AP Psych
Across
- 1. Demonstrated when seeing a display of oranges helps someone remember oranges were on their forgotten grocery list.
- 4. Displayed by listing many new and unusual uses for a common object, like a brick.
- 5. Psychological approach holding that development is largely a product of learning.
- 7. The phenomenon that would best explain remembering only the titles of the first few books on a list.
- 11. Type of intelligence that research supports continues to increase through adulthood.
- 17. Memory system involving the recall of certain motor actions and is a function of the cerebellum.
- 19. Brain structure responsible for triggering fear when suddenly startled by a dangerous-looking snake.
- 20. Theory explaining why students receiving only one point for watching a video might rate it as more interesting than those who received ten points.
- 22. Explains fans in a crowd feeling anonymous and engaging in offensive chants they wouldn't typically use.
- 23. Theory best explaining why someone might seek out friends and a concert after a quiet retreat.
- 24. Statistical technique used to reduce a large number of individual items into smaller, related groups.
- 25. Clue: Often characterized by severely impaired interpersonal communication in children.
Down
- 2. A personality disorder characterized by an unwarranted sense of self-importance.
- 3. Theory that explains color vision and would predict struggles in identifying wing colors if the fovea is damaged.
- 6. Reflected when observers are hesitant to help an unconscious person until someone else initiates action.
- 8. Jean Piaget's earliest stage at which a child is capable of using simple logic to think about objects and events.
- 9. Its incomplete development would most likely explain a teenager's persistence in texting while driving despite warnings.
- 10. Graph depicting Ebbinghaus's findings on how memory recall lessens over time.
- 12. An application of operant conditioning where coupons are earned for work and can be exchanged for rewards.
- 13. Measure of intelligence traditionally based on the relationship between mental age and chronological age.
- 14. Effect found when students who plagiarize the most overestimate how often other students plagiarize.
- 15. Type of memory demonstrated by knowing the formula to calculate the area of a square.
- 16. The mistaken belief that past independent random events influence future ones, e.g., thinking a son is more likely after having four daughters.
- 18. A visual cue for seeing in depth which is lacking in individuals with sight in only one eye.
- 21. Persistent repetitive thoughts that cannot be controlled.