Cog Psych final
18. People playing the parlor game "20 questions" often use hierarchical organization strategies. One player asks up to 20 yes/no questions to determine the identity of an object another player has selected. The player's questions usually start as general and get more specific as the player approaches a likely guess. Initial questions asked by a player are often one of three questions: "Is it an animal
" "Is it a vegetable?" and "Is it a mineral?" Each of these three questions describes which level of categorization? Superordinate
15. The effective duration of short-term memory, when rehearsal is prevented, is
15-20 seconds or less
4. Jacoby's experiment, in which participants made judgments about whether they had previously seen the names of famous and non-famous people, found that inaccurate memories based on source misattributions occurred after a delay of
24 hours
14. Using the partial report procedure in his "letter array" experiment, Sperling was able to infer that participants initially saw about percent of the 12 letters in the display.
82
12. Which of the following neural components is NOT found at the receiving end of neurons
? Axon
1. Which property listed below makes human language unique
? Creativity
17. Which approach to categorization can more easily take into account atypical cases such as flightless birds
? Exemplar
27. Suppose we asked people to form simultaneous images of two or more animals such as a rabbit alongside an elephant. Then, we ask them basic questions about the animals. For example, we might ask if the rabbit has whiskers. Given our knowledge of imagery research, we would expect the fastest response to this question when the rabbit is imagined alongside
A bumblebee
13. Which of the following statements best describes how neurons communicate one another
A chemical process takes place in the synapse
26. Mental-scanning experiments found
A direct relationships between scanning time and distance on the image
11. Lindsay and coworkers "slime in the first-grade teacher's desk" experiment showed that presenting
A photograph of the participant's first-grade class increased the likelihood of false memories
21. According to Collins and Quillian's semantic network model, it should take longest to verify which statement below
A turtle is an animal
36. According to Anders Ericcson, the biggest difference between world-class pianist graduating from Julliard (a famous school for music performers in NY City) and a Northwest graduate with a BS in education looking for a job as a music teacher is
About 8,000 hours of practice
18. Traditional views of short-term memory argue that coding in STM is mostly
Acoustic
1. For most adults over age 40, the reminiscence bump describes enhanced memory for
Adolescence and young adulthood
16. Which of the following is consistent with the idea of localization of function
All of the above
24. Having a large working memory capacity is beneficial on many cognitive tasks. Unfortunately, your working memory capacity can be compromised (limited or even shrunk) by
All of the above
5. In support of late selection models, Donald MacKay showed that the presentation of a biasing word on the unattended ear influenced participants' processing of __________ when they were ____________ of that word.
Ambiguous sentences; unaware
3. An experiment on the phonemic restoration effect would most likely include
An extraneous cough
8. Regarding children's language development, Noam Chomsky noted that children generate many sentences they have never heard before. From this, he concluded that language development is drive largely by
An inborn biological program
3. The procedure in which trained participants describe their experiences and thought processes in response to stimuli presented under controlled conditions is known as
Analytic introspection
11. Consider the following sentences: "Captain Ahab wanted to kill the whale. He cursed at it." These two sentences taken together provide an example of a(n)
Anaphoric inference
20. When I used to run long distances, if I got bored, I would try to listen "in my imagination" to long pieces of music, such as a Beethoven symphony. But as I ran past a car or house playing loud music, it completely wrecked my imagining of Beethoven. This was due to
Articulatory suppression
6. Swinney did an experiment in which he presented participants with the sentence, "The man was not surprised to find several spiders, roaches, and other bugs in the corner of the room." He found that immediately after hearing the word "bug", the participants accesse
Both the "insect" and the "hidden listening device" meanings of the word
32. In explaining the paradox that imagery and perception exhibit a double dissociation, Behrmann and coworkers suggested that perception necessarily involves ______ processing and imagery starts as a __________ process.
Bottom-up; top-down
30. Of the following real-world phenomena, the confirmation bias best explains the observation that people
Can cite several reasons for their position on a controversial issue but none for the opposing side
7. The conclusion to be drawn from the man named Shereshevskii whose abnormal brain functioning gave him virtually limitless word-for-word memory is that having memory like a video recorder
Can seriously disrupt functioning in one's personal life
14. The prototype approach to categorization states that a standard representation of a category is based on
Category members that have been encountered in the past
16. The research by Ericsson and colleagues (1980) examined the ability of a college student to achieve amazing feats of memory by having him remember strings of random digits that were recited to him. They found that this students used his experience with running times to help him retain these strings of numbers. The significance of this finding was that
Chunking requires knowledge of familiar patterns or concepts
9. Which of the following options would NOT be an important factor in automatic processing
Close attention
5. A mental conception of the layout of a physical space is known as a(n)
Cognitive map
24. Learning in the connectionist network is represented by adjustments to network
Connection weights
3. Bartlett's experiment in which English participants were asked to recall the "War of the Ghosts" story that was taken from the French Indian culture illustrated the
Constructive nature of the memory
32. Palmer's experiment, in which he asked people to identify objects in a kitchen, showed how _______ can affect perception
Context
12. A psycholinguist conducts an experiment with a group of participants from a small village in Asia and another from a small village in South America. They speak very different languages with very different features. She asked the groups to describe the bands of color they saw in a rainbow and found they reported the same number of bands as their language possessed primary color words. These results
Contradict the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
6. Newell and Simon were among the first to use computers in cognitive psychology. Their computer program
Created proofs for problems in logic
5. In the lexical decision task, participants are asked to
Decide whether a string of letters is a word or a non-word
1. Donders' main reason for doing his choice reaction time experiment was to study...
Decision making
31. Following up on the last question: if the size of your occipital lobe is decreased, the size of your visual images will
Decrease
31. Gauthier and coworkers' experiment on experience-dependent plasticity showed that after extensive "Greeble recognition" training sessions, FFA neurons had a(n) _______ response to faces and an _______ response to Greebles.
Decreased; increased
13. Not all of the members of everyday categories have the same features. Most fish have gills, fins, and scales. Sharks lack the feature of scales, yet they are still categorized as fish. This poses a problem for the ____________ approach to categorization.
Definitional
35. For Anders Ericcson, the most essential part of developing expertise is
Deliberate practice
8. Brain imaging studies reveal that semantics and syntax are associated with _______ brain mechanisms.
Different
23. Research on the physiology of semantic memory has shown that the representation of different categories in the brain (like living and non-living things) is best described as being
Distributed
21. The idea that specific cognitive functions activate many areas of the brain is known as
Distributed processing
22. A general education science class at Dartmouth requires students to design and build a useful product. This task requires primarily
Divergent thinking
21. Experts solve problems based on
Domain-specific strategies
11. In the "blind drunk" study, problems with attention were found when participants were
Drinking alcohol, but below the legal limit for being drunk
23. The least intrusive (or disruptive) technique for studying the brain is
EEG (sometimes called ERP)
31. Elementary school students in the U.S. are often taught to use the very familiar word "HOMES" as a cue for remembering the names of the Great Lakes (each letter in "HOMES" provides a first-letter cue for one of the lakes: Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, Superior). This memory procedure usually works better than repeating the names over and over. The use of this familiar word provides an example of
Elaborative rehearsal
32. According to the levels of processing theory, memory durability depends on the depth at which information is
Encoded
12. In Posner's model of attention, the Stroop Effect was used to test
Executive attention
2. A lesson to be learned from the research on flashbulb memories is that
Extreme vividness of a memory does not mean it is accurate
14. Neurons that respond to specific qualities (e.g. such as orientation, movement, and length) that make up objects are called
Feature detectors
20. Experts categorize problems based on
General principles that the problems share
29. You look at a rope coiled on a beach and are able to perceive it as a single strand because of the law of
Good figure
9. The point of the chicken-cow-grass study is
How people think may vary by culture
27. Memories of which we are unaware in Cognitive Psychology are called
Implicit
10. Maria has no idea what she just read in her text because she was thinking about how hungry she is and what she is going to have for dinner. This is a real-world example of
Inattentional blindness
35. An observational researcher observes chimps in their natural setting, and based upon the evidence, tries to form a general conclusion. This researcher is using mostly what kind of logic
Induction
10. Most of the coherence in text is created by
Inference
14. Judgments about "warmth" in problem solving are mostly used to determine if a task involves
Insight
29. Your text describes an "Italian woman" who, after an attack of encephalitis, had difficulty remembering people or facts she knew before. She could, however, remember her life events and daily tasks. Her memory behavior reflects
Intact episodic memory but defective semantic memory
15. In the two-string problem, tying the pliers to one of the strings best represents a(n) ¬¬¬¬______ state.
Intermediate
5. The experiment in which participants first read sentences about a baseball game and were then asked to identify sentences they had seen before, illustrated that memory
Involves making inferences
4. When we look at a record of the physical energy produced by conversational speech, we see that the speech signal
Is continuous
28. According to Tulving, the defining properties of the experiences of episodic memory is that
It involves mental time travel
15. According to the typicality effect,
Items that are high in prototoypicality are judged more rapidly as being in a group
11. The psychologist credited with the case study of Little Albert is
J.B. Watson
19. The analogical paradox refers to problem-solving differences between
Laboratory and real-world settings
18. Hemoglobin molecules in areas of high brain activity
Lose some of the oxygen they are transporting
6. If you are folding towels that have just come out of the laundry while watching television, you may find that you don't have to pay much attention to the process of folding the towels. This sort of familiar task that does not require much of your attention would be an example of a(n) _______ task.
Low-load
23. In Belilock and Carr's study of relationship between working memory capacity and problem solving, individuals with high working memory capacity performed best in the _______ condition.
Low-pressure
24. If the questions on the test are considered to be ill-defined, this would mean
Many people cannot understand the question
4. The main difference between early and late selection models of attention is that in late selection models, selection of stimuli for final processing doesn't occur until the information in analyzed for
Meaning
25. Shepard and Meltzer measured the time it took for participants to decide whether two objects were the same (two different views of the same object) or different (two different objects). These researchers inferred cognitive processes by using
Mental chronometry
33. Patients suffering from unilateral neglect perceive only the right side of their world, ignoring the left. When they are asked to close their eyes and form a mental image of something like a tree, and then describe their image, their description shows that they
Neglect the left half
20. Groups of neurons or structures that are connected within the nervous system are called ________
Neural networks
10. Linking damage to the brain and changes in behavior is technically called
Neuropsychology
18. Gick and Holyoak consider which of the following to be the most difficult step to achieve in the process of analogical problem solving
Noticing that there is an analogous relationship between problems because most participants need prompting before they notice a connection
4. According to the behaviorists, only the study of ____________ should be the emphasis of the science of psychology.
Observable behavior
28. Inductive reasoning involves
Observational premises
21. It was easier to perform two tasks at the same time if
One is handled by the sketch pad and one is handled by the phonological loop
16. Actions that take the problem from one state to another are known as
Operators
32. By using a(n) _______, a country could increase the percentage of individuals agreeing to be organ donors dramatically.
Opt-out procedure
12. Happy couples married for decades often claim it was "love at first sight". These claims may or may not be true, thanks to the _________ bias.
Optimistic
26. Speech segmentation is defined as
Organizing the sounds of speech into individual words
22. Radioactive dye is associated with which brain study technique
PET scan
7. Colin Cherry's experiment in which participants listen to two messages simultaneously, one in each ear, found all but which of the following
People can focus on one message and ignore the other one
28. Perky's imagery study (1910) had participants describe images of objects that were dimly projected onto a screen. The significance of Perky's results was that
People were influenced by the projected images when forming their mental images, even when they were unaware that the projected images were present
14. If kittens are raised in an environment that contains only verticals, you would predict that most of the neurons in their visual cortex would respond best to the visual presentation of a
Picket fence
29. Kosslyn's transcranial magnetic stimulation experiment on brain activation that occurs in response to imagery found that the brain activity in the visual cortex
Plays a causal role in both perception and imagery
23. Funahashi et al's work on monkeys doing a delayed response task examined the role of neurons in the
Prefrontal cortex
22. Spreading activation
Primes associated concepts
17. Back in high school, you were required by your teacher to learn a poem and recite it is front of your class. Soon after, your history teacher made you learn and recite lines from a famous speech. This proved to be a really hard task for you; much harder than memorizing the poem. One possible explanation of this is
Proactive interference
19. The fusiform face area (FFA) in the rain is often damaged in patients with
Prosopagnosia
24. The brain signals intensity (a loud noise, sudden severe pain, bright lights)
Rapid firing of neurons
30. Which of the following involved procedural memory
Reading a sentence in a book
35. Experimental evidence suggesting that the standard model of consolidation needs to be revised are data that show that the hippocampus was activated during retrieval of _____ memories.
Recent and remote episodic
25. Suppose you have been studying your French vocabulary words for several hours and are making many mistakes. You switch to reviewing the new terms for your upcoming biology test, and your performance is noticeably better. You are experiencing
Release from proactive interference
13. Gestalt psychologists consider problem solving as process involving
Restructuring
8. The misinformation effect can be explained by
Retroactive interference
26. In which of the following examples of two different brain-injured patients (Jerry and Roger) is a double dissociation demonstrated
Roger has good semantic memory and poor episodic memory, while Jerry has good episodic memory but poor semantic memory
6. Your friend has been sick for several days, so you go over to her home to make her some chicken soup. Searching for a spoon, you first reach in a top drawer beside the dishwasher. Then, you turn to the big cupboard beside the stove to search for a pan. In your search, you have relied on a kitchen
Schema
13. Information remains in visual sensory memory for
Seconds or a fraction of a second
1. When Sam listens to his girlfriend Susan in the restaurant and ignores other people's conversations, he is engaged in the process of attention
Selective
2. In a dichotic listening experiment, ______ refers to the procedure that is used to force participants to pay attention to a specific message in one ear among competing messages in the other ear.
Shadowing
30. You are at a parade where there are a number of marching bands. You perceive the bands that are all in the same uniforms as being grouped together. The red uniforms are one band, the green uniforms another, and so forth. You have this perceptual experience because of the law of
Similarity
10. When presenting lineups to eyewitnesses, it has been found that a(n) _______ lineup is much more likely to result in an innocent person being falsely identified
Simultaneous
30. Your text describes the case of M.G.S. who underwent brain surgery as treatment for severe epilepsy. Testing of M.G.S. pre- and post-surgery revealed that the right visual cortex is involved in the
Size of the field of view
27. Which concept below is most closely associated with the evolutionary perspective to solving the Wason four-card problem
Social-exchange theory
15. When conducting an experiment on how stimuli are represented by the firing of neurons, you notice that neurons respond differently to different faces. For example, Arthur's face causes three neurons to fire, with neuron 1 responding the most and neuron 3 responding the least. Roger's face causes three different neurons to fire, with neuron 7 responding the least and neuron 9 responding the most. Your results support
Sparse
34. The standard model of consolidation proposes that the hippocampus is
Strongly active when memories are first formed and being consolidated but becomes less active when retrieving older memories that are already consolidated
2. Yoda, a central character of the Star Wars movies created by George Lucas, has a distinctive way of speaking. Statements such as "Afraid you will be," show serious problems with
Syntactics
33. Omission bias involves
Tending to do nothing rather than making a decision that could be interpreted as causing harm
34. Janet is a high schooler from a rural, mostly white community. While watching basketball on tv, she notices that many of the best players are tall, African-Americans. She concludes that blacks are taller than whites. Janet's error is best described as
The availability heuristic
22. One function of ____ is to pull information out of long-term memory.
The central executive
20. The semantic network model predicts that the time it takes for a person to retrieve information about a concept should be determined by
The distance that must be travelled through the network
25. Computer programs have been designed that can recognize matching human faces with the same accuracy as a human being, but the computer loses its efficiency at this process when
The faces are viewed from an angle
26. According to your text, the key to solving the Wason four-card problem is
The falsification principle
3. Broadbent's model is called an early selection model because
The filter eliminates unattended information right at the beginning of the flow of information
9. Tanenhaus and coworkers' eye movement study presented participants with different pictures for interpreting the sentence, "Put the apple on the towel in the box." Their results support
The interactionist approach to parsing
9. Research on eyewitness testimony has shown that the more confident the person giving the testimony is of their memories
The more convincing the testimony is to a jury
19. The word-length effect reveals that
The phonological loop of the working memory model has a limited capacity
29. The conjunction rule states that
The probability of two events co-occurring is equal to or less than the probabilities of either event occurring alone
34. Watching a silent film depicting a Native American ceremony, which dancers and drumming, people often imagine the sound of the drums. The part of the brain most active would be
The secondary auditory cortex
33. Jennie loves to dance, having taken ballet for many years. She is now learning salsa dancing. Although the movements are very different from the dances she is familiar with, she has found a successful memory strategy of linking the new dance information to her previous experiences as a dancer and to her own affection for dance. This strategy suggest reliance on
The self-reliance effect
19. Your text describes cross-cultural studies of categorization with U.S. and Itzaj participants. Given the results of these studies, we know that if asked to name basic level objects for a category, U.S. participants would answer ____________ and Itzaj participants would answer ___________.
Tree; oak
16. An advantage of the exemplar approach over the prototype approach is that the exemplar approach provides a better explanation of the ________ effect.
Typicality
25. Consider the following syllogism: All cats are birds. All birds have wings. All cats have wings This syllogism is
Valid
28. The likelihood principle states that
We perceive the object that is most likely to have caused the pattern of stimuli we have received
7. Eye tracking studies investigating attention as we carry out actions such as making a peanut butter sandwich shows that a person's eye movements.
Were determined primarily by the task
17. The best description of the purpose of think-aloud protocols is that they are used to determine
What information a person is attending to while solving a problem
31. People tend to overestimate
What negative feelings will occur following a decision more so than positive feelings
36. Recent research on memory, based largely on fear conditioning in rats, indicates that
When a memory is reactivated, it becomes capable of being changed or altered, just as it was immediately after it was formed
8. Imagine that U.S. lawmakers are considering changing the driving laws and that you have been consulted as an attention expert. Given the principles of divided attention, in which of the following conditions would a person have the most difficulty with driving and therefore pose the biggest safety risk on the road
When the person is driving an unfamiliar vehicle that is more difficult to operate
33. The pathway leading from the striate cortex to the temporal lobe is known as the
Where pathway
17. The temporal lobe is
Where signals are received from the auditory system
2. According to Ebbinghaus's savings curve, savings is a function of
Word familiarity
7. Which of the following is NOT influenced by meaning
Word frequency effect
27. In the "finding faces in a landscape" demonstration in your text, once you perceive a particular grouping of rocks as a face, it is often difficult not to perceive them this way. This is due to
Your prior knowledge