Vocabulary
- Absolute stability
- Consistency in the level or amount of a personality attribute over time.
- Absolute threshold
- The smallest amount of stimulation needed for detection by a sense.
- Acceptance and commitment therapy
- A therapeutic approach designed to foster nonjudgmental observation of one’s own mental processes.
- Action Potential
- A transient all-or-nothing electrical current that is conducted down the axon when the membrane potential reaches the threshold of excitation.
- Active person–environment transactions
- The interplay between individuals and their contextual circumstances that occurs whenever individuals play a key role in seeking out, selecting, or otherwise manipulating aspects of their environment.
- Adoption study
- A behavior genetic research method that involves comparison of adopted children to their adoptive and biological parents.
- Affective forecasting
- Predicting how one will feel in the future after some event or decision.
- Age effects
- Differences in personality between groups of different ages that are related to maturation and development instead of birth cohort differences.
- Age identity
- How old or young people feel compared to their chronological age; after early adulthood, most people feel younger than their chronological age.
- Agender
- An individual who may have no gender or may describe themselves as having a neutral gender.
- Aggression
- Any behavior intended to harm another person who does not want to be harmed.
- Agnosia
- Loss of the ability to perceive stimuli.
- Agoraphobia
- A sort of anxiety disorder distinguished by feelings that a place is uncomfortable or may be unsafe because it is significantly open or crowded.
- Agreeableness
- A personality trait that reflects a person’s tendency to be compassionate, cooperative, warm, and caring to others. People low in agreeableness tend to be rude, hostile, and to pursue their own interests over those of others.
- Alogia
- A reduction in the amount of speech and/or increased pausing before the initiation of speech.
- Ambivalent sexism
- A concept of gender attitudes that encompasses both positive and negative qualities.
- Amnesia
- The loss of memory.
- Anal sex
- Penetration of the anus by an animate or inanimate object.
- Anchoring
- The bias to be affected by an initial anchor, even if the anchor is arbitrary, and to insufficiently adjust our judgments away from that anchor.
- Androgyny
- Having both feminine and masculine characteristics.
- Anecdotal evidence
- A piece of biased evidence, usually drawn from personal experience, used to support a conclusion that may or may not be correct.
- Anhedonia
- Loss of interest or pleasure in activities one previously found enjoyable or rewarding.
- Anhedonia/amotivation
- A reduction in the drive or ability to take the steps or engage in actions necessary to obtain the potentially positive outcome.
- Animism
- The belief that everyone and everything had a “soul” and that mental illness was due to animistic causes, for example, evil spirits controlling an individual and his/her behavior.
- Anomalous face overgeneralization hypothesis
- Proposes that the attractiveness halo effect is a by-product of reactions to low fitness. People overgeneralize the adaptive tendency to use low attractiveness as an indicator of negative traits, like low health or intelligence, and mistakenly use higher-than-average attractiveness as an indicator of high health or intelligence.
- Anosmia
- Loss of the ability to smell.
- Anterograde amnesia
- Inability to form new memories for facts and events after the onset of amnesia.
- A pervasive pattern of disregard and violation of the rights of others. These behaviors may be aggressive or destructive and may involve breaking laws or rules, deceit or theft.
- Counterpart diagnosis to psychopathy included in the third through fifth editions of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM; APA, 2000). Defined by specific symptoms of behavioral deviancy in childhood (e.g., fighting, lying, stealing, truancy) continuing into adulthood (manifested as repeated rule-breaking, impulsiveness, irresponsibility, aggressiveness, etc.).
- Anxiety
- A mood state characterized by negative affect, muscle tension, and physical arousal in which a person apprehensively anticipates future danger or misfortune.
- Anxiety disorder
- A group of diagnoses in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV-TR) classification system where anxiety is central to the person’s dysfunctioning. Typical symptoms include excessive rumination, worrying, uneasiness, apprehension, and fear about future uncertainties either based on real or imagined events. These symptoms may affect both physical and psychological health. The anxiety disorders are subdivided into panic disorder, specific phobia, social phobia, posttraumatic stress disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and generalized anxiety disorder.
- Asylum
- A place of refuge or safety established to confine and care for the mentally ill; forerunners of the mental hospital or psychiatric facility.
- Attachment behavioral system
- A motivational system selected over the course of evolution to maintain proximity between a young child and his or her primary attachment figure.
- Attachment behaviors
- Behaviors and signals that attract the attention of a primary attachment figure and function to prevent separation from that individual or to reestablish proximity to that individual (e.g., crying, clinging).
- Attachment figure
- Someone who functions as the primary safe haven and secure base for an individual. In childhood, an individual’s attachment figure is often a parent. In adulthood, an individual’s attachment figure is often a romantic partner.
- Attachment patterns
- (also called “attachment styles” or “attachment orientations”) Individual differences in how securely (vs. insecurely) people think, feel, and behave in attachment relationships.
- Attitude
- A way of thinking or feeling about a target that is often reflected in a person’s behavior. Examples of attitude targets are individuals, concepts, and groups.
- Attitude
- A psychological tendency that is expressed by evaluating a particular entity with some degree of favor or disfavor.
- Attraction
- A connection between personality attributes and aspects of the environment that occurs because individuals with particular traits are drawn to certain environments.
- Attraction
- The psychological process of being sexually interested in another person. This can include, for example, physical attraction, first impressions, and dating rituals.
- Attractiveness halo effect
- The tendency to associate attractiveness with a variety of positive traits, such as being more sociable, intelligent, competent, and healthy.
- Attributional style
- The tendency by which a person infers the cause or meaning of behaviors or events.
- Attrition
- A connection between personality attributes and aspects of the environment that occurs because individuals with particular traits drop out from certain environments.
- Audience design
- Constructing utterances to suit the audience’s knowledge.
- 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.
- A parenting style characterized by high (but reasonable) expectations for children’s behavior, good communication, warmth and nurturance, and the use of reasoning (rather than coercion) as preferred responses to children’s misbehavior.
- Stage from approximately 2 years to age 4 or 5 when parents create rules and figure out how to effectively guide their children’s behavior.
- Autobiographical memory
- Memory for the events of one’s life.
- Autobiographical narratives
- A qualitative research method used to understand characteristics and life themes that an individual considers to uniquely distinguish him- or herself from others.
- Autobiographical reasoning
- The ability, typically developed in adolescence, to derive substantive conclusions about the self from analyzing one’s own personal experiences.
- Automatic
- Automatic biases are unintended, immediate, and irresistible.
- Automatic
- A behavior or process has one or more of the following features: unintentional, uncontrollable, occurring outside of conscious awareness, and cognitively efficient.
- 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.
- Automatic thoughts
- Thoughts that occur spontaneously; often used to describe problematic thoughts that maintain mental disorders.
- Availability heuristic
- A heuristic in which the frequency or likelihood of an event is evaluated based on how easily instances of it come to mind.
- Availability heuristic
- The tendency to judge the frequency or likelihood of an event by the ease with which relevant instances come to mind.
- Average life expectancy
- Mean number of years that 50% of people in a specific birth cohort are expected to survive. This is typically calculated from birth but is also sometimes re-calculated for people who have already reached a particular age (e.g., 65).
- Aversive racism
- Aversive racism is unexamined racial bias that the person does not intend and would reject, but that avoids inter-racial contact.
- Avoidant
- A pervasive pattern of social inhibition, feelings of inadequacy, and hypersensitivity to negative evaluation.
- Axon
- Part of the neuron that extends off the soma, splitting several times to connect with other neurons; main output of the neuron.
- Behavioral genetics
- The empirical science of how genes and environments combine to generate behavior.
- Behaviorism
- The study of behavior.
- Benevolent sexism
- The “positive” element of ambivalent sexism, which recognizes that women are perceived as needing to be protected, supported, and adored by men.
- Biases
- The systematic and predictable mistakes that influence the judgment of even very talented human beings.
- Bidirectional
- The idea that parents influence their children, but their children also influence the parents; the direction of influence goes both ways, from parent to child, and from child to parent.
- Big Five
- Five, broad general traits that are included in many prominent models of personality. The five traits are neuroticism (those high on this trait are prone to feeling sad, worried, anxious, and dissatisfied with themselves), extraversion (high scorers are friendly, assertive, outgoing, cheerful, and energetic), openness to experience (those high on this trait are tolerant, intellectually curious, imaginative, and artistic), agreeableness (high scorers are polite, considerate, cooperative, honest, and trusting), and conscientiousness (those high on this trait are responsible, cautious, organized, disciplined, and achievement-oriented).
- 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.
- Bigender
- An individual who identifies as two genders.
- Binary
- The idea that gender has two separate and distinct categories (male and female) and that a person must be either one or the other.
- 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.
- Biological vulnerability
- A specific genetic and neurobiological factor that might predispose someone to develop anxiety disorders.
- A model in which the interaction of biological, psychological, and sociocultural factors is seen as influencing the development of the individual.
- Birth cohort
- Individuals born in a particular year or span of time.
- Bisexual
- Attraction to two sexes.
- Blatant biases
- Blatant biases are conscious beliefs, feelings, and behavior that people are perfectly willing to admit, are mostly hostile, and openly favor their own group.
- Blind to the research hypothesis
- When participants in research are not aware of what is being studied.
- 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.
- Blood Alcohol Content (BAC)
- Blood Alcohol Content (BAC): a measure of the percentage of alcohol found in a person’s blood. This measure is typically the standard used to determine the extent to which a person is intoxicated, as in the case of being too impaired to drive a vehicle.
- Borderline
- A pervasive pattern of instability of interpersonal relationships, self-image, and affects, and marked impulsivity.
- Borderline Personality Disorder
- This personality disorder is defined by a chronic pattern of instability. This instability manifests itself in interpersonal relationships, mood, self-image, and behavior that can interfere with social functioning or work. It may also cause grave emotional distress.
- Bottom-up processing
- Building up to perceptual experience from individual pieces.
- Bounded awareness
- The systematic ways in which we fail to notice obvious and important information that is available to us.
- Bounded ethicality
- The systematic ways in which our ethics are limited in ways we are not even aware of ourselves.
- Bounded rationality
- Model of human behavior that suggests that humans try to make rational decisions but are bounded due to cognitive limitations.
- Bounded self-interest
- The systematic and predictable ways in which we care about the outcomes of others.
- Bounded willpower
- The tendency to place greater weight on present concerns rather than future concerns.
- Brain Stem
- The “trunk” of the brain comprised of the medulla, pons, midbrain, and diencephalon.
- Broca’s Area
- An area in the frontal lobe of the left hemisphere. Implicated in language production.
- Case study
- An in-depth and objective examination of the details of a single person or entity.
- Catatonia
- Behaviors that seem to reflect a reduction in responsiveness to the external environment. This can include holding unusual postures for long periods of time, failing to respond to verbal or motor prompts from another person, or excessive and seemingly purposeless motor activity.
- Categorize
- To sort or arrange different items into classes or categories.
- Catharsis
- Greek term that means to cleanse or purge. Applied to aggression, catharsis is the belief that acting aggressively or even viewing aggression purges angry feelings and aggressive impulses into harmless channels.
- Cathartic method
- A therapeutic procedure introduced by Breuer and developed further by Freud in the late 19th century whereby a patient gains insight and emotional relief from recalling and reliving traumatic events.
- Causality
- In research, the determination that one variable causes—is responsible for—an effect.
- Central Nervous System
- The portion of the nervous system that includes the brain and spinal cord.
- Cerebellum
- The distinctive structure at the back of the brain, Latin for “small brain.”
- Cerebrum
- Usually refers to the cerebral cortex and associated white matter, but in some texts includes the subcortical structures.
- Chameleon effect
- The tendency for individuals to nonconsciously mimic the postures, mannerisms, facial expressions, and other behaviors of one’s interaction partners.
- Chemical senses
- Our ability to process the environmental stimuli of smell and taste.
- Chronic stress
- Discrete or related problematic events and conditions which persist over time and result in prolonged activation of the biological and/or psychological stress response (e.g., unemployment, ongoing health difficulties, marital discord).
- Chutes and Ladders
- A numerical board game that seems to be useful for building numerical knowledge.
- Circadian Rhythm
- Circadian Rhythm: The physiological sleep-wake cycle. It is influenced by exposure to sunlight as well as daily schedule and activity. Biologically, it includes changes in body temperature, blood pressure and blood sugar.
- Cisgender
- A term used to describe individuals whose gender matches their biological sex.
- Cisgender
- When a person’s birth sex corresponds with his/her gender identity and gender role.
- 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 bias modification
- Using exercises (e.g., computer games) to change problematic thinking habits.
- Cognitive failures
- Every day slips and lapses, also called absentmindedness.
- Cognitive psychology
- The study of mental processes.
- Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)
- A family of approaches with the goal of changing the thoughts and behaviors that influence psychopathology.
- Cohort
- Group of people typically born in the same year or historical period, who share common experiences over time; sometimes called a generation (e.g., Baby Boom Generation).
- Cohort effects
- Differences in personality that are related to historical and social factors unique to individuals born in a particular year.
- Coital sex
- Vaginal-penile intercourse.
- Common ground
- Information that is shared by people who engage in a conversation.
- Comorbidity
- Describes a state of having more than one psychological or physical disorder at a given time.
- Concrete operations stage
- Piagetian stage between ages 7 and 12 when children can think logically about concrete situations but not engage in systematic scientific reasoning.
- 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
- A learned reaction following classical conditioning, or the process by which an event that automatically elicits a response is repeatedly paired with another neutral stimulus (conditioned stimulus), resulting in the ability of the neutral stimulus to elicit the same response on its own.
- 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.
- Conformity
- Changing one’s attitude or behavior to match a perceived social norm.
- Confounds
- Factors that undermine the ability to draw causal inferences from an experiment.
- Conscience
- The cognitive, emotional, and social influences that cause young children to create and act consistently with internal standards of conduct.
- Conscientiousness
- A personality trait that reflects a person’s tendency to be careful, organized, hardworking, and to follow rules.
- Consciousness
- Consciousness: the awareness or deliberate perception of a stimulus
- Consciousness
- The quality or state of being aware of an external object or something within oneself. It has been defined as the ability to experience or to feel, wakefulness, having a sense of selfhood, and the executive control system of the mind.
- Consciousness
- Awareness of ourselves and our environment.
- Conservation problems
- Problems pioneered by Piaget in which physical transformation of an object or set of objects changes a perceptually salient dimension but not the quantity that is being asked about.
- Consolidation
- Process by which a memory trace is stabilized and transformed into a more durable form.
- Consolidation
- The process occurring after encoding that is believed to stabilize memory traces.
- 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.”
- Contingency management
- A reward or punishment that systematically follows a behavior. Parents can use contingencies to modify their children’s behavior.
- Continuous development
- Ways in which development occurs in a gradual incremental manner, rather than through sudden jumps.
- Continuous distributions
- Characteristics can go from low to high, with all different intermediate values possible. One does not simply have the trait or not have it, but can possess varying amounts of it.
- Contralateral
- Literally “opposite side”; used to refer to the fact that the two hemispheres of the brain process sensory information and motor commands for the opposite side of the body (e.g., the left hemisphere controls the right side of the body).
- Theory that proposes that the frequency, types, and reciprocity of social exchanges change with age. These social exchanges impact the health and well-being of the givers and receivers in the convoy.
- Corpus Callosum
- The thick bundle of nerve cells that connect the two hemispheres of the brain and allow them to communicate.
- Correlation
- In statistics, the measure of relatedness of two or more variables.
- Correlation
- Measures the association between two variables, or how they go together.
- Corresponsive principle
- The idea that personality traits often become matched with environmental conditions such that an individual’s social context acts to accentuate and reinforce their personality attributes.
- Cross-sectional design
- Research method that involves observation of all of a population, or a representative subset, at one specific point in time.
- Cross-sectional studies
- Research method that provides information about age group differences; age differences are confounded with cohort differences and effects related to history and time of study.
- Cross-sectional study/design
- A research design that uses a group of individuals with different ages (and birth cohorts) assessed at a single point in time.
- Crowds
- Adolescent peer groups characterized by shared reputations or images.
- Crystallized intelligence
- Type of intellectual ability that relies on the application of knowledge, experience, and learned information.
- Cue overload principle
- The principle stating that the more memories that are associated to a particular retrieval cue, the less effective the cue will be in prompting retrieval of any one memory.
- Cues
- Cues: a stimulus that has a particular significance to the perceiver (e.g., a sight or a sound that has special relevance to the person who saw or heard it)
- Cultural relativism
- The idea that cultural norms and values of a society can only be understood on their own terms or in their own context.
- Culture of honor
- A culture in which personal or family reputation is especially important.
- Cumulative continuity principle
- The generalization that personality attributes show increasing stability with age and experience.
- Cunnilingus
- Oral stimulation of the female’s external sex organs.
- Dark adaptation
- Adjustment of eye to low levels of light.
- Data (also called observations)
- In research, information systematically collected for analysis and interpretation.
- Decay
- The fading of memories with the passage of time.
- Declarative memory
- Conscious memories for facts and events.
- Deductive reasoning
- A form of reasoning in which a given premise determines the interpretation of specific observations (e.g., All birds have feathers; since a duck is a bird, it has feathers).
- Defensive coping mechanism
- An unconscious process, which protects an individual from unacceptable or painful ideas, impulses, or memories.
- Delusions
- False beliefs that are often fixed, hard to change even in the presence of conflicting information, and often culturally influenced in their content.
- Dendrites
- Part of a neuron that extends away from the cell body and is the main input to the neuron.
- Departure stage
- Stage at which parents prepare for a child to depart and evaluate their successes and failures as parents.
- Dependent
- A pervasive and excessive need to be taken care of that leads to submissive and clinging behavior and fears of separation.
- Dependent variable
- The variable the researcher measures but does not manipulate in an experiment.
- Depressants
- Depressants: a class of drugs that slow down the body’s physiological and mental processes.
- Depth perception
- The ability to actively perceive the distance from oneself of objects in the environment.
- DES
- Dissociative Experiences Scale.
- Descriptive norm
- The perception of what most people do in a given situation.
- Developmental intergroup theory
- A theory that postulates that adults’ focus on gender leads children to pay attention to gender as a key source of information about themselves and others, to seek out possible gender differences, and to form rigid stereotypes based on gender.
- Deviant peer contagion
- The spread of problem behaviors within groups of adolescents.
- Diagnostic criteria
- The specific criteria used to determine whether an individual has a specific type of psychiatric disorder. Commonly used diagnostic criteria are included in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder, 5th Edition (DSM-5) and the Internal Classification of Disorders, Version 9 (ICD-9).
- Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT)
- A treatment often used for borderline personality disorder that incorporates both cognitive-behavioral and mindfulness elements.
- Dialectical worldview
- A perspective in DBT that emphasizes the joint importance of change and acceptance.
- Dichotic listening
- A task in which different audio streams are presented to each ear. Typically, people are asked to monitor one stream while ignoring the other.
- DID
- Dissociative identity disorder, formerly known as multiple personality disorder, is at the far end of the dissociative disorder spectrum. It is characterized by at least two distinct, and dissociated personality states. These personality states – or ‘alters’ - alternately control a person’s behavior. The sufferer therefore experiences significant memory impairment for important information not explained by ordinary forgetfulness.
- Differential stability
- Consistency in the rank-ordering of personality across two or more measurement occasions.
- Differential susceptibility
- Genetic factors that make individuals more or less responsive to environmental experiences.
- Differential threshold (or difference threshold)
- The smallest difference needed in order to differentiate two stimuli. (See Just Noticeable Difference (JND))
- Diffuse Optical Imaging (DOI)
- A neuroimaging technique that infers brain activity by measuring changes in light as it is passed through the skull and surface of the brain.
- Directional goals
- The motivation to reach a particular outcome or judgment.
- Discontinuous development
- Discontinuous development
- Discrimination
- Discrimination is behavior that advantages or disadvantages people merely based on their group membership.
- Discrimination
- Discrimination is behavior that advantages or disadvantages people merely based on their group membership.
- 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.
- Disorganized behavior
- Behavior or dress that is outside the norm for almost all subcultures. This would include odd dress, odd makeup (e.g., lipstick outlining a mouth for 1 inch), or unusual rituals (e.g., repetitive hand gestures).
- Disorganized speech
- Speech that is difficult to follow, either because answers do not clearly follow questions or because one sentence does not logically follow from another.
- Dissociation
- A disruption in the usually integrated function of consciousness, memory, identity, or perception of the environment.
- Dissociation
- Dissociation: the heightened focus on one stimulus or thought such that many other things around you are ignored; a disconnect between one’s awareness of their environment and the one object the person is focusing on
- Dissociative amnesia
- Loss of autobiographical memories from a period in the past in the absence of brain injury or disease.
- Distinctiveness
- The principle that unusual events (in a context of similar events) will be recalled and recognized better than uniform (nondistinctive) events.
- Distribution
- In statistics, the relative frequency that a particular value occurs for each possible value of a given variable.
- Dizygotic twins
- Twins conceived from two ova and two sperm.
- Dopamine
- A neurotransmitter in the brain that is thought to play an important role in regulating the function of other neurotransmitters.
- Dorsal pathway
- Pathway of visual processing. The “where” pathway.
- Drug diversion
- When a drug that is prescribed to treat a medical condition is given to another individual who seeks to use the drug illicitly.
- Durability bias
- A bias in affective forecasting in which one overestimates for how long one will feel an emotion (positive or negative) after some event.
- Early adversity
- Single or multiple acute or chronic stressful events, which may be biological or psychological in nature (e.g., poverty, abuse, childhood illness or injury), occurring during childhood and resulting in a biological and/or psychological stress response.
- Effortful control
- A temperament quality that enables children to be more successful in motivated self-regulation.
- 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.
- Ego defenses
- Mental strategies, rooted in the ego, that we use to manage anxiety when we feel threatened (some examples include repression, denial, sublimation, and reaction formation).
- Electroencephalography (EEG)
- A neuroimaging technique that measures electrical brain activity via multiple electrodes on the scalp.
- Empirical
- Concerned with observation and/or the ability to verify a claim.
- Empiricism
- The belief that knowledge comes from experience.
- Encoding
- Process by which information gets into memory.
- Encoding
- The initial experience of perceiving and learning events.
- Encoding specificity principle
- The hypothesis that a retrieval cue will be effective to the extent that information encoded from the cue overlaps or matches information in the engram or memory trace.
- Endophenotypes
- A characteristic that reflects a genetic liability for disease and a more basic component of a complex clinical presentation. Endophenotypes are less developmentally malleable than overt behavior.
- Engrams
- A term indicating the change in the nervous system representing an event; also, memory trace.
- Episodic memory
- Memory for events in a particular time and place.
- Episodic memory
- The ability to learn and retrieve new information or episodes in one’s life.
- Etiology
- The causal description of all of the factors that contribute to the development of a disorder or illness.
- Eugenics
- The practice of selective breeding to promote desired traits.
- Euphoria
- Euphoria: an intense feeling of pleasure, excitement or happiness.
- Evaluative priming task
- An implicit attitude task that assesses the extent to which an attitude object is associated with a positive or negative valence by measuring the time it takes a person to label an adjective as good or bad after being presented with an attitude object.
- Measures the firing of groups of neurons in the cortex. As a person views or listens to specific types of information, neuronal activity creates small electrical currents that can be recorded from non-invasive sensors placed on the scalp. ERP provides excellent information about the timing of processing, clarifying brain activity at the millisecond pace at which it unfolds.
- Evocative person–environment transactions
- The interplay between individuals and their contextual circumstances that occurs whenever attributes of the individual draw out particular responses from others in their environment.
- Experimenter expectations
- When the experimenter’s expectations influence the outcome of a study.
- Explicit attitude
- An attitude that is consciously held and can be reported on by the person holding the attitude.
- Exposure therapy
- A form of intervention in which the patient engages with a problematic (usually feared) situation without avoidance or escape.
- External cues
- Stimuli in the outside world that serve as triggers for anxiety or as reminders of past traumatic events.
- 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.”
- Extraversion
- A personality trait that reflects a person’s tendency to be sociable, outgoing, active, and assertive.
- Facets
- Broad personality traits can be broken down into narrower facets or aspects of the trait. For example, extraversion has several facets, such as sociability, dominance, risk-taking and so forth.
- Fact
- Objective information about the world.
- Factor analysis
- A statistical technique for grouping similar things together according to how highly they are associated.
- False memories
- Memory for an event that never actually occurred, implanted by experimental manipulation or other means.
- False-belief test
- An experimental procedure that assesses whether a perceiver recognizes that another person has a false belief—a belief that contradicts reality.
- Falsify
- In science, the ability of a claim to be tested and—possibly—refuted; a defining feature of science.
- Family Stress Model
- A description of the negative effects of family financial difficulty on child adjustment through the effects of economic stress on parents’ depressed mood, increased marital problems, and poor parenting.
- Fantasy proneness
- The tendency to extensive fantasizing or daydreaming.
- 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.
- Fellatio
- Oral stimulation of the male’s external sex organs.
- Fight or flight response
- A biological reaction to alarming stressors that prepares the body to resist or escape a threat.
- Five stages of psychosexual development
- Oral, anal, phallic, latency, and genital.
- Five-Factor Model
- Five broad domains or dimensions that are used to describe human personality.
- Five-Factor Model
- (also called the Big Five) The Five-Factor Model is a widely accepted model of personality traits. Advocates of the model believe that much of the variability in people’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviors can be summarized with five broad traits. These five traits are Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Neuroticism.
- Flashback
- Sudden, intense re-experiencing of a previous event, usually trauma-related.
- Flashbulb memory
- Vivid personal memories of receiving the news of some momentous (and usually emotional) event.
- Flashbulb memory
- A highly detailed and vivid memory of an emotionally significant event.
- Flat affect
- A reduction in the display of emotions through facial expressions, gestures, and speech intonation.
- Flavor
- The combination of smell and taste.
- Flexible Correction Model
- Flexible Correction Model: the ability for people to correct or change their beliefs and evaluations if they believe these judgments have been biased (e.g., if someone realizes they only thought their day was great because it was sunny, they may revise their evaluation of the day to account for this “biasing” influence of the weather)
- Fluid intelligence
- Type of intelligence that relies on the ability to use information processing resources to reason logically and solve novel problems.
- Foils
- Any member of a lineup (whether live or photograph) other than the suspect.
- Folk explanations of behavior
- People’s natural explanations for why somebody did something, felt something, etc. (differing substantially for unintentional and intentional behaviors).
- Foreclosure
- Individuals commit to an identity without exploration of options.
- Formal operations stage
- Piagetian stage starting at age 12 years and continuing for the rest of life, in which adolescents may gain the reasoning powers of educated adults.
- Framing
- The bias to be systematically affected by the way in which information is presented, while holding the objective information constant.
- Free association
- In psychodynamic therapy, a process in which the patient reports all thoughts that come to mind without censorship, and these thoughts are interpreted by the therapist.
- Frontal Lobe
- The front most (anterior) part of the cerebrum; anterior to the central sulcus and responsible for motor output and planning, language, judgment, and decision-making.
- Functional capacity
- The ability to engage in self-care (cook, clean, bathe), work, attend school, and/or engage in social relationships.
- Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
- Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI): A neuroimaging technique that infers brain activity by measuring changes in oxygen levels in the blood.
- Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
- Entails the use of powerful magnets to measure the levels of oxygen within the brain that vary with changes in neural activity. That is, as the neurons in specific brain regions “work harder” when performing a specific task, they require more oxygen. By having people listen to or view social percepts in an MRI scanner, fMRI specifies the brain regions that evidence a relative increase in blood flow. In this way, fMRI provides excellent spatial information, pinpointing with millimeter accuracy, the brain regions most critical for different social processes.
- Functionalism
- A school of American psychology that focused on the utility of consciousness.
- Fundamental attribution error
- The tendency to emphasize another person’s personality traits when describing that person’s motives and behaviors and overlooking the influence of situational factors.
- G
- Short for “general factor” and is often used to be synonymous with intelligence itself.
- Gender
- The psychological and sociological representations of one’s biological sex.
- Gender
- The cultural, social, and psychological meanings that are associated with masculinity and femininity.
- Gender constancy
- The awareness that gender is constant and does not change simply by changing external attributes; develops between 3 and 6 years of age.
- Gender discrimination
- Differential treatment on the basis of gender.
- Gender identity
- Personal depictions of masculinity and femininity.
- Gender identity
- A person’s psychological sense of being male or female.
- Gender roles
- The behaviors, attitudes, and personality traits that are designated as either masculine or feminine in a given culture.
- Gender roles
- Societal expectations of masculinity and femininity.
- Gender schema theory
- This theory of how children form their own gender roles argues that children actively organize others’ behavior, activities, and attributes into gender categories or schemas.
- Gender schemas
- Organized beliefs and expectations about maleness and femaleness that guide children’s thinking about gender.
- Gender stereotypes
- The beliefs and expectations people hold about the typical characteristics, preferences, and behaviors of men and women.
- Genderfluid
- An individual who may identify as male, female, both, or neither at different times and in different circumstances.
- Genderqueer or gender nonbinary
- An umbrella term used to describe a wide range of individuals who do not identify with and/or conform to the gender binary.
- General population
- A sample of people representative of the average individual in our society.
- Generalize
- In research, the degree to which one can extend conclusions drawn from the findings of a study to other groups or situations not included in the study.
- Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)
- Excessive worry about everyday things that is at a level that is out of proportion to the specific causes of worry.
- Gestalt psychology
- An attempt to study the unity of experience.
- Global subjective well-being
- Individuals’ perceptions of and satisfaction with their lives as a whole.
- 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.
- Good genes hypothesis
- Proposes that certain physical qualities, like averageness, are attractive because they advertise mate quality—either greater fertility or better genetic traits that lead to better offspring and hence greater reproductive success.
- Goodness of fit
- The match or synchrony between a child’s temperament and characteristics of parental care that contributes to positive or negative personality development. A good “fit” means that parents have accommodated to the child’s temperamental attributes, and this contributes to positive personality growth and better adjustment.
- Grandiosity
- Inflated self-esteem or an exaggerated sense of self-importance and self-worth (e.g., believing one has special powers or superior abilities).
- Group level
- A focus on summary statistics that apply to aggregates of individuals when studying personality development. An example is considering whether the average score of a group of 50 year olds is higher than the average score of a group of 21 year olds when considering a trait like conscientiousness.
- 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.
- Hallucinations
- Perceptual experiences that occur even when there is no stimulus in the outside world generating the experiences. They can be auditory, visual, olfactory (smell), gustatory (taste), or somatic (touch).
- Hallucinogens
- Hallucinogens: substances that, when ingested, alter a person’s perceptions, often by creating hallucinations that are not real or distorting their perceptions of time.
- Hedonic well-being
- Component of well-being that refers to emotional experiences, often including measures of positive (e.g., happiness, contentment) and negative affect (e.g., stress, sadness).
- Heritability coefficient
- An easily misinterpreted statistical construct that purports to measure the role of genetics in the explanation of differences among individuals.
- Heterogeneity
- Inter-individual and subgroup differences in level and rate of change over time.
- Heterosexual
- Opposite-sex attraction.
- Heterotypic stability
- Consistency in the underlying psychological attribute across development regardless of any changes in how the attribute is expressed at different ages.
- Heuristics
- cognitive (or thinking) strategies that simplify decision making by using mental short-cuts
- Heuristics
- A mental shortcut or rule of thumb that reduces complex mental problems to more simple rule-based decisions.
- HEXACO model
- The HEXACO model is an alternative to the Five-Factor Model. The HEXACO model includes six traits, five of which are variants of the traits included in the Big Five (Emotionality [E], Extraversion [X], Agreeableness [A], Conscientiousness [C], and Openness [O]). The sixth factor, Honesty-Humility [H], is unique to this model.
- High-stakes testing
- Settings in which test scores are used to make important decisions about individuals. For example, test scores may be used to determine which individuals are admitted into a college or graduate school, or who should be hired for a job. Tests also are used in forensic settings to help determine whether a person is competent to stand trial or fits the legal definition of sanity.
- Histrionic
- A pervasive pattern of excessive emotionality and attention seeking.
- Homophily
- Adolescents tend to associate with peers who are similar to themselves.
- Homosexual
- Same-sex attraction.
- Homotypic stability
- Consistency of the exact same thoughts, feelings, and behaviors across development.
- Honeymoon effect
- The tendency for newly married individuals to rate their spouses in an unrealistically positive manner. This represents a specific manifestation of the letter of recommendation effect when applied to ratings made by current romantic partners. Moreover, it illustrates the very important role played by relationship satisfaction in ratings made by romantic partners: As marital satisfaction declines (i.e., when the “honeymoon is over”), this effect disappears.
- Hostile attribution bias
- The tendency of some individuals to interpret ambiguous social cues and interactions as examples of aggressiveness, disrespect, or antagonism.
- Hostile attribution bias
- The tendency to perceive ambiguous actions by others as aggressive.
- Hostile expectation bias
- The tendency to assume that people will react to potential conflicts with aggression.
- Hostile perception bias
- The tendency to perceive social interactions in general as being aggressive.
- Hostile sexism
- The negative element of ambivalent sexism, which includes the attitudes that women are inferior and incompetent relative to men.
- Hot cognition
- The mental processes that are influenced by desires and feelings.
- Humorism (or humoralism)
- A belief held by ancient Greek and Roman physicians (and until the 19th century) that an excess or deficiency in any of the four bodily fluids, or humors—blood, black bile, yellow bile, and phlegm—directly affected their health and temperament.
- Hypersomnia
- Excessive daytime sleepiness, including difficulty staying awake or napping, or prolonged sleep episodes.
- Hypnosis
- Hypnosis: the state of consciousness whereby a person is highly responsive to the suggestions of another; this state usually involves a dissociation with one’s environment and an intense focus on a single stimulus, which is usually accompanied by a sense of relaxation
- Hypnotherapy
- Hypnotherapy: The use of hypnotic techniques such as relaxation and suggestion to help engineer desirable change such as lower pain or quitting smoking.
- Hypothesis
- A tentative explanation that is subject to testing.
- Hypothesis
- A possible explanation that can be tested through research.
- Hysteria
- Term used by the ancient Greeks and Egyptians to describe a disorder believed to be caused by a woman’s uterus wandering throughout the body and interfering with other organs (today referred to as conversion disorder, in which psychological problems are expressed in physical form).
- 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.
- Identity achievement
- Individuals have explored different options and then made commitments.
- Identity diffusion
- Adolescents neither explore nor commit to any roles or ideologies.
- Image-making stage
- Stage during pregnancy when parents consider what it means to be a parent and plan for changes to accommodate a child.
- Impact bias
- A bias in affective forecasting in which one overestimates the strength or intensity of emotion one will experience after some event.
- Implicit Association Test
- An implicit attitude task that assesses a person’s automatic associations between concepts by measuring the response times in pairing the concepts.
- Implicit Association Test
- Implicit Association Test (IAT) measures relatively automatic biases that favor own group relative to other groups.
- Implicit Associations Test
- Implicit Associations Test (IAT): A computer reaction time test that measures a person’s automatic associations with concepts. For instance, the IAT could be used to measure how quickly a person makes positive or negative evaluations of members of various ethnic groups.
- Implicit attitude
- An attitude that a person cannot verbally or overtly state.
- Implicit measures of attitudes
- Measures of attitudes in which researchers infer the participant’s attitude rather than having the participant explicitly report it.
- Implicit motives
- These are goals that are important to a person, but that he/she cannot consciously express. Because the individual cannot verbalize these goals directly, they cannot be easily assessed via self-report. However, they can be measured using projective devices such as the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT).
- Inattentional blindness
- The failure to notice a fully visible, but unexpected, object or event when attention is devoted to something else.
- Inattentional deafness
- The auditory analog of inattentional blindness. People fail to notice an unexpected sound or voice when attention is devoted to other aspects of a scene.
- Independent
- Two characteristics or traits are separate from one another-- a person can be high on one and low on the other, or vice-versa. Some correlated traits are relatively independent in that although there is a tendency for a person high on one to also be high on the other, this is not always the case.
- Independent variable
- The variable the researcher manipulates and controls in an experiment.
- Individual differences
- Ways in which people differ in terms of their behavior, emotion, cognition, and development.
- Individual level
- A focus on individual level statistics that reflect whether individuals show stability or change when studying personality development. An example is evaluating how many individuals increased in conscientiousness versus how many decreased in conscientiousness when considering the transition from adolescence to adulthood.
- Induction
- To draw general conclusions from specific observations.
- Inductive reasoning
- A form of reasoning in which a general conclusion is inferred from a set of observations (e.g., noting that “the driver in that car was texting; he just cut me off then ran a red light!” (a specific observation), which leads to the general conclusion that texting while driving is dangerous).
- Information processing theories
- Theories that focus on describing the cognitive processes that underlie thinking at any one age and cognitive growth over time.
- Informational influence
- Conformity that results from a concern to act in a socially approved manner as determined by how others act.
- Ingroup
- Group to which a person belongs.
- Inhibitory functioning
- Ability to focus on a subset of information while suppressing attention to less relevant information.
- Insomnia
- A sleep disorder in which there is an inability to fall asleep or to stay asleep as long as desired. Symptoms also include waking up too early, experience many awakenings during the night, and not feeling rested during the day.
- Instrumental conditioning
- Process in which animals learn about the relationship between their behaviors and their consequences. Also known as operant conditioning.
- Integrative or eclectic psychotherapy
- Also called integrative psychotherapy, this term refers to approaches combining multiple orientations (e.g., CBT with psychoanalytic elements).
- Integrative or eclectic psychotherapy
- Also called integrative psychotherapy, this term refers to approaches combining multiple orientations (e.g., CBT with psychoanalytic elements).
- Intelligence
- An individual’s cognitive capability. This includes the ability to acquire, process, recall and apply information.
- 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 stage
- Stage during teenage years when parents renegotiate their relationship with their adolescent children to allow for shared power in decision-making.
- Interference
- Other memories get in the way of retrieving a desired memory
- Internal bodily or somatic cues
- Physical sensations that serve as triggers for anxiety or as reminders of past traumatic events.
- Interoceptive avoidance
- Avoidance of situations or activities that produce sensations of physical arousal similar to those occurring during a panic attack or intense fear response.
- Interpretive stage
- Stage from age 4or 5 to the start of adolescence when parents help their children interpret their experiences with the social world beyond the family.
- Intersex
- Born with either an absence or some combination of male and female reproductive organs, sex hormones, or sex chromosomes.
- Intra- and inter-individual differences
- Different patterns of development observed within an individual (intra-) or between individuals (inter-).
- Introspection
- A method of focusing on internal processes.
- IQ
- Short for “intelligence quotient.” This is a score, typically obtained from a widely used measure of intelligence that is meant to rank a person’s intellectual ability against that of others.
- Jet Lag
- Jet Lag: The state of being fatigued and/or having difficulty adjusting to a new time zone after traveling a long distance (across multiple time zones).
- 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)
- 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.
- Letter of recommendation effect
- The general tendency for informants in personality studies to rate others in an unrealistically positive manner. This tendency is due a pervasive bias in personality assessment: In the large majority of published studies, informants are individuals who like the person they are rating (e.g., they often are friends or family members) and, therefore, are motivated to depict them in a socially desirable way. The term reflects a similar tendency for academic letters of recommendation to be overly positive and to present the referent in an unrealistically desirable manner.
- Levels of analysis
- Complementary views for analyzing and understanding a phenomenon.
- Levels of analysis
- In science, there are complementary understandings and explanations of phenomena.
- Lexical hypothesis
- The lexical hypothesis is the idea that the most important differences between people will be encoded in the language that we use to describe people. Therefore, if we want to know which personality traits are most important, we can look to the language that people use to describe themselves and others.
- Lexicon
- Words and expressions.
- Life course theories
- Theory of development that highlights the effects of social expectations of age-related life events and social roles; additionally considers the lifelong cumulative effects of membership in specific cohorts and sociocultural subgroups and exposure to historical events.
- Life span theories
- Theory of development that emphasizes the patterning of lifelong within- and between-person differences in the shape, level, and rate of change trajectories.
- Light adaptation
- Adjustment of eye to high levels of light.
- Limbic System
- Includes the subcortical structures of the amygdala and hippocampal formation as well as some cortical structures; responsible for aversion and gratification.
- Linguistic intergroup bias
- A tendency for people to characterize positive things about their ingroup using more abstract expressions, but negative things about their outgroups using more abstract expressions.
- Longitudinal studies
- Research method that collects information from individuals at multiple time points over time, allowing researchers to track cohort differences in age-related change to determine cumulative effects of different life experiences.
- Longitudinal study
- A study that follows the same group of individuals over time.
- Longitudinal study/design
- A research design that follows the same group of individuals at multiple time points.
- Lucid dreams
- Any dream in which one is aware that one is dreaming.
- Magnetic resonance imaging
- A set of techniques that uses strong magnets to measure either the structure of the brain (e.g., gray matter and white matter) or how the brain functions when a person performs cognitive tasks (e.g., working memory or episodic memory) or other types of tasks.
- Maladaptive
- Term referring to behaviors that cause people who have them physical or emotional harm, prevent them from functioning in daily life, and/or indicate that they have lost touch with reality and/or cannot control their thoughts and behavior (also called dysfunctional).
- Malingering
- Fabrication or exaggeration of medical symptoms to achieve secondary gain (e.g., receive medication, avoid school).
- Manipulation
- A connection between personality attributes and aspects of the environment that occurs whenever individuals with particular traits actively shape their environments.
- Masochism
- Receiving pain from another person to experience pleasure for one’s self.
- Masturbation
- Tactile stimulation of the body for sexual pleasure.
- Maturity principle
- The generalization that personality attributes associated with the successful fulfillment of adult roles increase with age and experience.
- Mechanoreceptors
- Mechanical sensory receptors in the skin that response to tactile stimulation.
- Medial temporal lobes
- Inner region of the temporal lobes that includes the hippocampus.
- Melatonin
- Melatonin: A hormone associated with increased drowsiness and sleep.
- Memory traces
- A term indicating the change in the nervous system representing an event.
- Mere-exposure effect
- The tendency to prefer stimuli that have been seen before over novel ones. There also is a generalized mere-exposure effect shown in a preference for stimuli that are similar to those that have been seen before.
- Mesmerism
- Derived from Franz Anton Mesmer in the late 18th century, an early version of hypnotism in which Mesmer claimed that hysterical symptoms could be treated through animal magnetism emanating from Mesmer’s body and permeating the universe (and later through magnets); later explained in terms of high suggestibility in individuals.
- Mimicry
- Copying others’ behavior, usually without awareness.
- Mindfulness
- Mindfulness: a state of heightened focus on the thoughts passing through one’s head, as well as a more controlled evaluation of those thoughts (e.g., do you reject or support the thoughts you’re having?)
- Mindfulness
- A process that reflects a nonjudgmental, yet attentive, mental state.
- Mindfulness-based therapy
- A form of psychotherapy grounded in mindfulness theory and practice, often involving meditation, yoga, body scan, and other features of mindfulness exercises.
- 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.
- Misinformation effect
- When erroneous information occurring after an event is remembered as having been part of the original event.
- Misinformation effect
- A memory error caused by exposure to incorrect information between the original event (e.g., a crime) and later memory test (e.g., an interview, lineup, or day in court).
- Mnemonic devices
- A strategy for remembering large amounts of information, usually involving imaging events occurring on a journey or with some other set of memorized cues.
- Mock witnesses
- A research subject who plays the part of a witness in a study.
- Model minority
- A minority group whose members are perceived as achieving a higher degree of socioeconomic success than the population average.
- Monozygotic twins
- Twins conceived from a single ovum and a single sperm, therefore genetically identical.
- Mood disorder
- A group of diagnoses in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV-TR) classification system where a disturbance in the person’s mood is the primary dysfunction. Mood disorders include major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, dysthymic and cyclothymic disorder.
- Mood-congruent memory
- The tendency to be better able to recall memories that have a mood similar to our current mood.
- Moratorium
- State in which adolescents are actively exploring options but have not yet made identity commitments.
- Morph
- A face or other image that has been transformed by a computer program so that it is a mixture of multiple images.
- Motivated skepticism
- A form of bias that can result from having a directional goal in which one is skeptical of evidence despite its strength because it goes against what one wants to believe.
- Multimodal perception
- The effects that concurrent stimulation in more than one sensory modality has on the perception of events and objects in the world.
- Myelin Sheath
- Fatty tissue, that insulates the axons of the neurons; myelin is necessary for normal conduction of electrical impulses among neurons.
- Narcissistic
- A pervasive pattern of grandiosity (in fantasy or behavior), need for admiration, and lack of empathy.
- 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.
- Nature
- The genes that children bring with them to life and that influence all aspects of their development.
- Need for closure
- The desire to come to a decision that will resolve ambiguity and conclude an issue.
- Need to belong
- A strong natural impulse in humans to form social connections and to be accepted by others.
- Nervous System
- The body’s network for electrochemical communication. This system includes all the nerves cells in the body.
- Neural impulse
- An electro-chemical signal that enables neurons to communicate.
- Neurodevelopmental
- Processes that influence how the brain develops either in utero or as the child is growing up.
- Neurons
- Individual brain cells
- Neuropsychoanalysis
- An integrative, interdisciplinary domain of inquiry seeking to integrate psychoanalytic and neuropsychological ideas and findings to enhance both areas of inquiry (you can learn more by visiting the webpage of the International Neuropsychoanalysis Society at http://www.neuropsa.org.uk/).
- Neuroticism
- A personality trait that reflects the tendency to be interpersonally sensitive and the tendency to experience negative emotions like anxiety, fear, sadness, and anger.
- Neurotransmitters
- Chemical substance released by the presynaptic terminal button that acts on the postsynaptic cell.
- Nightmares
- An unpleasant dream that can cause a strong negative emotional response from the mind, typically fear or horror, but also despair, anxiety, and great sadness. The dream may contain situations of danger, discomfort, psychological or physical terror. Sufferers usually awaken in a state of distress and may be unable to return to sleep for a prolonged period of time.
- Nociception
- Our ability to sense pain.
- Norm
- Assessments are given to a representative sample of a population to determine the range of scores for that population. These “norms” are then used to place an individual who takes that assessment on a range of scores in which he or she is compared to the population at large.
- Normative influence
- Conformity that results from a concern for what other people think of us.
- Null-hypothesis significance testing (NHST)
- In statistics, a test created to determine the chances that an alternative hypothesis would produce a result as extreme as the one observed if the null hypothesis were actually true.
- Numerical magnitudes
- The sizes of numbers.
- Nurture
- The environments, starting with the womb, that influence all aspects of children’s development.
- Nurturing stage
- Stage from birth to around 18-24 months in which parents develop an attachment relationship with child and adapt to the new baby.
- Obedience
- Responding to an order or command from a person in a position of authority.
- Obedience
- Responding to an order or command from a person in a position of authority.
- Object permanence task
- The Piagetian task in which infants below about 9 months of age fail to search for an object that is removed from their sight and, if not allowed to search immediately for the object, act as if they do not know that it continues to exist.
- Object relations theory
- A modern offshoot of the psychodynamic perspective, this theory contends that personality can be understood as reflecting mental images of significant figures (especially the parents) that we form early in life in response to interactions taking place within the family; these mental images serve as templates (or “scripts”) for later interpersonal relationships.
- Objective
- Being free of personal bias.
- Observational learning
- Learning by observing the behavior of others.
- Observational learning
- Learning by observing the behavior of others.
- Obsessive-compulsive
- A pervasive pattern of preoccupation with orderliness, perfectionism, and mental and interpersonal control, at the expense of flexibility, openness, and efficiency.
- Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
- This anxiety disorder is characterized by intrusive thoughts (obsessions), by repetitive behaviors (compulsions), or both. Obsessions produce uneasiness, fear, or worry. Compulsions are then aimed at reducing the associated anxiety. Examples of compulsive behaviors include excessive washing or cleaning; repeated checking; extreme hoarding; and nervous rituals, such as switching the light on and off a certain number of times when entering a room. Intrusive thoughts are often sexual, violent, or religious in nature...
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
- A disorder characterized by the desire to engage in certain behaviors excessively or compulsively in hopes of reducing anxiety. Behaviors include things such as cleaning, repeatedly opening and closing doors, hoarding, and obsessing over certain thoughts.
- Occipital Lobe
- The back most (posterior) part of the cerebrum; involved in vision.
- Odorants
- Chemicals transduced by olfactory receptors.
- Olfaction
- Ability to process olfactory stimuli. Also called smell.
- Olfactory epithelium
- Organ containing olfactory receptors.
- Openness to Experience
- A personality trait that reflects a person’s tendency to seek out and to appreciate new things, including thoughts, feelings, values, and experiences.
- 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.
- Operational definitions
- How researchers specifically measure a concept.
- Opponent-process theory
- Theory proposing color vision as influenced by cells responsive to pairs of colors.
- Oppositional defiant disorder
- A childhood behavior disorder that is characterized by stubbornness, hostility, and behavioral defiance. This disorder is highly comorbid with ADHD.
- Oral sex
- Cunnilingus or fellatio.
- Ossicles
- A collection of three small bones in the middle ear that vibrate against the tympanic membrane.
- Outgroup
- Group to which a person does not belong.
- Overconfident
- The bias to have greater confidence in your judgment than is warranted based on a rational assessment.
- Panic disorder (PD)
- A condition marked by regular strong panic attacks, and which may include significant levels of worry about future attacks.
- Paranoid
- A pervasive distrust and suspiciousness of others such that their motives are interpreted as malevolent.
- Paraphilic disorders
- Sexual behaviors that cause harm to others or one’s self.
- Parent management training
- A treatment for childhood behavior problems that teaches parents how to use contingencies to more effectively manage their children’s behavior.
- Parietal Lobe
- The part of the cerebrum between the frontal and occipital lobes; involved in bodily sensations, visual attention, and integrating the senses.
- Participant demand
- When participants behave in a way that they think the experimenter wants them to behave.
- Pathologizes
- To define a trait or collection of traits as medically or psychologically unhealthy or abnormal.
- Pavlovian conditioning
- See classical conditioning.
- Perception
- The psychological process of interpreting sensory information.
- Peripheral Nervous System
- All of the nerve cells that connect the central nervous system to all the other parts of the body.
- Personality
- Characteristic, routine ways of thinking, feeling, and relating to others.
- Personality
- Enduring predispositions that characterize a person, such as styles of thought, feelings and behavior.
- Personality disorders
- When personality traits result in significant distress, social impairment, and/or occupational impairment.
- Personality traits
- Enduring dispositions in behavior that show differences across individuals, and which tend to characterize the person across varying types of situations.
- Person-centered therapy
- A therapeutic approach focused on creating a supportive environment for self-discovery.
- Person–environment transactions
- The interplay between individuals and their contextual circumstances that ends up shaping both personality and the environment.
- Person-situation debate
- The person-situation debate is a historical debate about the relative power of personality traits as compared to situational influences on behavior. The situationist critique, which started the person-situation debate, suggested that people overestimate the extent to which personality traits are consistent across situations.
- Phantom limb
- The perception that a missing limb still exists.
- Phantom limb pain
- Pain in a limb that no longer exists.
- Phonemic awareness
- Awareness of the component sounds within words.
- Photo spreads
- A selection of normally small photographs of faces given to a witness for the purpose of identifying a perpetrator.
- Piaget’s theory
- Theory that development occurs through a sequence of discontinuous stages: the sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational, and formal operational stages.
- Pinna
- Outermost portion of the ear.
- Placebo effect
- When receiving special treatment or something new affects human behavior.
- Planning fallacy
- A cognitive bias in which one underestimates how long it will take to complete a task.
- Population
- In research, all the people belonging to a particular group (e.g., the population of left handed people).
- Positron emission tomography
- A technique that uses radio-labelled ligands to measure the distribution of different neurotransmitter receptors in the brain or to measure how much of a certain type of neurotransmitter is released when a person is given a specific type of drug or does a particularly cognitive task.
- Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
- A neuroimaging technique that measures brain activity by detecting the presence of a radioactive substance in the brain that is initially injected into the bloodstream and then pulled in by active brain tissue.
- Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
- A sense of intense fear, triggered by memories of a past traumatic event, that another traumatic event might occur. PTSD may include feelings of isolation and emotional numbing.
- 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.
- Prejudice
- An evaluation or emotion toward people based merely on their group membership.
- Prejudice
- Prejudice is an evaluation or emotion toward people merely based on their group membership.
- Preoperational reasoning stage
- Period within Piagetian theory from age 2 to 7 years, in which children can represent objects through drawing and language but cannot solve logical reasoning problems, such as the conservation problems.
- 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.
- Prevalence
- The number of cases of a specific disorder present in a given population at a certain time.
- Primacy of the Unconscious
- The hypothesis—supported by contemporary empirical research—that the vast majority of mental activity takes place outside conscious awareness.
- 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.
- Primed
- A process by which a concept or behavior is made more cognitively accessible or likely to occur through the presentation of an associated concept.
- Priming
- Priming: the activation of certain thoughts or feelings that make them easier to think of and act upon
- Priming
- A stimulus presented to a person reminds him or her about other ideas associated with the stimulus.
- 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.
- Probability
- A measure of the degree of certainty of the occurrence of an event.
- Probability values
- In statistics, the established threshold for determining whether a given value occurs by chance.
- Processing speed
- The time it takes individuals to perform cognitive operations (e.g., process information, react to a signal, switch attention from one task to another, find a specific target object in a complex picture).
- Processing speed
- The speed with which an individual can perceive auditory or visual information and respond to it.
- Projection
- A social perceiver’s assumption that the other person wants, knows, or feels the same as the perceiver wants, know, or feels.
- Projective hypothesis
- The theory that when people are confronted with ambiguous stimuli (that is, stimuli that can be interpreted in more than one way), their responses will be influenced by their unconscious thoughts, needs, wishes, and impulses. This, in turn, is based on the Freudian notion of projection, which is the idea that people attribute their own undesirable/unacceptable characteristics to other people or objects.
- Prototype
- A typical, or average, member of a category. Averageness increases attractiveness.
- Pseudoscience
- Beliefs or practices that are presented as being scientific, or which are mistaken for being scientific, but which are not scientific (e.g., astrology, the use of celestial bodies to make predictions about human behaviors, and which presents itself as founded in astronomy, the actual scientific study of celestial objects. Astrology is a pseudoscience unable to be falsified, whereas astronomy is a legitimate scientific discipline).
- Psychic causality
- The assumption that nothing in mental life happens by chance—that there is no such thing as a “random” thought or feeling.
- Psychoanalytic therapy
- Sigmund Freud’s therapeutic approach focusing on resolving unconscious conflicts.
- Psychodynamic therapy
- Treatment applying psychoanalytic principles in a briefer, more individualized format.
- Psychogenesis
- Developing from psychological origins.
- Psychological control
- Parents’ manipulation of and intrusion into adolescents’ emotional and cognitive world through invalidating adolescents’ feelings and pressuring them to think in particular ways.
- Psychological vulnerabilities
- Influences that our early experiences have on how we view the world.
- Psychometric approach
- Approach to studying intelligence that examines performance on tests of intellectual functioning.
- Psychomotor agitation
- Increased motor activity associated with restlessness, including physical actions (e.g., fidgeting, pacing, feet tapping, handwringing).
- Psychomotor retardation
- A slowing of physical activities in which routine activities (e.g., eating, brushing teeth) are performed in an unusually slow manner.
- Psychopathology
- Illnesses or disorders that involve psychological or psychiatric symptoms.
- Psychopathy
- Synonymous with psychopathic personality, the term used by Cleckley (1941/1976), and adapted from the term psychopathic introduced by German psychiatrist Julius Koch (1888) to designate mental disorders presumed to be heritable.
- Psychophysics
- Study of the relationships between physical stimuli and the perception of those stimuli.
- Psychosexual stage model
- Probably the most controversial aspect of psychodynamic theory, the psychosexual stage model contends that early in life we progress through a sequence of developmental stages (oral, anal, Oedipal, latency, and genital), each with its own unique mode of sexual gratification.
- PTM
- Post-traumatic model of dissociation.
- Punisher
- A stimulus that decreases the strength of an operant behavior when it is made a consequence of the behavior.
- Punishment
- Inflicting pain or removing pleasure for a misdeed. Punishment decreases the likelihood that a behavior will be repeated.
- Qualitative changes
- Large, fundamental change, as when a caterpillar changes into a butterfly; stage theories such as Piaget’s posit that each stage reflects qualitative change relative to previous stages.
- Quantitative changes
- Gradual, incremental change, as in the growth of a pine tree’s girth.
- 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.
- Quasi-experimental design
- An experiment that does not require random assignment to conditions.
- Random assignment
- Assigning participants to receive different conditions of an experiment by chance.
- Reactive person–environment transactions
- The interplay between individuals and their contextual circumstances that occurs whenever attributes of the individual shape how a person perceives and responds to their environment.
- Realism
- A point of view that emphasizes the importance of the senses in providing knowledge of the external world.
- Reappraisal, or Cognitive restructuring
- The process of identifying, evaluating, and changing maladaptive thoughts in psychotherapy.
- Recall
- Type of memory task where individuals are asked to remember previously learned information without the help of external cues.
- Reciprocity
- The act of exchanging goods or services. By giving a person a gift, the principle of reciprocity can be used to influence others; they then feel obligated to give back.
- Recoding
- The ubiquitous process during learning of taking information in one form and converting it to another form, usually one more easily remembered.
- Recognition
- Type of memory task where individuals are asked to remember previously learned information with the assistance of cues.
- Recurrent dreams
- The same dream narrative or dreamscape is experienced over different occasions of sleep.
- 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.
- Reference group effect
- The tendency of people to base their self-concept on comparisons with others. For example, if your friends tend to be very smart and successful, you may come to see yourself as less intelligent and successful than you actually are. Informants also are prone to these types of effects. For instance, the sibling contrast effect refers to the tendency of parents to exaggerate the true extent of differences between their children.
- 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.
- Reinforced response
- Following the process of operant conditioning, the strengthening of a response following either the delivery of a desired consequence (positive reinforcement) or escape from an aversive consequence.
- 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.
- Relational aggression
- Intentionally harming another person’s social relationships, feelings of acceptance, or inclusion within a group.
- Reliablility
- The consistency of test scores across repeated assessments. For example, test-retest reliability examines the extent to which scores change over time.
- 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.
- Replacement fantasy
- Fantasizing about someone other than one’s current partner.
- Representative
- In research, the degree to which a sample is a typical example of the population from which it is drawn.
- Representativeness heuristic
- A heuristic in which the likelihood of an object belonging to a category is evaluated based on the extent to which the object appears similar to one’s mental representation of the category.
- Research confederate
- A person working with a researcher, posing as a research participant or as a bystander.
- Research participant
- A person being studied as part of a research program.
- Retina
- Cell layer in the back of the eye containing photoreceptors.
- Retrieval
- The process of accessing stored information.
- Retrieval
- Process by which information is accessed from memory and utilized.
- Retroactive interference
- The phenomenon whereby events that occur after some particular event of interest will usually cause forgetting of the original event.
- Retrograde amnesia
- Inability to retrieve memories for facts and events acquired before the onset of amnesia.
- Right-wing authoritarianism (RWA) focuses on value conflicts but endorses respect for obedience and authority in the service of group conformity.
- Rods
- Photoreceptors of the retina sensitive to low levels of light. Located around the fovea.
- SAD performance only
- Social anxiety disorder which is limited to certain situations that the sufferer perceives as requiring some type of performance.
- Sadism
- Inflicting pain upon another person to experience pleasure for one’s self.
- Safer-sex practices
- Doing anything that may decrease the probability of sexual assault, sexually transmitted infections, or unwanted pregnancy; this may include using condoms, honesty, and communication.
- Sample
- In research, a number of people selected from a population to serve as an example of that population.
- Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
- The hypothesis that the language that people use determines their thoughts.
- Schema
- A mental model or representation that organizes the important information about a thing, person, or event (also known as a script).
- Schema
- A mental representation or set of beliefs about something.
- Schema (plural: schemata)
- A memory template, created through repeated exposure to a particular class of objects or events.
- Schemas
- The gender categories into which, according to gender schema theory, children actively organize others’ behavior, activities, and attributes.
- Schizoid
- A pervasive pattern of detachment from social relationships and a restricted range of expression of emotions in interpersonal settings.
- Schizophrenia
- This mental disorder is characterized by a breakdown of thought processes and emotional responses. Symptoms include auditory hallucinations, paranoid or bizarre delusions, or disorganized speech and thinking. Sufferers from this disorder experience grave dysfunctions in their social functioning and in work.
- Schizotypal
- A pervasive pattern of social and interpersonal deficits marked by acute discomfort with, and reduced capacity for, close relationships as well as perceptual distortions and eccentricities of behavior.
- SCID-D
- Structural Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Dissociative Disorders.
- Scientific theory
- An explanation for observed phenomena that is empirically well-supported, consistent, and fruitful (predictive).
- Scientist-practitioner model
- A model of training of professional psychologists that emphasizes the development of both research and clinical skills.
- Security of attachment
- An infant’s confidence in the sensitivity and responsiveness of a caregiver, especially when he or she is needed. Infants can be securely attached or insecurely attached.
- Selection
- A connection between personality attributes and aspects of the environment that occurs whenever individuals with particular attributes choose particular kinds of environments.
- Selective listening
- A method for studying selective attention in which people focus attention on one auditory stream of information while deliberately ignoring other auditory information.
- 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-categorization theory
- Self-categorization theory develops social identity theory’s point that people categorize themselves, along with each other into groups, favoring their own group.
- Self-enhancement bias
- The tendency for people to see and/or present themselves in an overly favorable way. This tendency can take two basic forms: defensiveness (when individuals actually believe they are better than they really are) and impression management (when people intentionally distort their responses to try to convince others that they are better than they really are). Informants also can show enhancement biases. The general form of this bias has been called the letter-of-recommendation effect, which is the tendency of informants who like the person they are rating (e.g., friends, relatives, romantic partners) to describe them in an overly favorable way. In the case of newlyweds, this tendency has been termed the honeymoon effect.
- 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.
- Self-perceptions of aging
- An individual’s perceptions of their own aging process; positive perceptions of aging have been shown to be associated with greater longevity and health.
- Self-report measure
- A type of psychological test in which a person fills out a survey or questionnaire with or without the help of an investigator.
- Semantic memory
- The more or less permanent store of knowledge that people have.
- Sensation
- The physical processing of environmental stimuli by the sense organs.
- Sensorimotor stage
- Period within Piagetian theory from birth to age 2 years, during which children come to represent the enduring reality of objects.
- Sensory adaptation
- Decrease in sensitivity of a receptor to a stimulus after constant stimulation.
- Sex
- Biological category of male or female as defined by physical differences in genetic composition and in reproductive anatomy and function.
- Sex
- An organism’s means of biological reproduction.
- Sexual attraction
- The capacity a person has to elicit or feel sexual interest.
- Sexual consent
- Permission that is voluntary, conscious, and able to be withdrawn at any time.
- Sexual fluidity
- Personal sexual attributes changing due to psychosocial circumstances.
- Sexual harassment
- A form of gender discrimination based on unwanted treatment related to sexual behaviors or appearance.
- Sexual literacy
- The lifelong pursuit of accurate human sexuality knowledge, and recognition of its various multicultural, historical, and societal contexts; the ability to critically evaluate sources and discern empirical evidence from unreliable and inaccurate information; the acknowledgment of humans as sexual beings; and an appreciation of sexuality’s contribution to enhancing one’s well-being and pleasure in life.
- Sexual orientation
- Refers to the direction of emotional and erotic attraction toward members of the opposite sex, the same sex, or both sexes.
- Sexual orientation
- A person’s sexual attraction to other people.
- Shape theory of olfaction
- Theory proposing that odorants of different size and shape correspond to different smells.
- Sibling contrast effect
- The tendency of parents to use their perceptions of all of their children as a frame of reference for rating the characteristics of each of them. For example, suppose that a mother has three children; two of these children are very sociable and outgoing, whereas the third is relatively average in sociability. Because of operation of this effect, the mother will rate this third child as less sociable and outgoing than he/she actually is. More generally, this effect causes parents to exaggerate the true extent of differences between their children. This effect represents a specific manifestation of the more general reference group effect when applied to ratings made by parents.
- Signal detection
- Method for studying the ability to correctly identify sensory stimuli.
- Simulation
- The process of representing the other person’s mental state.
- Situation model
- A mental representation of an event, object, or situation constructed at the time of comprehending a linguistic description.
- Sleep deprivation
- A sufficient lack of restorative sleep over a cumulative period so as to cause physical or psychiatric symptoms and affect routine performances of tasks.
- Sleep paralysis
- Sleep paralysis occurs when the normal paralysis during REM sleep manifests when falling asleep or awakening, often accompanied by hallucinations of danger or a malevolent presence in the room.
- Sleep-wake cycle
- A daily rhythmic activity cycle, based on 24-hour intervals, that is exhibited by many organisms.
- A condition marked by acute fear of social situations which lead to worry and diminished day to day functioning.
- The way a person explains the motives or behaviors of others.
- The set of neuroanatomical structures that allows us to understand the actions and intentions of other people.
- The hypothesis that the human brain has evolved, so that humans can maintain larger ingroups.
- The way people process and apply information about others.
- The study of how people think about the social world.
- Social dominance orientation (SDO) describes a belief that group hierarchies are inevitable in all societies and even good, to maintain order and stability.
- Social identity theory notes that people categorize each other into groups, favoring their own group.
- When one person causes a change in attitude or behavior in another person, whether intentionally or unintentionally.
- This theory of how children form their own gender roles argues that gender roles are learned through reinforcement, punishment, and modeling.
- The theory that people can learn new responses and behaviors by observing the behavior of others.
- Authorities that are the targets for observation and who model behaviors.
- Network of people with whom an individual is closely connected; social networks provide emotional, informational, and material support and offer opportunities for social engagement.
- Networks of social relationships among individuals through which information can travel.
- The branch of psychological science that is mainly concerned with understanding how the presence of others affects our thoughts, feelings, and behaviors.
- The process by which one individual consults another’s emotional expressions to determine how to evaluate and respond to circumstances that are ambiguous or uncertain.
- 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.
- Zeitgeber is German for “time giver.” Social zeitgebers are environmental cues, such as meal times and interactions with other people, that entrain biological rhythms and thus sleep-wake cycle regularity.
- Sociocultural theories
- Theory founded in large part by Lev Vygotsky that emphasizes how other people and the attitudes, values, and beliefs of the surrounding culture influence children’s development.
- Socioeconomic status (SES)
- A person’s economic and social position based on income, education, and occupation.
- Socioemotional Selectivity Theory
- Theory proposed to explain the reduction of social partners in older adulthood; posits that older adults focus on meeting emotional over information-gathering goals, and adaptively select social partners who meet this need.
- Soma
- Cell body of a neuron that contains the nucleus and genetic information, and directs protein synthesis.
- Somatogenesis
- Developing from physical/bodily origins.
- 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.
- Spatial Resolution
- A term that refers to how small the elements of an image are; high spatial resolution means the device or technique can resolve very small elements; in neuroscience it describes how small of a structure in the brain can be imaged.
- Specific vulnerabilities
- How our experiences lead us to focus and channel our anxiety.
- Split-brain Patient
- A patient who has had most or all of his or her corpus callosum severed.
- 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.
- Standardize
- Assessments that are given in the exact same manner to all people . With regards to intelligence tests standardized scores are individual scores that are computed to be referenced against normative scores for a population (see “norm”).
- State
- When a symptom is acute, or transient, lasting from a few minutes to a few hours.
- Stereotype Content Model
- Stereotype Content Model shows that social groups are viewed according to their perceived warmth and competence.
- Stereotype threat
- The phenomenon in which people are concerned that they will conform to a stereotype or that their performance does conform to that stereotype, especially in instances in which the stereotype is brought to their conscious awareness.
- Stereotypes
- Our general beliefs about the traits or behaviors shared by group of people.
- Stereotypes
- Stereotype is a belief that characterizes people based merely on their group membership.
- Stereotyping
- A mental process of using information shortcuts about a group to effectively navigate social situations or make decisions.
- Stigmatized group
- A group that suffers from social disapproval based on some characteristic that sets them apart from the majority.
- Stimulants
- Stimulants: a class of drugs that speed up the body’s physiological and mental processes.
- Stimulus control
- When an operant behavior is controlled by a stimulus that precedes it.
- Storage
- The stage in the learning/memory process that bridges encoding and retrieval; the persistence of memory over time.
- Strange situation
- A laboratory task that involves briefly separating and reuniting infants and their primary caregivers as a way of studying individual differences in attachment behavior.
- Stress reaction
- The tendency to become easily distressed by the normal challenges of life.
- Structural model
- Developed to complement and extend the topographic model, the structural model of the mind posits the existence of three interacting mental structures called the id, ego, and superego.
- Structuralism
- A school of American psychology that sought to describe the elements of conscious experience.
- Subjective age
- A multidimensional construct that indicates how old (or young) a person feels and into which age group a person categorizes him- or herself
- Subtle biases
- Subtle biases are automatic, ambiguous, and ambivalent, but real in their consequences.
- Successful aging
- Includes three components: avoiding disease, maintaining high levels of cognitive and physical functioning, and having an actively engaged lifestyle.
- Suicidal ideation
- Recurring thoughts about suicide, including considering or planning for suicide, or preoccupation with suicide.
- 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.
- Supernatural
- Developing from origins beyond the visible observable universe.
- Survey method
- One method of research that uses a predetermined and methodical list of questions, systematically given to samples of individuals, to predict behaviors within the population.
- Synapses
- Junction between the presynaptic terminal button of one neuron and the dendrite, axon, or soma of another postsynaptic neuron.
- Synaptic Gap
- Also known as the synaptic cleft; the small space between the presynaptic terminal button and the postsynaptic dendritic spine, axon, or soma.
- Synchrony
- Two people displaying the same behaviors or having the same internal states (typically because of mutual mimicry).
- Syndrome
- Involving a particular group of signs and symptoms.
- Syntax
- Rules by which words are strung together to form sentences.
- System 1
- Our intuitive decision-making system, which is typically fast, automatic, effortless, implicit, and emotional.
- System 2
- Our more deliberative decision-making system, which is slower, conscious, effortful, explicit, and logical.
- 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.
- Temperament
- Early emerging differences in reactivity and self-regulation, which constitutes a foundation for personality development.
- Temperament
- A child’s innate personality; biologically based personality, including qualities such as activity level, emotional reactivity, sociability, mood, and soothability.
- Temporal Lobe
- The part of the cerebrum in front of (anterior to) the occipital lobe and below the lateral fissure; involved in vision, auditory processing, memory, and integrating vision and audition.
- Temporal Resolution
- A term that refers to how small a unit of time can be measured; high temporal resolution means capable of resolving very small units of time; in neuroscience it describes how precisely in time a process can be measured in the brain.
- Temporally graded retrograde amnesia
- Inability to retrieve memories from just prior to the onset of amnesia with intact memory for more remote events.
- 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
- Children’s growing understanding of the mental states that affect people’s behavior.
- 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.
- Thought-action fusion
- The tendency to overestimate the relationship between a thought and an action, such that one mistakenly believes a “bad” thought is the equivalent of a “bad” action.
- 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 processing
- Experience influencing the perception of stimuli.
- Topographic model
- Freud’s first model of the mind, which contended that the mind could be divided into three regions: conscious, preconscious, and unconscious. (The “topographic” comes from the fact that topography is the study of maps.)
- Trait
- When a symptom forms part of the personality or character.
- “Traitement moral” (moral treatment)
- A therapeutic regimen of improved nutrition, living conditions, and rewards for productive behavior that has been attributed to Philippe Pinel during the French Revolution, when he released mentally ill patients from their restraints and treated them with compassion and dignity rather than with contempt and denigration.
- Trance States
- Trance: a state of consciousness characterized by the experience of “out-of-body possession,” or an acute dissociation between one’s self and the current, physical environment surrounding them.
- Transduction
- The conversion of one form of energy into another.
- Transformation
- The term for personality changes associated with experience and life events.
- Transgender
- A person whose gender identity or gender role does not correspond with his/her birth sex.
- Transgender
- A term used to describe individuals whose gender does not match their biological sex.
- Transgender female (TGF)
- A transgender person whose birth sex was male.
- Transgender male (TGM)
- A transgender person whose birth sex was female.
- Trauma
- An event or situation that causes great distress and disruption, and that creates substantial, lasting damage to the psychological development of a person.
- Trephination
- The drilling of a hole in the skull, presumably as a way of treating psychological disorders.
- Triarchic model
- Model formulated to reconcile alternative historic conceptions of psychopathy and differing methods for assessing it. Conceives of psychopathy as encompassing three symptomatic components: boldness, involving social efficacy, emotional resiliency, and venturesomeness; meanness, entailing lack of empathy/emotional-sensitivity and exploitative behavior toward others; and disinhibition, entailing deficient behavioral restraint and lack of control over urges/emotional reactions.
- 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.
- Type I error
- In statistics, the error of rejecting the null hypothesis when it is true.
- Type II error
- In statistics, the error of failing to reject the null hypothesis when it is false.
- Unconditional positive regard
- In person-centered therapy, an attitude of warmth, empathy and acceptance adopted by the therapist in order to foster feelings of inherent worth in the patient.
- 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.
- Validity
- Evidence related to the interpretation and use of test scores. A particularly important type of evidence is criterion validity, which involves the ability of a test to predict theoretically relevant outcomes. For example, a presumed measure of conscientiousness should be related to academic achievement (such as overall grade point average).
- Value
- Belief about the way things should be.
- 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.
- Violence
- Aggression intended to cause extreme physical harm, such as injury or death.
- 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).
- Vivid dreams
- A dream that is very clear, where the individual can remember the dream in great detail.
- Weber’s law
- States that just noticeable difference is proportional to the magnitude of the initial stimulus.
- Working memory
- Memory system that allows for information to be simultaneously stored and utilized or manipulated.
- Working memory
- The ability to maintain information over a short period of time, such as 30 seconds or less.