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Created by kellybrickell
about 12 years ago
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What is taste aversion learning?
What are problems with classical conditioning explanations of taste aversion?
What is blocking?
What mathematical model was developed to explain conditioning phenomena like blocking?
What is the term for when something important happens to an animal, it searches its memory to see what events could have been used to predict the occurence
Conditioning as a biological adaption means what?
What is the defining characteristic of evolutionary psychology?
What are Learned responses that are part of the organisms repertoire?
Autoshaping is remarkable persistent and resistant to what?
What is an example of autoshaping?
What results when there is competition between biologically based behavior and a learned response.
Instinctive drift refers to the tendency of organisms to…?
What is an example of instinctual drift?
What term refers to Limitations on learning that results from biological factors not from experiences
What is the general principle of biological constraints?
What is a precursor of evolutionary Psychology?
What is sociobiology?
What is social behavior?
Alturism among humans is a ____ ordained by ____
What is an altruistic act in its purest form?
A procedure where individuals are given info about their biological functioning, they are trained to control/change their functioning.
A specific kind of biofeedback that involves feedback about neurological functioning
Biofeedback and neurofeedback:
alleviate ____;
reduces ____;
controls _____;
and treats ____.
Emotion, aggression, memory (part of the brain)
control of rapid and habitual movements coordination of motor activity; balance (part of the brain)
Growth; regulation of other endocrine gland activity (part of the brain)
Physiological functions such as breathing, heart functioning, digestion (part of the brain)
"relay" center for sensory info (part of the brain)
Learning and memory (part of the brain)
Arousal center; sleep-wake control (part of the brain)
Regulation of endocrine gland activity relating to growth, sexual behavior, and other functions (part of the brain)
Sensation, language, speech, thinking, and motor activity (part of the brain)
The lower brain stem (part of the brain)
The upper brain stem (part of the brain)
Brain stem responsible for regulating waking and sleeping and for controlling general arousal
The largest and most complex brain structure
The brain stem responsible for basic physiological functions such as respiration and heart rate.
What is centrally involved in locomotion and balance?
What is associated with movement?
What is the forebrain's most important structures?
Sensation, movement, orientation (Lobe of the cerebral cortex)
Vision (Lobe of the cerebral cortex)
Motor activity; higher thought processes (Lobe of the cerebral cortex)
Hearing, language, speech (Lobe of the cerebral cortex)
Learning depends on the formation of connections among what?
All info enters the brain through what?
All sensory info except ____ goes through the ____ and then to the appropriate sections of the brain
Important info having to do with nonemotional facts and events goes through the ___ into ____
important emotional info goes through the ____ for processing into ____
Actual processing, examination of info for meaning and associations happens in the ___
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