| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| T: Sperry, Hubel, Wiesel, D.O. Hebb; brain function and behaviour, imaging techniques | biological | 100%
|
| memory, how we process information, memory, how we reason | cognitive | 50%
|
| T: Neisser, Simon; re-introduction of the study of mental processes and cognitive structures, reaction-time and accuracy | cognitive | 50%
|
| the behaviour of individuals varies within culture | cultural differences | 50%
|
| some of its claim is not falsifiable thus not as famous anymore | evolutionary | 50%
|
| nearly all behaviours are multiply determined | has multiple scores | 50%
|
| self actualization, human potential and human growth | humanistic | 50%
|
| T: Rogers, Maslow; opposed behaviourism, personal growth, self-actualization, positive side of human nature | humanistic | 50%
|
| psychology studies behaviour within individuals | individuals differ greatly | 50%
|
| psychology suffers from a large amount of variability | low degree of replicability | 50%
|
| all behaviours can be explained by genetic factors | nature | 50%
|
| all behaviours can be explained by environmental factors | nurture | 50%
|
| how early childhood experiences influences our behaviours | psychodynamic | 50%
|
| T: Sigmund Freud; unconscious influences on behaviour, case studies, no research, grand theory of personality (ego, superego) | psychodynamic | 50%
|
| individuals influence the behaviour of individuals | reciprocal determinism | 50%
|
| examining and learning how behaviours are learned | behaviourism | 0%
|
| T: Pavlov, Watson, Thorndike, Skinner; mental processes unobservable and unverifiable, objects study of stimulus-response relations | behaviourism | 0%
|
| examining behaviour by looking at the biological processes of that behaviour | biological-neuroscience | 0%
|
| T: William James; functions of consciousness, thinking produces useful behaviours | functionalism | 0%
|
| T: Max Wertheimer; organization of cognitive processes, whole greater than sum of its parts | gestalt | 0%
|
| T: Wilhelm Wundt; scientific study of mind, introspection, the parts are greater than the whole | structuralism | 0%
|