<p>I would look mostly at the Barron's, maybe Princeton Review. You might also want to take a look at the laminated Quick Notes thing. </p>
<p>As for the brain, here are the parts I would recommend you know (other than parts of the brain, you only need to know a minimal amount of stuff from the psychobiology chapter; basically when a neuron reaches its threshold it fires, and an impulse travels down the axon. When it gets to the synapse, it must be converted freom an electrical message to a chemical one-neurotransmitters- which carry the message to the next neuron. THe message can't jump the synapse. It gets picked up by receptor sites on the next neuron, and the part that accepts incoming messages is the dendrites. Finally, after a neuron fires, there is a brief- milliseconds- refractory period during which it "resets" and can't accept new messages. Wow. That was supposed to be a sort explanation.)</p>
<p>Continued in next post, hope this is helpful so far.</p>
<p>could you please send the AP test to <a href="mailto:danielsjang@gmail.com">danielsjang@gmail.com</a> ?
Thanks a lot!<br>
Totally self studied, and i need MUCH more studying to do. I have 5 tests left, too! AHHH
Thanks again!</p>
<p>confused517, newyorker, and danielsjang, check your emails. I sent it. In the future, I'm more likely to notice your requests if you PM with your email. Any questions about the test should be posted here, we can discuss answers and stuff if you want.</p>
<p>You're welcome, biomaster!! Good luck to all of you! I'm going off to cram for science right now. Oh, and Happy Mother's Day! (Although I imagine none of you are mothers, but most of you have mothers... never mind.)</p>