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О.В. Иванова Английский язык в сфере профессиональных коммуникаций (специальность – «Психология») МОДУЛЬ 10 «Intelligence. Emotions. Memory. Temperament». Москва 2013 1 О.В.Иванова – кандидат психологических наук Рецензент: М.Н.Алексеева – кандидат филологических наук, доцент Рекомендовано научно-методическим советом РосНОУ АНГЛИЙСКИЙ ЯЗЫК Модуль 1. «Hello! It’s me» Модуль 2. «The Place I Live In» Модуль 3. «Daily Life» Модуль 4. «Leisure and Pleasure» Модуль 5. «On the Move» Модуль 6. «It’s a Small World» Модуль 7. «The Body and the Soul» Модуль 8. «Shopping and Eating out» Модуль 9. «It’s a Fine Day, isn’t it»? Модуль 10. «Several Important Themes of Psychology» Модуль 11. «Social Psychology» Модуль 12. «Infancy and Childhood» Модуль 10 В предлагаемом модуле рассматриваются лексические темы «Several important themes of psychology» , «Testing for intelligence» , « The nature of emotion» , « Representation of knowledge in memory» , « Retrieval: Getting information out of memory», « Retrieval: Getting information out of memory», « Individual temperament», « Personality traits».В модуль включены тексты по данным темам,упражнения на усвоение лексики и содержания модуля, развитие различных видов речевой деятельности. Для студентов Российского Нового Университета 2 СОДЕРЖАНИЕ БАЗОВОЕ СОДЕРЖАНИЕ МОДУЛЯ………….…………..............................................4 TEXT 1. Several important themes of psychology…………….……………………………...............5 TEXT 2. Testing for intelligence………………………………………………………………………7 TEXT 3. The nature of emotion………………………………………………………………………..12 TEXT 4(A, B). A. Representation of knowledge in memory……………………….......................................15 B. Retrieval: Getting information out of memory………………….......................................17 TEXT 5. Individual temperament………………….…………………………………………………..19 TEXT 6. Personality traits……………………………………..............................................................22 TEXT 7. Understanding stress…………………………………………………………………………24 TEST ……………………………………………………………………………………….27 Vocabulary………………………………………………………….......................................34 Literature……………………………………………………………………………………39 3 БАЗОВОЕ СОДЕРЖАНИЕ МОДУЛЯ Intelligence. Emotions. Memory. Temperament. 4 Text I Task1. Translate the following words. Heredity Behavior Nurture Lifeblood Heritage Subjective imprint Reinforcement Interconnection Conditioned SEVERAL IMPORTANT THEMES OF PSYCHOLOGY We now introduce four important themes of psychology. The first concerns the role of heredity and environment in jointly shaping behavior. In regard to nature versus nurture, research on learning has clearly and repeatedly demonstrated the enormous power of the environment and experience in shaping behavior. Indeed, many learning theorists once believed that all aspects of behavior could be explained in terms of environmental determinants. In recent decades, however, evidence on instinctive drift and conditioned taste aversion has shown that there are biological constraints on conditioning. Thus, even in explanations of learning —an area once dominated by nurture theories —we see again that heredity and environment jointly influence behavior. The controversy about how children acquire language skills replays the nature versus nurture debate. The debate is far from settled, but the accumulating evidence suggests that language development depends on both nature and nurture, as more recent interactions theories of language acquisition have proposed. The second pertinent theme is the empirical nature of psychology. For many decades, psychologists paid little attention to cognitive processes, because most of them assumed that thinking is too private to be studied scientifically. During the 1950s and 1960s, however, psychologists began to devise creative new ways to measure mental processes. These innovations fueled the cognitive revolution that put the psyche (the mind) back in psychology. Thus, once again, we see how empirical methods are the lifeblood of the scientific enterprise. 5 Third, the study of cognitive processes shows how there are both similarities and differences across cultures in behavior. On the one hand, we saw that thought processes are largely invariant in spite of sharp differences in cultures' linguistic heritage. On the other hand, there are cultural variations in cognitive style that reflect the ecological demands of one's environment. And, although the evidence does not support the strong version of the linguistic relativity hypothesis, a culture's language may make certain ways of thinking easier or more difficult. Thus, cognitive processes are moderated — albeit to a limited degree —by cultural factors. The fourth theme is the subjective nature of human experience. The reconstructive nature of memory should explain people's tendency to view the world with a subjective slant. When you observe an event, you don't store an exact copy of the event in your memory. Instead, you store a rough, "bare bones" approximation of the event that may be reshaped as time goes by. With the passage of time, people tend to put more and more of a personal, subjective imprint on memories. You will see further that decision making is also a highly subjective process. Dense interconnections exist between psychology and events in the world at large. The history of research on conditioning shows how progress in psychology can seep into every corner of society. For example, ‘Skinner’s ideas on the power of positive reinforcement have influenced patterns of discipline in our society. Research on operant conditioning has also affected management styles in the business world, leading to an increased emphasis on positive reinforcement. The fact that the principles of conditioning are routinely applied in homes, businesses, schools and factories clearly shows that psychology is not an ivory tower endeavor. Task 2 Answer the following questions. 1) Is human behavior influenced by heredity or by environment? 2) What does language development depend on? 6 When did psychologists turn to empirical methods for measuring mental 3) processes? 4) How do cultural factors influence thought processes? 5) What explains the subjective nature of human experience? 6) How is an image of the event in human memory changed with the passage of time? What aspects of psychology are applied in everyday life? 7) Task 3 Give your opinion on the subject. What is more important for vocational success: heredity or nurture? Task 4 Match the term with the definition. 1) evidence a) knowledge got by study 2) discipline b) seat of consciousness, thought and feeling 3) nature c) a vocabulary and way of using it 4) mind d) information tending to establish facts 5) learning e) person's innate character 6) language f) recollection of previous experience g) mental or moral training Text II Task 1. Read the following words and find the definition. intelligence assume intelligence quotient overall score person's performance involve divide deviate average performance ability 7 Task 2. Read the text. Make sure that you know all the words and words combination in the following text. TESTING FOR INTELLIGENCE Psychologists have not reached a consensus on how best to define intelligence. Working definitions describe intelligence in terms of reasoning, problem solving, and dealing with environment. IQ tests measure some, but not all, of these aspects of intelligence. Let's look at the history of IQ tests. In 1904 the French government appointed psychologist Alfred Binet to a commission charged with identifying, studying, and providing special educational programs for children who were not doing well in school. As a part of his work on the commission, Binet developed a set, or a battery, of intellectual test items that provided the model for today's intelligence tests. In creating his test, Binet assumed that intelligence is involved in many reasoning, thinking, and problemsolving activities. His tests included tasks such as unwrapping a piece of candy, repeating numbers or sentences from memory, and identifying familiar objects. Binet also assumed that children's abilities increase with age. About a decade after Binet published his test, Lewis Terman at Stanford University developed an English version known as the Stanford- Binet. Terman added items to measure the intelligence of adults and revised the method of scoring. Mental age was divided by chronological age, and the quotient was multiply by 100; the result was called the intelligence quotient, or IQ. Thus, a child whose mental age and chronological age were equal would have an IQ of 100, which is considered "average" intelligence. From this method of scoring came the term IQ test, a name of a widely used test designed to measure intelligence on an objective, standardized scale. Nowadays in schools the Stanford-Binet and Wechsler tests are the roost popular individually administered intelligence tests. Both include subtests and provide scores for parts of the test as well as an overall score. Currently, a person's IQ score reflects how far that person's performance on the test deviates from the average performance by people in his or her age group. 8 IQ tests are reasonably reliable, and they do a good job of predicting academic success. However, IQ tests assess only some of the abilities that might be considered aspects of intelligence, and they may favor those most familiar with middle-class culture. Nonetheless, this familiarity is important for academic and occupational success. Task 3 Work in pairs. First of all, write down and translate the unknown words from the text. Then ask your partner to translate them and visa versa. At least, it must be 10 words. Task 4 Now look back at the text, and use the numbers and the underlined sections to help you to complete the notes below. 1) … is the reasoning, problem solving, and dealing with environment. 2) … includes tasks such as repeating numbers or sentences from memory and widely used test designed to measure intelligence on an objective, standardized scale. 3) …was divided by chronological age, and the quotient was multiply by 100; the result was called … . 4) A person whose mental age and chronological age were equal would have an IQ of 100, which is considered … . 5) … reflects how far that person's performance on the test deviates from the average performance by people in his or her age group. Task 5 What's your I.Q.? If you've never had an IQ test before, here's how IQ testing works: This IQ test contains 20 questions. Based on your answers, you'll receive an IQ score between 0 and 200. The average I.Q. is 100. Are you above average IQ, or below average IQ? Take the FREE * IQ TEST and test what your I.Q. is! 1. Serval, caracal, lynx, and oncilla. These are all types of what? Butterflies Cats 9 Computer viruses Bacteria These numbers follow a pattern. 2, 7, 13, 20, 28. What comes next?. 30 36 37 42 One of these things doesn't belong. Which is it?. Computer Typewriter Cell phone Post-it note "Nearby Priests" - If these letters are rearranged, they create the name of which person?. A famous scientist A pop princess A football player A baseball player Fall is to summer as Monday is to _____? Tuesday Sunday Wednesday Friday A, S, D, F, G, H, J. Which letter comes next in this sequence? K W V M 7. Psychologists disagree about whether IQ test scores are different for men and women. Help us find out if gender and IQ are related, by indicating your gender. Male Female "A Granola Nerd" - If these letters are rearranged, they create the name of which political figure? A former U.S. President A former Supreme Court Judge 10 A former Senator A former British Prime Minister These numbers follow a pattern. 5, 10, 3, 8, 1. What comes next? 6 5 -4 -2 Dome is to Mountain as Redwood is to _____? Forest Tree Plant Paper One of these things doesn't belong. Which is it? Gmail.com Yahoo.com Hotmail.com Ask.com Which word fits in the blank in this sequence: water, paperclip, business cards, ____, computer cell phone executive desk furniture pushpins magnets 7G, 10J, 13M, 16P, 19S. Which letter comes next in this sequence? T U V W "Sardine Hold" - If these letters are rearranged, they create the name of which geographic location?. The location nicknamed, The Ocean State The location nicknamed, The Sunshine State The location nicknamed, The Lone Star State The location nicknamed, The Volunteer State From the list of letters below, which one CAN NOT be turned upside down, reflected in a mirror and still look correct?. B 11 D U O Which word fits in the blank in this sequence: mouse, squirrel, ____, hippo, blue whale. Butterfly Frog Deer Lion One of these things doesn't belong. Which is it? Rat Cheese Man Cat "Advises Mil" - If these letters are rearranged, they create the name of which person? An actor An author A fictional character A jazz musician Rios, Amanti, Sorento, Sedona. These are all types of what? Places in Italy Places in Spain Kia model cars Saturn model cars 20.IQ scores need to be scaled according to age. When were you born? MM DD YYYY Birth Date Text III Task 1 Translate the words and words combination. Feature Tend to Arousal Mood Valence Appraisal 12 Alter Behave Elicit Intent Agent Innate Frown Adjustment Task 2 Read the text. Make sure that you know all the words and words combination in the following text. THE NATURE OF EMOTION Everyone seems to agree that joy, sorrow, anger, fear, love and hate are emotions, but it is hard to identify the shared features that make these experiences emotions rather than thought or impulses. Most psychologists in Western cultures tend to see emotions as organized psychological and physiological reactions to changes in our relationship to the world. These reactions are partly subjective experiences and partly objectively measurable patterns of behavior and physiological arousal. The subjective experience of emotion has several characteristics: 1. Emotion is usually transitory; it tends to have a relatively clear beginning and end, and a relatively short duration. Moods, by contrast, tend to last longer. 2. Emotional experience has valence, which means it is either positive or negative. 3. Emotional experience is elicited partly by a cognitive appraisal of how a situation relates to your goals. 4. Emotional experience alters thought processes, often by directing attention toward some things and away fords others. 5. Emotional experience elicits an action tendency, a motivation to behave in certain ways. 6. Emotional experiences are passions that happen to you, usually without willful intent. The subjective aspects of emotions are experiences both triggered by the thinking self and felt as happening to the self. They reveal an individual as agent 13 and object, both I and me, both the controller of thoughts and recipient of passions. Objective aspects of emotion include learned and innate expressive displays and physiological responses. Expressive displays — a smile, a frown — communicate feelings to others. Physiological responses — changes in heart rate — provide biological adjustments needed to perform the action tendencies generated by emotional experience. In summary, an emotion is a transitory, valenced experience that is felt with some intensity as happening to the self, generated in part by cognitive appraisal of situations and accompanied by both learned and innate physical responses. Through emotion, people communicate their internal states and intentions to others, but emotion also functions to direct and energize a person's own thoughts and actions. Task 3 Answer the following questions: 1) Give the definition of the emotion. And give the different examples. 2) What are characteristics of the subjective experience of emotion? 3) What is the difference between mood and emotion? 4) What is the emotional experience? 5) What do objective aspects of emotion include? 6) Why does emotion direct and energize a person's own thoughts and actions? Task 4 Translate these sentences into English using words from the text 1) Все согласятся, что страх, радость, печаль – это различные типы эмоций. 14 2) Большинство психологов определяют эмоции, как совокупность психических и физиологических реакций, которые меняются в зависимости от нашего отношения к окружающему миру. 3) Эмоция – это временное состояние, она имеет начало и конец и также обладает не продолжительной длительностью. 4) Объективные аспекты эмоций включают в себя отражение врожденного и приобретенного, а также психологические реакции. 5) Благодаря эмоциям люди обозначают свое внутреннее состояние и намерение по отношению к другим. Task 5 Find in the text synonyms to the words given below Estimation, peculiarity, incentive, humor, knit. Text IV (A, B) Task 1. Vocabulary Memory storage Mental representation Schema cluster Knowledge recall Retrieval cue long-term memory recollection Task 2. Read the text given below and open the brackets using the verbs in the correct form. REPRESENTATION OF KNOWLEDGE IN MEMORY Over the years memory researchers (wrestle) endlessly with one major question relating to memory storage: How is knowledge represented and organized in memory? In other words, what forms do our mental representations of information take? Most theorists seem to agree that our mental representations 15 probably take a variety of forms, depending on the nature of the material that needs to be tucked away in memory. For example, memories of visual scenes, of how to perform actions (such as typing or hitting a backhand stroke in tennis), and of factual information (such as definitions or dates in history) are probably represented and organized in very different ways. Most of the theorizing to date (focus) on how factual knowledge may be represented in memory. Imagine that you just (visit) Professor Smith's office, which is shown in the photo. Take a brief look at the photo and then cover it up. Now pretend that you want to describe Professor Smith's office to a friend. Write down what you saw in the office (the picture). After you finish, compare your description with the picture. Chances are, your description will include elements — filing cabinets, for instance — that were not in the office. This common phenomenon (demonstrate) how schemas can influence memory. A schema is an organized cluster of knowledge about a particular object or sequence of events. For example, college students have schemas for what professors' offices are like. People are more likely to remember things that are consistent with their schemas than things that are not. This principle was quite apparent when Brewer and Treyens tested the recall of 30 participants who (visit) briefly the office. Indeed, the tendency to recall things that are consistent with a schema can lead to memory errors. For instance, nine subjects in the Brewer and Treyens study falsely recalled that the office contained books. Information stored in memory is often organized around schemas. Thus, recall of an object or event will be influenced by both the actual details observed and the person's schemas for these objects and events. Task 3. Answer the following questions 1) What does the form of our mental representation depend on? 2) Give the definition of a schema? 16 3) How can schemas influence memory? 4) What tendency can lead to memory errors? Task 4. Translate these sentences into English using words from the text. 1) Память о том, как выполнять действия, и память о фактической информации, вероятно, организованы по-разному. 2) Схема - это упорядоченная совокупность знаний о конкретном предмете или событии. 3) Люди скорее запомнят те факты, которые соответствуют их схемам, чем те, которые не соответствуют. 4) Привычка вспоминать факты, соответствующие схемам, может привести к ошибкам памяти. 5) Информация, которая хранится в памяти, часто организована в соответствии со схемами. 6) На воспоминание о предмете или явлении влияет как реальная обстановка, так и схематическое представление человека об этом предмете или явлении. Task 5. Find in the text synonyms to the words given below news, group, outline, mistake, ordinary, compatible, to remember, to stock. Task 1. Read the text given below RETRIEVAL: GETTING INFORMATION OUT OF MEMORY Entering information into long-term memory is a worthy goal, but an insufficient one if you can't get the information back out again when you need it. Fortunately, recall often occurs without much effort. But occasionally a planned search of LTM is necessary. For instance, imagine that you were asked to recall 17 the names of all 50 states in the United States. You would probably conduct your memory search systematically, recalling states in alphabetical order or by geographical location. Although this example is rather simple, retrieval is a complex process. We'll now discuss the tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon — the temporary inability to remember something you know, accompanied by a feeling that it's just out of reach. The tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon is a common experience that occurs to the average person about once a week. It clearly represents a failure in retrieval. Fortunately, memories can often be jogged with retrieval cues — stimuli that help gain access to memories. This was apparent when Roger Brown and David McNeill studied the tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon. They gave participants definitions of obscure words and asked them to think of the words. Brown and McNeill found that subjects groping for obscure words were correct in guessing the first letter of the missing word 57% of the time. This figure far exceeds chance and shows that partial recollections are often headed in the right direction. Task 2. Say if these sentences are false or true 1) To retrieve factual information from long-term memory is always very easy. 2) The tip-of-the tongue phenomenon is a very rare event. 3) Failure in information retrieval happens quite often. 4) A planned search of long-term memory is necessary when you want to retrieve a lot of factual information. 5) Retrieval cues can help in the search of information. Task 3. Think and answer What retrieval cues can be used to help gain access to memories? 18 How can these cues be used? Give examples and explain. Task 4. Choose the right ending of the sentence 1) Entering information into long-term memory is a) a waste of time b) a worthy goal c) a rare occasion 2) The tip-of-the tongue phenomenon represents a) failure in retrieval b) a form of organized knowledge c) access to memory 3) Retrieval cues can help a) to represent information b) to find an error с) о remember facts Task 5. Find in the text antonyms to the given words success, permanent, wrong, clear, rarely, definitely, to forget, to retrieve Text V Task 1. Read the following words and find the definition. Vigorous fuss Whimper kick Scream wail Refer contribution slow- to-warm-up inflectional Expectation assertiveness in tune babbling Task 2. Read the text. Make sure that you know all the words and words combination in the following text. 19 INDIVIDUAL TEMPERAMENT From the moment infants are born, they differ from one another in the emotions they express. Some infants are happy, active, and vigorous; they splash, thrash, and wriggle. Others lie still most of the time. Some infants approach new objects with enthusiasm; others turn away or fuss. Some infants whimper; others kick, scream, and wail. Characteristics like these make up the infant's temperament. Temperament refers to the infants individual style and frequency of expressing needs and emotions; it is constitutional, biological, and genetically based. It reflects a contribution by nature to the beginning of an individual's personality. In some of the earliest research on infant temperament there were found three main temperament patterns. Easy babies, the most common kind, get hungry and sleepy at predictable times, react to new situations cheerfully, and seldom fuss. Difficult babies are irregular and irritable. Those in the third group, slow-to-warmup babies, react warily to new situations but eventually come to enjoy them. One possibly inflectional factor is the match between the infant's temperament and the parents' expectations, desires, and personal styles. When parents believe they are responsible for the infant's behavior, an easy child might reassure them. The parents are looking for signs of assertiveness; a difficult child might prove welcome. If parent and infant are in tune, chances increase that temperamental qualities will be stable. Consider, for example, the temperament patterns of ChineseAmerican children and European-American ones. At birth, Chinese- American infants are calmer, less changeable and more easily consoled when upset than European-American infants, suggesting that there may be an inherited predisposition toward self-control among the Chinese. This tendency is then powerfully reinforced by the Chinese culture. Compared with European-American parents, Chinese parents are less likely to reward and stimulate babbling and smiling, and more likely to maintain close control of their young children. The 20 children, in turn, are more dependent on their mothers and less likely to play by themselves; they are less vocal, noisy, and active than European-American children. These temperamental differences between children in different ethnic groups illustrate the combined contributions of nature and nurture. Task 3. Work in pairs. First of all, write down and translate the unknown words from the text. Then ask your partner to translate them and visa versa. At least, it must be 10 words. Task 4. Complete the sentences from with the words from the box easy babies Match 1) the combined difficult babies contributions slow-to-warm-up temperament babies … reflects a contribution by nature to the beginning of an individual's personality. 2) These temperamental differences between children in different ethnic groups illustrate … of nature and nurture. 3) … the most common kind, get hungry and sleepy at predictable times, react to new situations cheerfully. 4) One possibly inflectional factor is … between the infant's tem- perament and the parents' expectations, desires, and personal styles. 5) … are irregular and irritable. 6) … react warily to new situations but eventually come to enjoy them. Task 5. Illustrate the temperamental differences between children in different ethnic groups. Do you agree with this theory? 21 Text VI Task 1. Translate the words and words combination. Trait feature Introversion extroversion Neuroticism neurotic self-image impulsiveness Task 2. Read and translate the text given below PERSONALITY TRAITS A person's social behavior depends on his enduring features, but also on the personalities of others present, and on the nature of the situation. A person's behavior can be predicted to some extent from variables like age, sex, job and social class, since there are regular and specified relations between people occupying different positions in the social structure. Temperament. There is more consistency between different situations for features of temperament such as level of energy, mood and reactions to stress. Two dimensions which have repeatedly emerged from psychological research are introversion- extroversion and neuroticism. These dimensions are somewhat similar to intelligence in that they are general factors of personality, a source of consistent behavior, and tests can be given for them. Extroversion contains two components which are correlate but partly independent. These are behavioral extroversion, which consists of impulsiveness and a preference for action as opposed it thinking about action, and social extroversion, which consists of liking for social situations, especially large and noisy ones. By neuroticism we mean an inability to tolerate stress, a tendency to be anxious, to work ineffectively and to fine people difficult to deal with. Neuroticism is a matter of degree about 5-10 per cent of the population would be classified as neurotic by psychiatrists, and could benefit from treatment. Neuroticism can be measured by questionnaire, interview, or from performance at laboratory tasks. 22 Social performance. Individuals vary greatly in their entire style of social performance from one situation to another. Then appears to be very little consistency so that personality cannot be described in terms of general traits like ‘dominance’, etc. Individuals are however consistent in groups or similar situations and it is possible to describe their behavior at work; in committees as chairman, etc. A person may be more or less socially skillet over a given range of social situations. Rewardingness may be an important part of this general ability rewarding people are both more popular and influential. In addition there are a number more specific social skills, such as dealing with subordinate ('leadership skills'), taking the chair at committee meetings, interviewing, giving lectures, etc. The self-image. This is not a' dimension' of personality but a cognitive structure consisting of the ideas a person has about himself. One way of describing an individual's social behavior is at list the main roles he plays in the groups to which he belongs; read role is linked to part of his self-image. The self-image also include self-perceptions such as being 'intelligent' or 'lively', which may extend across all these roles, and lead to their being played in Task 3. Translate these sentences into English using words from the text 1) Поведение человека можно предсказать, исходя из таких переменных величин, как возраст, пол, работа социальный статус. 2) Поведенческая экстровертность состоит из импульсивности и склонности скорее к действию, чем к размышлению. 3) Психиатры считают, что примерно 5-10 процента населения являются невротиками. 4) Существует например, навык множество руководить специфических социальных подчиненными («навык навыков, лидерства»), председательствовать на совещаниях, давать интервью, читать лекции. 5) В большинстве случаев люди иерархической структурой. 23 работают в организациях с 6) Невозможно исследовать при помощи анкет, опросов или путем оценки выполнения лабораторных заданий. 7) Некоторые люди питают большое уважение к традициям, раболепны и почтительны по отношению к начальству и грубят подчиненным. Task 4. Find in the text synonyms to the words given below conduct, to forecast, to endure, execution, worthwhile, firm, tension, subordinate, custom, to arise Task 5. Derive nouns from the following verbs by means of suffixes: -ion, - ior ,-er, -ing, -ence,-ance, -ment to predict, to behave, to carry, to react, to like, to correlate, to meet, to prefer, to ail, to perform Text VII Task1. Translate the following words. Desirable to adjust to disrupt Severe to involve deal with Behavioral Nausea the extent stress-coping skills Predict influence to tend to blame to be harmed Adversely to be basic anxiety to affect mediating to think of… Task 2. Read the text given below. 24 UNDERSTANDING STRESS You have probably heard that death and taxes are the only two things you can be sure of in life. If there is a third, it must surely be stress. Stress is basic to life — no matter how wealthy, powerful, attractive, or happy you might be. It comes in many forms — a difficult exam, an automobile accident, waiting in a long line, a day on which everything goes wrong. Mild stress can be stimulating, motivating, and sometimes desirable. But as it becomes more severe, stress can bring on physical, psychological, and behavioral problems. Stress is the negative emotional and physiological process that occurs as individuals try to adjust to or deal with environmental circumstances that disrupt, or threaten to disrupt, their daily functioning. Thus stress involves a transaction between people and their environments. The environmental circumstances that cause people to make adjustments are called stressors. Stress reactions are physical, psychological, and behavioral responses (such as nervousness, nausea, and fatigue) that people display in the face of stressors. It is important to understand stress because it contributes to psychological problems such as anxiety and depression, and adversely affects people's physical health. Interestingly, some people are more strongly affected by stressors than other people, or may be more affected on one occasion or another. Why? The answer lies in mediating factors that influence the transaction between people and their environments. Mediating factors include variables such as the extent to which people can predict and control their stressors, how they interpret the threat involved, the social support they get, and their stress-coping skills. People who tend to think of stressors as temporary and who do not constantly blame themselves for the onset of stressors appear to be harmed less by them. Task 3. Find the answers to these questions in the following text. 1. Name some forms of stress and give some examples of consequences of stress. 2. How can you describe stress? 25 3. Why some people are more strongly affected by stressors than other people, or may be more affected on one occasion or another? 4. What is stressor? 5. Which stress reactions you know? 6. What happens when individuals try to adjust to or deal with environmental circumstances that disrupt, or threaten to disrupt, their daily functioning? Task 4. Decide if the information in sentences are true (T) or false (F). 1. Stress can be stimulating, motivating, and sometimes desirable. 2. The environmental circumstances that cause people to make adjustments are called stressors. 3. All stress reactions are positive. 4. There are following behavioral responses to stress: nervousness, nausea and fatigue. 5. Some people are more strongly affected by stressors than other people. 6. People who do not constantly blame themselves for the onset of stressors appear to be harmed less by them. Task 5. Your friend is under stress. In 1 week he will pass state exams. Please describe what would you advice him to fight this stress. At least 10 sentences. Test 1. 1. Choose the missing word from the box. a) cluster; b) schema; c) search; d) correct; e) represented; f) retrieval; g) failure; h) insufficient; i) description; j) consistent; k) memory 1) Memories of visual scenes and of factual information are ... in different ways. 2) Perhaps your ... will include elements that were not in the office. 3) This common phenomenon demonstrates how... can influence memory. 26 4) A schema is an organized ... of knowledge about a particular object or sequence of events. 5) People are more likely to remember things that are ... with their schemas than things that are not. 6) Occasionally a planned ... of long-term memory is necessary. 7) Information stored in ... is often organized around schemas. 8) Memories can usually be jogged with ... cues. 9) The tip-of-the tongue phenomenon represents a ... in retrieval. 10) Subjects groping for obscure words were ... in guessing the first letter of the missing word 57% of the time. Task 2. Match the term with the definition. A. 1) commitment 2) conjecture 3) drive 4) interview 5) pattern 6) personnel 7) response 8) stimulus 9) success 10) introversion 11) work a) model from which the thing is to be made b) opportunity of earning money by labor 27 c) critical examination of a person's qualities d) organized effort to achieve special purpose e) attainment of wealth or fame or position f) engagement that restricts freedom of action g) oral examination of a candidate h) body of persons engaged in a factory or office i) formation of opinion without sufficient Grounds j) answer given in word or act k) a thing that rouses to activity or energy 1) being concerned with one's own mental B. 1) to guess 2) to learn 3) to pair 4) to perform 5) to refer 6) to retrieve 7) to tolerate . 8) to measure 9) to select 10) to store a) to pick out as best or most suitable b) to estimate by some standard or rule 28 c) to lay up for future use d) to carry into effect e) to recover by effort of memory f) to estimate without measurement or detailed calculation g) to get knowledge of a subject by study or experience h) to bring out the meaning of something i) to assign to certain date or place or class j) to arrange persons or things in couples k) to accept someone or something unpleasant or disliked Task 3. Choose Russian equivalents for the English words. 1) memory 2) action 3) to represent 4) to influence 5) to include 6) cluster 7) consistent 8) factual 9) average 10) to recall a) влиять b) припомнить c) включить 29 d) представлять e) средний f) фактический g) память h) действие i) явление j) группа k) совместимый Task 4. Choose English equivalents for the Russian words. 1) обычный 2) частичный 3) сложный 4) догадаться 5) сопровождать 6) проводить 7) привести 8) поиск 9) ключ 10) явление a) to lead b) to exceed c) retrieval d) complex e) phenomenon f) common 30 g) cue h) to conduct i) to guess j) partial Task 5. Choose the right translation of the word combination. 1 personnel selection а) персональный отбор b) подбор персонала c) выбранный персонал 2 behaviour sample a) поведение образца b) образцовое поведение c) образец поведения 3 source monitoring a) отслеживание источника b) источник контролирования c) контрольный источник 4 memory system a) память системы b) система памяти c) системная память 31 5 incentive scheme a) программа стимулирования b) стимулирование программы c) побудительный мотив проекта 6 achievement motivation a) успех мотивации b) мотивация достижения c) мотивированное достижение 7 long-term memory a) долгий срок памяти b) период долгой памяти c) долговременная память Task 6 Find two words of similar meaning in each line. 1. а chance b) choice с selection ) d) solution 2. а' to devise b) to decide с to d) to ) investigate invent 3. а' nature b) nurture с thinking ) d) training 4. а' Compatib b) с conceivable d) le comparable ) consistent 5. а feeling b) dealing c emotion d)exciteme 32 ) nt 6. а' to b) to concern condition с to d) to guess ) conjecture 7. а to handle b) to hire с to d) to ) manipulate model 8. а to contain b) to consist с to invest ) d) to include Task 7. Derive nouns from the following verbs by means of suffixes: -ion, - ior ,-er, -ing, -ence,-ance, -ment to predict, to behave, to carry, to react, to like, to correlate, to meet, to prefer, to ail, to perform Vocabulary A ability - способность access - доступ adjustment - регулировка agent - агент alter - изменять 33 appraisal - оценка arousal - пробуждение assertiveness - напористость assume - считать average performance - средняя производительность B Babbling - болтовня behave - вести себя behavior - поведение C cluster - совокупность cognitive - познавательный conditioned - условный conditioning - формирование условных рефлексов contribution - вклад cue - стимул D deviate - отклоняться divide - делить E elicit - выявлять empirical - основанный на опыте 34 environment - окружающая среда error - ошибка expectation - ожидание extroversion - экстровертность, обращенность вовне, открытость F feature – особенность, характерная черта frown - нахмуриться fuss - суетиться H heredity - наследственность I identity - индивидуальность impulsiveness - опрометчивость, импульсивность in tune - в тон inflectional - флективный innate - врожденный intelligence - интеллект intelligence quotient - коэффициент умственного развития intent - намерение interconnection - взаимосвязь introversion - интровертность, обращенность вовнутрь, замкнутость involve - включать в себя, подразумевать, предполагать 35 K kick - пнуть knowledge - знания, сведения L long-term memory - долговременная память M memory - память mental - мысленный mood - настроение N nature - природа neurotic - неврастеник; невротический neuroticism - невроз nurture - воспитание O operant conditioning - выработка инструментальных условных рефлексов overall score - общий балл P 36 person's performance - человек производительности phenomenon - явление positive reinforcement - положительное подкрепление R recall - v. вспоминать, напоминать recollection - воспоминание reconstructive memory - реконструктивный память refer - сослаться representation - представление retrieval - воспроизведение S schema - схема scream - вскрикнуть self-image - представление о самом себе storage - хранение информации T tend to - как правило tip-of-the-tongue - на кончике языка 37 V valence - валентность vigorous - энергичный W wail - причитать whimper - хныкать Список литературы: 1) Агабекян И.П. и др. Английский для психологов : Учебное пособие. М.:Проспект,2008 2) Донченко Е.Н. «Английский для психологов и социологов», Ростов н/Д, изд. «Феникс»,2006 г. 3) Бочарова Г.В.,Никошкова Е.В,Печкурова З.В. «Texts on psychology»,М.:Флинта:Московский психолого-социальный институт,2006 г. 4) Агабекян И.П. ,Коваленко П.И., Кудряшова Ю.А., «Английский язык для психологов» М.:ТК Велби, Изд. Проспект,2008г. 38