SCOP Cheat Sheet Version 3.0 are listed roughly chronologically. Bolded terms appear frequently in tossups.

Term / Event Details the philosophy of study psychology based on observable actions; proponents included behaviorism B.F. Skinner, John Watson, and Ivan Pavlov (see "classical conditioning" below) a central tenet of b ehaviorism; the ability to train a living being to respond to a stimulus; examples include John Watson's L ittle Albert Experiment, in which a little boy was taught classical conditioning to fear fluffy white objects, and P avlov's dogs, an experiment in which Ivan Pavlov trained dogs to salivate when they heard a bell , author of T oward a Psychology of Being, described human needs on a Maslow's Hierarchy of pyramidal scale, from basic needs like food and safety at the bottom to "s elf-actualization" Needs at the top after Nazi Adolf Eichmann's trial, S tanley Milgram tested o bedience to authority by Milgram's Obedience ordering "teachers" to test the memories of "learners" and punish them for wrong answers Experiment with increasingly intense (but fake) electric shocks to test the teachers' willingness to inflict pain under orders, even against their personal beliefs Philip Zimbardo divided students into "i nmates" and "g uards" in a Stanford Prison "prison" scenario; they internalized their roles and guards began abusing inmates; Zimbardo Experiment described the scenario in T he Lucifer Effect

Psychologist Details sociologist; identified altruistic, fatalistic, and anomic behavior in S uicide; T he Division of Émile Durkheim Labor in Society Austrian founder of p sychoanalysis; wrote T he Interpretation of Dreams; described the human psyche as being divided into a primal i d, a noble e go, and a s uperego that balances Sigmund Freud them; proposed that men act on the O edipus complex, the urge to overcome their fathers and seduce women like their mothers; wrote B eyond the Pleasure Principle Swiss; proposed the idea of the c ollective unconscious, a collection of universal Carl Jung archetypes, including a nima, a nimus, persona, self, and shadow; defined the terms "introvert" and "extrovert;" opposed Freud Swiss; studied child psychology and divided children's development into four stages, such Jean Piaget as Sensorimotor, Preoperational, and Concrete Operational; defined "object permanence"

Scholastic Community Outreach Program 2018