Psy 101 Hangman

 
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accommodation  Piaget's term for the modification of an establisehd schema to fit a new object or problem  
acculturation  a transition from feeling part of the culture of one's original country to the culture of the coutnry that one enters  
assimilation  Piaget's term for the application of one scema to new objects or problems  
attachment  a long-term feeling of closeness between people, such as a child and a caregiver  
authoritarian parents  those who exert firm controls on their children, generally without explaining the resons for the rules and without providing much warmth  
authoritative parents  those who are demanding adn impose firm controls, but who are also warm and responsive to hte child's communications  
biculturalism  the ablility to alternate between memership in one culture and membership in another  
chromosome  a strand of hereditary material found in the nucleus of a cell  
cohort  a group of people born at a particular time (as compared to people born at different times)  
conservation  the concept that objects retain their weight, volume, and certain other properties in spite of changes in tehir shape or arrangement  
cross-sectional study  a study of groups of individuals of different ages all at the same time  
dishabituation  an increase in a apreviously habituated response as a result of a change in the stimulus  
egocentric  the inability to take the perspective of another person; a tendency to view the world as centered around oneself  
equilibration  the establishment of harmony or balance between assimiliation and accommodation  
fetal alcohol syndrom  a condition marked by stunted growth of the head and body; malformations of the face, heart, and ears; and nercous system damage, including seizures, hyperactivity, learning disabilities,a ndmetnal retardation  
fetus  an organism more developed than an embryo but not yet born (from about 8 weeks after conception until birth in humans)  
fraternal twins  twins who develop from two eggs (dizygotic) fertilized by two different sperm; they are no more closely related than are any other children born to teh same parents  
gene  a segment of a chromosome that controls chemical reactions taht ultimately direct the development of the organism  
habituation  a decrease in a person's response to a stimulus after it has been presented repeatedly  
heritability  an estimate of the variance within a apopulation that is due to heredity  
identical twins  twins who develop fromthe same fertilized egg (monozygotic) and therefore have the same genes  
identity achievement  the outcome of having explored various possible identities and then making one's own decision  
identity crisis  concerns with dcision about the future and the quest for self-understanding  
identity foreclosure  the state of having made firm identity decisions without having thought much about them  
identity moratorium  the state of seriously considering one's identity without yet having made any decisions  
indifferent or uninvolved parents  those who pay little attention to their children beyond doing what is necessary to feed and shelter them  
longitudinal study  a study of a single group of individuals over time  
midlife transition  a time of goal reassessment  
moral dilemma  a problem that pits one moral value against another  
object permanence  the concept that objects continue to exist even when one does not see, hear, or otherwise sense them  
operation  according to Piaget a mental process that can be reversed  
permissive parents  those who are warm and loving but undemanding  
phenylketonuria (PKU)  an inherited disorder in which a person lacks the chemical reactions that convert a nutrient called phenylalanine into other chemicals; unless teh diet is carefully controlled, the affected person will become mentally retarded  
preoperational stage  according to Piaget the second stage of intellectual development, in which children lack operations  
schema (pl.: schemata)  an organized way of interacting with objects in the world  
selective attrition  the tendency of some kinds of people to be more likely than others to drop out of a study  
sensorimotor stage  according to Piaget the first stage of intellectual development; an infant's behavior is limited to making simple motor responses  
sequential design  a procedure in which researchers start with groups of people of different ages, studied at the same time, and then study them again at one or more later times  
sex chromosomes  the pair of chromosomes that determine whether an individual will develop as a female or as a male  
sex-limited gene  a gene that affects one sex more strongly than the other, even though both sexes have the gene  
sex-linked gene  a gene located on the X chromosome  
stage of concrete operations  according to Piaget the ability to deal with the properties of concrete objects but not hypothetical or abstract questions  
stage of formal operations  according to Piaget the stage when children develop teh ability to deal with abstract, hypothetical situations, which demand logical, deductive reasoning and systematic planning  
Strange Situation  a procedure in which a psychologist observes an infant's behavior in an unfamiliar room at various times as a stranger enters, leaves, and returns and the mother enters, leaves, and returns  
temperament  people's tendency to be either active or inactive, outgoing or reserved, and to respond vigorously or quietly to a new stimuli  
terror-management theory  the proposal that we cope with out fear of death by avoiding thinking about death and by affirming a worldview that provides self-esteem, hope, and value in life  
theory of mind  an understanding that other people have a mind too and that each person knows some things that other people don't know  
X chromosome  a sex chromosome; females have two per cell and males have only one  
Y chromosome  a sex chromosome; males have one per cell adn females have none  
zone of priximal development  the distance between what a child cando on his or her own and what the child can do with the help of adults or older children  
zygote  a fertilized egg cell