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6th EDITIONBYSAUNDRAK.
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CICCARELLI J. AND NOLAND
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WHITE. ISBN-13:9780135212431
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,TABLE OF CONTENTS
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1. The Science of Psychology
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2. The Biological Perspective
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3. Sensation and Perception
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4. Consciousness
5. Learning
6. Memory
7. Cognition: Thinking, Intelligence, and Language
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8. Development Across the Life Span
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9. Motivation and Emotion
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10. Sexuality and Gender f f
11. Stress and Health f f
12. Social Psychology
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13. Theories of Personality f f
14. Psychological Disorders f
15. Psychological Therapies f
, Name f rf r
Chapter 1r–rQuick Quiz 1
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1. The rf goals fof fpsychology rfare rfto r .
a) explore rftherfconscious fand funconsciousrf functions fof fthe rf rhuman f mind
b) understand,rfcompare, rfandrfanalyze rf human fbehavior
c) improve rfpsychological f well-being f rinrfall f individuals rf from f birth funtil fdeath
d) describe, rfexplain, rfpredict, rfandrfcontrol fbehavior
2. fr was fan fearly fproponent fof f functionalism.
a) Ivan fPavlov c)rf rWilhelm rf rWundt
b) William f rJames d)rf rMax f rWertheimer
3. Freud fsaid rfphobias fwere r , rfwhereas fWatson f said f phobias fwere r .
a) learned;rf inherited c)rfsexual;rfunconscious
b) repressed fconflicts;rf learned d)rfconditioned;rfunconditioned
4. Which fperspective rffocuses fon f free rfwill fand fself-actualization?
a) psychoanalysis c)rfcognitive rfperspective
b) humanism d)rfbehaviorism
5. The rfclass rf ris rfplaying rfa rf game rfof rfJeopardy! rfand rf rit rf ris rf your rfturn. rf“I’ll rf take rf rSpecialties rf rin rfPsychology rf for rf$300.”
rfThe rfr evealed rf answer rf is, rf“These rfpsychological fprofessionals rf work f with f situations rf rin
rf which f environmental f conditions rfmay f have rfanrf rimpact f on f mental f health.” rf rWhat f will fyou f say?
a) “What f risrfarfneuropsychologist?”
b) “What fisrfarfforensic rfpsychologist?”
c) “What f risrfarfpsychiatric fsocial fworker?”
d) “What f risrfarfdevelopmental f psychologist?”
6. When f you f watch f dogs f play f rinrf the rf park f orrf watch fhow f ryourrf professors fconduct f theirrfclasses, rf you fare rfengaging f rin rfa
rffr rorm rf of r .
a) case fstudy fresearch c)rfsur vey fresearch
b) naturalistic fobservation d)rfpsychometric rfstudy
7. A fdetailed fdescriptionrfof farfparticular findividual fbeing fstudied forrftreated rfisrfcalledrfa r .
a) representative rfsample c)rfsingle-blind rfstudy
b) case rfstudy d)rfnaturalistic rfobservation
8. A fnegative rfcorrelation rf means fthat r .
a) high rf rvalues fof fone rf rvariable rfare rfassociated rf withrf lowrf rvalues fof fthe rf other
b) high rf rvalues fof f one rf variable rfare rfassociated rf withrf high rf rvalues fof fthe rfother
c) lowrf rvalues fof fone rf variable rfare rfassociated rfwithrf low rf values fof fthe rfother
d) there rf risrfnorfrelationship rf between fthe rftwo f rvariables
9. f r isrf anrf experiment f rinrf which fparticipantsrfdorf notrf knowrf rifrf theyrfare rf rin rfthe rf experimental forrfthe rfcontrol
rf group, rfbutrf the rfexperimenters fdo f knowrfwhich rf participantsrfare rfpartrfof f which f group.
a) The rfdouble-blind rfstudy c)rfThe rfsingle-blind rfstudy
b) Field rfresearch d)rf rCorrelational fresearch
10. Experimenters fcan f justify rfthe fuse rfof fdeception rfbecause r .
a) there rf risrf informed fconsent c)rfitrf may fberf necessary f forrf the rfexperiment fto fwork
b) research rf risrf more rf important fthan f people d)rf ritrf risrfnotrfthatrf harmful