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AP Psych vocab 12

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1. Scientific method   a 5 step process for empirical investigation of a hypothesis under conditions designed to control biases and subjective judgments.  
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2. Empirical investigation   an approach to research that relies on sensory experience and observation as research data.  
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3. Theory   a testable explanation for a set of facts or observations. In science, a theory is not just speculation or a guess  
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4. Hypothesis   a statement predicting the outcome of a scientific study, a statement describing the relationship among variables in a study.  
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5. Operational definitions   specific descriptions of concepts involving the conditions of a scientific study. Operations definitions are stated in terms of how the concepts are to be measured or what operations are being employed to produce them.  
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6. Independent Variable   a stimulus condition so named because the experimentor changes it independently of all the other carefully controlled experimental conditions.  
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7. Random presentation   a process by which chance alone determines the order in which the stimulus is presented.  
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8. Data   pieces of info, especially info gathered by a researcher to be used in testing a hypothesis.  
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9. Dependent variable   the measured outcome of a study. The responses of a subject in a study.  
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10. Replicate   in research, this refers to doing a study over to see whether the same results ate obtained. As a control for bias, replication is often done by someone other than the original researcher  
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11. Experiment   a kind of research in which the researcher controls all the conditions and directly manipulates the conditions, including the independent variable.  
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12. Confounding or Extraneous Variables   Variables that have an unwanted influence on the outcome of the experiment.  
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13. Controls   constraints that the experimenter places on the experiment to ensure that each subject has the exact same conditions.  
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14. Random assignment   each subject of the sample has an equal likelihood of being chosen for the experimental group of an experiment.  
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15. Ex Post Facto   research in which we choose subjects based on pre  
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16. Correlation Study   a type of research that is mainly statistical in nature. Correlations studies determine the relationship between two variables.  
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17. Study   a quasi  
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18. Naturalistic observation   a research method in which subjects are observed in their natural environment.  
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19. Longitudinal Study   a type of study in which one group of subjects is followed and observed for an extended period of time.  
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20. Cross sectional study   a study in which a representative cross section of the population is chosen and then each cohort is followed for a short period of time.  
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21. Cohort sequential study   a research method in which a cross section of the population is chosen and then each cohort is followed for a short period of time.  
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22. Personal bias   the researcher allowing personal beliefs to affect the outcome of a study.  
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23. Expectancy bias   the researcher allowing his or her expectations to affect the outcome of a study  
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24. Double blind study   an experimental procedure in which both the researchers and participants are uninformed about the nature of the independent variable being administered.  
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25. Institutional review board   a committee at each institution where research is conducted to review every experiment for ethics and methodology.  
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26. Institutional animal care and use committee   a committee at each institution where research is conducted to review every experiment involving animals for ethics and methodology.  
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27. Frequency distribution   a summary chart, showing how frequently each of the various scores in a set of data occurs.  
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28. Histogram   a bar graph depicting a frequency distribution. The height of the bars indicates the frequency of a group of scores.  
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29. Descriptive statistics   statistical procedures used to describe characteristics and responses of groups of subjects.  
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30. Mean   the measure of central tendency most often used to describe a set of data  
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31. Median   a measure of central tendency for a distribution, represented by the score that separates the upper half of the scores from the lower half of the scores  
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32. Mode   a measure of central tendency for a distribution, represented by the score that occurs most often.  
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33. Range   the simplest measure of variability, represented by the difference between the highest and lowest values in a frequency distribution.  
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34. Standard deviation   a measure of variability that indicates the average difference between the scores and their mean.  
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35. Normal distribution   a bell  
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36. Correlation   a relationship between variables, in which changes in one variable are reflected by changes in the other variable. Such as the correlation between age and height in children.  
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37. Correlation coefficient   a # between  
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38. Inferential statistics   statistical techniques (probability theory) used to assess whether the results of a study are reliable or whether the might be the result of chance.  
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39. Random sample   a sample group of subjects selected by chance.  
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40. Representative sample   a sample obtained in such a way that it reflects the distribution of important variables in the larger population in which the researchers are interested these can be age, income level, ethnicity, and geographic distribution.  
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41. Significant difference   psychologists accept a difference between the groups as “real” or significant, when the probability that it might be due to an atypical sample drawn by chance is less than 5 in 100. (p < 0.05)  
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1. Psychology   the scientific study of behavior and mental processes  
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2. Pseudopyschology   the erroneous assertions or practices set forth as being scientific psychology  
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3. Confirmation bias   the tendency to attend to evidence that complements and confirms our beliefs or expectations, while ignoring evidence that does not  
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4. Experimental psychologists   psychologists who do research on basic psychological processes – as contrasted with applied psychologists also called research psychologists  
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5. Teachers of psychology   psychologists whose primary job is teaching typically in high schools and colleges and universities.  
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6. Applied psychologists   psychologists who use the knowledge developed by experimental psychologists to solve human problems.  
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7. Psychiatrist   a medical specialty dealing with the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders  
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8. Structuralism   a historical school of psychology devoted to uncovering the basic structures that make up mind and thought. Structuralists sought the “elements” of conscious experience.  
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9. Introspection   the process of reporting on one’s own conscious mental experiences  
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10. Functionalism   School of psychology that believed mental processes could best be understood in terms of their adaptive purpose and function.  
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11. Gestalt psychology   school of psychology that sought to understand how the brain works by studying perception and perceptual learning. Gestalt psychologists believed that percepts consist of meaningful wholes (gestalts in German.)  
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12. Behaviorism   school (also modern perspective) that has sought to make psychology an objective science focused only on behavior – to the exclusion of mental processes.  
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13. Psychoanalysis   an approach to psychology based on Sigmund Freud’s assertions, which emphasize unconscious processes. The term is used to refer to Freud’s psychoanalytical theory and to his psychoanalytical treatment method.  
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14. Biological view   the psychological perspective that searches for the causes of behavior in the functioning of the genes, the brain and the nervous system, and the endocrine (hormone) system.  
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15. Neuroscience   the field devoted to understanding how the brain creates thoughts, feelings, motives, consciousness,, memories, and other mental processes  
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16. Evolutionary psychology   a relatively new specialty in psychology that sees behavior and mental processes in terms of their genetic adaptations for survival and reproduction.  
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17. Developmental view   the psychological perspective emphasizing changes that occur across the lifespan.  
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18. Cognitive view   the psychological perspective emphasizing mental processes such as learning, perception, and thinking, as forms of information processing.  
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19. Cognitions   mental processes such as thinking, memory, sensation, and perception.  
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20. Cognitive neuroscience   an interdisciplinary field emphasizing brain activity as info processing; involves cognitive psychology, biology neurology, computer science linguistics, and specialists from other fields who are interested in the connection between mental processes and t  
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21. Clinical view   the psychological perspective emphasizing mental health and mental illness. Psychodynamic and humanistic psychology are variations on the clinical view  
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22. Psychodynamic psychology   a clinical viewpoint emphasizing the understanding of mental disorders in terms of unconscious needs, desires, memories, and conflicts  
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23. Humanistic psychology   a clinical viewpoint emphasizing human ability, growth, potential, and free will.  
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24. Behavioral view   a psychological perspective that finds the source of our actions in environmental stimuli, rather than inner mental processes.  
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25. Sociocultural view   a psychological perspective emphasizing the importance of social interaction, social learning, and a cultural perspective.  
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26. Culture   a complex blend of language, beliefs, customs, values, and traditions developed by a group of people and shared with others in the same environment.  
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27. Trait view   a psychological perspective that view behavior and personality as the products of enduring psychological characteristics.  
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28. Empirical approach   a study conducted via careful observations and scientifically based research.  
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  the psychological specialty that studies how organisms change over time as a result of biological and environmental influences  
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1. Personality   the psychological qualities that bring continuity to an individual’s behavior in different situations and at different times  
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2. Psychoanalysis   Freud’s system of treatment for mental disorders. Refers to psychoanalytic theory as well.  
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3. Psychoanalytic theory   Freud’s theory of personality  
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4. Unconscious   In Freudian theory, this is the psychic domain of which the individual is not aware but that is the storehouse of repressed impulses, drives, and conflicts unavailable to consciousness.  
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5. Libido   the Freudian concept of psychic energy that drives individuals to experience sensual pleasure  
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6. Id   the primitive, unconscious portion of the personality that houses the most basic drives and stores repressed memories.  
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7. Superego   the mind’s storehouse of values, including moral attitudes learned from parents and society, roughly the notion of conscious.  
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8. Ego   the conscious rational part of the personality, keeps peace between the Id and Superego  
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9. Psychosexual stages   successive instinctive patterns of associating pleasure with stimulation of specific bodily areas at different times of life.  
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10. Oedipus complex   Freud a largely unconscious process where male children displace an erotic attraction toward their mother to females of their own age, and at the same time identify with their fathers.  
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11. Identification   the process where an individual tries to become like another person, especially the same sex parent.  
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12. Penis Envy   Freud, the female desire to have a penis  
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13. Fixation   occurs when psychosexual development is arrested at an immature age.  
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14. Ego Defense mechanism   largely unconscious mental strategies employed to reduce the experience of conflict or anxiety.  
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15. Repression   An unconscious process that excludes unacceptable thoughts and feelings from awareness and memory.  
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16. Projective tests   personality assessment instruments, such as the Rorschach and TAT based on Freud’s ego defense mechanism of projection  
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17. Rorschach ink blot test   a projective test requiring subjects to describe what they see in a series of inkblots.  
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18. Thematic Apperception Test   a projective test requiring subjects to make up stories that explain ambiguous pictures.  
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19. Psychic Determination   Freud’s assumption that all our mental and behavioral responses are caused by unconscious traumas, desires, and conflicts.  
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20. Neo   Freudians  
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21. Personal unconscious   Jung’s term for the portion of the unconscious roughly related to Freud’s I  
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22. Collective Unconscious   Jung’s addition to the unconscious involving a reservoir for instinctive memories including the archetypes which exist in all people.  
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23. Archetypes   the ancient memory images in the collective unconscious. Archetypes appear and reappear in art, literature, and folktales around the world.  
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24. Introversion   Jungian dimension that focuses on inner experience  
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25. Extraversion   the Jungian personality dimension involving turning one’s attention outward, toward others.  
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26. Basic Anxiety   an emotion proposed by Karen Horney, that gives a sense of uncertainty and loneliness in a hostile world that can lead to maladjustment.  
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27. Neurotic Needs   Signs of neurosis in Horney’s theory, these 10 needs are normal desires carried to a neurotic extreme.  
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28. Inferiority Complex   A feeling of inferiority that is largely unconscious with its roots in childhood.  
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29. Compensation   making up for one’s real or imagined deficiencies.  
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30. Traits   stable personality characteristics that are presumed to exist within the individual and guide his or her thoughts and actions under various conditions.  
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31. Central traits   According to trait theory, traits that form the basis of personality.  
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32. Secondary traits   preferences and attitudes  
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33. Cardinal traits   Personality components that define a person’s life. Very few have cardinal traits.  
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34. Self   actualizing personalities  
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35. Fully Functioning Person   Carl Roger’s term for a healthy self actualizing person who has a self concept that is both positive and congruent with reality.  
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36. Phenomenal Field   our psychological reality composed of perceptions and feelings  
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37. Positive psychology   a recent movement within psychology focusing on desirable aspects of human functioning as opposed to an emphasis on psychopathology.  
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38. Observational learning   the process of learning new responses by watching others’ behavior  
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39. Reciprocal determinism   The process in which the cognition, behavior, and environment mutually influence each other  
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40. Locus of Control   an individual’s sense of where his or her life influences originate.  
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41. Humors   Four body fluids  
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42. Temperament   basic pervasive personality dispositions that are apparent in early childhood and that establish the tempo and mood of the individual’s behaviors  
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43. Five factor theory   trait perspective suggesting that personality is composed of five fundamental personality dimensions: openness to experience, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness and neuroticism.  
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44. MMPI   2  
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45. Reliability   an attribute of psychological test that gives reliable results  
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46. Validity   an attribute of a psychological test that actually measures what it is being used to measure  
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47. Person situation controversy   a theoretical dispute concerning the relative contribution of personality factors and situational factors in controlling behavior.  
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48. Type   refers to especially important dimensions or clusters of traits that are not only central to a person’s personality but are found with essentially the same pattern in many people  
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49. Myers   Briggs Type indicator  
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50. Implicit personality theory   assumptions about personality that are held by people to simplify the task of understanding people  
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51. Fundamental attribution error   the assumption that another person’s behavior, especially clumsy, inappropriate or otherwise undesirable behavior is the result of a flaw in the person’s personality, rather than in the situation.  
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52. Neuroticism   susceptibility to neurotic problems  
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53. Extraversion   a personality descriptor indicating “outgoing” nature of some individuals  
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54. Introversion   a personality descriptor indicating quiet and reserved nature of some individuals  
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55. Eclectic   either theories switching to explain different situations or building one’s own theory of personality from pieces borrowed from many perspectives.  
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