Vocabulary
- Absolute threshold
- The smallest amount of stimulation needed for detection by a sense.
- Adaptation
- The fact that after people first react to good or bad events, sometimes in a strong way, their feelings and reactions tend to dampen down over time and they return toward their original level of subjective well-being.
- Adoption study
- A behavior genetic research method that involves comparison of adopted children to their adoptive and biological parents.
- Agnosia
- Loss of the ability to perceive stimuli.
- Altruism
- A desire to improve the welfare of another person, at a potential cost to the self and without any expectation of reward.
- Anosmia
- Loss of the ability to smell.
- Audition
- Ability to process auditory stimuli. Also called hearing.
- Auditory canal
- Tube running from the outer ear to the middle ear.
- Auditory hair cells
- Receptors in the cochlea that transduce sound into electrical potentials.
- Autobiographical reasoning
- The ability, typically developed in adolescence, to derive substantive conclusions about the self from analyzing one’s own personal experiences.
- Automatic empathy
- A social perceiver unwittingly taking on the internal state of another person, usually because of mimicking the person’s expressive behavior and thereby feeling the expressed emotion.
- Awareness
- A conscious experience or the capability of having conscious experiences, which is distinct from self-awareness, the conscious understanding of one’s own existence and individuality.
- Behavioral genetics
- The empirical science of how genes and environments combine to generate behavior.
- Behaviorism
- The study of behavior.
- Big Five
- A broad taxonomy of personality trait domains repeatedly derived from studies of trait ratings in adulthood and encompassing the categories of (1) extraversion vs. introversion, (2) neuroticism vs. emotional stability, (3) agreeable vs. disagreeableness, (4) conscientiousness vs. nonconscientiousness, and (5) openness to experience vs. conventionality. By late childhood and early adolescence, people’s self-attributions of personality traits, as well as the trait attributions made about them by others, show patterns of intercorrelations that confirm with the five-factor structure obtained in studies of adults.
- Big-C Creativity
- Creative ideas that have an impact well beyond the everyday life of home or work. At the highest level, this kind of creativity is that of the creative genius.
- Binocular disparity
- Difference is images processed by the left and right eyes.
- Binocular vision
- Our ability to perceive 3D and depth because of the difference between the images on each of our retinas.
- Blocking
- In classical conditioning, the finding that no conditioning occurs to a stimulus if it is combined with a previously conditioned stimulus during conditioning trials. Suggests that information, surprise value, or prediction error is important in conditioning.
- “Bottom-up” or external causes of happiness
- Situational factors outside the person that influence his or her subjective well-being, such as good and bad events and circumstances such as health and wealth.
- Bottom-up processing
- Building up to perceptual experience from individual pieces.
- Categorize
- To sort or arrange different items into classes or categories.
- Chemical senses
- Our ability to process the environmental stimuli of smell and taste.
- Classical conditioning
- The procedure in which an initially neutral stimulus (the conditioned stimulus, or CS) is paired with an unconditioned stimulus (or US). The result is that the conditioned stimulus begins to elicit a conditioned response (CR). Classical conditioning is nowadays considered important as both a behavioral phenomenon and as a method to study simple associative learning. Same as Pavlovian conditioning.
- Cochlea
- Spiral bone structure in the inner ear containing auditory hair cells.
- Cognitive psychology
- The study of mental processes.
- Collective self-esteem
- Feelings of self-worth that are based on evaluation of relationships with others and membership in social groups.
- Collectivism
- The cultural trend in which the primary unit of measurement is the group. Collectivists are likely to emphasize duty and obligation over personal aspirations.
- Collectivism
- Belief system that emphasizes the duties and obligations that each person has toward others.
- Common knowledge effect
- The tendency for groups to spend more time discussing information that all members know (shared information) and less time examining information that only a few members know (unshared).
- Common-pool resource
- A collective product or service that is freely available to all individuals of a society, but is vulnerable to overuse and degradation.
- Commons dilemma game
- A game in which members of a group must balance their desire for personal gain against the deterioration and possible collapse of a resource.
- Conditioned compensatory response
- In classical conditioning, a conditioned response that opposes, rather than is the same as, the unconditioned response. It functions to reduce the strength of the unconditioned response. Often seen in conditioning when drugs are used as unconditioned stimuli.
- Conditioned response (CR)
- The response that is elicited by the conditioned stimulus after classical conditioning has taken place.
- Conditioned stimulus (CS)
- An initially neutral stimulus (like a bell, light, or tone) that elicits a conditioned response after it has been associated with an unconditioned stimulus.
- Cones
- Photoreceptors of the retina sensitive to color. Located primarily in the fovea.
- Conformity
- Changing one’s attitude or behavior to match a perceived social norm.
- Conscious experience
- The first-person perspective of a mental event, such as feeling some sensory input, a memory, an idea, an emotion, a mood, or a continuous temporal sequence of happenings.
- Consciousness
- Awareness of ourselves and our environment.
- Contemplative science
- A research area concerned with understanding how contemplative practices such as meditation can affect individuals, including changes in their behavior, their emotional reactivity, their cognitive abilities, and their brains. Contemplative science also seeks insights into conscious experience that can be gained from first-person observations by individuals who have gained extraordinary expertise in introspection.
- Context
- Stimuli that are in the background whenever learning occurs. For instance, the Skinner box or room in which learning takes place is the classic example of a context. However, “context” can also be provided by internal stimuli, such as the sensory effects of drugs (e.g., being under the influence of alcohol has stimulus properties that provide a context) and mood states (e.g., being happy or sad). It can also be provided by a specific period in time—the passage of time is sometimes said to change the “temporal context.”
- Convergent thinking
- The opposite of divergent thinking, the capacity to narrow in on the single “correct” answer or solution to a given question or problem (e.g., giving the right response on an intelligence tests).
- Cooperation
- The coordination of multiple partners toward a common goal that will benefit everyone involved.
- Cross-cultural psychology (or cross-cultural studies)
- An approach to researching culture that emphasizes the use of standard scales as a means of making meaningful comparisons across groups.
- Cross-cultural studies (or cross-cultural psychology)
- An approach to researching culture that emphasizes the use of standard scales as a means of making meaningful comparisons across groups.
- Cultural differences
- An approach to understanding culture primarily by paying attention to unique and distinctive features that set them apart from other cultures.
- Cultural intelligence
- The ability and willingness to apply cultural awareness to practical uses.
- Cultural psychology
- An approach to researching culture that emphasizes the use of interviews and observation as a means of understanding culture from its own point of view.
- Cultural relativism
- The principled objection to passing overly culture-bound (i.e., “ethnocentric”) judgements on aspects of other cultures.
- Cultural script
- Learned guides for how to behave appropriately in a given social situation. These reflect cultural norms and widely accepted values.
- Cultural similarities
- An approach to understanding culture primarily by paying attention to common features that are the same as or similar to those of other cultures
- Culture
- A pattern of shared meaning and behavior among a group of people that is passed from one generation to the next.
- Dark adaptation
- Adjustment of eye to low levels of light.
- Decomposed games
- A task in which an individual chooses from multiple allocations of resources to distribute between him- or herself and another person.
- Descriptive norm
- The perception of what most people do in a given situation.
- Differential threshold (or difference threshold)
- The smallest difference needed in order to differentiate two stimuli. (See Just Noticeable Difference (JND))
- Discriminative stimulus
- In operant conditioning, a stimulus that signals whether the response will be reinforced. It is said to “set the occasion” for the operant response.
- Divergent thinking
- The opposite of convergent thinking, the capacity for exploring multiple potential answers or solutions to a given question or problem (e.g., coming up with many different uses for a common object).
- Dorsal pathway
- Pathway of visual processing. The “where” pathway.
- Drive state
- Affective experiences that motivate organisms to fulfill goals that are generally beneficial to their survival and reproduction.
- Ego
- Sigmund Freud’s conception of an executive self in the personality. Akin to this module’s notion of “the I,” Freud imagined the ego as observing outside reality, engaging in rational though, and coping with the competing demands of inner desires and moral standards.
- Emerging adulthood
- A new life stage extending from approximately ages 18 to 25, during which the foundation of an adult life is gradually constructed in love and work. Primary features include identity explorations, instability, focus on self-development, feeling incompletely adult, and a broad sense of possibilities.
- Emotion
- An experiential, physiological, and behavioral response to a personally meaningful stimulus.
- Emotion coherence
- The degree to which emotional responses (subjective experience, behavior, physiology, etc.) converge with one another.
- Emotion fluctuation
- The degree to which emotions vary or change in intensity over time.
- Empathy
- The ability to vicariously experience the emotions of another person.
- Empiricism
- The belief that knowledge comes from experience.
- Enculturation
- The uniquely human form of learning that is taught by one generation to another.
- Ethnocentric bias (or ethnocentrism)
- Being unduly guided by the beliefs of the culture you’ve grown up in, especially when this results in a misunderstanding or disparagement of unfamiliar cultures.
- Ethnographic studies
- Research that emphasizes field data collection and that examines questions that attempt to understand culture from it's own context and point of view.
- Eugenics
- The practice of selective breeding to promote desired traits.
- Extinction
- Decrease in the strength of a learned behavior that occurs when the conditioned stimulus is presented without the unconditioned stimulus (in classical conditioning) or when the behavior is no longer reinforced (in instrumental conditioning). The term describes both the procedure (the US or reinforcer is no longer presented) as well as the result of the procedure (the learned response declines). Behaviors that have been reduced in strength through extinction are said to be “extinguished.”
- False-belief test
- An experimental procedure that assesses whether a perceiver recognizes that another person has a false belief—a belief that contradicts reality.
- Fear conditioning
- A type of classical or Pavlovian conditioning in which the conditioned stimulus (CS) is associated with an aversive unconditioned stimulus (US), such as a foot shock. As a consequence of learning, the CS comes to evoke fear. The phenomenon is thought to be involved in the development of anxiety disorders in humans.
- First-person perspective
- Observations made by individuals about their own conscious experiences, also known as introspection or a subjective point of view. Phenomenology refers to the description and investigation of such observations.
- Flashbulb memory
- A highly detailed and vivid memory of an emotionally significant event.
- Flavor
- The combination of smell and taste.
- Folk explanations of behavior
- People’s natural explanations for why somebody did something, felt something, etc. (differing substantially for unintentional and intentional behaviors).
- Free rider problem
- A situation in which one or more individuals benefit from a common-pool resource without paying their share of the cost.
- Functionalism
- A school of American psychology that focused on the utility of consciousness.
- Gestalt psychology
- An attempt to study the unity of experience.
- Goal-directed behavior
- Instrumental behavior that is influenced by the animal’s knowledge of the association between the behavior and its consequence and the current value of the consequence. Sensitive to the reinforcer devaluation effect.
- Group cohesion
- The solidarity or unity of a group resulting from the development of strong and mutual interpersonal bonds among members and group-level forces that unify the group, such as shared commitment to group goals.
- Group polarization
- The tendency for members of a deliberating group to move to a more extreme position, with the direction of the shift determined by the majority or average of the members’ predeliberation preferences.
- Groupthink
- A set of negative group-level processes, including illusions of invulnerability, self-censorship, and pressures to conform, that occur when highly cohesive groups seek concurrence when making a decision.
- Gustation
- Ability to process gustatory stimuli. Also called taste.
- Habit
- Instrumental behavior that occurs automatically in the presence of a stimulus and is no longer influenced by the animal’s knowledge of the value of the reinforcer. Insensitive to the reinforcer devaluation effect.
- Happiness
- The popular word for subjective well-being. Scientists sometimes avoid using this term because it can refer to different things, such as feeling good, being satisfied, or even the causes of high subjective well-being.
- Heritability coefficient
- An easily misinterpreted statistical construct that purports to measure the role of genetics in the explanation of differences among individuals.
- Homeostasis
- The tendency of an organism to maintain a stable state across all the different physiological systems in the body.
- Homeostatic set point
- An ideal level that the system being regulated must be monitored and compared to.
- Hypothalamus
- A portion of the brain involved in a variety of functions, including the secretion of various hormones and the regulation of hunger and sexual arousal.
- Identity
- Sometimes used synonymously with the term “self,” identity means many different things in psychological science and in other fields (e.g., sociology). In this module, I adopt Erik Erikson’s conception of identity as a developmental task for late adolescence and young adulthood. Forming an identity in adolescence and young adulthood involves exploring alternative roles, values, goals, and relationships and eventually committing to a realistic agenda for life that productively situates a person in the adult world of work and love. In addition, identity formation entails commitments to new social roles and reevaluation of old traits, and importantly, it brings with it a sense of temporal continuity in life, achieved though the construction of an integrative life story.
- Independent self
- The tendency to define the self in terms of stable traits that guide behavior.
- Individual differences
- Ways in which people differ in terms of their behavior, emotion, cognition, and development.
- Individualism
- The cultural trend in which the primary unit of measurement is the individual. Individualists are likely to emphasize uniqueness and personal aspirations over social duty.
- Individualism
- Belief system that exalts freedom, independence, and individual choice as high values.
- Industrialized countries
- The economically advanced countries of the world, in which most of the world’s wealth is concentrated.
- Informational influence
- Conformity that results from a concern to act in a socially approved manner as determined by how others act.
- Instrumental conditioning
- Process in which animals learn about the relationship between their behaviors and their consequences. Also known as operant conditioning.
- Intention
- An agent’s mental state of committing to perform an action that the agent believes will bring about a desired outcome.
- Intentionality
- The quality of an agent’s performing a behavior intentionally—that is, with skill and awareness and executing an intention (which is in turn based on a desire and relevant beliefs).
- Interdependent self
- The tendency to define the self in terms of social contexts that guide behavior.
- Interindividual-intergroup discontinuity
- The tendency for relations between groups to be less cooperative than relations between individuals.
- Introspection
- A method of focusing on internal processes.
- Joint attention
- Two people attending to the same object and being aware that they both are attending to it.
- Just noticeable difference (JND)
- The smallest difference needed in order to differentiate two stimuli. (see Differential Threshold)
- Latent inhibition
- The ability to filter out extraneous stimuli, concentrating only on the information that is deemed relevant. Reduced latent inhibition is associated with higher creativity.
- Law of effect
- The idea that instrumental or operant responses are influenced by their effects. Responses that are followed by a pleasant state of affairs will be strengthened and those that are followed by discomfort will be weakened. Nowadays, the term refers to the idea that operant or instrumental behaviors are lawfully controlled by their consequences.
- Life satisfaction
- A person reflects on their life and judges to what degree it is going well, by whatever standards that person thinks are most important for a good life.
- Light adaptation
- Adjustment of eye to high levels of light.
- Little-c creativity
- Creative ideas that appear at the personal level, whether the home or the workplace. Such creativity needs not have a larger impact to be considered creative.
- Lordosis
- A physical sexual posture in females that serves as an invitation to mate.
- Mechanoreceptors
- Mechanical sensory receptors in the skin that response to tactile stimulation.
- Mimicry
- Copying others’ behavior, usually without awareness.
- Mirror neurons
- Neurons identified in monkey brains that fire both when the monkey performs a certain action and when it perceives another agent performing that action.
- Multicultural experiences
- Individual exposure to two or more cultures, such as obtained by living abroad, emigrating to another country, or working or going to school in a culturally diverse setting.
- Multimodal perception
- The effects that concurrent stimulation in more than one sensory modality has on the perception of events and objects in the world.
- Narrative identity
- An internalized and evolving story of the self designed to provide life with some measure of temporal unity and purpose. Beginning in late adolescence, people craft self-defining stories that reconstruct the past and imagine the future to explain how the person came to be the person that he or she is becoming.
- Negative feelings
- Undesirable and unpleasant feelings that people tend to avoid if they can. Moods and emotions such as depression, anger, and worry are examples.
- Neural impulse
- An electro-chemical signal that enables neurons to communicate.
- Nociception
- Our ability to sense pain.
- Non-industrialized countries
- The less economically advanced countries that comprise the majority of the world’s population. Most are currently developing at a rapid rate.
- Normative influence
- Conformity that results from a concern for what other people think of us.
- Obedience
- Responding to an order or command from a person in a position of authority.
- Observational learning
- Learning by observing the behavior of others.
- Observational learning
- Learning by observing the behavior of others.
- Odorants
- Chemicals transduced by olfactory receptors.
- OECD countries
- Members of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, comprised of the world’s wealthiest countries.
- Olfaction
- Ability to process olfactory stimuli. Also called smell.
- Olfactory epithelium
- Organ containing olfactory receptors.
- Open ended questions
- Research questions that ask participants to answer in their own words.
- Openness to experience
- One of the factors of the Big Five Model of personality, the factor assesses the degree that a person is open to different or new values, interests, and activities.
- Operant
- A behavior that is controlled by its consequences. The simplest example is the rat’s lever-pressing, which is controlled by the presentation of the reinforcer.
- Operant conditioning
- See instrumental conditioning.
- Opponent-process theory
- Theory proposing color vision as influenced by cells responsive to pairs of colors.
- Originality
- When an idea or solution has a low probability of occurrence.
- Ossicles
- A collection of three small bones in the middle ear that vibrate against the tympanic membrane.
- Ostracism
- Excluding one or more individuals from a group by reducing or eliminating contact with the person, usually by ignoring, shunning, or explicitly banishing them.
- Outgroup
- A social category or group with which an individual does not identify.
- Pavlovian conditioning
- See classical conditioning.
- Perception
- The psychological process of interpreting sensory information.
- Phantom limb
- The perception that a missing limb still exists.
- Phantom limb pain
- Pain in a limb that no longer exists.
- Pinna
- Outermost portion of the ear.
- Positive feelings
- Desirable and pleasant feelings. Moods and emotions such as enjoyment and love are examples.
- Practitioner-Scholar Model
- A model of training of professional psychologists that emphasizes clinical practice.
- Prediction error
- When the outcome of a conditioning trial is different from that which is predicted by the conditioned stimuli that are present on the trial (i.e., when the US is surprising). Prediction error is necessary to create Pavlovian conditioning (and associative learning generally). As learning occurs over repeated conditioning trials, the conditioned stimulus increasingly predicts the unconditioned stimulus, and prediction error declines. Conditioning works to correct or reduce prediction error.
- Preoptic area
- A region in the anterior hypothalamus involved in generating and regulating male sexual behavior.
- Preparedness
- The idea that an organism’s evolutionary history can make it easy to learn a particular association. Because of preparedness, you are more likely to associate the taste of tequila, and not the circumstances surrounding drinking it, with getting sick. Similarly, humans are more likely to associate images of spiders and snakes than flowers and mushrooms with aversive outcomes like shocks.
- Primary auditory cortex
- Area of the cortex involved in processing auditory stimuli.
- Primary somatosensory cortex
- Area of the cortex involved in processing somatosensory stimuli.
- Primary visual cortex
- Area of the cortex involved in processing visual stimuli.
- Principle of inverse effectiveness
- The finding that, in general, for a multimodal stimulus, if the response to each unimodal component (on its own) is weak, then the opportunity for multisensory enhancement is very large. However, if one component—by itself—is sufficient to evoke a strong response, then the effect on the response gained by simultaneously processing the other components of the stimulus will be relatively small.
- Prisoner’s dilemma
- A classic paradox in which two individuals must independently choose between defection (maximizing reward to the self) and cooperation (maximizing reward to the group).
- Projection
- A social perceiver’s assumption that the other person wants, knows, or feels the same as the perceiver wants, know, or feels.
- Psychophysics
- Study of the relationships between physical stimuli and the perception of those stimuli.
- Punisher
- A stimulus that decreases the strength of an operant behavior when it is made a consequence of the behavior.
- Quantitative genetics
- Scientific and mathematical methods for inferring genetic and environmental processes based on the degree of genetic and environmental similarity among organisms.
- Quantitative law of effect
- A mathematical rule that states that the effectiveness of a reinforcer at strengthening an operant response depends on the amount of reinforcement earned for all alternative behaviors. A reinforcer is less effective if there is a lot of reinforcement in the environment for other behaviors.
- Rational self-interest
- The principle that people will make logical decisions based on maximizing their own gains and benefits.
- Realism
- A point of view that emphasizes the importance of the senses in providing knowledge of the external world.
- Redemptive narratives
- Life stories that affirm the transformation from suffering to an enhanced status or state. In American culture, redemptive life stories are highly prized as models for the good self, as in classic narratives of atonement, upward mobility, liberation, and recovery.
- Reflexivity
- The idea that the self reflects back upon itself; that the I (the knower, the subject) encounters the Me (the known, the object). Reflexivity is a fundamental property of human selfhood.
- Reinforcer
- Any consequence of a behavior that strengthens the behavior or increases the likelihood that it will be performed it again.
- Reinforcer devaluation effect
- The finding that an animal will stop performing an instrumental response that once led to a reinforcer if the reinforcer is separately made aversive or undesirable.
- Remote associations
- Associations between words or concepts that are semantically distant and thus relatively unusual or original.
- Renewal effect
- Recovery of an extinguished response that occurs when the context is changed after extinction. Especially strong when the change of context involves return to the context in which conditioning originally occurred. Can occur after extinction in either classical or instrumental conditioning.
- Retina
- Cell layer in the back of the eye containing photoreceptors.
- Reward value
- A neuropsychological measure of an outcome’s affective importance to an organism.
- Ritual
- Rites or actions performed in a systematic or prescribed way often for an intended purpose. Example: The exchange of wedding rings during a marriage ceremony in many cultures.
- Rods
- Photoreceptors of the retina sensitive to low levels of light. Located around the fovea.
- Satiation
- The state of being full to satisfaction and no longer desiring to take on more.
- Scientist-practitioner model
- A model of training of professional psychologists that emphasizes the development of both research and clinical skills.
- The sense of the self as a storyteller who reconstructs the past and imagines the future in order to articulate an integrative narrative that provides life with some measure of temporal continuity and purpose.
- Self as motivated agent
- The sense of the self as an intentional force that strives to achieve goals, plans, values, projects, and the like.
- The sense of the self as an embodied actor whose social performances may be construed in terms of more or less consistent self-ascribed traits and social roles.
- Self-construal
- The extent to which the self is defined as independent or as relating to others.
- Self-esteem
- The extent to which a person feels that he or she is worthy and good. The success or failure that the motivated agent experiences in pursuit of valued goals is a strong determinant of self-esteem.
- Sensation
- The physical processing of environmental stimuli by the sense organs.
- Sensory adaptation
- Decrease in sensitivity of a receptor to a stimulus after constant stimulation.
- Shape theory of olfaction
- Theory proposing that odorants of different size and shape correspond to different smells.
- Knowledge, expectations, conceptualizations, and other cognitive representations that members of a group have in common pertaining to the group and its members, tasks, procedures, and resources.
- Signal detection
- Method for studying the ability to correctly identify sensory stimuli.
- Simulation
- The process of representing the other person’s mental state.
- Situational identity
- Being guided by different cultural influences in different situations, such as home versus workplace, or formal versus informal roles.
- The process of contrasting one’s personal qualities and outcomes, including beliefs, attitudes, values, abilities, accomplishments, and experiences, to those of other people.
- Improvement in task performance that occurs when people work in the presence of other people.
- A person’s sense of who they are, based on their group membership(s).
- A theoretical analysis of group processes and intergroup relations that assumes groups influence their members’ self-concepts and self-esteem, particularly when individuals categorize themselves as group members and identify with the group.
- The theory that people can learn new responses and behaviors by observing the behavior of others.
- The reduction of individual effort exerted when people work in groups compared with when they work alone.
- Authorities that are the targets for observation and who model behaviors.
- The traits and social roles that others attribute to an actor. Actors also have their own conceptions of what they imagine their respective social reputations indeed are in the eyes of others.
- An assessment of how an individual prefers to allocate resources between him- or herself and another person.
- Sociometer model
- A conceptual analysis of self-evaluation processes that theorizes self-esteem functions to psychologically monitor of one’s degree of inclusion and exclusion in social groups.
- Somatosensation
- Ability to sense touch, pain and temperature.
- Somatotopic map
- Organization of the primary somatosensory cortex maintaining a representation of the arrangement of the body.
- Sound waves
- Changes in air pressure. The physical stimulus for audition.
- Spontaneous recovery
- Recovery of an extinguished response that occurs with the passage of time after extinction. Can occur after extinction in either classical or instrumental conditioning.
- Standard scale
- Research method in which all participants use a common scale—typically a Likert scale—to respond to questions.
- State of vulnerability
- When a person places him or herself in a position in which he or she might be exploited or harmed. This is often done out of trust that others will not exploit the vulnerability.
- Stimulus control
- When an operant behavior is controlled by a stimulus that precedes it.
- Structuralism
- A school of American psychology that sought to describe the elements of conscious experience.
- Subjective well-being
- The name that scientists give to happiness—thinking and feeling that our lives are going very well.
- Subjective well-being scales
- Self-report surveys or questionnaires in which participants indicate their levels of subjective well-being, by responding to items with a number that indicates how well off they feel.
- Superadditive effect of multisensory integration
- The finding that responses to multimodal stimuli are typically greater than the sum of the independent responses to each unimodal component if it were presented on its own.
- Synchrony
- Two people displaying the same behaviors or having the same internal states (typically because of mutual mimicry).
- Tastants
- Chemicals transduced by taste receptor cells.
- Taste aversion learning
- The phenomenon in which a taste is paired with sickness, and this causes the organism to reject—and dislike—that taste in the future.
- Taste receptor cells
- Receptors that transduce gustatory information.
- Teamwork
- The process by which members of the team combine their knowledge, skills, abilities, and other resources through a coordinated series of actions to produce an outcome.
- Tertiary education
- Education or training beyond secondary school, usually taking place in a college, university, or vocational training program.
- The Age 5-to-7 Shift
- Cognitive and social changes that occur in the early elementary school years that result in the child’s developing a more purposeful, planful, and goal-directed approach to life, setting the stage for the emergence of the self as a motivated agent.
- The “I”
- The self as knower, the sense of the self as a subject who encounters (knows, works on) itself (the Me).
- The “Me”
- The self as known, the sense of the self as the object or target of the I’s knowledge and work.
- Theory of mind
- The human capacity to understand minds, a capacity that is made up of a collection of concepts (e.g., agent, intentionality) and processes (e.g., goal detection, imitation, empathy, perspective taking).
- Theory of mind
- Emerging around the age of 4, the child’s understanding that other people have minds in which are located desires and beliefs, and that desires and beliefs, thereby, motivate behavior.
- Third-person perspective
- Observations made by individuals in a way that can be independently confirmed by other individuals so as to lead to general, objective understanding. With respect to consciousness, third-person perspectives make use of behavioral and neural measures related to conscious experiences.
- Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon
- The inability to pull a word from memory even though there is the sensation that that word is available.
- “Top-down” or internal causes of happiness
- The person’s outlook and habitual response tendencies that influence their happiness—for example, their temperament or optimistic outlook on life.
- Top-down processing
- Experience influencing the perception of stimuli.
- Transduction
- The conversion of one form of energy into another.
- Trichromatic theory
- Theory proposing color vision as influenced by three different cones responding preferentially to red, green and blue.
- Twin studies
- A behavior genetic research method that involves comparison of the similarity of identical (monozygotic; MZ) and fraternal (dizygotic; DZ) twins.
- Tympanic membrane
- Thin, stretched membrane in the middle ear that vibrates in response to sound. Also called the eardrum.
- Ultimatum game
- An economic game in which a proposer (Player A) can offer a subset of resources to a responder (Player B), who can then either accept or reject the given proposal.
- Unconditioned response (UR)
- In classical conditioning, an innate response that is elicited by a stimulus before (or in the absence of) conditioning.
- Unconditioned stimulus (US)
- In classical conditioning, the stimulus that elicits the response before conditioning occurs.
- Unusual uses
- A test of divergent thinking that asks participants to find many uses for commonplace objects, such as a brick or paperclip.
- Value judgment
- An assessment—based on one’s own preferences and priorities—about the basic “goodness” or “badness” of a concept or practice.
- Value-free research
- Research that is not influenced by the researchers’ own values, morality, or opinions.
- Ventral pathway
- Pathway of visual processing. The “what” pathway.
- Vestibular system
- Parts of the inner ear involved in balance.
- Vicarious reinforcement
- Learning that occurs by observing the reinforcement or punishment of another person.
- Visual perspective taking
- Can refer to visual perspective taking (perceiving something from another person’s spatial vantage point) or more generally to effortful mental state inference (trying to infer the other person’s thoughts, desires, emotions).
- Weber’s law
- States that just noticeable difference is proportional to the magnitude of the initial stimulus.
- Well-being
- The experience of mental and physical health and the absence of disorder.