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Mary Ainsworth
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Albert Bandura
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AP PSYCH KEY PEOPLE

TermDefinition
Mary Ainsworth Emotional attachment Her “strange situation” room that infants are placed in during attachment testing is a standard procedure.The strange situation and patterns of attachment.Secure,Anxious
Albert Bandura A researcher who focused on observational learning, or modeling. Bandura showed that children learn behavior by watching others. He did a famous study involving “Bobo” dolls that demonstrated children don’t need punishment or reward to learn
Alfred Adler Studied under Freud. Adler broke away from Freud. He believed that social motives, rather than sexual drives, motivated people the most. In Adler’s view, strivings for superiority drive people’s behavior.
Solomon Asch Social conformity. Studied how people reacted when their perceptions of events were challenged by others. Asch found that most individuals changed their own opinions in order to agree with the group, even when the majority was clearly wrong
Aaron Beck A developer of cognitive therapy. His cognitive approach to therapy emphasizes using rational thoughts to overcome fears rather than trying to uncover the unconscious meaning of those fears
Alfred Binet A developer of the Binet-Simon scale Binet intended the test to predict school performance
Walter Cannon Developed the Cannon-Bard theory of emotion, which holds that physical and emotional stimuli happen simultaneously, with no causal relationship
Noam Chomsky A linguist. Chomsky performed research that led to the decline of behaviorist theories about language acquisition and encouraged researchers to study the biological bases of behavior. He proposed that humans are born with an innate language acquisition.
Hermann Ebbinghaus A philosopher, psychologist, and author of On Memory. His work challenged the view that higher mental processes such as memory couldn’t be studied scientifically. Ebbinghaus Forgetting Curve
Albert Ellis An American psychologist who developed a form of cognitive-behavioral therapy known as rational-emotive therapy His rational-emotive therapy is based on the idea that self-defeating thoughts cause psychological problems
Sigmund Freud An Austrian neurologist and pioneer in the field of psychoanalysis Dream Analysis Unconscious Id, Ego, Superego Defense Mechanisms Unconscious. Id, Ego, Superego. Defense
Erik Erikson Erikson is best-known for his 8 Stages of Psychosocial Development and the concept of the identity crisis. his psychosocial theory looked at how social influences contribute to personality throughout the entire lifespan.
John Garcia He conducted a series of studies on Conditioned Taste Aversion In these studies, he manipulated the kinds of stimuli preceding the onset of nausea and other noxious experiments in rats, using radiation to artificially induce the nausea
Howard Gardner A developmental psychologist whose research focuses on creativity in adults and children Gardner proposed a theory of multiple intelligences, which has been highly influential among educators
Harry Harlow Professor Harlow’s research developed an abundant supply of primate learning tests Harlow’s famous wire/cloth “mother” monkey studies demonstrated that the need for affection created a stronger bond between mother and infant than did physical needs
Karen Horney She was a pioneering theorist in personality, psychoanalysis, and “feminine psychology.” Anxiety is created by anything that jeopardizes a person’s means of gaining security The neurotic’s rigid adherence to his safety devices protects him in some ways
William James An American philosopher and psychologist James believed that the experience of emotion arises from bodily expression According to his view, people are said BECAUSE they cry Contributed to development of the James-Lange theory of emotion
Carl Jung Swiss psychologist and psychiatrist who was a friend and follower of Freud Jung broke away from Freud in the 1910s because of a bitter theoretical disagreement Collective unconscious- contains universal human memories
Lawrence Kohlberg A major figure in moral psychology and moral education Kohlberg had a passionate commitment to building a just society Kohlberg’s 6 Stages of Moral Development
Abraham Maslow Leader in the field of humanistic psychology Believed human beings’ needs are arranged like a ladder,Self-Actualization
Stanley Milgram Conductor of a famous, controversial research study of obedience to authority. Found that his experiment subjects were willing to cause serious harm and suffering to others if instructed to do so by an authority figure. Milgram had to deceive his subjects
Ivan Pavlov Classical Conditioning Pavlov made his most famous discovery while studying how dog saliva related to the function of the stomach. He repeatedly gave a dog food after ringing a bell. The dog began to salivate for false alarms too.
Jean Piaget Developmental psychologists Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development His contributions include a theory of cognitive child development, detailed observational studies of cognition in children, and a series of tests to reveal cognitive abilities
Carl Rogers An American psychologist who proposed the person-centered or client-centered theory of psychology. Rogers asserted that people’s self-concepts determine their behavior and relationships with others. Client-Therapist Relationship
Elizabeth Kubler She identified 5 stages of psychological adjustment Denial Anger Bargaining Depression Acceptance
Stanley Schachter The developers of the two-factor theory of emotion Schachter and Singer believed that emotions come both from psychological stimuli and the cognitive interpretation of that stimuli
Martin Seligman Pioneer in the field of “positive psychology,” the study of what makes people happy and good. Contrasts traditional clinical psychology, which focuses on what makes people distressed Discovered the phenomenon of learned helplessness in dogs
Hans Selye A Viennese-born endocrinologist who pioneered the field of stress research Concluded that physiological response to stress is nonspecific General Adaptation Syndrome – Alarm Resistance Exhaustion (GAS-ARE)
B.F. Skinner Behavioral psychologist who built on Pavlov’s work to develop theories of operant behavior Skinner studied operant conditioning by using the Skinner Box
Charles Spearman Cognitive psychologist who theorized the existence of a general type of intelligence, the “g” factor, that underlies all types of intelligence General Intelligence Theory
Robert Sternberg The developer of the Triarchic Theory of Intelligence Proposed there are three aspects to intelligence: componential, experiential, and contextual
Lewis Terman A developer of the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale in 1916, a revision of the Binet-Simon scale. Believed in the existence of innate differences in intelligence and supported the eugenics movement of his time Lewis Terman’s “Termites”
Edward Thorndike Studied learning and classical conditioning, primarily in animals Formulated the Law of Effect- any behavior that is followed by a pleasant consequence is likely to be repeated, while any behavior followed by unpleasant consequences is likely to stop.
John Watson Founder of a school of psychology known as behaviorism Watson studied the effects of conditioning on children One of his most famous experiments involved conditioning a child named Little Albert to fear white, furry objects
David Wechsler Designed the first intelligence test specifically for adults Called the test the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) Also devised a test for children called the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children
Wilhelm Wundt Best known for establishing the first psychology lab in Liepzig, Germany, generally considered the official beginning of psychology as a field of science separate from philosophy Father of Psychology, so… Turn down for Wundt?!
Created by: AdiV
 

 



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