100 100 100 100 100 100
200 200 200 200 200 200
300 300 300 300 300 300
400 400 400 400 400 400
500 500 500 500 500 500
Name the
Psychologist D-Fence Definitions Freud Trait
Theory
What
Perspective?
Psychoanalytic approach to
personality
A 100
The guy who made the
pyramid
A 200
Abraham Maslow
A 200
One of the two psychologists
who “corrected” Freud’s
emphasis on childhood; they
placed higher emphasis on
social interactions than Freud
A 300
Karen Horney or Alfred Adler
A 300
Social-Cognitive approach to
personality
A 400
Albert Bandura
A 400
A 500
He expanded on Maslow’s
work and studied concepts
related to “the self”
Carl Rogers
A 500
The conscious expression of
feelings that are the opposite
of unconscious feelings
B 100
Reaction Formation
B 100
Disguising unacceptable,
unconscious impulses by
attributing them to others
B 200
B 300
Every time Mr. Vogel got
upset with one of his AP
Psych students, he tended
to give extremely difficult
tests to his American
History classes
Displacement
B 300
Angela remembers every
detail about her high school
sweetheart, but remembers
hardly anything about the
college boyfriend who broke
her heart
B 400
After getting a low grade on
an AP Psych exam, you go to
the gym and run 10 miles on
the treadmill
B 500
Sublimation
B 500
C 100
The perception that you control
your own fate
Internal Locus of Control
C 100
C 200
According to Rogers, an
attitude of total acceptance
toward another person
Unconditional Positive
Regard
C 200
A readiness to perceive
oneself favorably
C 300
Self-serving bias
C 300
The interacting influences of
behavior, traits, and
environment
C 400
Reciprocal Determinism
C 400
Carl Jung’s concept of a
shared, inherited reservoir of
memory tracing from our
species’ history
C 500
Collective Unconscious
C 500
The personality perspective most
likely to use free association
D 100
Psychoanalysis
D 100
D 200
The personality perspective
that studies how individuals
react in different situations
Social-Cognitive
D 200
The personality perspective
most criticized for being over
simplistic; describing but
NOT explaining personality
D 300
Trait Theory
D 300
The personality perspective
most concerned with growth
and self-actualization
D 400
The personality perspective
most dependent upon
projective tests
D 500
Psychoanalysis or
Psychodynamics
D 500
In suggesting that the mind is
mostly hidden, Freud was
most clearly emphasizing the
importance of this
E 100
Unconscious or Id
E 100
Freud would attribute feelings
of guilt to this part of one’s
personality
E 200
You want to be a loving
member of your family, but
also want to show disgust at
your sibling’s habits; Freud
says this part of your
personality finds a solution
E 300
Ego is to Id as the reality
principle is to this
E 400
Pleasure principle
E 400
E 500
Freud said this part of your
mind is accessible at a particular
moment, but often remains at
the unconscious level
Preconscious
E 500
In Big Five Theory,
emotional stability is
measured in this dimension
F 100
Neuroticism
F 100
Factor Analysis measures the
dimensions of emotional
stability versus instability on
the Y axis, and these two
characteristics on the X axis
F 200
Introversion and Extraversion
F 200
In Big Five Theory, the
endpoints for imagination and
practicality partly measure
this Trait Dimension
F 300
This personality inventory is
the most widely researched
and clinically used of all
personality tests
F 400
Minnesota Multiphasic
Personality Inventory
(MMPI)
F 400
This famous psychometric
questionnaire was designed to
measure psychological
preferences in how people
make decisions; initially
served to help women enter
the workforce post-WWII
F 500
Myers-Brigg Type Indicator
F 500
The Final Jeopardy Category is:
Concept of Self
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Innovation and creativity are most
likely to be appreciated in a
culture characterized by this
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Individualism
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