College Board-Aligned Original Notes

AP Psychology Unit 1 Topic 6: Sensation

Apply Sensation to behavior, mental processes, research evidence, and real-world examples.

Unit 1: Biological Bases of Behavior. College Board exam weighting listed for this unit: 15%-25% of exam score.

What to Know

  • Distinguish definition from application in scenario questions.
  • Identify variables, participants, controls, ethics, and causal limits in research.
  • Use precise vocabulary because similar terms often differ in important ways.
  • Always connect this topic back to the larger unit: Biological Bases of Behavior.

Detailed Notes

Sensation should be learned through definition, example, and application. You need to know what the concept means and how it would appear in a person's behavior or thinking.

In AP Psychology, AP questions often give a scenario and ask you to apply terms. A strong answer names the concept, points to the specific behavior, and explains the connection.

When research is involved, identify variables and limits. Experiments can support causal claims when designed well; correlational studies describe relationships but do not prove causation by themselves.

Key Vocabulary

Neuron

A nerve cell that communicates through electrical and chemical signals.

Neurotransmitter

A chemical messenger released by neurons.

Cognition

Mental processes such as perception, memory, and problem solving.

Learning

A relatively lasting change in behavior or knowledge based on experience.

Operational definition

A precise description of how a variable is measured or manipulated.

Quick Practice

How would you explain Sensation in one or two AP-style sentences?

Name the concept, apply it to a specific example or source, and explain the reasoning that connects the evidence to your answer.

Related Topics in This Unit

  • The interaction of inherited traits, environment, and evolution in shaping behavior
  • Structures and functions of nervous systems
  • Neural firing and the influence of psychoactive substances
  • The study of the brain, including its structures and functions