Exam 14: Brain, Behavior, and Cognition Since 1945
Exam 1: Introduction10 Questions
Exam 2: Origins of a Science of Mind25 Questions
Exam 3: Everyday Life and Psychological Practices25 Questions
Exam 4: Subject Matter, Methods, and the Making of a New Science28 Questions
Exam 5: From Periphery to Center: Creating an American Psychology25 Questions
Exam 6: The Practice of Psychology at the Interfacewith Medicine25 Questions
Exam 7: Psychologists As Testers: Applying Psychology, Ordering Society25 Questions
Exam 8: American Psychological Science and Practice Between the World Wars27 Questions
Exam 9: Psychology in Europe Between the World Wars27 Questions
Exam 10: The Golden Age of American Psychology25 Questions
Exam 11: Internationalization and Indigenization of Psychology Afterworld War II27 Questions
Exam 12: Feminism and American Psychology: the Science and Politics of Gender25 Questions
Exam 13: Inclusiveness, Identity, and Conflict in Late 20th-Century American Psychology25 Questions
Exam 14: Brain, Behavior, and Cognition Since 194529 Questions
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While interest in language had existed in the early parts of the 20th century, renewed interest in, and subsequent development of, psycholinguistics did not occur until
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The theory behind the phrase "cells that fire together, wire together" can be attributed to
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Donald Broadbent is best known for his work with memory and his theory on
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The shift toward cognitive psychology during the 1950s was, to some degree, inspired by Jean Piaget and
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Noam Chomsky's work was brought to the attention of the psychological world following
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Roger Sperry's work with brains that had undergone a separation of the corpus callosum indicated
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