PSY Final
Ninety-five percent of individuals fall within which range of IQ scores?
70-130
Door-in-the-face technique is best illustrated by which of the following examples?
A furniture salesperson suggests you buy a new couch, chair, and matching end tables. When you decline, they offer just the chair.
Which of the following scenarios depicts an example of a defense mechanism?
Anthony plays football to deal with anger over his parent's divorce.
Which of the following scenarios depicts the use of emotional suppression?
Bran feels intense sadness when watching a movie but keeps himself from crying.
Which of the following is a difference between using exemplars and prototypes for forming concepts?
Exemplars use a specific member of a category as representation
According to psychologists, which of the following reasons most likely explains why adults are less likely than children to use visual images in their thinking?
Increased use of language makes it more difficult to directly access visual images.
Which of the following best describes how contemporary psychologists view Sigmund Freud's approach to personality?
It is heralded for its early, profound impact on the field of psychology, but is generally not supported by research.
This psychologist studied styles of attachment between infants and their caregivers using an experiment known as the "Strange Situation."
Mary Ainsworth
Which of the following scenarios depicts someone utilizing the method of loci to improve their memory?
Melba pictures her family's boat and associates information she is learning to various areas of the vehicle.
As time passes, which of the following best describes what happens to long-term memories?
Older memories may be more difficult to retrieve.
Appraisal theory suggests that emotions are elicited in response to an assessment of how something affects one's
Personal Well-being
Which of the following best describes Freud's thoughts on the relationship between personality and psychosexual stages?
Personality characteristics emerge due to conflict in each psychosexual stage.
Which of the following is true about schemas?
Schemas can affect which information is retained or discarded from our memory.
Which one of the following accurately describes procedural memories?
They are best explained to others through demonstrations.
The Cannon-Bard theory of emotion suggests which of the following relationships between physical sensations and subjective feelings?
They occur simultaneously.
In the famous Milgram obedience study, which of the following was true about the learners or confederates?
They received no actual shocks but pretended that the shocks were real.
The somatovisceral afference model of emotion (SAME) suggests that significant cognitive processing and evaluation is needed when a situation produces
a general state of arousal.
The state of being in a different place from where one would like to be is known as
a problem.
How long is information typically held in sensory memory?
a second or less
According to Piaget, this is the cognitive process wherein acquisition of new knowledge requires the alteration of existing schema.
accommodation
The social facilitation phenomenon suggests that the presence of another person
affects behavior differently depending on the complexity of the behavior.
Cues are used to
aid retrieval of information from storage.
A reflex is best defined as
an inevitable, uncontrollable response to stimuli.
Reinforcement sensitivity theory describes individual differences in
approach, avoidance, and inhibition of behavior.
The Yerkes-Dodson law predicts that individuals will perform best on a difficult task when their
arousal is moderate.
According to Piaget, this is the cognitive process wherein acquisition of new knowledge does not require the alteration of existing schema.
assimilation
Applied behavior analysis, a type of behavior therapy based on principles of operant conditioning, is most commonly used to treat individuals with
autism spectrum disorder.
Erikson held that toddlerhood was most concerned with which of the following psychosocial crises?
autonomy vs. shame/doubt
Which of the following is the best definition of deindividuation?
becoming immersed within a group, leading to anonymity
Sexual orientation is comprised of which of the following components?
behavior, attraction, and identity
In defining a problem, psychologists suggest using which of the following approaches to reduce the likelihood of failure?
breaking down large goals into intermediate goals
The process of changing the meaning of an event to change the associated emotion is known as suppression.
cognitive reappraisal.
Special, organizing ideas formed from our experiences that help us to make sense of our knowledge base are
concepts.
According to Piaget, in this stage a child can solve cognitive tasks but lacks the ability to think abstractly.
concrete operational
The component of Freud's personality theory that represents the "self" that is visible to others is the
ego.
Being able to successfully perceive, use, understand, and manage emotions is referred to as
emotional intelligence.
Which of the following emotions is likely to be associated with the greatest amount of autonomic nervous system activation?
fear
This is the final stage in Piaget's theory or cognitive development, in which a child has begun thinking not only symbolically but abstractly and can apply abstract reasoning to solve complex problems.
formal operational
Broca's area is located in the brain's
frontal lobe.
A barrier in which a concept is only thought of in its most typical form is called
functional fixedness.
Before starting a diet, a person should take the time to create a food journal and write down the food they actually eat during the day. This is an effective way to change eating habits because the person is
gaining a better understanding of the behavior and when it occurs.
An important similarity between chunking and rehearsal is that they
help retain information in short-term memory longer.
Rules of thumb that are used as shortcuts to problem solving are
heuristics.
Humans are motivated to maintain a steady state of internal balance known as
homeostasis.
Which of the following defines the term 'self-schema'?
how we organize and process information about ourselves
Erikson held that adolescence was most concerned with which of the following psychosocial crises?
identity vs. role confusion
Individuals with Down syndrome experience intellectual disability and
impaired language ability.
The mere exposure effect occurs when regular exposure to neutral or positive stimuli leads to
increased liking of the stimuli.
Erikson held that middle childhood is most concerned with which of the following psychosocial crises?
industry vs. inferiority
Both romantic love and sexual desire involve which of the following brain structures?
insula
In Albert Bandura's research on imitation, children who saw an adult punch and yell at a Bobo doll were more likely to
interact with the Bobo doll in the same way.
Erikson held that early adulthood is most concerned with which of the following psychosocial crises?
intimacy vs. isolation
Appraisal theory suggests that assessment of a stimulus
is a continuous process.
Being bilingual means that an individual
is proficient in two languages.
According to Erikson, this developmental stage is centered on the psychosocial crisis of ego integrity vs. despair.
late adulthood
Learning that occurs without reinforcement is described as
latent learning.
A relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs as the result of experience is known as
learning.
Which theory of memory claims that the deeper information is processed, the better our memory of it will be?
levels of processing theory
The difference between compliance and obedience depends on whether the request is
made by an authority figure.
According to Erikson, this developmental stage is centered on the psychosocial crisis of generativity vs. stagnation.
middle adulthood
The smallest units of speech that carry meaning are known as
morphemes.
Research suggests that sleep plays a positive role in the formation of which type of memory?
most types of memory
Charles Spearman posited that generalized intelligence (g) is comprised of
one's overall intelligence rather than specific abilities.
Of the following, the best definition of "partial reinforcement" is reinforcing
only some occurrences of a desired behavior
Mary Ainsworth developed an experimental paradigm to determine children's attachment styles by examining their interactions with
parents and strangers
Robert Sternberg's triangular model of love focuses on which three dimensions?
passion, intimacy, and commitment
Of the following, the best definition of "projective test" is a test that measures a respondent's
personality projected onto an ambiguous stimulus.
Advertisements often attempt to influence our behavior through
priming
Which of the following theories of personality was created by Sigmund Freud and suggests that psychic energy moves among compartments of the personality?
psychodynamic
Memory decay is most likely to affect memories that are
rarely used.
The method of recitation involves
saying information aloud that you put into your own words.
Tests measuring intelligence quotient (IQ) are designed to predict
school performance.
According to Freud, the id component of personality is most concerned with
seeking immediate pleasure and relief.
The pattern of thoughts, feelings, and actions that an individual perceives in their mind is their
self
When someone asks, "tell me about yourself," they are asking you to describe your
self-concept.
When making attributions, members of individualistic cultures are more likely than members of collectivist cultures to demonstrate
self-serving bias.
Punishment is most effective under the conditions of
significance, immediacy, and consistency.
A group's rules for behavior are referred to as
social norms.
Memory retrieval is the process of recovering information from
storage.
The principle of encoding specificity suggests that long-term memories include which of the following?
target information and other pieces of information noticed during encoding
This term describes the beginnings of personality patterns observed in infants.
temperament
Wernicke's area is located in the brain's
temporal lobe
The theory of emotion that claims that physical sensations lead to subjective feelings is called
the James-Lange theory
Which theory of emotion suggests that humans are very good at interpreting their physical states?
the James-Lange theory
Observational learning is best defined as
the ability to learn by watching others.
The prisoner's dilemma is a classic model of
the factors that underlie decisions to compete or cooperate within groups.
According to Freud, which aspect of personality resides solely in our unconscious mind?
the id
The idea that good things happen to good people but bad things happen to bad people is called
the just-world belief.
Extinction occurs when
the pairing of the CS and UCS is broken.
The term 'negative' in operant conditioning refers to
the removal of a stimulus
An individual's view on who or what is responsible for outcomes in their life is known as
their locus of control.
The Sally-Anne Test is used to assess in young children the development of a working
theory of mind
Of the following, the best definition of "personality" is a characteristic way of
thinking, feeling, and behaving.
Both Skinner and Thorndike agreed that punishment was generally
too weak to control behavior
Compared to other theoretical approaches to personality, humanistic theories generally view humans as
unique and good natured.
Findings from Tolman's maze experiments suggest that cognitive maps are typically formed via
unique non-associative learning.
The theory of motivated forgetting suggests that we are more likely to forget which type of information?
unpleasant information
Negative reinforcement involves the removal of something that a person considers
unpleasant.
Which of the following best describes when catharsis is likely to occur?
when an individual has reached their limit for a particular emotion
Lev Vygotsky is famous for exploring this concept which describes the relationship between a learner being able to accomplish more difficult tasks with instruction.
zone of proximal development