Semester 1 Flashcards
Biopsychology or behavioural neuroscience is the study of:
Electrical and chemical processes underlying mental events.
Which one of the following is NOT a method used by philosophers?
a. Logic
b. Argumentation
c. Reasoning
d. Experimentation
Experimentation
The two schools of thought that dominated psychology in its earliest years
were:
Structuralism and functionalism.
Proponents of determinism in psychology believe that:
Actions of humans and animals follow physical laws.
Humanistic theorists believe that people:
Have an innate desire to improve themselves.
One method often used by cognitive psychologists in experiments on
memory is:
Response time
To practise as a psychologist in Australia there is a legal requirement that:
You be registered with the national registration board.
The scientific approach to research has three main goals:
Description, prediction and understanding.
Description is the summarising of data in such a way that
the results can be easily understood.
Prediction involves using the outcome of the research to identify what would happen in the future.
Understanding involves identifying the causal factors that led to the results found in the research.
A sample is defined as a subgroup:
Of the population that is likely to be representative of the population as a
whole.
A measure is internally consistent if:
Several ways of asking the same question yield similar results.
Internal consistency is a form of reliability and is required to ensure that a test is measuring what it purports to measure.
To operationalise the variables means to:
Turn abstract concepts into concrete variables that are defined by some set
of actions or operations.
A correlation coefficient measures the extent to which two variables are:
Co-related.
The correlation coefficient is the statistic that describes the extent to which two variables are related.
One of the best ways to obtain an accurate assessment of a variable is:
By using multiple measures.
If the finding of my study can be generalised to situations outside the laboratory, the study has:
External validity, it means that findings can be generalised to situations outside, or external to, the laboratory.
In an experiment to test the effects of anxiety on memory performance, the independent variable is:
Anxiety.