EMU Psychology
Across
- 2. our automatic response to stimuli
- 4. brain structure associated with motor coordination, balance, and control of muscle tone
- 5. where you can find your professors' offices
- 6. the scientific study of behavior and mental process
- 7. a theory based prediction
- 9. This type of reinforcement takes away an unpleasant stimulus as a reward
- 13. the school that defines psychology as the study of observable behavior, founded by John B Watson
- 14. This psychologist believed that people are basically good and are endowed with self-actualizing tendencies
- 16. activating particular associations in memory
- 18. an emotional bond between infant and one or more adults
- 20. Caffeine, Nicotine, Cocaine, & Methamphetamine are examples of...
- 22. the way a question or an issue is posed that can influence decisions and expressed opinions
- 23. a person's overall self-evaluation of sense of self-worth
- 25. a research method that examines one individual in depth hoping to reveal things true of us all.
Down
- 1. the type of degree you will be awarded at graduation; B.S.
- 3. A research method that reveals cause and effect
- 7. a mental shortcut or rule of thumb that enables quick, efficient judgments
- 8. the ability to store and retrieve information over time
- 10. the school that emphasizes the importance of unconscious motives and conflicts founded by Sigmund Freud
- 11. Aristotle called us "____ animals" as humans feel the need to belong.
- 12. a motive to increase another's welfare without conscious regard for one's own self-interest
- 15. the basic building block of the nervous system
- 16. An anxiety disorder in which a person has lingering memories, nightmares, etc. from a life threatening event
- 17. According to Freud this is the unconscious part of the brain that strives to satisfy sexual and aggressive drives
- 18. the brain's ability to focus on stimuli
- 19. it passes messages away from the cell body to other neurons
- 21. name of EMU's annual spring festival conference (abbr.)
- 24. the book used for classifying psychological disorders