Package deal
A Level Psychology questions and 100% answers bundles with good package deals
A Level Psychology questions and 100% answers bundles with good package deals
[Show more]A Level Psychology questions and 100% answers bundles with good package deals
[Show more]Evaluate each way of studying the brain - FMRI 
:) - Non invasive and does not expose brain to potentially harmful radiation as is the case with other 
scan methods 
:) - Offers a more objective and reliable measure of psychological processes than is possible with verbal 
reports. It is a useful way...
Preview 2 out of 13 pages
Add to cartEvaluate each way of studying the brain - FMRI 
:) - Non invasive and does not expose brain to potentially harmful radiation as is the case with other 
scan methods 
:) - Offers a more objective and reliable measure of psychological processes than is possible with verbal 
reports. It is a useful way...
Benefits of an attachment - Survival 
Food 
Love 
Security 
Briefly explain classical conditioning - Learning a behaviour through stimulus, response and 
association 
Briefly explain operant conditioning - Learning a behaviour through rewards reinforcements and 
punishments 
Describe evidence for th...
Preview 2 out of 12 pages
Add to cartBenefits of an attachment - Survival 
Food 
Love 
Security 
Briefly explain classical conditioning - Learning a behaviour through stimulus, response and 
association 
Briefly explain operant conditioning - Learning a behaviour through rewards reinforcements and 
punishments 
Describe evidence for th...
Evaluate conditioning as a theory - Classical 
:) - Research into classical conditioning has lead to the development of treatment of phobias, systematic 
desensitisation works by eliminating the learned anxious response (CR) that is associated with the 
feared object (CS). This process has been prov...
Preview 2 out of 11 pages
Add to cartEvaluate conditioning as a theory - Classical 
:) - Research into classical conditioning has lead to the development of treatment of phobias, systematic 
desensitisation works by eliminating the learned anxious response (CR) that is associated with the 
feared object (CS). This process has been prov...
3 Major Somatic Treatments - Psychosurgery, drug therapy, and electroconvulsive therapy 
Agoraphobia - Fear of crowds and open spaces. Most common phobia and most prevalent among 
women in early adulthood. Shown to have a genetic transmission. 
Allyon and Azrin (1968) - Supports the use of token eco...
Preview 3 out of 19 pages
Add to cart3 Major Somatic Treatments - Psychosurgery, drug therapy, and electroconvulsive therapy 
Agoraphobia - Fear of crowds and open spaces. Most common phobia and most prevalent among 
women in early adulthood. Shown to have a genetic transmission. 
Allyon and Azrin (1968) - Supports the use of token eco...
Capacity of LTM - Potentially unlimited 
Capacity of STM - 7+_ 2 units 
Define retrieval failure - Retrieval failure occurs when there is an absence of cues. This is an 
explanation for forgetting based on the idea that cues are needed in order to recall information. 
Cues are things that serve as a...
Preview 2 out of 7 pages
Add to cartCapacity of LTM - Potentially unlimited 
Capacity of STM - 7+_ 2 units 
Define retrieval failure - Retrieval failure occurs when there is an absence of cues. This is an 
explanation for forgetting based on the idea that cues are needed in order to recall information. 
Cues are things that serve as a...
5 stages of minority influence - Consistency, Draw attention to a cause or issue, Augmentation 
Principle, Snowball Effect and Cognitive Conflict 
ABC model - A cognitive approach to understanding mental disorder, focusing on the effect of 
irrational beliefs on emotion. 
Abnormal brain circuits - S...
Preview 3 out of 29 pages
Add to cart5 stages of minority influence - Consistency, Draw attention to a cause or issue, Augmentation 
Principle, Snowball Effect and Cognitive Conflict 
ABC model - A cognitive approach to understanding mental disorder, focusing on the effect of 
irrational beliefs on emotion. 
Abnormal brain circuits - S...
define anxiety - a state if mental and physical arousal, the emotions include having worried thought 
and feeling tension 
define eye witness testimony - the ability of people to remember the details of events such as 
crimes 
define leading question - A question which, because of the way it is phra...
Preview 1 out of 3 pages
Add to cartdefine anxiety - a state if mental and physical arousal, the emotions include having worried thought 
and feeling tension 
define eye witness testimony - the ability of people to remember the details of events such as 
crimes 
define leading question - A question which, because of the way it is phra...
1. intra-psychic phase - 'i can't stand this anymore' 
- partner becomes dissatisfied 
- they brood on the reasons for this and focus on their partner's shortcomings by themselves 
2. dyadic phase - 'i would be justified in withdrawing' 
- dissatisfactions are aired within the relationship 
- ...
Preview 2 out of 11 pages
Add to cart1. intra-psychic phase - 'i can't stand this anymore' 
- partner becomes dissatisfied 
- they brood on the reasons for this and focus on their partner's shortcomings by themselves 
2. dyadic phase - 'i would be justified in withdrawing' 
- dissatisfactions are aired within the relationship 
- ...
Aim - General statement of why the study is being carried out. 
Behaviour categories - Dividing a target behaviour into a subset of behaviours. 
Case study - Research method involving detailed study of a single individual, institution or event. 
Closed questions - Questions that have a range of answ...
Preview 1 out of 4 pages
Add to cartAim - General statement of why the study is being carried out. 
Behaviour categories - Dividing a target behaviour into a subset of behaviours. 
Case study - Research method involving detailed study of a single individual, institution or event. 
Closed questions - Questions that have a range of answ...
Aim - A general expression of what the researcher intends to investigate 
Behavioural Categories - Dividing a target behaviour (such as stress or aggression) into a subset of 
specific and operationalised behaviours 
️• difficult to make clear and unambiguous 
️ • Dustbin categories (categor...
Preview 2 out of 15 pages
Add to cartAim - A general expression of what the researcher intends to investigate 
Behavioural Categories - Dividing a target behaviour (such as stress or aggression) into a subset of 
specific and operationalised behaviours 
️• difficult to make clear and unambiguous 
️ • Dustbin categories (categor...
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller martinndungu1986. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
No, you only buy these notes for $14.49. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.
4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)
67096 documents were sold in the last 30 days
Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy study notes for 14 years now