Myers Nathan C. Dewall All Chapters Covered
ISBN:9781319132101| Complete Guide A+ Study Guide
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,TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1: Thinking Critically With Psychological Science
1 The History and Scope of Psychology
2 Research Strategies: How Psychologists Ask and Answer Questions
3 Statistical Reasoning in Everyday Life
CHAPTER 2: The Biology of Mind
4 Neural and Hormonal Systems
5 Tools of Discovery: Having Our Head Examined
6 Brain Regions and Structures
7 Damage Responses and Brain Hemispheres
CHAPTER 3: Consciousness and the Two-Track Mind
8 Basic Consciousness Concepts
9 Sleep and Dreams
10 Drugs and Consciousness
CHAPTER 4: Nature, Nurture, and Human Diversity
11 Behavior Genetics: Predicting Individual Differences
12 Evolutionary Psychology: Explaining Human Nature and Nurture
13 Cultural and Gender Diversity: Understanding Nature and Nurture
CHAPTER 5: Developing Through the Life Span
14 Developmental Issues, Prenatal Development, and the Newborn
15 Infancy and Childhood
16 Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood
17 Adulthood
CHAPTER 6: Sensation and Perception
18 Basic Concepts of Sensation and Perception
19 Vision: Sensory and Perceptual Processing
20 Hearing, Skin, Chemical, and Body Senses
CHAPTER 7: Learning
21 Basic Learning Concepts and Classical Conditioning
22 Operant Conditioning
23 Biology, Cognition, and Learning
CHAPTER 8: Memory
24 Studying and Encoding Memories
25 Storing and Retrieving Memories
26 Forgetting, Memory Construction, and Improving Memory
CHAPTER 9: Thinking and Language
27 Thinking
28 Language and Thought
CHAPTER 10: Intelligence
29 What Is Intelligence?
30 Intelligence Assessment and Dynamics
31 Genetic and Environmental Influences on Intelligence
CHAPTER 11: What Drives Us: Hunger, Sex, Belongingness, and Achievement
32 Basic Motivational Concepts
33 Hunger
34 Sexual Motivation
35 Affiliation and Achievement
CHAPTER 12: Emotions, Stress, and Health
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,36 Introduction to Emotion
37 Expressing Emotion
38 Experiencing Emotion
39 Stress and Illness
40 Health and Coping
CHAPTER 13: Social Psychology
41 Social Thinking
42 Social Influence
43 Antisocial Relations
44 Prosocial Relations
CHAPTER 14: Personality
45 Introduction to Personality and Psychodynamic Theories
46 Humanistic Theories and Trait Theories
47 Social-Cognitive Theories and the Self
CHAPTER 15: Psychological Disorders
48 Introduction to Psychological Disorders
49 Anxiety Disorders, Obsessive Compulsive and Related Disorders, Trauma- and Stressor-Related
Disorders, and Somatic Symptom and Related Disorders
50 Depressive Disorders and Bipolar Disorders
51 Schizophrenia
52 Dissociative, Personality, and Eating Disorders
53 Neurodevelopmental Disorders
CHAPTER 16: Therapy
54 Introduction to Therapy and the Psychological Therapies
55 Evaluating Psychotherapies
56 The Biomedical Therapies and Preventing Psychological Disorders
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, Chapter 1: Thinking Critically With Psychological Science
Myers: Psychology 14th Edition
Multiple Choice
Indicate The Answer Choice That Best Completes The Statement Or Answers The Question.
If Results Are Statistically Significant But Have A Small Effect Size, The
Results May Lack Practical Significance.
Lack A Cause-Effect Relationship.
Represent A Negative Relationship.
Represent A Neutral Relationship.
In One Study, Introductory Psychology Students Were Fitted With Electronically Activated Recorders
So That Researchers Could Sample Their Daily Activities. The Researchers Were Employing A
Scientific Method Known As
Naturalistic Observation.
The Double-Blind Procedure.
Experimentation.
The Case Study.
Studies Conducted In The Late 1990s In Which The Researcher Concluded That Children Who Were
Administered The Mmr Vaccination Developed Autism Were
Withheld From The Public
Intentionally. Accurate.
Never Published By Academic
Journals. Discovered To Be
Fraudulent.
Seven Members Of A Boys' Club Reported The Following Individual Earnings From Their Sale Of Cookies:
$2, $9,
$8, $10, $4, $9, And $7. In This Distribution Of Individual
Earnings The Median Is Greater Than The Mean And
Greater Than The Mode. The Median Is Less Than The
Mean And Less Than The Mode.
The Median Is Greater Than The Mean And Less Than
The Mode. The Median Is Less Than The Mean And
Greater Than The Mode.
Professor Valetta Believes That Identical Twins Have Similar Levels Of Intelligence Largely
Because They Share Common Genes. His Idea Is Best Described As A(N)
Theory.
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