by an orchestra.
- Recklessly extravagant or wasteful in the use of resources.
- Relating to the junction of the cornea of the eye.
- Used to classify something, or suggest that it can be classified in terms of its position on a scale between two extreme or opposite points.
- A sacred song or hymn, many of which composed in the Bible.
- A roundish and flattish part of something, usually connected to something else.
- The origin or mode of formation of something; the first book in the Bible.
- Small hills or mounds.
20 Clues: Small hills or mounds. • The study of humankind. • Slightly obscured; mental obscurity or confusion. • Relating to the junction of the cornea of the eye. • Quietly, gently, and easily imposed on; submissively. • To collect or combine texts or papers in a proper order. • Recklessly extravagant or wasteful in the use of resources. • ...
Crucigrama sobre Lenguaje, Pensamiento e Inteligencia 2023-10-27
Across
- capacidad mental que permite a una persona razonar, comprender, aprender, resolver problemas.
- Tipo de inteligencia donde una persona aplica sus habilidades y conocimientos en problemas cotidianos.
- Área del cerebro involucrada en la producción del habla.
- Sistema verbal que estructura y comunica los pensamientos.
- Tipo de pensamiento que se relaciona con el lenguaje, cálculos matemáticos.
- Tipo de inteligencia donde las personas destacan en las matemáticas, la filosofía, la física.
- Dice que es el lenguaje que determina el pensamiento.
- órgano esencial para la comunicación verbal.
- Inteligencia que poseen los lideres religiosos, psicoterapeutas.
Down
- Fase de la memoria en el cual la información es codificada y consolidada en la memoria a largo plazo.
- Tipo de pensamiento que busca múltiples respuestas y soluciones a un problema
- Tipo de inteligencia que posee un escultor, Bailarín, Atleta
- tipo de inteligencia con capacidad para controlar nuestras propias emociones.
- proceso mental que ayuda a Formar ideas, tomar decisiones y resolver problemas.
- Tipo de inteligencia para componer o tocar instrumentos.
- Se multiplica la edad mental que obtiene la persona en el test por 100 y se divide por la edad cronológica.
- Tipo de pensamiento que aplica la lógica y la razón para llegar a conclusiones y resolver problemas.
- Teoría que se sostiene si una persona es inteligente en un área lo es en otras.
- El lenguaje se produce a través del refuerzo, la discriminación y la generalización.
- Área de comprensión del lenguaje
20 Clues: Área de comprensión del lenguaje • órgano esencial para la comunicación verbal. • Dice que es el lenguaje que determina el pensamiento. • Área del cerebro involucrada en la producción del habla. • Tipo de inteligencia para componer o tocar instrumentos. • Sistema verbal que estructura y comunica los pensamientos. • ...
PSYCHOLOGICAL TERMS CROSSWORD PUZZLE 2024-10-21
Across
- A type of therapy that focuses on the present moment
- A mental process of dismissing uncomfortable thoughts
- A mental disorder characterized by persistent sadness
- A disorder characterized by alternating periods of mania and depression
- A type of delusion where a person believes that multiple people are actually the same person in disguise
- Prefix meaning “abnormal”
- Term for Learning Theory
- The phenomenon where one experiences physical symptoms without a medical cause
- The psychological phenomenon of being unable to recall a word or name
- A false belief that one has a special mission or purpose
- A term for a strong, irrational fear of a situation or object
- The inability to experience pleasure due to substance use
- A defense mechanism where one attributes their own unacceptable thoughts to others
Down
- A method of treatment involving medication and therapy
- A type of delusion where a person believes they are someone else
- The feeling of being detached from one's body or surroundings
- A type of delusion where the individual believes that they are being followed or spied on
- A term for the psychological study of the relationship between the mind and body
- A type of therapy that uses the unconscious mind
- Root word for “emotion”
- A cognitive distortion that leads to overgeneralizing
- A state of mental confusion often seen in dementia
- Phobia of Spiders
- A defense mechanism where one redirects their emotions to a safer target
- Treatment
25 Clues: Treatment • Phobia of Spiders • Root word for “emotion” • Term for Learning Theory • Prefix meaning “abnormal” • A type of therapy that uses the unconscious mind • A state of mental confusion often seen in dementia • A type of therapy that focuses on the present moment • A mental process of dismissing uncomfortable thoughts • ...
Socially conditioned diseases their morbidity and mortality rates, disability, risk factors. 2025-03-03
Across
- Long term health problem that impacts daily life.
- Overconsumption of this beverage can lead to liver damage
- The inability to perform normal activities.
- A socioeconomic condition linked to increased health risks.
- Social pressures can contribute to these eating issues.
- Rapid increase in disease cases.
- Mental health condition often exacerbated by social isolation.
- Inhaling this substance is a leading cause of lung cancer. SMOKING
- Loss of work, a social stressor impacting health.
- Lack of physical activity, a major health concerns
- A state of mental or emotional strain.
- A factor directly causing a disease.
- The severity of a disease's impact.
- Imbalanced intake of food, often due to social factors.
Down
- What doctors use to determine a medical condition.
- Contaminated air, a risk factor for respiratory problems.
- Unequal access to healthcare, a social determinant.
- Lack of social can lead to isolation and depression.
- Excess body weight, a risk factor for many diseases.
- The predicted outcome of a disease.
- The effect of a disease on daily life.
- A measure of health impact on a population.
- A type of illness influenced by social conditions.
- The amount of cases of a condition in a population.
- A factor increasing the likelihood of health problems.
- The study of disease patterns in populations.
- The state of physical and mental well-being.
- The rate of disease in a population.
- The number of deaths due to a disease.
- The beginning of a disease.
30 Clues: The beginning of a disease. • Rapid increase in disease cases. • The predicted outcome of a disease. • The rate of disease in a population. • A factor directly causing a disease. • The severity of a disease's impact. • The effect of a disease on daily life. • The number of deaths due to a disease. • A state of mental or emotional strain. • ...
Neurodegenerative Disease 2024-03-08
Across
- A service to gain relief, and improve the quality of life.(7 letters)
- These structures transmit electrical impulses away from the cell body of neurons. (5 letters)
- Mental processes such as thinking, reasoning, and remembering. (9 letters)
- Therapy to improve patient's immune system.(13 letters)
- Neurodegenerative disease characterized by memory loss and cognitive decline. (9 letters)
- Cognitive damage to cells and the nervous system.(17 letters)
- A medical problem the parents carry down to their offspring.(7 letters)
- act or practice of taking steps to avoid or stop something from happening, regarding disease. (12 letters)
Down
- Commonly provided to reduce the symptoms in a neurological disease, assist the immune system.(8 letters)
- Therapy to improve the mindset of the patient.(13 letters)
- A health condition that lasts for an extended period without significant improvement. (7 letters)
- assist the patient in regaining their ability for physical and mental awareness. (14 letters)
- Losing their ability to control all their muscles.(9 letters)
- Molecule containing genetic information passed from parents to offspring. (3 letters)
- Unit of the nervous system responsible for transmitting information. (7 letters)
- A decline in mental ability severe enough to interfere with daily life. (8 letters)
- Cell: Cell in the nervous system provide protection and support to neurons. (9 letters)
17 Clues: Therapy to improve patient's immune system.(13 letters) • Therapy to improve the mindset of the patient.(13 letters) • Losing their ability to control all their muscles.(9 letters) • Cognitive damage to cells and the nervous system.(17 letters) • A service to gain relief, and improve the quality of life.(7 letters) • ...
Cognitive Approach - Key Term Crossword 2021-10-03
Across
- A lie detector used in courts which use brain activity rather than heart rate
- A type of model which is a diagrammatic representation of human internal mental processes
- A mental framework of beliefs and expectation
Down
- A criticism of the cognitive approach suggesting that it reduces complex human processing to something too simplistic
- An assumption of internal mental processes based on observed behaviour
- Cognitive psychologists have used computer models to contribute towards the emergence of cognitive __________
- A type of model which which makes references to internal mental processes being compared to computers
- The type of experiments mostly used by cognitive psychologists
8 Clues: A mental framework of beliefs and expectation • The type of experiments mostly used by cognitive psychologists • An assumption of internal mental processes based on observed behaviour • A lie detector used in courts which use brain activity rather than heart rate • A type of model which is a diagrammatic representation of human internal mental processes • ...
craft 2018-12-31
Across
- Two people with different mental models can see the same situation and describe it ………
- The biggest challenge with mental model is that we often don’t realize that we …… in a certain way.
- The way to break mental models is to __ our beliefs
- entire organizations have ..... mental models which shape their strategies and internal ways of working.
- We take actions based on our ...
Down
- Author of book The Fifth Discipline
- Assuming and creating a picture of your understanding
- The models may once have been .... but have now been invalidated by changing environmental factors such as technology and new competition.
8 Clues: We take actions based on our ... • Author of book The Fifth Discipline • The way to break mental models is to __ our beliefs • Assuming and creating a picture of your understanding • Two people with different mental models can see the same situation and describe it ……… • ...
Unit 1 2020-12-07
Across
- The branch of psychology that studies how we think, influence, and relate to each other,
- The science of behavior & mental processes,
- Pure science that aims to increase the scientific knowledge base,
- pure science that aims to increase scientific knowledge,
- The branch of psychology that studies physical, cognitive, and social change,
- The type of psychology is a historically significant perspective that emphasized the growth potential of healthy people,
- The branch of psychology that studies how people interact with social environments,
- The psychological study of the evolution of behavior
- The branch of psychology that studies behavior and thinking using the experimental method,
- The view that psychology should be studied of the actions, not the mental processing,
Down
- The principle that traits contributing to reproduction and survival will most likely be passed on to future generations,
- The branch of psychology that studies/treats people with psychological disorders,
- The branch of psychology that studies someone's patterns of thinking, feeling, and acting,
- An approach that incorporates biological, psychological, and social-cultural levels of analysis,
- The branch of psychology that assists people with problems in living,
- Knowledge originates in experience & science relies on observation and experimentation,
- School of thought promoted by Wundt & Titchener which discovered structure of human mind,
- The scientific study of measurement of human abilities, attitudes, and traits,
- School of thought promoted by James & Darwin which explored mental/behavioral processes of organisms
- A branch of medicine dealing with psychological disorders,
20 Clues: The science of behavior & mental processes, • The psychological study of the evolution of behavior • pure science that aims to increase scientific knowledge, • A branch of medicine dealing with psychological disorders, • Pure science that aims to increase the scientific knowledge base, • The branch of psychology that assists people with problems in living, • ...
Psychology Thinking Crossword 2013-02-24
Across
- capacity to use information and abilities in new ways
- sodden realization of solution
- smallest meaningful unit of language such as prefix or suffix
- an abstract unit of thought that represents an object
- study of meaning in language
- the ways in which words and phrases are arranged into grammatical scentences
- systematic and logical thought process used to reach a specific goal
- free flow of thoughts with no particular plan
- overcome rigidity
- statement or assertion that serves as the basis for an arguement
Down
- type of mental set that prevents one from imagining new functions for familiar objects
- mentally rearranging elements
- the basic sound unit in a spoken language
- label for class of objects or events that share common attributes
- set habitual strategy or pattern
- step by step procedures to solve problems
- likeness that exists between two or more things that are in other ways unlike
- changing and reorganizing the information stored in memory to create new information
- tendency to look for information that confirms one's percieved notions
- process of making decisions based on certain ideas or standards held by the decision maker
- a representation of an example of a concept
- mental repression of an event or object
- rules of thumb that tend to simplify a problem to allow for faster and easier problem solving
- effect influence of wording
- most complex unit of thought that is a statement of relation between concepts
25 Clues: overcome rigidity • effect influence of wording • study of meaning in language • mentally rearranging elements • sodden realization of solution • set habitual strategy or pattern • mental repression of an event or object • the basic sound unit in a spoken language • step by step procedures to solve problems • a representation of an example of a concept • ...
Cognition (Remix) by R. Kelly 2017-05-09
Across
- Effect found with colorful words
- Reasoning in which general conclusions lead to specific hypotheses
- Effect that would make finding Waldo much easier if the rest of the picture was black and white
- Event memory
- Bottom-up processing is driven by this
- Transfer that refers to improvement in similar tasks
- Heuristic influenced by conjunction fallacy, sample size, and base-rate fallacy
- Grouping principles that help us perceive the world
- Explicit Memory
- Problems with similar answers
- Code in which mental images are language like descriptions
- Production task; Thinking of 30 uses for a brick, for example
- Motivation that comes from within the self
- Auditory sensory memory
- The "direct" route of reading
Down
- Inductive shortcut (e.x. availability, representativeness)
- The most basic, typical example of a category
- Effect that makes you think D.C. is closer to College Park than College Park is to D.C.
- Amnesia that prevents new memory formation
- Mental "___"; happens when imagining a rabbit next to an elephant and then counting the rabbits whiskers
- Effect that lets me hear my name in someone else's conversation
- Visual sensory memory
- Face Blindness
- Mental imaging code that deals with direct representation
- Effect in which logical fallacies occur because of unrelated prior knowledge
- Motivation that comes from outside the self
- The actual real life stimulus in the world
- Amnesia that "deletes" old memories
- Heuristic heavily influenced by recency and familiarity
- Reasoning in which specific facts lead to general conclusions
30 Clues: Event memory • Face Blindness • Explicit Memory • Visual sensory memory • Auditory sensory memory • Problems with similar answers • The "direct" route of reading • Effect found with colorful words • Amnesia that "deletes" old memories • Bottom-up processing is driven by this • Amnesia that prevents new memory formation • The actual real life stimulus in the world • ...
Health 2017-02-23
Across
- factors conditions that decrease the likelihood that people will deal with stress effectively
- setting, the process of working towards something you want to accomplish
- who is most likely to get a mental illness
- what is one mind stress management
- how you feel about yourself
- what is one way of communication
- faster what is a physical sign of stress
- the exchange of thoughts feeling or beliefs between two or more people
- who is one person that influences your self-esteem
- what is one teen stressor
- factors conditions that help people deal more effectively with stressful situation
- the body's response to physical mental of emotional tension
- what does S stand for in the smart goal model
Down
- decision easy, no major, impact, very little thought
- what is one body stress management
- decision harder, takes a long time, greater impact
- what is one of listening
- what is one of the roadblocks of communication
- the way you view yourself
- who can diagnose a mental illness
- what is one of the types of communication
- making process of making a choice
- messages, taking responsibility of your feeling
- what does the M stand for in the smart goal model
- what is one roadblock to communication
- anything that causes stress
- message, when your words say one thing but your body or tone says another
- attention, what is one way of being an effective communicator
- emotional sign of stress
29 Clues: what is one of listening • emotional sign of stress • the way you view yourself • what is one teen stressor • how you feel about yourself • anything that causes stress • what is one way of communication • who can diagnose a mental illness • making process of making a choice • what is one body stress management • what is one mind stress management • ...
The terrible thing that happened to Barnaby Brocket 2017-08-30
Across
- / angrily or bitterly
- / physical or mental effort
- / produce and discharge
- / buoyant or suspended in water or air
- /anxious or fearful that something bad or unpleasant will happen
- / bring (swallowed food) up again to the mouth
- / having lost the physical, mental, or moral qualities considered normal and desirable; showing evidence of decline.
- / take in and understand fully (information or ideas).
- /sail or travel all the way around (something, especially the world
- / a disagreement or argument
- member of the legal profession qualified to deal with conveyancing, the drawing up of wills, and other legal matters
- feeling resentment at having been unfairly treated
- /causing someone to lose their dignity and the respect of others
Down
- / lacking sophistication or good taste
- /generous or forgiving, especially towards a rival or less powerful person
- / (of part of the body) feel a sharp stinging pain
- / a state of being extremely dirty and unpleasant,
- / a difficult, unpleasant, or embarrassing situation
- /not exactly known, established, or defined
- / in a way that cannot be challenged or denied
- /desire to have a quality, possession, or other desirable thing belonging to (someone else).
- / pain or discomfort in the stomach associated with difficulty in digesting food
- a person considered to be important because of high rank or office
- /completely baffled; very puzzled
- / give out sweat through the pores of the skin as a result of heat, physical exertion, or stress
- /causing great physical or mental pain
26 Clues: / angrily or bitterly • / produce and discharge • / physical or mental effort • / a disagreement or argument • /completely baffled; very puzzled • / lacking sophistication or good taste • / buoyant or suspended in water or air • /causing great physical or mental pain • /not exactly known, established, or defined • / in a way that cannot be challenged or denied • ...
Anxiety 2021-12-15
Across
- health ability to interact and form meaningful relationships with others.
- the natural state of rest during which your eyes are closed and you become unconscious
- moisture exuded through the pores of the skin, typically in profuse quantities as a reaction to heat, physical exertion, fever, or fear.
- the treatment of mental disorder by psychological rather than medical means.
- a natural instinctive state of mind deriving from one's circumstances, mood, or relationships with others.
- having or involving a sensation of spinning around and losing one's balance.
- the surroundings or conditions in which a person, animal, or plant lives or operates.
- a feeling of worry, nervousness, or unease
- to disturb the regular or normal functions of
- anxiety feel very anxious or fearful when a person you’re close with leaves your sight
Down
- a state of mental or emotional strain or tension resulting from adverse or very demanding circumstances
- type of anxiety disorder in which you fear and often avoid places or situations that might cause you to panic and make you feel trapped, helpless or embarrassed.
- the passing on of physical or mental characteristics genetically from one generation to another.
- sudden uncontrollable fear or anxiety
- feeling sad or going through a rough patch.
- General anxiety disorder
- a substance used for medical treatment, especially a medicine or drug.
- anxiety following a traumatic event
- the pulsation of the heart
- an extreme or irrational fear of or aversion to something
20 Clues: General anxiety disorder • the pulsation of the heart • anxiety following a traumatic event • sudden uncontrollable fear or anxiety • a feeling of worry, nervousness, or unease • feeling sad or going through a rough patch. • to disturb the regular or normal functions of • an extreme or irrational fear of or aversion to something • ...
Final Exam Review #1 2021-12-01
Across
- A group of drugs used to reduce the severity of highs & lows that someone with bipolar may experience.
- __________ psychology involves the study of internal mental processes.
- Focuses on how reinforcement and punishment can be utilized to either increase or decrease the frequency of a behavior.
- In the Humanistic approach is being completely honest and open.
- 1st physician to remove chains from seriously mental ill patience in France.
- Has a master's or bachelor's in nursing & specialized training in dealing with psychological disorders.
- Has a master's degree & provides limited psychotherapy in an outpatient setting.
- A physician during the early 1000s who was a major figure in human treatment during this time.
- __________ Cognition is the study of how information about people is processed & stored.
- In the Humanistic approach is the emotional understanding of the client.
Down
- A group of drugs used to treat inattention & hyperactivity disorders.
- A group of medications that are used to treat depression.
- A group of drugs used to treat anxiety disorders.
- Involves forming associations between stimuli
- Is attributed to the creation of the Humanistic approach.
- A medical doctor that specializes in treating psychological disorders
- Helped establish state-funded mental hospitals during the 1800s.
- A __________ occurs when our expectations cause us unconsciously to act in a manner to bring behaviors that confirm our expectations.
- Has a PhD & is trained to diagnose & treat psychological illnesses.
- Used hypnosis to get his patients to talk about their problems.
20 Clues: Involves forming associations between stimuli • A group of drugs used to treat anxiety disorders. • A group of medications that are used to treat depression. • Is attributed to the creation of the Humanistic approach. • In the Humanistic approach is being completely honest and open. • Used hypnosis to get his patients to talk about their problems. • ...
PSYC 341 Review Crossword 2023-11-28
Across
- An idea that plays hide and seek in your mind
- The spice of ideas – where no two are exactly the same
- The unsung hero of language – how context shapes meaning
- Thinking in boxes – the brain's organizational ninja move
- A mental filing cabinet where things of a feather are filed together
- The ABCs of ideas – simplicity at its core
- who's watching?
- The boss of all ideas – the grand poobah!
- Thinking about thinking – a mental acrobatics exercise!
- The word's DNA – the smallest meaning-carrying unit
- When sounds hold hands in the linguistic dance
- The practicality meter – separating the wheat from the chaff of ideas
Down
- Like a social ladder, but for ideas and importance
- The smallest sound unit – the whisper in the symphony of language
- How new ideas are born – the idea's debutante ball
- The shining example, the MVP of the category
- Ideas raining from the brain's penthouse to the ground floor
- The mind's magical lens – where reality gets its makeover
- The gold standard for normality in the world of categories
- The mind's wake-up call – what gets the neurons firing
- When ideas clash – the jarring note in the symphony of thoughts
- The underling, the sidekick, the Robin to Batman's concept
- Slicing and dicing ideas for better mental digestion
- Grammar's rulebook – the conductor of the language orchestra
- The language DJ – spinning the sounds of speech
25 Clues: who's watching? • The boss of all ideas – the grand poobah! • The ABCs of ideas – simplicity at its core • The shining example, the MVP of the category • An idea that plays hide and seek in your mind • When sounds hold hands in the linguistic dance • The language DJ – spinning the sounds of speech • Like a social ladder, but for ideas and importance • ...
Crucigrama sobre Lenguaje, Pensamiento e Inteligencia 2023-10-27
Across
- Tipo de pensamiento que aplica la lógica y la razón para llegar a conclusiones y resolver problemas.
- Tipo de inteligencia que posee un escultor, Bailarín, Atleta
- Se multiplica la edad mental que obtiene la persona en el test por 100 y se divide por la edad cronológica.
- órgano esencial para la comunicación verbal.
- Tipo de inteligencia donde una persona aplica sus habilidades y conocimientos en problemas cotidianos.
- tipo de inteligencia con capacidad para controlar nuestras propias emociones.
- capacidad mental que permite a una persona razonar, comprender, aprender, resolver problemas.
- Tipo de inteligencia para componer o tocar instrumentos.
- Inteligencia que poseen los lideres religiosos, psicoterapeutas.
- Sistema verbal que estructura y comunica los pensamientos.
Down
- Teoría que se sostiene si una persona es inteligente en un área lo es en otras.
- Tipo de pensamiento que busca múltiples respuestas y soluciones a un problema
- Tipo de pensamiento que se relaciona con el lenguaje, cálculos matemáticos.
- Tipo de inteligencia donde las personas destacan en las matemáticas, la filosofía, la física.
- proceso mental que ayuda a Formar ideas, tomar decisiones y resolver problemas.
- El lenguaje se produce a través del refuerzo, la discriminación y la generalización.
- Área del cerebro involucrada en la producción del habla.
- Área de comprensión del lenguaje
- Fase de la memoria en el cual la información es codificada y consolidada en la memoria a largo plazo.
- Dice que es el lenguaje que determina el pensamiento.
20 Clues: Área de comprensión del lenguaje • órgano esencial para la comunicación verbal. • Dice que es el lenguaje que determina el pensamiento. • Área del cerebro involucrada en la producción del habla. • Tipo de inteligencia para componer o tocar instrumentos. • Sistema verbal que estructura y comunica los pensamientos. • ...
chapter 21-23 crossword 2025-09-18
Across
- The type of alcohol found in beverages; a powerful and addictive drug.
- The physical and mental impairment caused by alcohol or another substance.
- A chronic dependence—mental or physical—on a drug.
- A mental need for a drug to feel good or function.
- The use or sale of drugs that are illegal or not permitted.
- A dangerous or fatal reaction to taking too much of a drug.
- Smoke exhaled by a smoker, directly inhaled into the lungs.
- An irrational suspiciousness or distrust of others.
- The improper or nonmedical use of chemical substances.
- The body’s process of breaking down substances.
- Addictive chemical in tobacco that affects the brain and nervous system.
- Sticky, dark substance in tobacco smoke that damages the lungs.
- The chemical process where yeast converts sugars into alcohol.
- Excessive use of alcohol, often starting before age 18.
- The percentage of alcohol in a person’s bloodstream.
Down
- A physical chemical need for a drug in the body.
- A substance that temporarily increases alertness or energy.
- Any substance capable of causing cancer in living tissue.
- A type of drug that slows down the central nervous system.
- Tobacco product that is chewed, sniffed, or placed in the mouth, not burned.
- A gas exhaled by smokers and produced during combustion; colorless and odorless.
- r ugs Substances that cannot be lawfully manufactured, bought, or sold by anyone.
- A plant whose leaves, buds, and flowers are smoked for their effects.
23 Clues: The body’s process of breaking down substances. • A physical chemical need for a drug in the body. • A chronic dependence—mental or physical—on a drug. • A mental need for a drug to feel good or function. • An irrational suspiciousness or distrust of others. • The percentage of alcohol in a person’s bloodstream. • ...
Psych 3360 vocabulary 1 2023-09-11
Across
- the experience, not arising from an external stimulus, that an amputated or missing limb is still present
- basic categories of mental abilities, e.g., memory, attention, language, imagination, emotion, will
- a linkage between two neurons in which increased activity in the first cell causes decreased activity in the second
- a linkage between two neurons in which increased activity in the first cell causes increased activity in the second
- the distinction between a program and the physical "machine" that carries it out; used as an argument that the mind may be studied without detailed knowledge of the brain
- the idea that the mind and body are separate and different in kind
Down
- the idea that thinking and other forms of mental activity can be understood as analogous to a kind of computer program
- a neurophysiological sensing technology that uses a rotating X-ray to create 2D images of the brain structure
- an internal data structure
- how can the mental and physical reals relate, e.g., how can mental causes have physical effects and vice-versa?
- a neurophysiological sensing technology that uses powerful magnets to create images of brain activity
- if the sum of incoming signals exceeds this criterion, a neuron will fire; if not, then it does nothing
- a neurophysiological sensing technology that uses powerful magnets to create images of brain structures
- a neurophysiological sensing technology that uses radioactive tracers in the blood to create images of brain activity
14 Clues: an internal data structure • the idea that the mind and body are separate and different in kind • basic categories of mental abilities, e.g., memory, attention, language, imagination, emotion, will • a neurophysiological sensing technology that uses powerful magnets to create images of brain activity • ...
