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This overview delves into the key areas of the brain, focusing on the functions of the occipital, temporal, parietal, and frontal lobes. We examine prominent psychological theories, including Thorndike’s Law of Effect, Opponent-Process Theory, and the General Adaptation Syndrome by Hans Selye. Notable psychologists such as Solomon Asch, Albert Bandura, and Stanley Milgram shape the discussion of behavior and emotion. Additionally, we touch upon techniques like EEG and MRI for understanding brain activity. Discover how these elements intertwine in cognitive and behavioral psychology.
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Picture This Lobes Out of place Theories Alphabet Soup 100 100 100 100 100 200 200 200 200 200 300 300 300 300 300 400 400 400 400 400 500 500 500 500 500
This lobe is associated with sound and contains Wernicke’s area
This contains the somatosensory cortex and is responsible for pressure, pain, temperature, and touch
This lobe in responsible for abstract thought and contains the motor cortex and Broca’s area
This Loeb recorded hits such as “Stay (I Missed You)” and “I Do.”
If the consequences of a behavior are pleasant, the stimulus-response connection will be strengthened. This is Thorndike’s _________.
This theory on vision that suggests that opposing retinal pairs (red-green; yellow-blue; white-black) enable color.
This theory explains pain through a filter in the spinal cord that either blocks or allows pain signals to be sent through.
An emotional theory which suggests that arousal must be combined with a cognitive label to experience the emotion
Hans Selye’s stress model that suggests three stages—alarm, resistance, exhaustion
Sleep stage which becomes more frequent the longer one sleeps; also features Michael Stipe
Originally designed to identify emotional disorders, this is a widely used personality test
A brain imaging tool that uses magnetic fields to measure the density and location of brain material
Hans Seyle’s model for response to stress: alarm—resistance—exhaustion