All AP Psychology Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1492 : Ap Psychology
What are endorphins?
Neuronal cells that provide additional support to neurons
A research principle designed to make the participants respond in a predetermined manner
Another word for dendrites
Neurotransmitters linked to reduced pain and increased pleasure
Drugs that depress brain activity
Neurotransmitters linked to reduced pain and increased pleasure
Endorphins are neurotransmitters linked to reduced pain and increased pleasure. They are natural, meaning that they are synthesized and exist in the body, and are released in response to external pain (e.g., endorphins are released when you hit your head).
Example Question #1493 : Ap Psychology
A patient has suffered an injury to the left hemisphere of his brain. He is able to understand language, but cannot easily form full sentences. What part of the brain did the patient injure?
Hippocampus
Broca's area
Wernike’s area
Basal ganglia
Corpus callosum
Broca's area
Damage to Broca's area causes expressive aphasia, or "Broca's aphasia." People who suffer from this type of aphasia are unable to form grammatical sentences fluidly; their speech is instead labored and halting. Because the patient is unable to form full sentences easily, he likely sustained injury to Broca's area.
We can tell that the patient did not injure Wernike’s area because we are told that he is still able to understand language. People who have Wernike's area injuries suffer from a different kind of aphasia, "receptive aphasia" or "Wernike's aphasia"; these individuals are not able to understand language, though they can form full sentences. One can think of expressive aphasia as a disruption of syntax that leaves semantics intact, and of receptive aphasia as a disruption of semantics leaving syntax intact.
None of the other answer choices are as specifically related to the abilities to produce and understand language as are Broca's area and Wernike's area; the basal ganglia helps to control motor functions and voluntary movements, the corpus callosum connects the left and right hemispheres of the brain, and the hippocampus helps regulate long-term memory.
Example Question #4 : Other Biological Principles
Which area of the brain is responsible for procedural memory?
Pons
Hippocampus
Midbrain
Hypothalamus
Cerebellum
Cerebellum
The cerebellum, as well as the basal ganglia and motor cortex, are responsible for procedural, or muscle memory. Whereas the hippocampus is associated with semantic, spacial, and episodic memory, the cerebellum, basal ganglia, and motor cortex are associated with motor control. Procedural memory is also known as non-declarative or implicit (rather than explicit) memory because a person cannot say, but can demonstrate their acquisition of skill. For example, if an individual with a driver's license suffers an injury to their hippocampus and suffers from amnesia, they may still retain the ability to drive a car due to muscle memory in the cerebellum.
Example Question #5 : Other Biological Principles
What type of fluid serves to protect and cushion the central nervous system?
Platelets
Water
Glial fluid
Cerebrospinal fluid
Hydrochloric fluid
Cerebrospinal fluid
Cerebrospinal fluid is the fluid in and around the brain and spinal cord (the two components of the central nervous system) that serves as a protective barrier.
Example Question #1092 : Individual Psychology And Behavior
In the 1960s, scientist Dmitry Belyaev began an experiment that observed the domestication of the silver fox as opposed to the wild red fox. The red fox is a wild and wary animal, unlike the silver fox. Belyaev selected and mated the tamest individuals of the red fox species. After 30 plus generations a new breed of fox was established: the silver fox.
Which of the following best explains Belyaev’s process of fox breeding?
Genetic selection
Artificial selection
Adaptation
Mutagenesis
Natural Selection
Artificial selection
Belyaev's selection may be considered as artificial selection because he was purposefully selecting for a specific behavioral trait—tameness. As a result, natural selection and genetic selection would be incorrect choices. There was no noted mutation observed in the study; therefore, mutagenesis would be an incorrect answer.
Example Question #1093 : Individual Psychology And Behavior
As a part of a research study, Carlos had a brain scan before and after learning a juggling routine. The scan that showed his brain after he learned the routine showed structural changes in areas that process visual and motor tasks. This is an example of which of the following?
None of these
Conditioning
Hemispheric specialization
Neuroplasticity
Neuroplasticity
Neuroplasticity is a concept that refers to structural changes in the brain that occur because of changes in the person's behavior, emotions, thoughts, or environment. It means that the brain is more flexible and adaptable than once thought, even after fully developing.
Conditioning can also part of learning a new task, but conditioning involves pairing stimuli together (e.g. classical conditioning) or being reinforced or punished (e.g. operant conditioning). Hemispheric specialization is when one side—hemisphere—of the brain is dominant in controlling a particular function.
Example Question #1094 : Individual Psychology And Behavior
Upon seeing a bear, Peter's heart rate increased, his pupils dilated, and he began to perspire. Which of the following systems is most likely affecting Peter?
Somatosensory nervous system
Peripheral nervous system
Sympathetic nervous system
Autonomic nervous system
Parasympathetic nervous system
Sympathetic nervous system
The sympathetic nervous system is at work in this scenario. Both the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems are divisions of the autonomic nervous system. Unlike the parasympathetic nervous system; however, the sympathetic branch is the "fight or flight" response. In emergencies, the hypothalamus initiates this response which, dumps adrenaline into the blood stream and accelerates bodily functions for either a fight or flight scenario. The parasympathetic branch is the "rest and digest" system and works in opposition to the sympathetic branch.
Example Question #231 : Cognition And Consciousness
What term did Carl Jung introduce to represent the form of the unconscious that is common to mankind as a whole and that contains archetypes, or universal primordial images and ideas?
Anima mundi
Prima materia
Collective unconscious
Samsara
Morphogenetic field
Collective unconscious
The collective unconscious is a term used in analytical psychology, especially Jungian psychology, to describe a part of the unconscious mind that is shared by a society, a people, or all mankind.
Example Question #232 : Cognition And Consciousness
Which of the following is an example of semantic memory?
Recalling your first day of 1st grade
Predicting what will happen to you tomorrow
Knowing the capital of New York
Salivating when you see your favorite food
Remembering how to ride a bicycle
Knowing the capital of New York
Semantic memory is one's memory for various facts and concepts, so being able to recall the capital of New York is a good example of this type of memory. Remembering how to ride a bicycle is a procedural memory, recalling your first day of 1st grade is an episodic memory, and salivating when you see your favorite food is a conditioned memory.
Example Question #233 : Cognition And Consciousness
What is aphasia?
An impairment in communication through oral and/or written means
A popular treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
Carbon dioxide deprivation in the brain
Oxygen deprivation in the brain
An impairment in processing visual stimuli
An impairment in communication through oral and/or written means
Aphasia is a language disorder that impacts a person's communication skills. Aphasia typically results from a head injury or stroke, and leaves long-lasting effects on a person's communication abilities depending on the severity and location of the head injury or stroke.