A.
Predictive validity is the extent to which a test measures and forecasts a behavior in the future. The results of the written exam that you take at the end of the year for AP psychology will be a part of what determines whether you can get those credits for college. Written exams will help you predict how well you will do in college. Standardization is the two-part development process of making both the testing procedures and scoring procedures uniform and objective in order to obtain meaningful scores. The results of the written exam would not be valid if people were given different directions and different amounts of time to take the exam. Declarative memories are the memories that we make an effort to remember. If you don’t study for the written exam you will not do well. The hippocampus is a horse-shoe shaped area of the brain that plays an important role in consolidating information from short-term memory into long-term memory. Damage to the hippocampus can cause anterograde amnesia. This is the loss of ability to create memories.
B. Operant conditioning is a method of learning that occurs through rewards and punishments for behavior. When Zane does well at evaluations his mom pays him twenty dollars. Zane will most likely do his best since he knows twenty dollars is on the line. Mental images are mental representations or pictures of objects we create in our mind about the outside world If Zane is shy and gets nervous while performing, he can imagine the people without their pants on. The cerebellum helps control posture, balance, and the coordination of voluntary movements. Without cerebellum Zane would not be able to sit up straight and move his mouth correctly. Your mouth has to be a certain way for you to play the oboe. The frontal lobes are associated with reasoning, planning, parts of speech, movement, emotions, and problem solving. The frontal lobes help control your emotions and nervousness. Often referred to as the "body clock", the