SDC Psychology Fall Exam
The class is playing a game of Jeopardy! and it is your turn. "I'll take Specialties in Psychology for $300." The revealed answer is, "These psychological professionals work with situations in which environmental conditions may have an impact on their health." What will you say?
"What is a psychiatric social worker?"
Jamie walks from a bright room into a dark room. It will take about ________ minutes for her rods to fully adjust to the dark.
30
Which research stated in his book Finding Meaning in Dreams, that the nature of a person's dreams may be influenced by the personality of their culture.
Domhoff
A test can fail in reliability while still being valid.
False
Which of these is an element of the formal definition of intellectual disability?
IQ approximately 2 standard deviations below the mean on a normal curve
Which of the following would be an example of a sterotype threat?
Joaquim, who believes IQ tests are unfair to Hispanics, something that his IQ score seems to reflect
According to famed linguist Noam Chomsky, humans have an innate ability to understand and produce language through a device he called
Language Acquisition Device
You are invited to take part in a study by a researcher trying to replicate the work of Hermann Ebbinghaus. What might this researcher ask you to do?
Listen to me: BEC, DAX, FER, KOJ; now repeat what I said.
Which of the following statements about punishment is NOT true?
Rewards should always immediately follow punishments.
Which book, published by Herrnstein and Murray in 1994, sparked tremendous debate with its assertions about the heritability of intelligence?
The Bell Curve
____________ believe that language helps develop concepts, whereas ____________ believed that concepts must be developed first if language is to follow.
Vygotsky; Piaget
What is the biggest reason we use animals in research?
We can do things to animals that we can't do to people
Which early psychologist was the first to try to bring objectivity and measurement to the concept of psychology?
Wilhelm Wundt
According to the semantic network model, it would take less time to answer "true" to which sentence?
a salmon is a fish
The work of Freud was built around _________________.
a theory of personality that emphasizes unconscious motives and conflicts
Dr. Delmar wants to determine how loud a certain noise must be in order for it to be heard from a distance of 50 feet. Her question involves the concept of:
absolute threshold
According to this theory, sleep is a product of evolution.
adaptive theory
On a fixed-ratio schedule, reinforcement is given _________________.
after a specific number of responces are given
What three types of intelligence constitute Sternberg's triarchic theory of intelligence?
analytical, creative, and practical
The part of the neuron that carries outgoing messages either to another neuron or to a muscle or gland is the _______________.
axon
An individual's semantic memory contains:
background knowledge about words, symbols, concepts and rules arranged as hierarchies of information in categories and subordinate categories
Rods and cones are connected to____________.
bipolar neurons
Curare, a poison, works by ________.
blocking receptor sites and acting as an antagonist for acetylcholine
The shortest wavelengths that we can see are experienced as_________ colors.
blue
Ira has been smoking cigarettes for years, and particularly enjoys smoking when he goes to a casino to play blackjack. He recently quit smoking and has been cigarette-free for eight months. In that time, he has also had no opportunity to go back to a casino to play cards. Tonight, he and some friends went to play blackjack, and once he sat down at the table he got a sudden and irresistible urge to smoke a cigarette, and ended up smoking a pack in one night. Ira's unexpected desire to smoke was a result of ________.
classical conditioning
Which of the following is NOT an altered state of consciousness?
concentration
Our awareness of various external stimuli and internal mental processes, such as making decisions, daydreaming, reflecting, and concentration, is called _______________.
consciousness
Color, shape, size, and brightness are all types of perceptual_____________________.
constancy
CPAP stands for ____________
continuous positive airway pressure
What part of the brain can sometimes be referred to as the "rind" or outer covering?
cortex
According to Robert Sternberg ___________ intelligence is the ability to deal with new and different concepts and to come up with new ways of solving problems (divergent thinking, in other words)
creative
The branchlike structures that receive messages from other neurons are called___________.
dendrites
The goals of psychology are to
describe, explain, predict, and control behavior
The question "What is happening?" refers to which of the following goals in psychology?
description
John will likely experience REM rebound tonight if he:
did not sleep much last night
Dr. Roll is conducting a research study. She wants to measure the physical connectivity in the research participants' brains by imaging their white matter. Which of the following methods will she use?
diffusion tensor imaging
Which theory of hypnosis includes the idea of a "hidden observer"?
dissociative
Sigmund Freud's psychoanalysis focused on
early childhood experiences
Amber meets a cute guy named Carson at a party. She wants to make sure she remembers his name, so she reminds herself that he has the same name as the capital of Nevada (Carson City). This transferring of information from short-term memory to long-term memory is an example of what type of rehearsal?
elaborative
Which of following is an example of episodic memory?
events
Neuroplasticity is the concept that when the brain is injured, it is unable to change the structure and function of the cells to adjust to the damage
false
Memories that concern events that are highly significant and are vividly remembered are called ______.
flashbulb memories
On a variable-interval schedule, reinforcement is given
for the first correct response after varying amounts of the time have passed
a block to problem solving that comes from thinking about objects in terms of their most common typical use is called___________.
functional fixedness
After being in class for a while ____________ is a likely explanation for not hearing the sound of the lights buzzing above you until someone says something about it.
habituation
The medulla, pons, and cerebellum are all apart of the:
hindbrain
How does Ernest Hilgard explain pain reduction through hypnosis?
hypnotized individuals dissociate the experience, so part of the mind is unaware of the pain
In nearsightedness, the image is focused:
in front of the retina
REM behavior disorder most commonly occurs_____________.
in men over 60
What score indicates how one individual compares to others on an intelligence test?
intelligence quotient
What two categories of dream content did Sigmund Freud describe?
latent and manifest
The process by which experience or practice results in a relatively permanent change in behavior or potential behavior is known as____________.
learning
Which of the following is NOT a perceptual constancy?
linear perspective
What do we call the hypothesis that language influences what we think?
linguistic relativity hypothesis
Researchers have found that it takes ______________ to view a mental image that is larger or covers more distance than a smaller or more compact one.
longer
What is thinking?
mental activity that involves processing, organizing, understanding, and communicating information
Cognitive psychologists are a subgroup of experimental psychologists who are concerned primarily with
mental events which intervene between stimuli and responses
The divergent thinking technique of starting with a central idea an drawing a "map" with lines from the center to the other related ideas and then forming a mental image of the concepts and their connections is known as_____________.
mind or subject mapping
A.R. Luria studied an individual with phenomenal memory. This person was a ____________.
mnemonist
When you look out the window of a car that is traveling 60 mph, objects at different locations appear to move in different directions an different speeds. The apparent motion is known as:
motion parallax
Your friend has experienced excessive daytime sleepiness. He is laughing with you and suddenly falls to the ground. Your friend is probably suffering from ________.
narcolepsy
Larry has been told by his doctor that he is experiencing ________ due to hair cells that were destroyed as a result of loud sounds.
nerve hearing impairement
The branch of life sciences which involves the structure and function of the brain and nervous system is called
neuroscience
What must be paired together for classical conditioning to occur?
neutral stimulus and unconditioned stimulus
Retroactive interference, as used in the study of memory, refers to when_____________.
newer infomation interferes with the retrieval of older informantion
The part of the brain which interprets visual information is the__________.
occipital lobe
B.F. Skinner is known for his theory of:
operant conditioning
Conduction hearing impairment refers to hearing problems that originate in the_________________.
outer ear
One major danger of barbiturates is ________.
overdose
Which of the following is a common ethical guideline suggested by the American Psychological Association?
participants must be allowed to make an informed decision
People's tendency to perceive a thing a certain way because their previous experiences or expectations influence them is called _________________.
perceptual expectancy
The autnomic and somatic nervous system are divisions of the _______________ system.
peripheral
A psychologist wanted to see if people are more prone to seek the company of others when anxious than when calm. He randomly assigned half of his subjects to an anxiety group and then told them that, as part of the study, they would receive electric shocks. He did not frighten the other group of subjects. Finally, he recorded how many subjects in each group to be "tested" in a group setting and how many chose to be "tested" alone. What was the dependent variable in the study?
preference for being alone or in a group
A reinforcer that is reinforcing in and of itself is called a ______________ reinforcer.
primary
Selma notices that as her supply of marijuana decreases, she starts thinking more and more about where she can get another supply as well as feeling nervous and anxious. This is an example of ________.
psychological dependence
Under what circumstances will a reinforcer make the target response more likely to occur again?
regardless of whether it is a positive or negative reinforcer, a reinforcer makes a response more likely to occur
Anything that increases the likelihood that a behavior will increase is called a(n)
reinforcer
Freud said phobias were ________ whereas Watson said phobias were ________.
repressed conflicts; learned
Maria often sleeps soundly and rarely awakens to any outside noise. However, the cries of Maria's baby can awaken her immediately. What part of the brain is responsible for this reaction?
reticular formation
A soldier was injured when a mortar exploded next to him. Although he recovered from his wounds, he is not able to recall information from years ago. What term is used to describe this soldier's condition?
retrograde amnesia
The type of memory that is most likely an encyclopedia or a dictionary is
semantic memory
A display of 12 letters is flahsed on a screen in front of you followed by a tone. You attempt to recall a portion of the display based on the specific tone you heard. What aspect of your memory is this experiment designed to assess?
sensory memory
An echo usually stays in the sensory registers for __________.
several seconds
The hypothalamus controls the ______________.
sleep-wake cycle
Nicotine is a ________________.
stimulant
Which of the following terms do NOT belong together?
structuralism; observable behavior
Corey was in an automobile accident that resulted in an injury to her brain. She now has difficulty with her hearing and her memory. The part of her brain most likely injured was her __________.
temporal lobe
You decide that you are going to condition your dog to salivate to the sound of a metronome. You give the dog a biscuit, and then a second later you sound the metronome. You do this several times, but no conditioning seems to occur. This is probably because ________.
the biscuit was given too long after the sound of the metronome
The placebo effect means
the expectations of the participants influence their behavior
The magazine Desperate Wives publishes a survey of its female readers called "The Sex Life of the American Wife." It reports that 87 recept of all wives like to make love in rubber boots. The critical flaw in this research would be ______________.
the fact that the same is not representative of American wives
Mark and Kathy take their 2-year-old son to the supermarket every Saturday. Each week, the same sequence of events unfolds: Their son screams, demanding that they buy him treats. Although they refuse to give in to his demands, he continues to scream. Finally, either Mark or Kathy gets in their son's face and yells at the top of their lungs "Shut up!" He stops screaming instantly. What operant conditioning concepts are illustrated in this story?
the parents are using punishment to suppress the screaming; their use of punishment is negatively reinforced by the cessation of screaming.
The activation-synthesis hypothesis of dreaming states that ____________.
the purpose of dreaming is to resolve current concerns and problems
In the experiment with Little Albert, the conditioned stimulus was_________________.
the rat
Which hemisphere of the cerebral cortex is usually dominated in spatial tasks?
the right hemisphere
___________ is a system used for reducing bias and error in the measurement of data.
the scientific method
The process by which outside stimuli, in their various forms of energy, are converted into neural signals is called________________.
transduction
Conditioned emotional responses are some of the easiest forms of classical conditioning to accomplish, as demonstrated by the fact that our lives are so full of them
true
The thyroid gland secretes a hormone called thyroxin.
true
In the curve of forgetting developed by Ebbinghaus, the greatest amount of forgetting occurs _______________
within the first hour after learning new material