Glossary

absentmindedness
 A lapse in attention that results in memory failure.
absolute threshold
 The minimal intensity needed to just barely detect a stimulus in 50% of the trials.
accommodation
 The process by which infants revise their schemas in light of new information.
accommodation
 The process by which the eye maintains a clear image on the retina.
acetylcholine (ACh)
 A neurotransmitter involved in a number of functions, including voluntary motor control.
acquisition
 The phase of classical conditioning when the CS and the US are presented together.
action potential
 An electric signal that is conducted along a neuron’s axon to a synapse.
activation–synthesis model
 The theory that dreams are produced when the brain attempts to make sense of random neural activity that occurs during sleep.
actor–observer effect
 The tendency to make situational attributions for our own behaviors while making dispositional attributions for the identical behavior of others.
adolescence
 The period of development that begins with the onset of sexual maturity (about 11 to 14 years of age) and lasts until the beginning of adulthood (about 18 to 21 years of age).
adulthood
 The stage of development that begins around 18 to 21 years and ends at death.
aggression
 Behavior with the purpose of harming another.
agonists
 Drugs that increase the action of a neurotransmitter.
agoraphobia
 A specific phobia involving a fear of public places.
alcohol myopia
 A condition that results when alcohol hampers attention, leading people to respond in simple ways to complex situations.
algorithm
 A well-defined sequence of procedures or rules that guarantees a solution to a problem.
altered state of consciousness
 A form of experience that departs significantly from the normal subjective experience of the world and the mind.
altruism
 Behavior that benefits another without benefiting oneself.
amygdala
 A part of the limbic system that plays a central role in many emotional processes, particularly the formation of emotional memories.
anal stage
 The second psychosexual stage, in which experience is dominated by the pleasures and frustrations associated with the anus, retention and expulsion of feces and urine, and toilet training.
analogical problem solving
 Solving a problem by finding a similar problem with a known solution and applying that solution to the current problem.
anorexia nervosa
 An eating disorder characterized by an intense fear of being fat and severe restriction of food intake.
antagonists
 Drugs that block the function of a neurotransmitter.
anterograde amnesia
 The inability to transfer new information from the short-term store into the long-term store.
antianxiety medications
 Drugs that help reduce a person’s experience of fear or anxiety.
antidepressants
 A class of drugs that help lift people’s moods.
antipsychotic drugs
 Medications that are used to treat schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders.
antisocial personality disorder (APD)
 A pervasive pattern of disregard for and violation of the rights of others that begins in childhood or early adolescence and continues into adulthood.
anxiety disorder
 The class of mental disorder in which anxiety is the predominant feature.
aphasia
 Difficulty in producing or comprehending language.
apparent motion
 The perception of movement as a result of alternating signals appearing in rapid succession in different locations.
appraisal
 An evaluation of the emotionrelevant aspects of a stimulus.
approach motivation
 A motivation to experience a positive outcome.
area A1
 A portion of the temporal lobe that contains the primary auditory cortex.
area V1
 The part of the occipital lobe that contains the primary visual cortex.
assimilation
 The process by which infants apply their schemas in novel situations.
association areas
 Areas of the cerebral cortex that are composed of neurons that help provide sense and meaning to information registered in the cortex.
attachment
 The emotional bond that forms between newborns and their primary caregivers.
attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
 A persistent pattern of severe problems with inattention and/or hyperactivity or impulsiveness that cause significant impairments in functioning.
attitude
 An enduring positive or negative evaluation of an object or event.
attribution
 An inference about the cause of a person’s behavior.
autism spectrum disorder (ASD)
 A condition beginning in early childhood in which a person shows persistent communication deficits as well as restricted and repetitive patterns of behaviors, interests, or activities.
autonomic nervous system (ANS)
 A set of nerves that carries involuntary and automatic commands that control blood vessels, body organs, and glands.
availability bias
 Items that are more readily available in memory are judged as having occurred more frequently.
avoidance motivation
 A motivation not to experience a negative outcome.
axon
 The part of a neuron that carries information to other neurons, muscles, or glands.
balanced placebo design
 A study design in which behavior is observed following the presence or absence of an actual stimulus and also following the presence or absence of a placebo stimulus.
basal ganglia
 A set of subcortical structures that directs intentional movements.
basilar membrane
 A structure in the inner ear that undulates when vibrations from the ossicles reach the cochlear fluid.
behavior
 Observable actions of human beings and nonhuman animals.
behavior therapy
 A type of therapy that assumes that disordered behavior is learned and that symptom relief is achieved through changing overt maladaptive behaviors into more constructive behaviors.
behavioral neuroscience
 An approach to psychology that links psychological processes to activities in the nervous system and other bodily processes.
behaviorism
 An approach that advocates that psychologists restrict themselves to the scientific study of objectively observable behavior.
belief
 An enduring piece of knowledge about an object or event.
belief bias
 People’s judgments about whether to accept conclusions depend more on how believable the conclusions are than on whether the arguments are logically valid.
bias
 The distorting influences of present knowledge, beliefs, and feelings on recollection of previous experiences.
Big Five
 The traits of the five-factor model: openness to experience, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism.
binding problem
 How features are linked together so that we see unified objects in our visual world rather than free-floating or miscombined features.
binocular disparity
 The difference in the retinal images of the two eyes that provides information about depth.
biofeedback
 The use of an external monitoring device to obtain information about a bodily function and possibly gain control over that function.
biological preparedness
 A propensity for learning particular kinds of associations over others.
biopsychosocial perspective
 Explains mental disorders as the result of interactions among biological, psychological, and social factors.
bipolar disorder
 A condition characterized by cycles of abnormal, persistent high mood (mania) and low mood (depression).
blind spot
 A location in the visual field that produces no sensation on the retina.
blocking
 A failure to retrieve information that is available in memory even though you are trying to produce it.
bulimia nervosa
 An eating disorder characterized by binge eating followed by purging.
burnout
 A state of physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion created by long-term involvement in an emotionally demanding situation and accompanied by lowered performance and motivation.
bystander intervention
 The act of helping strangers in an emergency situation.
Cannon–Bard theory
 The theory that a stimulus simultaneously triggers activity in the body and emotional experience in the brain.
case method
 A procedure for gathering scientific information by studying a single individual.
catatonic behavior
 A marked decrease in all movement or an increase in muscular rigidity and overactivity.
category-specific deficit
 A neurological syndrome that is characterized by an inability to recognize objects that belong to a particular category, although the ability to recognize objects outside the category is undisturbed.
cell body (or soma)
 The part of a neuron that coordinates information-processing tasks and keeps the cell alive.
central nervous system (CNS)
 The part of the nervous system that is composed of the brain and spinal cord.
cephalocaudal rule
 The “top-to-bottom” rule that describes the tendency for motor skills to emerge in sequence from the head to the feet.
cerebellum
 A large structure of the hindbrain that controls fine motor skills.
cerebral cortex
 The outermost layer of the brain, visible to the naked eye and divided into two hemispheres.
change blindness
 When people fail to detect changes to the visual details of a scene.
childhood
 The stage of development that begins at about 18 to 24 months and lasts until adolescence, which begins between 11 and 14 years.
chromosomes
 Strands of DNA wound around each other in a double-helix configuration.
chronic stressors
 Sources of stress that occur continuously or repeatedly.
chunking
 Combining small pieces of information into larger clusters or chunks that are more easily held in short-term memory.
circadian rhythm
 A naturally occurring 24-hour cycle.
classical conditioning
 A type of learning that occurs when a neutral stimulus produces a response after being paired with a stimulus that naturally produces a response.
cochlea
 A fluid-filled tube that is the organ of auditory transduction.
cocktail-party phenomenon
 A phenomenon in which people tune in one message even while they filter out others nearby.
cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)
 A blend of cognitive and behavioral therapeutic strategies.
cognitive development
 The emergence of the ability to think and understand.
cognitive dissonance
 An unpleasant state that arises when a person recognizes the inconsistency of his or her actions, attitudes, or beliefs.
cognitive map
 A mental representation of the physical features of the environment.
cognitive neuroscience
 The field of study that attempts to understand the links between cognitive processes and brain activity.
cognitive psychology
 The scientific study of mental processes, including perception, thought, memory, and reasoning.
cognitive restructuring
 A therapeutic approach that teaches clients to question the automatic beliefs, assumptions, and predictions that often lead to negative emotions and to replace negative thinking with more realistic and positive beliefs.
cognitive symptoms
 Deficits in cognitive abilities, specifically executive functioning, attention, and working memory.
cognitive therapy
 Focuses on helping a client identify and correct any distorted thinking about self, others, or the world.
cognitive unconscious
 All the mental processes that give rise to a person’s thoughts, choices, emotions, and behavior even though they are not experienced by the person.
color-opponent system
 Pairs of visual neurons that work in opposition.
common knowledge effect
 The tendency for group discussions to focus on information that all members share.
comorbidity
 The co-occurrence of two or more disorders in a single individual.
companionate love
 An experience involving affection, trust, and concern for a partner’s well-being.
comparison level
 The cost–benefit ratio that people believe they deserve or could attain in another relationship.
concept
 A mental representation that groups or categorizes shared features of related objects, events, or other stimuli.
concrete operational stage
 The stage of cognitive development that begins at about 6 years and ends at about 11 years, during which children learn how various actions or “operations” can affect or transform “concrete” objects.
conditioned response (CR)
 A reaction that resembles an unconditioned response but is produced by a conditioned stimulus.
conditioned stimulus (CS)
 A previously neutral stimulus that produces a reliable response in an organism after being paired with a US.
conduct disorder
 A persistent pattern of deviant behavior involving aggression to people or animals, destruction of property, deceitfulness or theft, or serious rule violations.
cones
 Photoreceptors that detect color, operate under normal daylight conditions, and allow us to focus on fine detail.
conformity
 The tendency to do what others do simply because others are doing it.
conjunction fallacy
 When people think that two events are more likely to occur together than either individual event.
conscious motivations
 Motivations of which people are aware.
consciousness
 A person’s subjective experience of the world and the mind. (pp. 8, 178)
conservation
 The notion that the quantitative properties of an object are invariant despite changes in the object’s appearance.
consolidation
 The process by which memories become stable in the brain.
control group
 The group of people who are not exposed to the particular manipulation, as compared to the experimental group, in an experiment.
conventional stage
 A stage of moral development in which the morality of an action is primarily determined by the extent to which it conforms to social rules.
cooperation
 Behavior by two or more individuals that leads to mutual benefit.
corpus callosum
 A thick band of nerve fibers that connects large areas of the cerebral cortex on each side of the brain and supports communication of information across the hemispheres.
correlation coefficient
 A mathematical measure of both the direction and strength of a correlation, which is symbolized by the letter r.
correlation
 Two variables are said to “be correlated” when variations in the value of one variable are synchronized with variations in the value of the other.
correspondence bias
 The tendency to make a dispositional attribution even when we should instead make a situational attribution.
crystallized intelligence
 The ability to retain and use knowledge that was acquired through experience.
cultural psychology
 The study of how cultures reflect and shape the psychological processes of their members.
debriefing
 A verbal description of the true nature and purpose of a study.
deep structure
 The meaning of a sentence.
defense mechanisms
 Unconscious coping mechanisms that reduce anxiety generated by threats from unacceptable impulses.
deindividuation
 A phenomenon that occurs when immersion in a group causes people to become less aware of their individual values.
delusion
 A patently false belief system, often bizarre and grandiose, that is maintained in spite of its irrationality.
demand characteristics
 Those aspects of an observational setting that cause people to behave as they think someone else wants or expects.
dendrite
 The part of a neuron that receives information from other neurons and relays it to the cell body.
dependent variable
 The variable that is measured in a study.
depressants
 Substances that reduce the activity of the central nervous system.
developmental psychology
 The study of continuity and change across the life span.
deviation IQ
 A statistic obtained by dividing a person’s test score by the average test score of people in the same age group and then multiplying the quotient by 100 (see ratio IQ).
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)
 A classification system that describes the features used to diagnose each recognized mental disorder and indicates how the disorder can be distinguished from other, similar problems.
diathesis–stress model
 Suggests that a person may be predisposed for a psychological disorder that remains unexpressed until triggered by stress.
dichotic listening
 A task in which people wearing headphones hear different messages presented to each ear.
diffusion chain
 A process in which individuals initially learn a behavior by observing another individual perform that behavior, and then serve as a model from which other individuals learn the behavior.
diffusion of responsibility
 The tendency for individuals to feel diminished responsibility for their actions when they are surrounded by others who are acting the same way.
discrimination
 Positive or negative behavior toward another person based on their group membership.
discrimination
 The capacity to distinguish between similar but distinct stimuli.
disorganized speech
 A severe disruption of verbal communication in which ideas shift rapidly and incoherently among unrelated topics.
display rule
 A norm for the appropriate expression of emotion.
DNA methylation
 Adding a methyl group to DNA.
door-in-the-face technique
 An influence strategy that involves getting someone to deny an initial request
dopamine
 A neurotransmitter that regulates motor behavior, motivation, pleasure, and emotional arousal.
dopamine hypothesis
 The idea that schizophrenia involves an excess of dopamine activity.
double depression
 A moderately depressed mood that persists for at least 2 years and is punctuated by periods of major depression.
double-blind
 An observation whose true purpose is hidden from both the observer and the person being observed.
drive
 An internal state caused by physiological needs.
drug tolerance
 The tendency for larger doses of a drug to be required over time to achieve the same effect.
dynamic unconscious
 An active system encompassing a lifetime of hidden memories, the person’s deepest instincts and desires, and the person’s inner struggle to control these forces. (pp. 190, 485)
dysthymia
 The same cognitive and bodily problems as in depression are present, but they are less severe and last longer, persisting for at least 2 years.
echoic memory
 A fast-decaying store of auditory information.
eclectic psychotherapy
 A form of psychotherapy that involves drawing on techniques from different forms of therapy, depending on the client and the problem.
ego
 The component of personality, developed through contact with the external world, that enables us to deal with life’s practical demands.
egocentrism
 The failure to understand that the world appears differently to different people.
electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
 A treatment that involves inducing a brief seizure by delivering an electrical shock to the brain.
electroencephalograph (EEG)
 A device used to record electrical activity in the brain.
electrooculograph (EOG)
 An instrument that measures eye movements.
embryonic stage
 The period of prenatal development that lasts from the 2nd week until about the 8th week.
emotion
 A positive or negative experience that is associated with a particular pattern of physiological activity.
emotion regulation
 The strategies people use to influence their own emotional experience.
emotional expression
 An observable sign of an emotional state.
emotional intelligence
 The ability to reason about emotions and to use emotions to enhance reasoning.
empirical method
 A set of rules and techniques for observation.
empiricism
 The belief that accurate knowledge can be acquired through observation.
encoding specificity principle
 The idea that a retrieval cue can serve as an effective reminder when it helps re-create the specific way in which information was initially encoded.
encoding
 The process of transforming what we perceive, think, or feel into an enduring memory.
endorphins
 Chemicals that act within the pain pathways and emotion centers of the brain.
epigenetic marks
 Chemical modifications to DNA that can turn genes on or off.
epigenetics
 Environmental influences that determine whether or not genes are expressed, or the degree to which they are expressed, without altering the basic DNA sequences that constitute the genes themselves.
episodic memory
 The collection of past personal experiences that occurred at a particular time and place.
equity
 A state of affairs in which the cost– benefit ratios of two partners are roughly equal.
evolutionary psychology
 A psychological approach that explains mind and behavior in terms of the adaptive value of abilities that are preserved over time by natural selection.
exemplar theory
 A theory of categorization that argues that we make category judgments by comparing a new instance with stored memories for other instances of the category.
existential approach
 A school of thought that regards personality as governed by an individual’s ongoing choices and decisions in the context of the realities of life and death.
expectancy theory
 The idea that alcohol effects can be produced by people’s expectations of how alcohol will influence them in particular situations.
experiment
 A technique for establishing the causal relationship between variables.
experimental group
 The group of people who are exposed to a particular manipulation, as compared to the control group, in an experiment.
explicit memory
 The act of consciously or intentionally retrieving past experiences.
exposure therapy
 An approach to treatment that involves confronting an emotion-arousing stimulus directly and repeatedly, ultimately leading to a decrease in the emotional response.
expressed emotion
 A measure of how much hostility, criticism, and emotional overinvolvement are used when speaking about a family member with a mental disorder.
external validity
 An attribute of an experiment in which variables have been defined in a normal, typical, or realistic way.
extinction
 The gradual elimination of a learned response that occurs when the CS is repeatedly presented without the US.
extrinsic motivation
 A motivation to take actions that lead to reward.
facial feedback hypothesis
 Emotional expressions can cause the emotional experiences they signify.
factor analysis
 A statistical technique that explains a large number of correlations in terms of a small number of underlying factors.
false recognition
 A feeling of familiarity about something that hasn’t been encountered before.
family resemblance theory
 Members of a category have features that appear to be characteristic of category members but may not be possessed by every member.
fast mapping
 The fact that children can map a word onto an underlying concept after only a single exposure.
feature-integration theory
 The idea that focused attention is not required to detect the individual features that comprise a stimulus, but is required to bind those individual features together.
fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)
 A developmental disorder that stems from heavy alcohol use by the mother during pregnancy.
fetal stage
 The period of prenatal development that lasts from the 9th week until birth.
fight-or-flight response
 An emotional and physiological reaction to an emergency that increases readiness for action.
fixation
 A phenomenon in which a person’s pleasure-seeking drives become psychologically stuck, or arrested, at a particular psychosexual stage.
fixed-interval schedule (FI)
 An operant conditioning principle in which reinforcers are presented at fixed-time periods, provided that the appropriate response is made.
fixed-ratio schedule (FR)
 An operant conditioning principle in which reinforcement is delivered after a specific number of responses have been made.
flashbulb memories
 Detailed recollections of when and where we heard about shocking events.
fluid intelligence
 The ability to see abstract relationships and draw logical inferences.
foot-in-the-door technique
 A technique that involves making a small request and following it with a larger request.
formal operational stage
 The final stage of cognitive development that begins around the age of 11, during which children learn to reason about abstract concepts.
fovea
 An area of the retina where vision is the clearest and there are no rods at all.
framing effects
 When people give different answers to the same problem depending on how the problem is phrased (or framed).
fraternal twins (or dizygotic twins)
 Twins who develop from two different eggs that were fertilized by two different sperm (see identical twins).
frequency distribution
 A graphical representation of measurements arranged by the number of times each measurement was made.
frequency format hypothesis
 The proposal that our minds evolved to notice how frequently things occur, not how likely they are to occur.
frontal lobe
 A region of the cerebral cortex that has specialized areas for movement, abstract thinking, planning, memory, and judgment.
frustration–aggression hypothesis
 A principle stating that animals aggress when their goals are thwarted.
full consciousness
 Consciousness in which you know and are able to report your mental state.
functional fixedness
 The tendency to perceive the functions of objects as fixed.
functionalism
 The study of the purpose mental processes serve in enabling people to adapt to their environment.
GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)
 The primary inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain.
gate-control theory of pain
 A theory of pain perception based on the idea that signals arriving from pain receptors in the body can be stopped, or gated, by interneurons in the spinal cord via feedback from two directions.
gateway drug
 A drug whose use increases the risk of the subsequent use of more harmful drugs.
gene
 The major unit of hereditary transmission.
general adaptation syndrome (GAS)
 A three-stage physiological response that appears regardless of the stressor that is encountered.
generalization
 The CR is observed even though the CS is slightly different from the CS used during acquisition.
generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)
 A disorder characterized by chronic excessive worry accompanied by three or more of the following symptoms: restlessness, fatigue, concentration problems, irritability, muscle tension, and sleep disturbance.
genetic dysphasia
 A syndrome characterized by an inability to learn the grammatical structure of language despite having otherwise normal intelligence.
genital stage
 The fifth and final psychosexual stage, the time for the coming together of the mature adult personality with a capacity to love, work, and relate to others in a mutually satisfying and reciprocal manner.
germinal stage
 The 2-week period of prenatal development that begins at conception.
Gestalt psychology
 A psychological approach that emphasizes that we often perceive the whole rather than the sum of the parts.
gestalt therapy
 Has the goal of helping the client become aware of his or her thoughts, behaviors, experiences, and feelings and to “own” or take responsibility for them.
glial cells
 Support cells found in the nervous system.
glutamate
 The major excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain.
grammar
 A set of rules that specify how the units of language can be combined to produce meaningful messages.
grossly disorganized behavior
 Behavior that is inappropriate for the situation or ineffective in attaining goals, often with specific motor disturbances.
group
 A collection of people who have something in common that distinguishes them from others.
group polarization
 The tendency for groups to make decisions that are more extreme than any member would have made alone.
group therapy
 A technique in which multiple participants (who often do not know one another at the outset) work on their individual problems in a group atmosphere.
groupthink
 The tendency for groups to reach consensus in order to facilitate interpersonal harmony.
habituation
 A general process in which repeated or prolonged exposure to a stimulus results in a gradual reduction in responding.
hair cells
 Specialized auditory receptor neurons embedded in the basilar membrane.
hallucination
 A false perceptual experience that has a compelling sense of being real despite the absence of external stimulation.
hallucinogens
 Drugs that alter sensation and perception and often cause visual and auditory hallucinations.
haptic perception
 The active exploration of the environment by touching and grasping objects with our hands.
harm reduction approach
 A response to high-risk behaviors that focuses on reducing the harm such behaviors have on people’s lives.
health psychology
 The subfield of psychology concerned with ways psychological factors influence the causes and treatment of physical illness and the maintenance of health.
hedonic principle
 The claim that people are motivated to experience pleasure and avoid pain.
helplessness theory
 The idea that individuals who are prone to depression automatically attribute negative experiences to causes that are internal (i.e., their own fault), stable (i.e., unlikely to change), and global (i.e., widespread).
heritability
 A measure of the variability of behavioral traits among individuals that can be accounted for by genetic factors.
heritability coefficient
 A statistic (commonly denoted as h2) that describes the proportion of the difference between people’s scores that can be explained by differences in their genes.
heuristic
 A fast and efficient strategy that may facilitate decision making but does not guarantee that a solution will be reached.
heuristic persuasion
 The process by which attitudes or beliefs are changed by appeals to habit or emotion.
hindbrain
 An area of the brain that coordinates information coming into and out of the spinal cord.
hippocampus
 A structure critical for creating new memories and integrating them into a network of knowledge so that they can be stored indefinitely in other parts of the cerebral cortex.
histone modification
 Adding chemical modifications to proteins called histones that are involved in packaging DNA.
homeostasis
 The tendency for a system to take action to keep itself in a particular state.
human sexual response cycle
 The stages of physiological arousal during sexual activity.
humanistic psychology
 An approach to understanding human nature that emphasizes the positive potential of human beings.
hypnosis
 A social interaction in which one person (the hypnotist) makes suggestions that lead to a change in another person’s (the subject’s) subjective experience of the world.
hypnotic analgesia
 The reduction of pain through hypnosis in people who are susceptible to hypnosis.
hypothalamus
 A subcortical structure that regulates body temperature, hunger, thirst, and sexual behavior.
hypothesis
 A falsifiable prediction made by a theory.
hysteria
 A temporary loss of cognitive or motor functions, usually as a result of emotionally upsetting experiences.
iatrogenic illness
 A disorder or symptom that occurs as a result of a medical or psychotherapeutic treatment itself.
iconic memory
 A fast-decaying store of visual information.
id
 The part of the mind containing the drives present at birth; it is the source of our bodily needs, wants, desires, and impulses, particularly our sexual and aggressive drives.
identical twins (or monozygotic twins)
 Twins who develop from the splitting of a single egg that was fertilized by a single sperm (see fraternal twins).
illusions
 Errors of perception, memory, or judgment in which subjective experience differs from objective reality.
illusory conjunction
 A perceptual mistake where features from multiple objects are incorrectly combined.
immune system
 A complex response system that protects the body from bacteria, viruses, and other foreign substances.
implicit learning
 Learning that takes place largely independent of awareness of both the process and the products of information acquisition.
implicit memory
 The influence of past experiences on later behavior and performance, even without an effort to remember them or an awareness of the recollection.
inattentional blindness
 A failure to perceive objects that are not the focus of attention.
independent variable
 The variable that is manipulated in an experiment.
infancy
 The stage of development that begins at birth and lasts between 18 and 24 months.
informational influence
 A phenomenon that occurs when another person’s behavior provides information about what is true.
informed consent
 A written agreement to participate in a study made by an adult who has been informed of all the risks that participation may entail.
insomnia
 Difficulty in falling asleep or staying asleep.
instrument
 Anything that can detect the condition to which an operational definition refers.
intelligence
 The ability to direct one’s thinking, adapt to one’s circumstances, and learn from one’s experiences.
intermittent reinforcement
 An operant conditioning principle in which only some of the responses made are followed by reinforcement.
intermittent reinforcement effect
 The fact that operant behaviors that are maintained under intermittent reinforcement schedules resist extinction better than those maintained under continuous reinforcement.
internal validity
 An attribute of an experiment that allows it to establish causal relationships.
internal working model of relationships
 A set of beliefs about the self, the primary caregiver, and the relationship between them.
interneurons
 Neurons that connect sensory neurons, motor neurons, or other interneurons.
interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT)
 A form of psychotherapy that focuses on helping clients improve current relationships.
intrinsic motivation
 A motivation to take actions that are themselves rewarding.
introspection
 The subjective observation of one’s own experience.
ironic processes of mental control
 Mental processes that can produce ironic errors because monitoring for errors can itself produce them.
James–Lange theory
 The theory that a stimulus triggers activity in the body, which in turn produces an emotional experience in the brain.
just noticeable difference (JND)
 The minimal change in a stimulus that can just barely be detected.
kin selection
 The process by which evolution selects for individuals who cooperate with their relatives.
language
 A system for communicating with others using signals that are combined according to rules of grammar and convey meaning.
language acquisition device (lad)
 A collection of processes that facilitate language learning.
latency stage
 The fourth psychosexual stage, in which the primary focus is on the further development of intellectual, creative, interpersonal, and athletic skills.
latent content
 A dream’s true underlying meaning.
latent learning
 Something is learned, but it is not manifested as a behavioral change until sometime in the future.
law of effect
 Behaviors that are followed by a “satisfying state of affairs” tend to be repeated and those that produce an “unpleasant state of affairs” are less likely to be repeated.
learning
 The acquisition of new knowledge, skills, or responses from experience that results in a relatively permanent change in the state of the learner.
limbic system
 A group of forebrain structures including the hypothalamus, the hippocampus, and the amygdala, which are involved in motivation, emotion, learning, and memory.
linguistic relativity hypothesis
 The proposal that language shapes the nature of thought.
locus of control
 A person’s tendency to perceive the control of rewards as internal to the self or external in the environment.
long-term memory
 A type of storage that holds information for hours, days, weeks, or years.
long-term potentiation (LTP)
 A process whereby communication across the synapse between neurons strengthens the connection, making further communication easier.
loudness
 A sound’s intensity.
lymphocytes
 White blood cells that produce antibodies that fight infection, including T cells and B cells.
major depressive disorder (or unipolar depression)
 A disorder characterized by a severely depressed mood and/or inability to experience pleasure that lasts 2 or more weeks and is accompanied by feelings of worthlessness, lethargy, and sleep and appetite disturbance.
manifest content
 A dream’s apparent topic or superficial meaning.
manipulation
 Changing a variable in order to determine its causal power.
marijuana
 The leaves and buds of the hemp plant, which contain a psychoactive drug called tetrahydrocannabinol (THC).
matched pairs
 A technique whereby each participant is identical to one other participant in terms of a third variable.
matched samples
 A technique whereby the participants in two groups are identical in terms of a third variable.
mean
 The average value of all the measurements.
means–ends analysis
 A process of searching for the means or steps to reduce differences between the current situation and the desired goal.
median
 The value that is in the middle; that is, greater than or equal to half the measurements and less than or equal to half the measurements.
medical model
 Abnormal psychological experiences are conceptualized as illnesses that, like physical illnesses, have biological and environmental causes, defined symptoms, and possible cures.
meditation
 The practice of intentional contemplation.
medulla
 An extension of the spinal cord into the skull that coordinates heart rate, circulation, and respiration.
memory misattribution
 Assigning a recollection or an idea to the wrong source.
memory
 The ability to store and retrieve information over time.
mental control
 The attempt to change conscious states of mind.
mental disorder
 A persistent disturbance or dysfunction in behavior, thoughts, or emotions that causes significant distress or impairment.
mere exposure effect
 The tendency for liking to increase with the frequency of exposure.
metabolism
 The rate at which energy is used by the body.
mind
 The private inner experience of perceptions, thoughts, memories, and feelings.
mind–body problem
 The issue of how the mind is related to the brain and the body.
mindfulness meditation
 Teaches an individual to be fully present in each moment; to be aware of his or her thoughts, feelings, and sensations; and to detect symptoms before they become a problem.
minimal consciousness
 A low-level kind of sensory awareness and responsiveness that occurs when the mind inputs sensations and may output behavior.
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
 A well-researched, clinical questionnaire used to assess personality and psychological problems.
mirror neurons
 Neurons that are active when an animal performs a behavior, such as reaching for or manipulating an object, and are also activated when another animal observes that animal performing the same behavior.
mode
 The value of the most frequently observed measurement.
monocular depth cues
 Aspects of a scene that yield information about depth when viewed with only one eye.
mood disorders
 Mental disorders that have mood disturbance as their predominant feature.
morphemes
 The smallest meaningful units of language.
morphological rules
 A set of rules that indicate how morphemes can be combined to form words.
motivation
 The purpose for or psychological cause of an action.
motor development
 The emergence of the ability to execute physical action.
motor neurons
 Neurons that carry signals from the spinal cord to the muscles to produce movement.
myelin sheath
 An insulating layer of fatty material.
myelination
 The formation of a fatty sheath around the axons of a neuron.
narcissism
 A trait that reflects a grandiose view of the self combined with a tendency to seek admiration from and exploit others.
narcolepsy
 A disorder in which sudden sleep attacks occur in the middle of waking activities.
narcotics (or opiates)
 Highly addictive drugs derived from opium that relieve pain.
nativism
 The philosophical view that certain kinds of knowledge are innate or inborn.
nativist theory
 The view that language development is best explained as an innate, biological capacity.
natural correlation
 A correlation observed in the world around us.
natural selection
 Charles Darwin’s theory that the features of an organism that help it survive and reproduce are more likely than other features to be passed on to subsequent generations.
naturalistic observation
 A technique for gathering scientific information by unobtrusively observing people in their natural environments.
need for achievement
 The motivation to solve worthwhile problems.
negative symptoms
 Deficits or disruptions to normal emotions and behaviors (e.g., emotional and social withdrawal; apathy; poverty of speech; and other indications of the absence or insufficiency of normal behavior, motivation, and emotion).
nervous system
 An interacting network of neurons that conveys electrochemical information throughout the body.
neurons
 Cells in the nervous system that communicate with one another to perform information-processing tasks.
neurotransmitters
 Chemicals that transmit information across the synapse to a receiving neuron’s dendrites.
night terrors (or sleep terrors)
 Abrupt awakenings with panic and intense emotional arousal.
nonshared environment
 Those environmental factors that are not experienced by all relevant members of a household (see shared environment).
nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI)
 Direct, deliberate destruction of body tissue in the absence of any intent to die.
norepinephrine
 A neurotransmitter that is particularly involved in states of vigilance, or heightened awareness of dangers in the environment.
norm of reciprocity
 The unwritten rule that people should benefit those who have benefited them.
normal distribution
 A mathematically defined distribution in which the frequency of measurements is highest in the middle and decreases symmetrically in both directions.
normative influence
 A phenomenon that occurs when another person’s behavior provides information about what is appropriate.
norms
 Customary standards for behavior that are widely shared by members of a culture.
obedience
 The tendency to do what powerful people tell us to do.
object permanence
 The belief that objects continue to exist even when they are not visible.
observational learning
 A condition in which learning takes place by watching the actions of others.
obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
 A disorder in which repetitive, intrusive thoughts (obsessions) and ritualistic behaviors (compulsions) designed to fend off those thoughts interfere significantly with an individual’s functioning.
occipital lobe
 A region of the cerebral cortex that processes visual information.
Oedipus conflict
 A developmental experience in which a child’s conflicting feelings toward the opposite-sex parent are (usually) resolved by identifying with the same-sex parent.
olfactory bulb
 A brain structure located above the nasal cavity beneath the frontal lobes.
olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs)
 Receptor cells that initiate the sense of smell.
operant behavior
 Behavior that an organism produces that has some impact on the environment.
operant conditioning
 A type of learning in which the consequences of an organism’s behavior determine whether it will be repeated in the future.
operational definition
 A description of a property in concrete, measurable terms.
oral stage
 The first psychosexual stage, in which experience centers on the pleasures and frustrations associated with the mouth, sucking, and being fed.
organizational encoding
 The process of categorizing information according to the relationships among a series of items.
outcome expectancies
 A person’s assumptions about the likely consequences of a future behavior.
panic disorder
 A disorder characterized by the sudden occurrence of multiple psychological and physiological symptoms that contribute to a feeling of stark terror.
parasympathetic nervous system
 A set of nerves that helps the body return to a normal resting state.
parietal lobe
 A region of the cerebral cortex whose functions include processing information about touch.
passionate love
 An experience involving feelings of euphoria, intimacy, and intense sexual attraction.
perception
 The organization, identification, and interpretation of a sensation in order to form a mental representation.
perceptual confirmation
 The tendency for people to see what they expect to see.
perceptual constancy
 A perceptual principle stating that even as aspects of sensory signals change, perception remains consistent.
peripheral nervous system (PNS)
 The part of the nervous system that connects the central nervous system to the body’s organs and muscles.
persistence
 The intrusive recollection of events that we wish we could forget.
person-centered therapy (or client-centered therapy)
 Assumes that all individuals have a tendency toward growth and that this growth can be facilitated by acceptance and genuine reactions from the therapist.
person–situation controversy
 The question of whether behavior is caused more by personality or by situational factors.
personal constructs
 Dimensions people use in making sense of their experiences.
personality
 An individual’s characteristic style of behaving, thinking, and feeling.
personality disorders
 Enduring patterns of thinking, feeling, or relating to others or controlling impulses that deviate from cultural expectations and cause distress or impaired functioning.
persuasion
 A phenomenon that occurs when a person’s attitudes or beliefs are influenced by a communication from another person.
phallic stage
 The third psychosexual stage, in which experience is dominated by the pleasure, conflict, and frustration associated with the phallic-genital region as well as coping with powerful incestuous feelings of love, hate, jealousy, and conflict.
phenomenology
 How things seem to the conscious person.
pheromones
 Biochemical odorants emitted by other members of its species that can affect an animal’s behavior or physiology.
philosophical empiricism
 The view that all knowledge is acquired through experience.
phobic disorders
 Disorders characterized by marked, persistent, and excessive fear and avoidance of specific objects, activities, or situations.
phoneme
 The smallest unit of sound that is recognizable as speech rather than as random noise.
phonological rules
 A set of rules that indicate how phonemes can be combined to produce speech sounds.
phototherapy
 A therapy that involves repeated exposure to bright light.
phrenology
 A now defunct theory that specific mental abilities and characteristics, ranging from memory to the capacity for happiness, are localized in specific regions of the brain.
physiology
 The study of biological processes, especially in the human body.
pitch
 How high or low a sound is.
pituitary gland
 The “master gland” of the body’s hormone-producing system, which releases hormones that direct the functions of many other glands in the body.
place code
 The process by which different frequencies stimulate neural signals at specific places along the basilar membrane, from which the brain determines pitch.
placebo
 An inert substance or procedure that has been applied with the expectation that a healing response will be produced.
pons
 A brain structure that relays information from the cerebellum to the rest of the brain.
population
 A complete collection of participants who might possibly be measured.
positive symptoms
 Thoughts and behaviors present in schizophrenia but not seen in those without the disorder, such as delusions and hallucinations.
postconventional stage
 A stage of moral development in which the morality of an action is determined by a set of general principles that reflect core values.
posthypnotic amnesia
 The failure to retrieve memories following hypnotic suggestions to forget.
posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
 A disorder characterized by chronic physiological arousal, recurrent unwanted thoughts or images of the trauma, and avoidance of things that call the traumatic event to mind.
power
 An instrument’s ability to detect small magnitudes of the property.
practical reasoning
 Figuring out what to do, or reasoning directed toward action.
preconventional stage
 A stage of moral development in which the morality of an action is primarily determined by its consequences for the actor.
prejudice
 A positive or negative evaluation of another person based on their group membership.
preoperational stage
 The stage of cognitive development that begins at about 2 years and ends at about 6 years, during which children develop a preliminary understanding of the physical world.
preparedness theory
 The idea that people are instinctively predisposed toward certain fears.
primary sex characteristics
 Bodily structures that are directly involved in reproduction.
priming
 An enhanced ability to think of a stimulus, such as a word or object, as a result of a recent exposure to the stimulus.
proactive interference
 Situations in which information learned earlier impairs memory for information acquired later.
problem of other minds
 The fundamental difficulty we have in perceiving the consciousness of others.
procedural memory
 The gradual acquisition of skills as a result of practice, or “knowing how” to do things.
projective tests
 Tests designed to reveal inner aspects of individuals’ personalities by analysis of their responses to a standard series of ambiguous stimuli.
prospect theory
 People choose to take on risk when evaluating potential losses and avoid risks when evaluating potential gains.
prospective memory
 Remembering to do things in the future.
prototype
 The “best” or “most typical” member of a category.
proximodistal rule
 The “inside-to-outside” rule that describes the tendency for motor skills to emerge in sequence from the center to the periphery.
psychoactive drugs
 Chemicals that influence consciousness or behavior by altering the brain’s chemical message system.
psychoanalysis
 A therapeutic approach that focuses on bringing unconscious material into conscious awareness to better understand psychological disorders.
psychoanalytic theory
 An approach that emphasizes the importance of unconscious mental processes in shaping feelings, thoughts, and behavior.
psychodynamic approach
 An approach that regards personality as formed by needs, strivings, and desires largely operating outside of awareness—motives that also can produce emotional disorders.
psychodynamic psychotherapies
 Therapies that explore childhood events and encourage individuals to use this understanding to develop insight into their psychological problems.
psychology
 The scientific study of mind and behavior.
psychopharmacology
 The study of drug effects on psychological states and symptoms.
psychophysics
 Methods that measure the strength of a stimulus and the observer’s sensitivity to that stimulus.
psychosexual stages
 Distinct early life stages through which personality is formed as children experience sexual pleasures from specific body areas and caregivers redirect or interfere with those pleasures.
psychosomatic illness
 An interaction between mind and body that can produce illness.
psychosurgery
 Surgical destruction of specific brain areas.
psychotherapy
 An interaction between a socially sanctioned clinician and someone suffering from a psychological problem, with the goal of providing support or relief from the problem.
puberty
 The bodily changes associated with sexual maturity.
punisher
 Any stimulus or event that functions to decrease the likelihood of the behavior that led to it.
random assignment
 A procedure that lets chance assign people to the experimental or control group.
random sampling
 A technique for choosing participants that ensures that every member of a population has an equal chance of being included in the sample.
range
 The value of the largest measurement in a frequency distribution minus the value of the smallest measurement.
ratio IQ
 A statistic obtained by dividing a person’s mental age by the person’s physical age and then multiplying the quotient by 100 (see deviation IQ).
rational choice theory
 The classical view that we make decisions by determining how likely something is to happen, judging the value of the outcome, and then multiplying the two.
rational coping
 Facing a stressor and working to overcome it.
reaction time
 The amount of time taken to respond to a specific stimulus.
reappraisal
 Changing one’s emotional experience by changing the way one thinks about the emotion-eliciting stimulus.
reasoning
 A mental activity that consists of organizing information or beliefs into a series of steps in order to reach conclusions.
rebound effect of thought suppression
 The tendency of a thought to return to consciousness with greater frequency following suppression.
receptors
 Parts of the cell membrane that receive the neurotransmitter and initiate or prevent a new electric signal.
reciprocal altruism
 Behavior that benefits another with the expectation that those benefits will be returned in the future.
reconsolidation
 Memories can become vulnerable to disruption when they are recalled, requiring them to become consolidated again.
referred pain
 Feeling of pain when sensory information from internal and external areas converges on the same nerve cells in the spinal cord.
reflexes
 Specific patterns of motor response that are triggered by specific patterns of sensory stimulation.
refractory period
 The time following an action potential during which a new action potential cannot be initiated.
reframing
 Finding a new or creative way to think about a stressor that reduces its threat.
rehearsal
 The process of keeping information in short-term memory by mentally repeating it.
reinforcement
 The consequences of a behavior determine whether it will be more or less likely to occur again.
reinforcer
 Any stimulus or event that functions to increase the likelihood of the behavior that led to it.
relaxation response
 A condition of reduced muscle tension, cortical activity, heart rate, breathing rate, and blood pressure.
relaxation therapy
 A technique for reducing tension by consciously relaxing muscles of the body.
reliability
 The tendency for an instrument to produce the same measurement whenever it is used to measure the same thing.
REM sleep
 A stage of sleep characterized by rapid eye movements and a high level of brain activity.
representativeness heuristic
 A mental shortcut that involves making a probability judgment by comparing an object or event to a prototype of the object or event.
repression
 A mental process that removes unacceptable thoughts and memories from consciousness and keeps them in the unconscious.
repressive coping
 Avoiding situations or thoughts that are reminders of a stressor and maintaining an artificially positive viewpoint.
Research Domain Criteria Project (RDoC)
 A new initiative that aims to guide the classification and understanding of mental disorders by revealing the basic processes that give rise to them.
resistance
 A reluctance to cooperate with treatment for fear of confronting unpleasant unconscious material.
response
 An action or physiological change elicited by a stimulus.
resting potential
 The difference in electric charge between the inside and outside of a neuron’s cell membrane.
reticular formation
 A brain structure that regulates sleep, wakefulness, and levels of arousal.
retina
 Light-sensitive tissue lining the back of the eyeball.
retrieval cue
 External information that is associated with stored information and helps bring it to mind.
retrieval
 The process of bringing to mind information that has been previously encoded and stored.
retrieval-induced forgetting
 A process by which retrieving an item from long-term memory impairs subsequent recall of related items.
retroactive interference
 Situations in which information learned later impairs memory for information acquired earlier.
retrograde amnesia
 The inability to retrieve information that was acquired before a particular date, usually the date of an injury or surgery.
rods
 Photoreceptors that become active under low-light conditions for night vision.
Rorschach Inkblot Test
 A projective technique in which respondents’ inner thoughts and feelings are believed to be revealed by analysis of their responses to a set of unstructured inkblots.
sample
 A partial collection of people drawn from a population.
schemas
 Theories about the way the world works.
schizophrenia
 A disorder characterized by the profound disruption of basic psychological processes; a distorted perception of reality; altered or blunted emotion; and disturbances in thought, motivation, and behavior.
scientific method
 A procedure for finding truth by using empirical evidence.
seasonal affective disorder (SAD)
 Recurrent depressive episodes in a seasonal pattern.
second-order conditioning
 Conditioning where a CS is paired with a stimulus that became associated with the US in an earlier procedure.
secondary sex characteristics
 Bodily structures that change dramatically with sexual maturity but that are not directly involved in reproduction.
self-actualizing tendency
 The human motive toward realizing our inner potential.
self-concept
 A person’s explicit knowledge of his or her own behaviors, traits, and other personal characteristics.
self-consciousness
 A distinct level of consciousness in which the person’s attention is drawn to the self as an object.
self-esteem
 The extent to which an individual likes, values, and accepts the self.
self-fulfilling prophecy
 The tendency for people to behave as they are expected to behave.
self-regulation
 The exercise of voluntary control over the self to bring the self into line with preferred standards.
self-report
 A method in which a person provides subjective information about their own thoughts, feelings, or behaviors, typically via questionnaire or interview.
self-selection
 A problem that occurs when anything about a person determines whether he or she will be included in the experimental or control group.
self-serving bias
 People’s tendency to take credit for their successes but downplay responsibility for their failures.
self-verification
 The tendency to seek evidence to confirm the self-concept.
semantic encoding
 The process of relating new information in a meaningful way to knowledge that is already in memory.
semantic memory
 A network of associated facts and concepts that make up our general knowledge of the world.
sensation
 Simple stimulation of a sense organ.
sensitization
 A simple form of learning that occurs when presentation of a stimulus leads to an increased response to a later stimulus.
sensorimotor stage
 A stage of development that begins at birth and lasts through infancy in which infants acquire information about the world by sensing it and moving around within it.
sensory adaptation
 Sensitivity to prolonged stimulation tends to decline over time as an organism adapts to current conditions.
sensory memory
 A type of storage that holds sensory information for a few seconds or less.
sensory neurons
 Neurons that receive information from the external world and convey this information to the brain via the spinal cord.
serotonin
 A neurotransmitter that is involved in the regulation of sleep and wakefulness, eating, and aggressive behavior.
shaping
 Learning that results from the reinforcement of successive steps to a final desired behavior.
shared environment
 Those environmental factors that are experienced by all relevant members of a household (see nonshared environment).
short-term memory
 A type of storage that holds nonsensory information for more than a few seconds but less than a minute.
sick role
 A socially recognized set of rights and obligations linked with illness.
signal detection theory
 The response to a stimulus depends both on a person’s sensitivity to the stimulus in the presence of noise and on a person’s response criterion.
sleep apnea
 A disorder in which the person stops breathing for brief periods while asleep.
sleep paralysis
 The experience of waking up unable to move.
social cognition
 The processes by which people come to understand others.
social-cognitive approach
 An approach that views personality in terms of how the person thinks about the situations encountered in daily life and behaves in response to them.
social exchange
 The hypothesis that people remain in relationships only as long as they perceive a favorable ratio of costs to benefits.
social influence
 The ability to control another person’s behavior
social loafing
 The tendency for people to expend less effort when in a group than when alone.
social phobia
 A disorder that involves an irrational fear of being publicly humiliated or embarrassed.
social psychology
 The study of the causes and consequences of sociality. (pp. 27, 508)
social support
 The aid gained through interacting with others.
somatic nervous system
 A set of nerves that conveys information between voluntary muscles and the central nervous system.
somatic symptom disorders
 The set of psychological disorders in which a person with at least one bodily symptom displays significant health-related anxiety, expresses disproportionate concerns about their symptoms, and devotes excessive time and energy to their symptoms or health concerns.
somnambulism (or sleepwalking)
 Occurs when a person arises and walks around while asleep.
source memory
 Recall of when, where, and how information was acquired.
specific phobia
 A disorder that involves an irrational fear of a particular object or situation that markedly interferes with an individual’s ability to function.
spinal reflexes
 Simple pathways in the nervous system that rapidly generate muscle contractions.
spontaneous recovery
 The tendency of a learned behavior to recover from extinction after a rest period.
standard deviation
 A statistic that describes the average difference between the measurements in a frequency distribution and the mean of that distribution.
state-dependent retrieval
 The tendency for information to be better recalled when the person is in the same state during encoding and retrieval.
stereotype threat
 The fear of confirming the negative beliefs that others may hold.
stereotyping
 The process by which people draw inferences about others based on their knowledge of the categories to which others belong.
stimulants
 Substances that excite the central nervous system, heightening arousal and activity levels.
stimulus
 Sensory input from the environment.
storage
 The process of maintaining information in memory over time.
Strange Situation
 A behavioral test developed by Mary Ainsworth that is used to determine a child’s attachment style.
stress inoculation training (SIT)
 A reframing technique that helps people to cope with stressful situations by developing positive ways to think about the situation.
stress
 The physical and psychological response to internal or external stressors.
stressors
 Specific events or chronic pressures that place demands on a person or threaten the person’s well-being.
structuralism
 The analysis of the basic elements that constitute the mind.
subcortical structures
 Areas of the forebrain housed under the cerebral cortex near the very center of the brain.
subliminal perception
 Thought or behavior that is influenced by stimuli that a person cannot consciously report perceiving.
subtyping
 The tendency for people who receive disconfirming evidence to modify their stereotypes rather than abandon them.
suggestibility
 The tendency to incorporate misleading information from external sources into personal recollections.
suicide attempt
 When a person engages in potentially harmful behavior with some intention of dying.
suicide
 Intentional self-inflicted death.
sunk-cost fallacy
 A framing effect in which people make decisions about a current situation based on what they have previously invested in the situation.
superego
 The mental system that reflects the internalization of cultural rules, mainly learned as parents exercise their authority.
surface structure
 How a sentence is worded.
syllogistic reasoning
 Determining whether a conclusion follows from two statements that are assumed to be true.
sympathetic nervous system
 A set of nerves that prepares the body for action in challenging or threatening situations.
synapse
 The junction or region between the axon of one neuron and the dendrites or cell body of another.
syntactical rules
 A set of rules that indicate how words can be combined to form phrases and sentences.
systematic persuasion
 The process by which attitudes or beliefs are changed by appeals to reason.
taste buds
 The organ of taste transduction.
tectum
 A part of the midbrain that orients an organism in the environment.
tegmentum
 A part of the midbrain that is involved in movement and arousal.
telegraphic speech
 Speech that is devoid of function morphemes and consists mostly of content words.
telomerase
 An enzyme that rebuilds telomeres at the tips of chromosomes.
telomeres
 Caps at the end of each chromosome that protect the ends of chromosomes and prevent them from sticking to each other.
temperaments
 Characteristic patterns of emotional reactivity.
template
 A mental representation that can be directly compared to a viewed shape in the retinal image.
temporal code
 The cochlea registers low frequencies via the firing rate of action potentials entering the auditory nerve.
temporal lobe
 A region of the cerebral cortex responsible for hearing and language.
teratogens
 Agents that damage the process of development, such as drugs and viruses.
terminal buttons
 Knoblike structures that branch out from an axon.
terror management theory
 The theory that people cope with their existential terror by developing a “cultural worldview.”
thalamus
 A subcortical structure that relays and filters information from the senses and transmits the information to the cerebral cortex.
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
 A projective technique in which respondents’ underlying motives, concerns, and the way they see the social world are believed to be revealed through analysis of the stories they make up about ambiguous pictures of people.
theoretical reasoning (or discursive reasoning)
 Reasoning directed toward arriving at a belief.
theory
 A hypothetical explanation of a natural phenomenon.
theory of mind
 The understanding that human behavior is guided by mental representations.
third-variable correlation
 Two variables are correlated only because each is causally related to a third variable.
third-variable problem
 The fact that a causal relationship between two variables cannot be inferred from the naturally occurring correlation between them because of the ever-present possibility of third-variable correlation.
thought suppression
 The conscious avoidance of a thought.
timbre
 A listener’s experience of sound quality or resonance.
token economy
 A form of behavior therapy in which clients are given “tokens” for desired behaviors, which they can later trade for rewards.
trait
 A relatively stable disposition to behave in a particular and consistent way.
transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)
 A treatment that involves placing a powerful pulsed magnet over a person’s scalp, which alters neuronal activity in the brain.
transduction
 What takes place when many sensors in the body convert physical signals from the environment into encoded neural signals sent to the central nervous system.
transfer-appropriate processing
 The idea that memory is likely to transfer from one situation to another when the encoding and retrieval contexts of the situations match.
transference
 An event that occurs in psychoanalysis when the analyst begins to assume a major significance in the client’s life and the client reacts to the analyst based on unconscious childhood fantasies.
transience
 Forgetting what occurs with the passage of time.
two-factor theory of intelligence
 Spearman’s theory suggesting that every task requires a combination of a general ability (which he called g) and skills that are specific to the task (which he called s).
two-factor theory
 The theory that emotions are based on inferences about the causes of physiological arousal.
Type A behavior pattern
 The tendency toward easily aroused hostility, impatience, a sense of time urgency, and competitive achievement strivings.
unconditioned response (UR)
 A reflexive reaction that is reliably produced by an unconditioned stimulus.
unconditioned stimulus (US)
 Something that reliably produces a naturally occurring reaction in an organism.
unconscious motivations
 Motivations of which people are not aware.
unconscious
 The part of the mind that operates outside of conscious awareness but influences conscious thoughts, feelings, and actions.
universality hypothesis
 Emotional expressions have the same meaning for everyone.
validity
 The goodness with which a concrete event defines a property.
variable
 A property whose value can vary across individuals or over time.
variable-interval schedule (VI)
 An operant conditioning principle in which behavior is reinforced based on an average time that has expired since the last reinforcement.
variable-ratio schedule (VR)
 An operant conditioning principle in which the delivery of reinforcement is based on a particular average number of responses.
vestibular system
 The three fluid-filled semicircular canals and adjacent organs located next to the cochlea in each inner ear.
visual acuity
 The ability to see fine detail.
visual form agnosia
 The inability to recognize objects by sight.
visual imagery encoding
 The process of storing new information by converting it into mental pictures.
Weber’s law
 The just noticeable difference of a stimulus is a constant proportion despite variations in intensity.
working memory
 Active maintenance of information in short-term storage.
zygote
 A fertilized egg that contains chromosomes from both a sperm and an egg.