PR9E #3 Flashcards
The hypothetico-deductive system is a…
(A) theory of learning described by Edward Thorndike in which he believed that one can only make a hypothesis through deductive reasoning
(B) theory of learning described by Clark Hull in which he believed he could predict human behavior by looking at all of the possible intervening variables that could determine a relationship between an input and an output
(C) theory of cognition described by Jean Piaget in which he believed that cognitive development improves as children test hypotheses in the world and deduce the results
(D) theory of problem solving described by Daniel Kahneman in which possible solutions are hypothesized and tested
(E) theory of cognition described by Lev Vygotsky to describe the way thoughts are tested through social interaction by observing the responses of others
(B) theory of learning described by Clark Hull in which he believed he could predict human behavior by looking at all of the possible intervening variables that could determine a relationship between an input and an output
Which of the following is NOT a technique used in self-presentation?
(A) Self-promotion
(B) Self-verification
(C) Ingratiation
(D) Self-regulation
(E) Self-deprecation
(D) Self-regulation
A child who watches a lot of violent television shows and movies, and plays violent video games may be more likely to imitate that violence in real life. This idea is consistent with the research of which of the following theorists?
(A) Albert Bandura
(B) David Buss
(C) Erich Fromm
(D) Walter Mischel
(E) George Kelly
(A) Albert Bandura
Allan Paivio’s dual coding theory suggests that memory…
(A) operates on two separate systems, short-term and long-term
(B) has two interacting components: verbal representations and mental images
(C) requires that humans make a minimum of two connections to each item being encoded in order to learn
(D) has both an implicit and explicit component
(E) has both a semantic and episodic component
(B) has two interacting components: verbal representations and mental images
A schema is…
(A) a drawing or outline of a concept
(B) a mental framework guiding the processing of relevant information
(C) a characteristic of cognitive processes
(D) a bias
(E) an innate tendency toward viewing objects in particular ways
(B) a mental framework guiding the processing of relevant information
Cephalocaudal and proximodistal refer to…
(A) children’s brain development and reach development in the first year of life
(B) children’s growth trends from the inside out and the top down, respectively
(C) children’s growth trends from the torso outward and from the bottom up, respectively
(D) children’s growth trends from top down and torso to the extremities, respectively
(E) children’s reach development, involving linking brain processes to limb movement
(D) children’s growth trends from top down and torso to the extremities, respectively
According to Diana Baumrind, parents who set severe limits with their children and give the children little voice in decision-making processes are likely following the…
(A) authoritative style of parenting
(B) attachment style of parenting
(C) authoritarian style of parenting
(D) disciplinarian style of parenting
(E) permissive style of parenting
(C) authoritarian style of parenting
Which of the following scenarios describes motion parallax?
(A) Looking out the front window of your car and seeing the lines on the highway converge, even though you know the lines on the highway are parallel
(B) When you are in a car driving down the highway and the trees appear to be moving along with you, the trees closer to the highway moving faster than the trees farther from the highway
(C) Knowing that in a picture of elks grazing in a field that the elks are approximately the same size in real life even if some appear much smaller or larger in the image
(D) Seeing an object appear to move if you stare at it first with one eye closed and one eye open and then switch eyes
(E) When we put on goggles that skew our vision by a 30-degree angle, for example, and then take them off, our perception is off by 30 degrees until we adapt back
(B) When you are in a car driving down the highway and the trees appear to be moving along with you, the trees closer to the highway moving faster than the trees farther from the highway
Which of the following is true about an axon when it is in its resting potential state?
(A) The fluid inside the neuron has more positively charged ions than the fluid outside, resulting in selective permeability of the axon membrane.
(B) The fluid inside the neuron has more positively charged ions than the fluid outside, resulting from selective permeability of the axon membrane.
(C) The fluid inside the neuron has more negatively charged ions than the fluid outside, resulting from selective permeability of the axon membrane.
(D) The fluid inside the neuron has more negatively charged ions than the fluid outside, resulting in selective permeability of the axon membrane.
(E) The fluid inside and outside alternate between negatively and positively charged ions.
(C) The fluid inside the neuron has more negatively charged ions than the fluid outside, resulting from selective permeability of the axon membrane.
All of the following are experienced during REM sleep EXCEPT…
(A) rapid eye movement
(B) paralysis of the large voluntary muscles
(C) night terrors
(D) dreaming
(E) high frequency brain waves
(C) night terrors
Karina, a post-doctoral fellow at a local university, wanted to study the impact of trauma on the families of students who were veterans with active post-traumatic stress disorder. The research could possibly cause harm to the participants. What would Karina likely have to do?
(A) Get informed consent from the participants and create a structure within her research proposal to care for students who might be harmed in the research, such as providing them with free counseling or treatment for as long as necessary
(B) Not tell the institutional review board at all and hope that no one suffers
(C) Disclose the problem in the research proposal
(D) Find a different research topic since there is never a reason to do harm to another human being
(E) Provide an adequate debriefing process for each participant and get informed consent
(A) Get informed consent from the participants and create a structure within her research proposal to care for students who might be harmed in the research, such as providing them with free counseling or treatment for as long as necessary
Landsberger’s Hawthorne effect study…
(A) analyzed data from 1924–1932 about the level of light in a company, demonstrating that what was really happening was that the workers changed their level of productivity based on whether they did tasks alone or in collaboration with a co-worker
(B) analyzed data from 1924–1932 about the level of light in a company, demonstrating that what was really happening was that the workers changed their level of productivity based on the level of light in the factory while they worked
(C) analyzed data from 1924–1932 about the level of light in a company, demonstrating that what was really happening was that the workers changed their level of productivity based on the difficulty of the assigned task on the assembly line
(D) analyzed data from 1924–1932 about the level of light in a company, demonstrating that what was really happening was that the workers changed their level of productivity based on being observed
(E) analyzed data from 1924–1932 about the level of light in a company, demonstrating that what was really happening was that the workers changed their level of productivity based on which position they held on the assembly line and how much they felt their role impacted the final product
(D) analyzed data from 1924–1932 about the level of light in a company, demonstrating that what was really happening was that the workers changed their level of productivity based on being observed
Martin Seligman is best known for his work on…
(A) learned helplessness and positive psychology
(B) learned helplessness and rational emotive behavioral therapy
(C) learned helplessness and Gestalt psychology
(D) learned helplessness and aversion therapies
(E) rational emotive behavioral therapy and positive psychology
(A) learned helplessness and positive psychology
Which memory store is believed to have the smallest capacity?
(A) Short-term memory
(B) Long-term memory
(C) Episodic memory
(D) Procedural memory
(E) Sensory memory
(E) Sensory memory
Chanel is complaining that her therapist is very directive, giving her regular homework assignments to log her thoughts, feelings, and actions. She would prefer to see a therapist who is more nondirective and creates an atmosphere in the room where she feels prized regardless of what she may say. Chanel is likely seeing a ___________ therapist but wants to try ______________.
(A) client-centered; cognitive-behavioral
(B) behavioral; psychodynamic
(C) psychodynamic; behavioral
(D) cognitive-behavioral; client-centered
(E) psychodynamic; client-centered
(D) cognitive-behavioral; client-centered
A person commits the fundamental attribution error when they…
(A) attribute their own good behavior to the situation
(B) attribute another’s bad behavior to that person’s character
(C) attribute their own bad behavior to their own character
(D) attribute another’s good behavior to that person’s character
(E) attribute another’s bad behavior to the situation
(B) attribute another’s bad behavior to that person’s character
Claire is a well-respected intelligence agent for the government. Her job is to prevent trouble before it happens by looking for conspiracies and connections between seemingly random events for patterns. However, sometimes she takes her job too far. She stays awake for days at a time, writing cards and mapping connections using the floor, the walls, the tables, and the furniture. When her boss arrives at her apartment, Claire believes she is clearly explaining all the intricacies to her boss, who in actuality cannot understand what she is saying because she is speaking so fast and making no sense. The boss believes Claire has lost touch with reality and needs professional help; the boss rushes Claire to the hospital where she is sedated. Claire begins to receive several medications and a referral for psychotherapy. When Claire is calmer and is able to give the clinician a history, she reveals that her father dealt with nearly identical issues for many years but was never treated before his death many years ago from suicide.
A clinician treating Claire would most likely diagnose _________ and use ____________ to treat her pharmacologically.
(A) bipolar disorder I; antidepressants
(B) bipolar disorder I; mood stabilizers
(C) cyclothymia; anti-psychotics
(D) hypomania; mood stabilizers
(E) major depressive disorder; antidepressants
(B) bipolar disorder I; mood stabilizers
Claire is a well-respected intelligence agent for the government. Her job is to prevent trouble before it happens by looking for conspiracies and connections between seemingly random events for patterns. However, sometimes she takes her job too far. She stays awake for days at a time, writing cards and mapping connections using the floor, the walls, the tables, and the furniture. When her boss arrives at her apartment, Claire believes she is clearly explaining all the intricacies to her boss, who in actuality cannot understand what she is saying because she is speaking so fast and making no sense. The boss believes Claire has lost touch with reality and needs professional help; the boss rushes Claire to the hospital where she is sedated. Claire begins to receive several medications and a referral for psychotherapy. When Claire is calmer and is able to give the clinician a history, she reveals that her father dealt with nearly identical issues for many years but was never treated before his death many years ago from suicide.
According to the diathesis stress model, Claire’s condition could most likely be linked to which combination of diathesis and stress?
(A) Diathesis: death of her father; Stress: her job
(B) Diathesis: family history of psychological disorders; Stress: the death of her father
(C) Diathesis: death of her father; Stress: family history of psychological disorders
(D) Diathesis: family history of psychological disorders; Stress: her job
(E) Diathesis: her stressful work; Stress: family history of psychological disorders
(D) Diathesis: family history of psychological disorders; Stress: her job
Claire is a well-respected intelligence agent for the government. Her job is to prevent trouble before it happens by looking for conspiracies and connections between seemingly random events for patterns. However, sometimes she takes her job too far. She stays awake for days at a time, writing cards and mapping connections using the floor, the walls, the tables, and the furniture. When her boss arrives at her apartment, Claire believes she is clearly explaining all the intricacies to her boss, who in actuality cannot understand what she is saying because she is speaking so fast and making no sense. The boss believes Claire has lost touch with reality and needs professional help; the boss rushes Claire to the hospital where she is sedated. Claire begins to receive several medications and a referral for psychotherapy. When Claire is calmer and is able to give the clinician a history, she reveals that her father dealt with nearly identical issues for many years but was never treated before his death many years ago from suicide.
The psychologist’s report assessing Claire’s condition might include all of the following EXCEPT…
(A) a treatment plan
(B) assessment instruments used
(C) a listing of traits and capacities
(D) prognosis
(E) risk assessment
(C) a listing of traits and capacities
Claire is a well-respected intelligence agent for the government. Her job is to prevent trouble before it happens by looking for conspiracies and connections between seemingly random events for patterns. However, sometimes she takes her job too far. She stays awake for days at a time, writing cards and mapping connections using the floor, the walls, the tables, and the furniture. When her boss arrives at her apartment, Claire believes she is clearly explaining all the intricacies to her boss, who in actuality cannot understand what she is saying because she is speaking so fast and making no sense. The boss believes Claire has lost touch with reality and needs professional help; the boss rushes Claire to the hospital where she is sedated. Claire begins to receive several medications and a referral for psychotherapy. When Claire is calmer and is able to give the clinician a history, she reveals that her father dealt with nearly identical issues for many years but was never treated before his death many years ago from suicide.
Had Claire’s condition gone untreated for some time, which of the following would have most likely happened next?
(A) She would have lapsed into a deep depressive episode.
(B) She would have experienced a psychotic break.
(C) She would have stabilized without treatment.
(D) She would have continued in that state indefinitely.
(E) She would have developed a personality disorder.
(A) She would have lapsed into a deep depressive episode.
Riya’s native language is English, but she learned French in high school and German in college. Occasionally, when speaking French, she will only remember a particular word in German, and when speaking German, she may only remember a particular word in French. Riya is experiencing…
(A) proactive and retroactive interference, respectively
(B) memory decay in both cases
(C) retroactive and proactive interference, respectively
(D) memory displacement in both cases
(E) memory decay and memory displacement, respectively
(C) retroactive and proactive interference, respectively
Allen Newell and Herbert Simon proposed that when humans encounter and try to solve novel problems, they most often rely upon…
(A) heuristics
(B) inductive reasoning
(C) deductive reasoning
(D) framing effects
(E) eidetic imagery
(A) heuristics
Organizing the letters C-B-S-N, F-L-C, and I-A into C-B-S, N-F-L, and C-I-A is an example of which encoding strategy?
(A) Dual coding
(B) Rehearsal
(C) Method of loci
(D) Chunking
(E) Simplistic
(D) Chunking
Klinefelter’s syndrome is…
(A) a genetic condition that occurs when a boy is born with an additional X chromosome, often resulting in lower testosterone production and problems with producing sperm in adulthood
(B) a genetic condition in which a baby is born without the ability to process the amino acid phenylalanine, causing a build-up of the acid, which can be toxic
(C) a genetic condition that occurs when a baby is born with three X chromosomes, often resulting in above average height and impaired verbal development
(D) a genetic condition in which a girl is born with only one X chromosome, often resulting in a webbed neck, incomplete sexual development, and verbal impairment
(E) a genetic condition in the 21st pair of chromosomes fail to separate during meiosis, resulting in intellectual and physical impairments, as well as distinctive physical features
(A) a genetic condition that occurs when a boy is born with an additional X chromosome, often resulting in lower testosterone production and problems with producing sperm in adulthood
All of the following are sex-related changes in men or women in middle adulthood EXCEPT…
(A) loss of bone mass
(B) declines in the production of androgens
(C) perimenopause
(D) accumulation of subcutaneous fat
(E) increased difficulty in achieving erections
(D) accumulation of subcutaneous fat
Alan was suffering with terrible seizures multiple times a day. In order to treat the seizures, his doctors opted to sever his corpus callosum. The surgery gave him relief from the seizures, but the doctors noticed that…
(A) if a picture were presented to Alan’s left visual field, he could name it, but if it were presented to the right, he could not name it but could draw it
(B) Alan suffered no side effects of the procedure
(C) Alan lost his ability to speak, but gained the ability to play the piano
(D) if a picture were presented to Alan’s right visual field, he could name it, but if it were presented to the left, he could not name it but could draw it
(E) Alan lost his ability to play the piano, but gained the ability draw and paint
(D) if a picture were presented to Alan’s right visual field, he could name it, but if it were presented to the left, he could not name it but could draw it
The need theory, which describes motivation in terms of a need for achievement, power, or affiliation, was developed by…
(A) Abraham Maslow
(B) Clark Hull
(C) Carl Rogers
(D) David McClelland
(E) Rollo May
(D) David McClelland
A researcher travelling into the remote part of the Amazon to study a tribe speaking a language common only to that tribe and then trying to understand how the tribe’s language reflects their culture, lifestyle, and history would be doing…
(A) correlational research
(B) ethnographic research
(C) mixed methods research
(D) case study research
(E) biographical study
(B) ethnographic research
Which of the following is NOT true about nonverbal communication?
(A) The meaning of hand gestures and touching are culturally dependent.
(B) What is considered staring in one country may be considered shifty eyed in another.
(C) A variety of facial expressions seem to be consistent across cultures.
(D) Microexpressions are actually useless in determining deception.
(E) Paralinguistic cues, such as changes in vocal tones and pitch, can provide guides to people’s emotions.
(D) Microexpressions are actually useless in determining deception.
According to the drive-reduction theory,
(A) a person will experience a need, such as a lack of food, then experience a drive, such as hunger, and then engage in a drive-reducing behavior, such as grabbing a snack from the refrigerator
(B) a person will experience a drive, such as hunger, and then experience a need, such as a lack of food, and then engage in a drive-reducing behavior, such as grabbing a snack from the refrigerator
(C) a person will engage in a drive-reducing behavior, such as grabbing a snack, in order to prevent the drive, hunger, from ever happening
(D) a person will experience a need, such as needing to get their homework done, and engage in a goal-directed behavior, such as doing their homework, to reduce the need and restore balance
(E) a person will engage in a goal-directed behavior, such as napping, in order to prevent the need for sleep from interfering with their day
(A) a person will experience a need, such as a lack of food, then experience a drive, such as hunger, and then engage in a drive-reducing behavior, such as grabbing a snack from the refrigerator
Kristy, a four-year-old fraternal twin, notices that her twin brother has “something different” down there compared to her. Sigmund Freud would likely say this child is going through the…
(A) phallic stage of psychosexual development
(B) anal stage of psychosexual development
(C) latency stage of psychosexual development
(D) trust vs. mistrust stage of psychosocial development
(E) self-interest stage of moral development
(A) phallic stage of psychosexual development
If a doctor is looking to see what specific areas were impacted by a stroke, the imaging technique that would provide the most detail would be…
(A) electroencephalogram
(B) electrooculogram
(C) magnetic resonance imaging
(D) computed tomography
(E) positron emission tomography
(E) positron emission tomography
Melissa, a psychotherapist, practices from the ideological orientation that a client needs to bring the real and ideal selves together in order to help a person live up to their highest potential. This orientation would likely be…
(A) existential
(B) humanistic
(C) psychodynamic
(D) integrative
(E) behavioral
(B) humanistic
Katherine remembers exactly where she was at the moment she learned of the attack on the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. She remembers every detail of what she was doing and how she responded. This is an example of…
(A) a flashbulb memory
(B) an elaborative memory
(C) a false memory
(D) a reconstructed memory
(E) the misinformation effect
(A) a flashbulb memory
Peer relationships become most important in a person’s development at which of the following stages?
(A) School-age (approximately 6–12)
(B) Adolescence (approximately 13–18)
(C) Young adulthood (approximately 20–45)
(D) Preschool (approximately 3–6)
(E) Infancy (approximately birth to age 2)
(B) Adolescence (approximately 13–18)
In the movie Memento, the lead character has lost his ability to consolidate short-term memory into long term memory, and instead, relies on Polaroid photographs to replace his long-term memory. The part of his brain most likely damaged is the…
(A) pons
(B) amygdala
(C) hypothalamus
(D) hippocampus
(E) frontal lobe
(D) hippocampus
Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky conducted well-known research into how people manage risk and uncertainty, finding that the pain of losing is more powerful than the pleasure from winning. When confronted with possibility of, for example, flipping a coin and having a 50 percent chance of winning $100 and a 50 percent chance of losing $100, people were more likely to be afraid of the loss than pleased by the gain. Kahneman’s and Tversky’s early work looked specifically at financial loss and gain.
The decision-making principle indicated above is known as…
(A) the availability heuristic
(B) the representativeness heuristic
(C) prospecting
(D) risk aversion
(E) conflict theory
(D) risk aversion
Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky conducted well-known research into how people manage risk and uncertainty, finding that the pain of losing is more powerful than the pleasure from winning. When confronted with possibility of, for example, flipping a coin and having a 50 percent chance of winning $100 and a 50 percent chance of losing $100, people were more likely to be afraid of the loss than pleased by the gain. Kahneman’s and Tversky’s early work looked specifically at financial loss and gain.
In Kahneman and Tversky’s studies, all of the following may have been confounding variables EXCEPT…
(A) age
(B) race/ethnicity
(C) size of the amount of the potential gain or loss
(D) gender
(E) occupation
(A) age
A common practice in elementary school education is to encourage younger students to write without worrying about spelling or grammar, and only later begin to introduce the rules of spelling and grammar. This would correspond with which of the following behaviorist principles?
(A) Fixed interval learning
(B) Discrimination
(C) Shaping
(D) Generalization
(E) Variable ratio reinforcement
(C) Shaping
Which of the following is NOT a component of deindividuation?
(A) Negative affect
(B) Anonymity
(C) High arousal
(D) Crowds
(E) Primal “group” brain
(A) Negative affect
Baddeley and Hitch proposed a model of short-term/ working memory featuring two separate “slave systems” arose from the discovery that…
(A) when people engaged in two simultaneous and similar tasks, they could perform each with efficiency
(B) when people engaged in multiple tasks, neither could be performed with any real efficiency
(C) when people engaged in multiple tasks, one tended to be performed better than the other
(D) when people engaged in two simultaneous tasks, they could perform each with efficiency, regardless of the task type
(E) when people engaged in two simultaneous tasks requiring two separate domains, such as visual and verbal, they were able to perform each with efficiency
(E) when people engaged in two simultaneous tasks requiring two separate domains, such as visual and verbal, they were able to perform each with efficiency
Bennett is conducting research with young students who may or may not have learning disabilities and commits a type 1 error. As a result…
(A) a person who does have a learning disability is diagnosed as not having one
(B) a person who doesn’t have a learning disability is diagnosed with one
(C) a person who does have a learning disability is diagnosed with one
(D) a person who does have a learning disability is diagnosed with a different one from the one they actually have
(E) a person who doesn’t have a learning disability is diagnosed as not having one
(B) a person who doesn’t have a learning disability is diagnosed with one
Kenneth Bancroft Clark and Mamie Phipps Clark are known for what landmark study?
(A) The Doll Tests
(B) The Marshmallow Test
(C) The Halo Effect experiment
(D) The Stanford Prison experiment
(E) The Learned Helplessness experiments
(A) The Doll Tests
A chi-square is used…
(A) to describe how much difference there is between your observed data and the data one would expect if there were no relationship between the variables
(B) to determine the margin of error in statistical probability
(C) when the sampling distribution is close to normal
(D) to determine the alpha level
(E) to aid with regression analysis
(A) to describe how much difference there is between your observed data and the data one would expect if there were no relationship between the variables
Poisons and other drugs act on neurotransmitters…
(A) either by mimicking the neurotransmitter in the case of agonist drugs, or blocking the neurotransmitter in the case of antagonist drugs
(B) either by mimicking the neurotransmitter in the case of antagonist drugs, or blocking the neurotransmitter in the case of agonist drugs
(C) by blocking the neurotransmitter in the case of both agonist and antagonist drugs
(D) by mimicking the neurotransmitter in the case of both agonist and antagonist drugs
(E) by acting on the postsynaptic receptor site like a key in a lock
(A) either by mimicking the neurotransmitter in the case of agonist drugs, or blocking the neurotransmitter in the case of antagonist drugs
When his mother leaves the room, little Anthony, 13 months old, cries bitterly. When she returns, he continues to sob. He lets his mother hold him, but he pushes her away as she’s trying to hold him. It is likely that Anthony has…
(A) anxious-avoidant attachment
(B) disorganized attachment
(C) belligerent attachment
(D) secure attachment
(E) anxious-ambivalent attachment
(E) anxious-ambivalent attachment
A group of critical care doctors meet to discuss new protocols for the treatment of a potentially deadly virus. The group supports a treatment plan including a two-dose vaccine and preventative vitamin supplements. Some members, however, are concerned about the possibility of toxic side effects of this combination. When they try to bring it up, the group dismisses their concerns and votes overwhelmingly in favor of the treatment plan. This scenario is an example of …
(A) group polarization
(B) stereotype threat
(C) peer pressure
(D) social facilitation
(E) groupthink
(E) groupthink
Noam Chomsky believed that language development…
(A) is innate, due to the presence in the brain of a language acquisition device, which allows normally developing children to acquire language when exposed to it during a critical period
(B) is innate, due to the presence in the brain of a language acquisition device, which allows all humans to acquire language when exposed to it during a critical period
(C) is innate, due to the presence in the brain of a language acquisition device, which allows all children to learn language through social interaction
(D) is acquired through reinforcement and punishment, as children are born with a blank slate
(E) is acquired through social interaction, but only when the other’s language skills are within the zone of proximal development
(A) is innate, due to the presence in the brain of a language acquisition device, which allows normally developing children to acquire language when exposed to it during a critical period
Transduction in sensory processing refers to…
(A) converting neural stimuli into electrical energy
(B) interactions between neurons as the stimulus is processed
(C) when the electrical signals are transformed by the brain into meaningful experiences
(D) when the sensory stimulus activates the appropriate receptors
(E) when humans engage in goal-directed behaviors in response to the stimulus
(A) converting neural stimuli into electrical energy
The mesolimbic dopamine pathway, associated with the brain’s reward system, connects which two structures?
(A) Ventral tegmental area to the pons
(B) Pons to the nucleus accumbens
(C) Ventral tegmental area to the synaptic clefts
(D) Ventral tegmental area to the nucleus accumbens
(E) Synaptic clefts to the pons
(D) Ventral tegmental area to the nucleus accumbens
In 2008, Stark, Kim, Miller, and Borgida published a study on the effectiveness of graphic warnings (i.e., pictures) for reducing the appeal of tobacco products. The researchers exposed both smokers and nonsmokers to combinations of large versus small warning labels and the inclusion versus omission of graphic pictures on three types of tobacco products. In one group, the participants saw advertisements for three products (tobacco, smoking cessation lozenges, and reduced exposure cigarettes). The other group’s participants saw either a Surgeon General’s tobacco warning label, or a graphic picture. For both groups, the researchers varied the size of the advertisement.
What might be used as an operational definition for the reduced appeal?
(A) Buying fewer tobacco products over the course of the year following the study
(B) How many friends they told about the effects the experiment had on them
(C) A questionnaire with a 7-point Likert scale indicating attitudes about smoking’s appeal to them
(D) Measurements of cortisol and dopamine levels
(E) The Beck Depression Inventory scale to measure how they felt about the images
(C) A questionnaire with a 7-point Likert scale indicating attitudes about smoking’s appeal to them
In 2008, Stark, Kim, Miller, and Borgida published a study on the effectiveness of graphic warnings (i.e., pictures) for reducing the appeal of tobacco products. The researchers exposed both smokers and nonsmokers to combinations of large versus small warning labels and the inclusion versus omission of graphic pictures on three types of tobacco products. In one group, the participants saw advertisements for three products (tobacco, smoking cessation lozenges, and reduced exposure cigarettes). The other group’s participants saw either a Surgeon General’s tobacco warning label, or a graphic picture. For both groups, the researchers varied the size of the advertisement.
If the research described was changed so that there was only one group consisting of smokers who saw the large warning labels and the graphic pictures, and the group’s attitudes were measured before they began the study and after the study was over, the study’s design would now be a…
(A) correlational study
(B) between-subjects study
(C) phenomenological study
(D) within-subjects study
(E) comparison study
(D) within-subjects study
Which of the following correctly describes the stages of speech development in children?
(A) Cooing, babbling, overextension, telegraphic speech, overregularization
(B) Cooing, babbling, overregularization, overextension, telegraphic speech
(C) Babbling, cooing, overextension, overregularization, telegraphic speech
(D) Babbling, cooing, telegraphic speech, overextension, overregularization
(E) Cooing, babbling, telegraphic speech, overextension, overregularization
(A) Cooing, babbling, overextension, telegraphic speech, overregularization
According to classical conditioning theories, learning is most effective when the unconditioned stimulus is presented in which pairing sequence?
(A) Simultaneous pairing
(B) Trace pairing
(C) Response pairing
(D) Delayed pairing
(E) Backward pairing
(D) Delayed pairing
In the second wave of feminism of the 1960s and 1970s, many men did not want women to have more opportunities in traditionally “male” positions, such as doctors and CEOs, keeping women in those fields relegated to positions as nurses or secretaries, because the men felt that there would not be enough doctor and CEO positions left for them if women filled those positions. This perspective exemplifies…
(A) realistic conflict theory
(B) superordinate goals
(C) glass ceiling effect
(D) glass cliff effect
(E) stereotype threat
(A) realistic conflict theory
Risk-taking behaviors in teens has been linked biologically to…
(A) synaptic pruning, removing connections to their amygdalas and thus reducing the fear response
(B) a prevalence of drugs and alcohol in school and in the community
(C) excess serotonin and norepinephrine present in the brain from excessive video game play
(D) the fact that the prefrontal cortex, responsible for decision-making and planning, is not yet fully developed until one is in their mid-20s
(E) the epigenetic changes to the brain
(D) the fact that the prefrontal cortex, responsible for decision-making and planning, is not yet fully developed until one is in their mid-20s
Walter Mischel’s famous “marshmallow experiment” is a dramatic example of what type of study?
(A) Cross-sectional studies
(B) Heritability studies
(C) Case studies
(D) Naturalistic studies
(E) Longitudinal studies
(E) Longitudinal studies
The magical number seven study, determining that human working memory can hold only 7 +/– 2 items at any given time was published by…
(A) Leon Festinger
(B) George A. Miller
(C) Edward Tolman
(D) Donald Hebb
(E) Alan Baddeley
(B) George A. Miller
In order to get more information about attitudes a person may be unwilling or unable to report, or attitudes they may not even be aware of, a research study might use…
(A) the Beck Depression Inventory
(B) the Buss Perry Aggression Questionnaire
(C) the Hamilton Rating Scale
(D) the Implicit Association Test
(E) the Reference Groups Inventory
(D) the Implicit Association Test
According to Weber and Fechner, in order to detect change, two stimuli…
(A) must differ by a constant percentage, which varies by stimulus type but remains constant for a given stimulus
(B) must differ by a constant proportion, which remains constant across different stimulus types
(C) must differ by a constant proportion, which varies by stimulus type but remains constant for a given stimulus
(D) must differ by a constant amount, which varies by stimulus type but remains constant for a given stimulus
(E) must differ by a constant amount, which remains constant across different stimulus types
(C) must differ by a constant proportion, which varies by stimulus type but remains constant for a given stimulus
Reggie suffers a stroke near where the parietal lobe borders with the occipital lobe. The symptom she is most likely experiencing is…
(A) loss of memory
(B) right side paralysis
(C) left side paralysis
(D) loss of the ability to understand speech
(E) visual and sensory hallucinations
(E) visual and sensory hallucinations
Understanding that there are only two givens in human existence—that we are born into a human body and that we die—and everything else involves elements of freedom, choice, and responsibility is consistent with the writings of…
(A) Carl Rogers
(B) Rollo May
(C) Abraham Maslow
(D) Neal Miller
(E) Hans Eysenck
(B) Rollo May
The famous research study involving baby geese and how they imprint on the first moving stimulus they see within a critical period of about 13–16 hours after birth was conducted by…
(A) John Bowlby
(B) Konrad Lorenz
(C) Mary Main
(D) Mary Ainsworth
(E) Erik Erikson
(B) Konrad Lorenz
Claude is conducting research into the effectiveness of three different behavioral therapies on smoking cessation. The best way to statistically work with his data would be to use…
(A) the correlation coefficient
(B) one-way ANOVA
(C) two-way ANOVA
(D) T-tests
(E) measures of central tendency
(B) one-way ANOVA
In his studies on memory, Herman Ebbinghaus chose to use nonsense syllables for all the following reasons EXCEPT:
(A) They were uniformly difficult.
(B) They were accurately measurable.
(C) They were plentiful.
(D) They were rhythmic.
(E) It was unlikely that participants could create associations to them.
(D) They were rhythmic.
Oscar spends much of his day in front of the television. On the news one day is a report of a terrible bungee-jumping disaster in a remote part of the world, where many people die and more are injured. For several days, Oscar hears continuous coverage of this disaster. According to the availability heuristic, Oscar will…
(A) donate any of his available funds to the rescue and relief effort
(B) compare this incident to other tragic events he has heard about in recent memory
(C) become very afraid of dying in a bungee-jumping accident, even though he doesn’t bungee-jump
(D) feel sympathy for the victims but relief that he is at home on his sofa
(E) feel that the victims got what they deserved for taking such a huge risk
(C) become very afraid of dying in a bungee-jumping accident, even though he doesn’t bungee-jump
All of the following psychoactive drugs are believed to increase alertness or energy EXCEPT…
(A) cocaine
(B) ketamine
(C) nicotine
(D) caffeine
(E) MDMA
(B) ketamine
All of the following are directly involved in kinesthetic sensing EXCEPT…
(A) semicircular canals
(B) joint receptors
(C) free nerve endings
(D) muscle spindles
(E) Golgi tendon organs
(A) semicircular canals
An individual who presents as attention-seeking, dramatic, overly emotional, and inclined to speak in a vague and impressionistic style most likely has which one of the following personality disorders?
(A) Narcissistic
(B) Antisocial
(C) Histrionic
(D) Schizotypal
(E) Obsessive-compulsive
(C) Histrionic
Which of the following statistics, if true, would provide the most support for the assertion that poverty causes drug addiction?
(A) 69% of poor people are drug addicts.
(B) 98% of drug addicts are poor.
(C) 85% of poor people are drug addicts, and for 80% of those individuals, they were poor for at least five years before they became drug addicts.
(D) Whenever rates of poverty increase among the population, rates of drug addiction increase proportionately.
(E) Whenever rates of drug addiction decrease among the population, rates of poverty decrease proportionately.
(C) 85% of poor people are drug addicts, and for 80% of those individuals, they were poor for at least five years before they became drug addicts.
The theory that alcoholism is genetic is best supported by which one of the following scenarios?
(A) Dizygotic twins are reared together; both are alcoholic
(B) Monozygotic twins are reared apart; neither is alcoholic
(C) Monozygotic twins are reared together; both are alcoholic
(D) Monozygotic twins are reared apart; both are alcoholic
(E) Dizygotic twins are reared apart; only one is alcoholic
(D) Monozygotic twins are reared apart; both are alcoholic
A teacher tells her class that she is going to read a list of words, and the student who can subsequently recall the greatest number of words will win a prize. She reads the following list of words in this order: bird, foot, house, cake, table, mind, car, snow, bath, dress, pen, yarn, and green. She then asks the students to write down all the words they remember. On average, the class will…
(A) be more likely to remember the word “foot” than the word “green,” owing to the recency effect
(B) be more likely to remember the words “bird” and “green” than the word “car,” owing to serial position effects
(C) be more likely to remember the word “snow” than the word “yarn,” owing to the recency effect
(D) be more likely to remember the words in the middle of the list than those at the beginning, owing to the primacy effect
(E) be more likely to remember certain words randomly than to recall any of the words based on serial position
(B) be more likely to remember the words “bird” and “green” than the word “car,” owing to serial position effects
The just-world hypothesis is best exemplified by which one of the following situations?
(A) Scott, who is typically kind, is mean to another boy because everyone else at school is.
(B) Beth is convicted of murder and sentenced to death. Many people take up her cause, asserting that she is actually innocent.
(C) Henry is extremely good-looking and popular. His baseball teammates elect him team captain, despite his lack of relevant experience and irresponsible behavior.
(D) Meg is fired from her job and her friends and family support her claim of racial discrimination.
(E) Ralph is beaten up by a gang of hoodlums on the street at 4:30 a.m. in a high-crime area. He is sharply criticized by the local community for placing himself in such a dangerous situation.
(E) Ralph is beaten up by a gang of hoodlums on the street at 4:30 a.m. in a high-crime area. He is sharply criticized by the local community for placing himself in such a dangerous situation.
Puffy, the Jackson family cat, had always been indifferent to Mr. Jackson until two weeks ago when Mrs. Jackson, who usually feeds the household pets, went on vacation. Now when Mr. Jackson comes home from work, Puffy begins to salivate and meow repeatedly until he feeds her. While not as attentive to Puffy as his wife is, Mr. Jackson eventually feeds Puffy after he gets tired of her meowing. How much meowing Mr. Jackson tolerates before he gives in depends upon his mood.
Which of the following statements is true regarding the situation described above?
(A) Mr. Jackson is an unconditioned stimulus for Puffy’s salivation.
(B) Puffy’s salivation is an unconditioned response to Mr. Jackson.
(C) Mr. Jackson has been conditioned to feed Puffy through negative reinforcement.
(D) When Mr. Jackson feeds Puffy he is positively reinforced with food.
(E) Puffy’s meowing is positive punishment for Mr. Jackson’s act of feeding her.
(C) Mr. Jackson has been conditioned to feed Puffy through negative reinforcement.
Puffy, the Jackson family cat, had always been indifferent to Mr. Jackson until two weeks ago when Mrs. Jackson, who usually feeds the household pets, went on vacation. Now when Mr. Jackson comes home from work, Puffy begins to salivate and meow repeatedly until he feeds her. While not as attentive to Puffy as his wife is, Mr. Jackson eventually feeds Puffy after he gets tired of her meowing. How much meowing Mr. Jackson tolerates before he gives in depends upon his mood.
Assume Mr. Jackson finds Puffy’s meowing highly annoying and wants it to stop as soon as his wife resumes pet-feeding duties. For the next week he should…
(A) feed Puffy as soon as she meows for food the first time
(B) feed Puffy as soon as she meows for food the fifth time
(C) feed Puffy after ten minutes, regardless of how many times she has meowed for food
(D) vary the number of meows it will take to feed Puffy according to the specific day of the week
(E) vary the number of minutes it will take to feed Puffy according to the specific day of the week
(A) feed Puffy as soon as she meows for food the first time
A researcher wishes to examine the relationship between age and marital satisfaction among American women. Which of the following research methods would be the best choice?
(A) A cross-sectional study
(B) Naturalistic observation
(C) A controlled laboratory experiment
(D) A quasi-experiment
(E) A case study
(A) A cross-sectional study
Bill has been unable to form new memories ever since he sustained a severe head injury in a sporting match two years ago. Which part of his brain has been damaged?
(A) The hypothalamus
(B) The medulla
(C) The occipital lobe
(D) The temporal lobe
(E) The hippocampus
(E) The hippocampus
A schizophrenic individual is LEAST likely to have which one of the following symptoms?
(A) Auditory hallucinations
(B) A flat affect
(C) Disordered thinking
(D) Delusions
(E) Visual hallucinations
(E) Visual hallucinations
Neuron branches that conduct impulses toward the cell are called…
(A) dendrites
(B) synapses
(C) axons
(D) myelin sheaths
(E) somas
(A) dendrites
Debra, who believes that she is a literal demon and must be destroyed, will attempt suicide if hospital staff do not watch her continuously. She cries constantly and refuses to eat or leave her bed. Debra’s behavior pattern is most accurately described as…
(A) schizoid
(B) schizotypal
(C) schizophrenic
(D) schizoaffective
(E) None of the above
(D) schizoaffective
Kevin, who loves playing football, watches a documentary about how dangerous playing football can be and how associated head injuries can cause brain damage. According to cognitive dissonance theory, Kevin is LEAST likely to do which of the following after watching the documentary?
(A) Play football less often
(B) Question the medical accuracy of the information in the documentary
(C) Stop playing football altogether
(D) Accept the documentary’s conclusions and continue to play football as often as before
(E) Decide that his love of football is worth the risk of injury
(D) Accept the documentary’s conclusions and continue to play football as often as before
Which of the following is one of Ekman’s universal basic emotions?
(A) Shame
(B) Curiosity
(C) Disgust
(D) Jealousy
(E) Guilt
(C) Disgust