Combo with "Pysch" and 11 others
Fluid Reasoning
"An apprentice is to a master as a novice is to an..." "How are an apple, a plum, and a banana different from a beet? Other items ask people to fill in the missing shape in a group of shapes and to tell a story of something that is going on in several pictures
Measuring Intelligence
"Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales, Fifth Edition (SB5). This is made up primarily of age-ranked questions. Questions get harder as you get older. Appropriate for ages 2 to 85+ years.
The Stanford-Binet, WAIS, and WISC have reliabilities of about ____.
+.9
Gifted Children
-Above 130 on IQ tests. -Less than 1% of the population scores above 140, these people are known as geniuses
Lewis Terman Experiment
-Terman selected 1,500 children with IQs of 140 or more. He followed this gifted group ("termites") into adulthood and found that most were quite successful. The correlation between IQ scores and school grades is .50. The link would be stronger but motivation, special talents, off-campus learning, and many other factors also affect grades. -IQ is not good at predicting success in art, music, writing, dramatics, science, and leadership (these are more in the creativity category) -IQ reveals potential, does not reveal success
Howard Gardner's eight different kinds of intelligence
1. Language (linguistic abilities): writer, lawyer, comedian 2. Logic and Math (numeric abilities): scientists, accountant, programmer 3. Visual and Spacial (pictorial abilities): engineer, inventor, artist 4. Music (musical abilities): composer, musician, music critic 5. Bodily-kinesthetic (physical abilities): dancer, athlete, surgeon 6. Intrapersonal (self-knowledge): poet, actor minister 7. Interpersonal (social abilities): psychologist, teacher, politian 8. Naturalist (an ability to understand the natural environment): biologist, medicine man, organic farmer.
Stages of Creative Thought
1. Orientation: As a first step, the person defines the problem and identifies its more important dimensions. 2. Preparation: In the second stage, creative thinkers saturate themselves with as much information about the problem as possible 3. Incubation: Most major problems produce a period during which all attempted solutions will be futile. At this point, problem solving may proceed on a subconscious level: Althought the problem seems to have been set aside, it is still "cooking" in the bachground. 4. Illumination: The stage of incubation is often ended by a rapid insight or series of insights. These produce the "Aha!" experience, often depicted in cartoons as a lightbulb appearing over the thinker's head. 5. Verification: The final step is to test and critically evaluate the solution obtained during the stage of illumination. If the solution proves faulty, the thinker reverts to the stage of incubation. pg. 331
Izard believes that there are ____ basic emotions, most of which ____ present in infancy. Although others claim that emotions such as pride and love should be added to the list, Izard contends that they are ____ of the basic emotions.
10 are combinations
You have just learned that your child is gifted and that his IQ score is over
130
Which of the following age groups can be categorized as part of emerging adulthood?
18-25
The bulk of personality change in adulthood occurs between ages
20-40.
Traditional intelligence tests before age ____ predict future aptitudes only modestly.
3
Studies in Europe and the US indicate that approximately ____ percent of men and ____ percent of women are exclusively homosexual. This finding suggests that popular estimates of the rate of homosexuality are ____.
3 or 4 1 or 2 high
The energy equivalent of a pound of fat is approximately ____ calories.
3500
Some organizations practice ____ feedback, in which employess not only rate themselves but are also rated by their supervisors and other colleagues.
360 degree
Research studies of identical and fraternal twins have led to the estimate that ____ percent of the variation in people's happiness ratings is heritable.
50
Which of the following individuals is most likely to use marijuana for a medicinal purpose? A. A cancer patient undergoing chemotherapy to reduce nausea B. A schizophrenic to reduce fearful hallucinations C. An alcoholic to reduce the withdrawal symptoms D. An Alzheimer's patient for memory loss
A cancer patient undergoing chemotherapy to reduce nausea
Which of the following students demonstrates a mastery-oriented style of motivation?
A child who tries harder despite failure at solving some problems
Conjunctive Concepts
A class of objects that have two or more features in common (for example, to qualify as an example of the concept an object must be both red and triangular). Another example: a motorcycle must have two wheels and an engine and handle bars. They are defined by the presence of two or more features.
optic nerve
A collection of millions of ganglion neurons that sends vast amounts of visual information, via the thalamus, to the brain.
Twin Studies
A comparison of the characteristics of twins who were raised together or separated at birth; used to identify the relative impact of heredity and environment. This allows us to estimate how much heredity and environment affect intelligence.
Relational Concepts
A concept defined by the relationship between features of an object or between an object and its surroundings (for example, "greater than", "lopsided") It is based on how an object relates to something else or how its features relate to one another. -larger -above -left -north -up-side down ex. brother because he has a brother that has the same parents
Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of concrete operations?
A decrease in reversibility
Functional Solution
A detailed, practical and workable solution
impoverished environments
A familial intellectual disability occurs due to
positive and negative instances
A father is helping his daughter to learn about animals. He points to a robin and eagle and explains that they are birds that fly, while the ostrich and penguin are examples of birds that do not fly. He then shows her pictures of a bat and a flying squirrel and tells her that these are not birds, but that the bat can actually fly and the flying squirrel can glide through the air. The To help his daughter learn the concept of "bird," the father is using
Conceptual Rule
A formal rule for deciding if an object or event is an example of a particular concept. Ex. a triangle must be a closed shape with three sides made of straight lines.
American Sign Language (ASL)
A gestural language. It is not pantomime or a code. It is a true language. Although ASL has a spatial grammar, syntax, and semantics all its own, both speech and signing follow similar universal language patterns.
an emotional barrier
A mental block to problem solving that is due to excessive self-criticism or involves an inablity to tolerate ambiguity is called
The biological basis of Rett Syndrome: A. A mutation that impacts the regulation of the epigenome B. Includes too many synapses in the cortex C. Is shown by a change in amygdala function D. Involves hyper - excitability of the brain
A mutation that impacts the regulation of the epigenome
an intellectual disability.
A person with an IQ score below 70 and a significant impairment in adaptive behaviors is said to have
Mechanical Solutions
A problem solution achieved by trial and error or by a fixed procedure based on learned rules. These are solutions to routine problems. These are achieved by trial and error or by rote. When a problem is solved by rote, thinking is guided by an algorithm, or a learned set of rules that always leads to a correct solution (ex. steps needed to divide one number into another.. not using a calculator)
Two-way bilingual education
A program in whcih English-speaking children and children with limited English proficiency are taught half the day in English and half in a second language.
If a researcher wants to be able to generalize about a population using data pulled from a sample, it is best to use: A. Experience sampling B. A random sample C. A descriptive study D. A convenience sample
A random sample
Base Rate
A second common error in judgment involves ignoring the base rate. It is the basic rate at which an event occurs over time; the basic probability of an event.
9. selective expert
A selective expert is someone who is notably more skilled and knowledgeable than the average person about which activities are personally meaningful.
Grammar
A set of rules for combining language units into meaningful speech or writing. One part of grammer is syntax (rules for ordering words when forming sentences). Syntax is important because rearranging words almost always changes the meaning of a sentence: "dog bites man" vs "man bites dog". Traditional grammar is concerned with "surface" language--the sentences we actually speak.
The Schachter-Singer two-factor theory of emotion states that: A. A situation evokes a physiological response that is followed by an emotion label B. A situation evokes a physiological label that is followed by a physiological response C. A situation evokes a physiological response that is followed by a physiological label D. A situation evokes an emotional label and the physiological response follows
A situation evokes a physiological response that is followed by an emotion label
Signal detection analysis
A technique used to determine the ability of the perceiver to separate true signals from background noise
What are the signs that may reveal a child is gifted?
A tendency to seek out older children and adults; am early fascination with explanations and problem solving; talking in complete sentences as early as 2 or 3 years of age; unusually good memory; interested in books or reading; showing of kindness, understanding, and corporation towards others. These lists go further than the g-factor
Culture-Fair Test
A test (such as an intelligence test) designed to minimize the importance of skills and knowledge that may be more common in some cultures than it is in others. These attempt to measure intelligence without being influenced by a person's verbal skills, cultural background, and educational level.
Insight
A thinker who suddenly solves a problem has experienced insight. Insight is a sudden mental reorganization of a problem that makes the solution obvious. Insight is so rapic and clear that we may wonder why we didn't see the solution sooner. These are usually based on reorganizing a problem. This allows us to see problems in new ways and makes their solutions seem obvious.
The mental activity of cognition includes all of the following EXCEPT
A. learning B. memory. C. attention. D. pragmatics. <<<<<
Artificial Intelligence and Cognition
AI is a long way from duplicating general human intelligence. AI systems like the Cubinator offer a way to probe some of our specific cognitive skills, or intelligences. 1. Computer Simulations are programs that attempt to dupicate specific human behaviors especially thinking, decision making, and problem solving. 2. Expert Systems are computer programs that respond s a human expert would. They have demystified some human abilities by converting complex skills into clearly stated rules a computer can follow. (can predict weather, play chess, read etc)
Worldwide, the fourth leading cause of death is ____, caused by the ____ which is spread primarily through the exchange of ____ and ___.
AIDS human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) blood semen
SAT reasoning test
Aaron and his fellow high school seniors are sitting in a large auditorium and are about to take a group multiple aptitude test that was designed to predict their chances of success in college. Aaron and his fellow classmates are most likely taking the
Causes of Intellectual Disability
About half of all cases of intellectual disability or organic, or related to physical disorders: Genetic abnormalities (missing genes, extra genes, defective genes) Fetal damage (prenatal damage from teratogens such as a disease, infection, or drugs) Birth injuries (lack of oxygen during delivery) Metabolic disorders (affect energy production and use in the body (intellectual disability) Malnutrition and exposure to lead, PCBs nad other toxins early in childhood can cause this too.
A (n) ____ is the minimum intensity of sensory stimulation required before the sensation is detected 50 percent of the time. A. Absolute threshold B. Minimum threshold C. Difference threshold D. Sensory adaptation
Absolute threshold
7. practical intelligence
According to Sternberg, practical intelligence involves the capacity to adapt one' behavior to the demands of the situation. This type of intelligence includes the intellectual skills used in everyday problem solving.
Represented Heuristic
According to Tversky and Kahneman it is a tendency to select wrong answers because they seem to match pre-existing mental categories. That is, we ten to give a choice greater weight if it seems to be representative of what we already know. Ex. In a courtroom, jurors are more likely to think a suspect is guilty if they look like someone that would commit a crime.
The compulsive use of a drug despite negative consequences is referred to as: A. Addiction B. Tolerance C. Dependence D. Withdrawal
Addiction
Which of the following would NOT be an example of an educational enrichment program for gifted children?
Advancing children to higher grades in school
IQ and Race
African-American children in the United States scored lower than European-American children. Japanese-American children scored above average in IQ.
insight
After working to solve a problem for three hours, Larry has just about "given up" until he suddenly realizes the "perfect" solution and wonders why he did not think of it sooner. Larry has just experienced
Which of the following drugs costs the United States the most in terms of lost workdays, medical treatment, and rehabilitation costs? A. Alcohol B. Cocaine and methamphetamine C. Marijuana D. Opiates
Alcohol
Which individual conducted pioneering work in the 1940s on women's sexual attitudes? A. Sigmund Freud B. Alfred Kinsey C. William Master D. Abraham Maslow
Alfred Kinsey
Sometimes the media displays graphs that are very misleading. In order to detect lying with graphs, an educated reader should: A. Examine the scale of the y-axis B. All choices C. Examine the scale of the x-axis D. Assess whether the graphs compare two variables that should logically be compared
All choices
A securely attached infant differs from one who is insecurely attached in terms of: A. All of the choices B. How they respond to strangers C. What they do when the attachment figure returns after an absence D. What they do when the attachment figure leaves
All of the choices
Flashbulb memories are memories: A. All of the choices B. That can result from highly emotional experiences C. That are quite detailed D. That includes very personal details even though it may result from a global event
All of the choices
Which of the following is an example of consciousness? A. Paying attention to your surroundings B. All of the choices C. Reflecting on your thoughts D. Moment - by - moment subjective experience
All of the choices
analytic intelligence
Although Sam is growing up in the inner city, he views the knowledge and skills he is learning in high school to be his "ticket" out of poverty. According to Robert Sternberg, Sam believes which of the following types of intelligence is the most important?
Harry has always been a vital and active individual. Recently however, he has begun having difficulty remembering newly learned information after brief periods of time. What disorder are his symptoms indicative of?
Alzheimer's disease
Which brain regions processes the emotional significance of stimuli and generates immediate emotional and behavioral reactions? A. Amygdala B. Prefrontal cortex C. Hypothalamus D. Hippocampus
Amygdala
Concepts
An idea that represents a category of objects or events. These help us identify important features of the world.
Clive Wearing had damage which resulted in: A. An inability to sing B. An inability to remember his caretakers C. An inability to play the piano D. An inability to remember his wife
An inability to remember his caretakers
Characteristics of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders include all of the following EXCEPT: A. Prenatal and postnatal growth retardation B. An increased prevalence in boys C. Decreases in social abilities D. Distinctive facial features
An increased prevalence in boys
Intelligence
An overall capacity to think rationally, act purposefully, and deal effectively with the environment. The core of intelligence is usually thought to consist of small general mental abilities (called the g-factor) in the areas of reasoning, problem solving, knowledge, memory, and successful adaptation to one's surroundings. Many psychologists accept an operational definition of intelligence by spelling out the procedures they use to measure it. Thus,by selecting items for an intelligence test, a psychologist is saying ina very direct way, "this is what i mean by intelligence. A test that measures memory, reasoning, and verbal fluency offers a very different definition of intelligence than one that measures strength of grip, shoes size etc.
According to Sternberg, successful intelligence requires which three abilities?
Analytical, creative, and practical abilities
Which of the following would NOT be considered a psychoactive drug? A. Antibiotics B. A stimulant such as Ritalin C. Alcohol D. Cocaine
Antibiotics
Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Any artificial system (often a computer program) that is capable of human-like problem solving or intelligent responding. This is valuable where speed, vast memory, and persistence are required. (playing a chess game or solving Rubik's cube)
psychometric test
Any measure used to assess a person's intelligence, aptitude, or other mental functions is referred to as a(n)
Heuristic
Any strategy or technique that aids problem solving, especially by limiting the number of possible solutions to be tried. Typically, a heuristic is a "rule of thumb" that reduces the number of alternatives thinkers must consider. Although this raises the odds of success, it does not guarentee a solution.
The term embryo describes the stage of development from: A. During the last trimester B. Conception to approximately 2 weeks after conception C. Approximately 2 weeks after conception to approximately 2 months D. Approximately 2 months to birth
Approximately 2 weeks after conception to approximately 2 months
Some people are generally happy and optimistic; other people are generally sad and pessimistic. One possible explanation for these general dispositions on life might be that optimistic people _____ and pessimistic people ____. A. Show cerebral asymmetry; show cerebral symmetry B. Show cerebral symmetry; show cerebral asymmetry C. Are right hemisphere dominant; are left hemisphere dominant D. Are left hemisphere dominant; are right hemisphere dominant
Are left hemisphere dominant; are right hemisphere dominant
Conflicts with parents during adolescence: A. Are most intense in mid-adolescence B. Are most intense in boys compared to girls C. Are most frequent in girls compared to boys D. Are most frequent in late adolescence
Are most intense in mid-adolescence
The philosopher ____ referred to humans as the ___ animal. From an evolutionary standpoint, social bonds in humans boosted our ancestors' ____ rates. As adults, those who formed ____ were more likely to ____ and co-nurture their offspring to maturity.
Aristotle social survival attachments reproduce
Heritability can best be understood: A. In the way it applies to individuals B. As the absolute value for calculating the relative influence of genes on behavior C. As a population estimate D. As a way to understand variations between genetic groups
As a population estimate
either: decayed of updated?
As new memories are formed, older memories are often
olfactory membrane
As we breathe in air through our nostrils, we inhale airborne chemical molecules, which are detected by the 10 million to 20 million receptor cells embedded in the ____________________ of the upper nasal passage
Visual-Spacial
Ask test takers to reproduce patterns of blocks and choose pictures that show how a piece of paper would look if it were folded or cut "Suppose that you are going east, then turn right, then turn right again, then turn left. In what direction are you facing now?"
Knowledge
Asseses what a person knows abut a wide range of topics "why is yeast added to bread dough?" "What does "cryptic" mean?
cretinism
At birth, Gordy was found to have a severe thyroid deficiency and was put on thyroid hormone replacement to prevent an intellectual disability resulting from the condition known as
Disjunctive concepts
At least one of several possible features. These are "either/or" concepts. To belong to the category, an item must have "this feature or that feature or another feature" Ex. a strike is either a swing and a miss or a pitch over the plate or a foul ball.
Being asked to count backwards by 3 from 100 after trying to memorize a list of words will have the biggest impact on your recall of the words: A. At the beginning of the list B. At all positions in the list equally C. In the middle of the list D. At the end of the list
At the end of the list
Why is memory not a perfect record of everything we see and experience? A. We need to remember details of events B. Neural networks are too limited C. Attention is limited D. It would take up too much of our limited long - term memory storage
Attention is limited
10. automatic processing
Automatic processing is thinking that occurs without deliberate, conscious thought, as in the way experts process most tasks.
Raya has been driving for over 10 years, but recently bought a new car. Given your knowledge about consciousness and behavior, you are likely to conclude that driving in general is a (n) _____ process, whereas driving in the new car is a (n) _____ process. A. Controlled; automatic B. Automatic; controlled C. Conscious; unconscious D. Unconscious; conscious
Automatic; controlled
Most estimates of the heritability of intelligence for middle-class white Americans are approximately
B. 50% inherited vs. 50% environmental.
Sophie has been shown two short, wide, transparent cylinders that contain equal amounts of water. The researcher now pours the liquid from one cylinder into a tall, thin cylinder. Sophie is asked which container has more liquid, and she replies that the tall container has the most, indicating a developmental error also known as an inability to
B. conserve.
Damage to this brain structure can produce symptoms resembling Parkinson's disease: A. Amygdala B. Hypothalamus C. Basal ganglia D. Hippocampus
Basal ganglia
Chimp Language
Beatrix and Allen Gardner used operant conditioning and imitation to teach a female chimp to use ASL. David Premack taught a chimp to use 130 "words" consisting of plastic chips arranged on a magnetized board.
If you hold a pencil in your teeth, forcing you to raise the edges of your lips into a sort of smile, you will ______, as predicted by the ______. A. Not feel any differently than you did before; facial feedback hypothesis B. Begin to feel happy; Cannon-Bard model C. Begin to feel happy; facial feedback hypothesis D. Not feel any different than you did before; circumflex model
Begin to feel happy; facial feedback hypothesis
Who would be most likely to agree with the statement, "Psychologists should study that which is observable?" A. Cognitive psychologist B. Behavioral psychologist C. Industrial / organizational psychologist D. Developmental psychologist
Behavioral psychologist
lens
Behind the pupil, focuses light on the retina
The French psychologist who devised a test to predict the success of children in school was ___. Predictions were made by comparing children's chronological ages with their ___ ages, which were determined by the test. This test ___ designed to measure inborn intelligence; Binet leaned toward an ___ explanation of intelligence.
Binet mental was not
Dreams occurring during REM sleep are ______; dreams occurring during non-REM sleep are ______. A. Bizarre and highly emotional; dull and mundane B. Dull and mundane; bizarre and highly emotional C. Likely to include auditory hallucinations and loss of time and space; likely to include visual hallucinations and illogical content D. Likely to include visual hallucinations and illogical content; likely to include auditory hallucinations
Bizarre and highly emotional; dull and mundane
With respect to the nature / nurture debate, psychological scientists now believe that: A. The issue is largely irrelevant to understanding the mind, the brain, and behavior B. Nature is the most important factor in understanding the mind, the brain, and behavior C. The mind, the brain, and behavior are largely a matter of nurture D. Both nature and nurture are important in understanding the mind, the brain, and behavior
Both nature and nurture are important in understanding the mind, the brain, and behavior
If you were a professor, how would you best get your students to study regularly? A. By providing a detailed syllabus B. By making the midterm difficult C. By requesting politely that they study D. By giving pop quizzes
By giving pop quizzes
Early on in the development of his theory of cognitive development, Piaget made use of which method(s)?
C. Interviews and observation
In administering which of the following intelligence tests are the examiners instructed to teach children who fail early items how to complete them before proceeding further?
C. Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children
A human newborn A. Cannot discriminate brightness and color B. Can clearly focus on objects up to 50 feet away C. Can discriminate tiny stripes from gray patches D. Can tell the difference between her or his mother's voice and that of a stranger
Can tell the difference between her or his mother's voice and that of a stranger
In the 1920s, physiologist Walter ____ began studying the effect of stress on the body. He discovered that the hormones ____ and ____ are released into the bloodstream in response to stress. THis and other bodily changes due to stress are mediated by the ____ nervous system, thus preparing the body for ____.
Cannon epinephrine (adrenaline) norephinephrine (noradrenaline) sympathetic fight or flight
Sensorineural hearing loss
Caused by damage to the cilia or to the auditory nerve
Conductive hearing loss
Caused by physical damage to the ear (such as to the eardrums or ossicles) that reduce the ability of the ear to transfer vibrations from the outer ear to the inner ear.
Marianna takes the bus to school every day. One morning, a different bus is used on her route. Marianna does not notice the change, even though her usual bus is blue and white and the new bus is green and black. Marianna is showing: A. Change blindness B. Tip - of - the - tongue C. Blocking D. Transience
Change blindness
Chapter 11
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 12
A leading theoretician, _______, argued that there is such a thing as general intelligence, which he called ____________.
Charles Spearman;g
Which of the following statements is true according to Piaget's theory of cognitive development?
Children play an active role in organizing and structuring knowledge
Like methamphetamine, _____ increases the concentration of dopamine in the synapse. A. Heroin B. Alcohol C. Cocaine D. MDMA
Cocaine
_______ refers to mental activity and behavior through which human beings acquire, remember, and learn to use knowledge.
Cognition
Fraternal Twins
Come from two separate eggs fertilized at the same time. IQ's of these are more similar than the IQs of ordinary siblings only because parents treat twins more alike than ordinary siblings, resulting in a closer match in IQs.
Which of the following is NOT one of Kohlberg's stages of moral reasoning? A. conventional B. preconventional C. postconventional D. Concrete operations
Concrete operations
The process by which an environmental stimulus and behavior are connected is known as: A. Cognition B. Episodic memory C. Behavior modification D. Conditioning
Conditioning
As described in the text, Harlow did an experiment with infant rhesus monkeys, requiring them to make a choice between an imitation mother that provided contact comfort and one that provided food. The results demonstrate that for this species: A. Food is the most important reinforcement B. Contact comfort is more important than food, particularly during stress C. Food is used as a method for tension reduction in the young D. Infants were distressed because the "mother" providing contact comfort did not also supply food
Contact comfort is more important than food, particularly during stress
Conditional Statement
Contains a qualification, often in the if/then form. "If sarah take apple, then mary give sarah chocolate"
To understand what infants know, researchers use experimental paradigms that take advantage of all the following processes EXCEPT: A. Preferential looking B. Crawling C. Orienting D. Habituation
Crawling
Brett, a graduate student who generates many innovative research ideas:
Creative intelligence
What distinguishes creative thinking from more routine problem solving?
Creative thinking involves all these thinking styles, plus fluency, flexibility, and originality. By counting the number of times you showed each of these, we could rate your creativity or capacity for divergent thinking. Rather than repeating learned solutions, creative thinking produces new answers, ideas, or patterns.
According to ____, human emotional expressions evolved because they helped our ancestors communicate before language developed. It has been adaptive for us to ____ faces in particular ____.
Darwin interpret contexts
All of the following changes begin to happen at the start of puberty EXCEPT: A. Development of primary sex characteristics B. Decreases in hormone levels C. Development of secondary sex characteristics D. A rapid, hormonally driven increase in height and weight
Decreases in hormone levels
Harry was reading the textbook for his potions class and was trying to relate the material to his own experiences. According to the levels of processing model of memory, this would be considered
Deep processing
General Solution
Defines the requirements for success, but not in enough detail to guide further action
Binocular depth cues
Depth cues that are created by retinal image disparity—that is, the space between our eyes, and thus require the coordination of both eyes.
Monocular depth cues
Depth cues that help us perceive depth using only one eye
sensation
Detection of energy from the environment and initiating neural action in response to it is called ____________.
Identical Twins
Develop from a single egg and have identical genes
Humanism, championed by Maslow and Rogers, changed therapy by:
Developing new techniques for questioning and listening to patients
Which of the following is NOT one of the important ideas that Piaget introduced to the field of cognitive psychology?
Development is the product of social interaction between partners.
Dr. Ebrahim examines how children's friendships change through the elementary and middle school years. Dr. Ebrahim is a(n) ___ psychologist. A. Developmental B. Cognitive C. Organizational D. Personality
Developmental
Tests of Creativity
Divergent Thinking. Tests of divergent thinking seem to tap something quite different from intelligence. Generally there is little correlation between creativity tests and IQ test scores. Each of these tests can be scored for fluency, flexibility, and originality. Divergent thining is an important part of creativity but there is more to it. To be creative, the solution to a problem must be more than novel, unusual, or original. It must also be practical if it is an invention and sensible if it is an idea. Creative person brings reasoning and critical thinking to bear on new ideas once they are produced.
Which of the following is NOT one of the issues on which scientists have focused in formulating theories of intelligence?
Does intelligence decrease throughout the lifespan as brain cells age?
Research on possible factors in the development of male homosexuality has found a casual role: A. For early sexual experience with same sex adults B. For underlying maladaptive personality structures C. Does not exist for any family or environmental factors D. For family patterns with dominant mothers and submissive fathers
Does not exist for any family or environmental factors
Mental retardation sometimes has a physical basis, such as ____, a genetic disorder caused by an extra chromosome.
Down syndrome
Cognition
Dr. Hart's research interests include the mental activities involved in processing images, concepts, words, rules, and symbols. He would best be described as studying
Logical Thought
Drawing conclusions on the basis of formal principles of reasoning. This is proceeding from given information to new conclusions on the basis of explicit rules)
Kanzi's Lexigrams
Duane Rumbaugh and Sue Savage-Rumbaugh. The chimp is given a keyboard with a lexigram (geometric symbol) on each key and using this he can create sentences several words long. Kanzi's ability to invent a simple grammar may help us better understand the roots of human language. It is certainly the stronget answer yet to critics.
Giftedness
Either the possession of a high IQ or special talents or aptitudes
Common Barriers to Problem Solving
Emotional Barriers: inhibition and fear of making a fool of oneself, fear of making a mistake, inability to tolerate ambiguity, excessive self-critism Cultural Barriers: values that hold that fantasy is a waste of time; that playfulness is for children only; that reason, logic and numbers are good; that feelings, intuitions, pleasure, and humor are bad or have n value in the serious business of problem solving. Learned Barriers: conventions about uses (functional fixedness), meanings, possibilities, taboos Perceptual Barriers: habits leading to a failure to identify important elements of a problem
What are the three steps in memory information processing? A. Encoding, retrieval, storage B. Encoding, storage, retrieval C. Input, storage, retrieval D. Input, processing, output
Encoding, storage, retrieval
The memory of your wedding day is an example of a (n): A. Semantic memory B. Declarative memory C. Episodic memory D. Procedural memory
Episodic memory
One of the best ways to remember factual information is to relate it to something personal. In this way, you are taking advantage of your ____ memory to aid retrieval from your ____ memory. A. Implicit; explicit B. Episodic; semantic C. Semantic; episodic D. Explicit; implicit
Episodic; semantic
IQ and Environment
Evidence for an environmental view of intelligence comes from adoption studies. Orphans lose points on IQ becuase they dont have parents, love etc.
Which of the following has NOT been found to increase helpless responses and lower achievement motivation in children?
Examiner's emphasis on learning goals.
Experts
Expert skills are based on aquired strategies (learned heuristics) and specific organized knowledge (systematic information). Experts are better able to see the true nature of problems and to define them in terms of general principles.
What is the process whereby the conditioned response is weakened when it is no longer presented with the unconditioned stimulus? A. Acquisition B. Extinction C. Reward D. Second - order conditioning
Extinction
2. A person's IQ is unaffected by school achievement
F Intellectual functions as measure by IQ tests is powerfully influenced by school achievement
5. By the age 60, most people decline in event the most basic cognitive abilities
F Many adults show intellectual improvement over most of adulthood, with not decline, even by age 60.
7. All people reach an intellectual peak in adolescence.
F Psychologist now agree that intelligence does NOT peak in adolescences and decline thereafter. .
3. To date. Cross-sectional research as shown a gradual increase in intellectual ability.
F. Cross-sectional research shows a decline in intellectual ability.
In research on signal detection theory, incorrectly "detecting" stimulus that was not presented in a trial is called a: A. Transduction B. False alarm C. Correct rejection D. Response bias
False alarm
If you try to remember a list of words that relate to the idea of "sleep" and later report remembering that you heard the word sleep in the list (even though it was not there), you are suffering from a(n): A. False memory B. Engram C. Repressed memory D. Sleep disorder
False memory
Hot Cognition
Feelings also tend to affect good judgement. When we must make a choice, our emotional reactions to various alternatives can determine what intuitively seems to be the right answer. Emotions such as fear, hope anxiety, liking or disgust can eliminate possibilities from consideration or promote them to the top of the list.
Our perception of the world is most like a: A. Video camera that takes movies with sound B. Film that has been edited to convey a theme C. Digital camera that takes snapshots D. Cell phone camera that takes movies without sound
Film that has been edited to convey a theme
Setting dates exactly one month apart for exams in an example of testing on a: A. Random assignment B. Variable interval C. Fixed interval D. Variable ratio
Fixed interval
If you trained a rat to fear a flashing light by pairing it with a painful electric shock, what would be the conditioned stimulus? A. Electric shock B. Flashing light C. Extinction D. Fear
Flashing light
In which one of the following ways does formal operational thought differ from concrete operational thought?
Formal operational thought is limited to considering alternatives directly observable in the physical world
Tabitha has become interested in thinking about hypothetical situations and wondering about different possibilities that could exist in the future. Which of Piaget's stages is she in?
Formal operations
individual neurons cannot fire fast enough
Frequency theory cannot be used to account for why we hear higher pitched sounds because _______________.
learned
Functional fixedness, or conventions about uses or meanings, fall under the category of which barriers to problem solving?
The optic nerve is composed of axons of: A. Fovea cells B. Bipolar cells C. Ganglion cells D. Rods and cones
Ganglion cells
If you look at a square made up of alternating red and blue stripes for several minutes, then look immediately at a blank white sheet of paper, you will see a square with alternating green and yellow stripes. This effect results from pairs of _____ that work _____. A. Ganglion cells; in concert B. Ganglion cells; in opposition C. Cones; in opposition D. Cones; in concert
Ganglion cells; in opposition
pain
Gate-control theory has been formulated to explain our sense of ___________.
Allie is afraid of her neighbor's large dog. She then becomes afraid of any dog she sees on the street, and eventually she fears even pictures of dogs or toy dogs. This change in her fear of dogs represents
Generalization
cognitive interview.
Geraldine witnesses a robbery in the parking lot at her college. At the police station, she is shown one photo at a time of possible suspects and is asked if this is the person she saw. Geraldine is undergoing a
Which of the following is an example of telegraphic speech?
Give doll
You are standing at the intersection of two perpendicular roads. You see one road running north - south and another road running east - west. You do not see one road running north and then turning east and another road running east then turning north. Which Gestalt principle accounts for what you do and do not see? A. Similarity B. Closure C. Parallelism D. Good continuation
Good continuation
Who developed a stage theory of moral development?
Gould
Which of the following is NOT a primary emotion? A. Disgust B. Sadness C. Fear D. Guilt
Guilt
Short - Term Memory: A. Has a limited capacity B. Lasts a lifetime C. Retains information for up to an hour D. Has an unlimited capacity
Has a limited capacity
Individuals with Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome: A. Have XX chromosomes and a female appearance B. Have XX chromosomes and a male appearance C. Have XY chromosomes and a male appearance D. Have XY chromosomes and a female appearance
Have XY chromosomes and a female appearance
Noam Chomsky
He focused instead on the unspoken rules we use to change core ideas into various sentences. Chomsky believes that we do not learn all the sentences we might ever say. Rather, we actively create them by applying transformation rules to universal, core patterns.
High-quality programs for disadvantaged children, such as the government-funded ____ program, increase children's school readiness; that is, they increase their ____, creating better attitudes toward learning.
Head Start emotional intelligence
conductive
Hearing loss resulting from damage to the bones of the middle ear is called ___________ hearing loss.
Even though he has already memorized his notes, Hao reviews them every night for the two weeks before the exam. This strategy is likely to _____ his performance due to _____. A. Help; cramming B. Hurt; spreading out his practice C. Hurt; cramming D. Help; spreading out his practice
Help; spreading out his practice
Which one of the following has NOT been associated with Head Start participation?
Higher IQ scores in adolescence
The strange-situation test was designed to allow psychologists to assess: A. How infants respond to separation and reunion with their mothers B. An infant's tendencies to seek or avoid novelty C. The level of social skill an infant has acquired D. A mother's response to a fearful infant
How infants respond to separation and reunion with their mothers
A specific section of the basilar membrane will fire maximally to signal the pitch of the tone
How would you perceive a 16,000 Hz tone?
Multiple Intelligences
Howard Garder's theory that there are seveal specialized types of intellectual ability
A group of rats has had an area of their brains damaged, resulting in a disruption of sexual behavior. The area that was damages was most likely the: A. Cerebellum B. Amygdala C. Hypothalamus D. Prefrontal cortex
Hypothalamus
Performance Intelligence
INtelligence measures by solving puzzles, assembling objects, completing pictures, and other nonverbal tasks
Prototypes
Ideal models to identify concepts. It is a model used as a prime example of a particular concept. ex. Robin
Synaethesia
Images cross normal sensory barriers ex. spiced chicken tastes "pointy", for another pain is the color orange and third, human voices unleash a flood of colors and tastes. Most of us use images to think, remember and solve problems. p 315
Basic units of thought
Images: picture-like mental representations Concepts: ideas that represent categories of objects or events Language: consists of words or symbols and rules for combining them
Your father has not ridden a bicycle since he was in college, about 20 years ago. Your father's remembering how to ride the bike without falling will call upon ____ memory. His remembering the names of the parts of the bike will call upon ____ memory. A. Episodic; declarative B. Declarative; episodic C. Implicit; semantic D. Semantic; episodic
Implicit; semantic
could be answered by an average child of that age.
In Binet's test of intelligence, items included at each age level were those which
5. analytic intelligence
In Robert Sternberg's theory, analytic intelligence includes all the mental processes that foster academic proficiency by making efficient learning, remembering, and thinking possible.
6. creative intelligence
In Stermberg's theory, creative intelligence involves the capacity for flexible and innovating thinking.
According to the work of Shepard Siegel, an addict's usual large dose is most likely to produce an overdose in which setting? A. The setting is unimportant B. In a novel setting C. None of the choices D. In a familiar setting
In a novel setting
hit and false alarm
In a signal detection task, which of the following two outcomes both involve a "YES" response from the person being tested?
Understanding
In problem solving, a deeper comprehension of the nature of the problem.
Flexibility
In tests of creativity, flexibility is indicated by the number of different types of solutions produced. This is the number of times you shift from one class of possible uses to another.
Fluency
In tests of creativity, fluency refers to the total number of solutions produced. This is defined as the total number of suggestions you are able to make.
Originality
In tests of creativity, originality refers to how novel or unusual solutions are. This is how novel or unusual your ideas are.
Summary of IQ and heredity
In the final analysis, intelligence reflects development as well as potential, nurture as well as nature. Moreover, the fact that intelligence is partly determined by heredity tells us little if any real value. Genes are fixed at birth. Improving the environments in which children learn and grow is the main way in which we acn ensure that they reach their full potential.
Rett Syndrome: A. Is seen in male children only B. Includes overly social behavior C. Includes areas of very high functioning in the cognitive domain D. Includes degeneration of function after a period of typical development
Includes degeneration of function after a period of typical development
A baseball player notices that when he touched his hat in a certain manner, his pitch was very fast. He now touches his hat every time he pitches because he believes that it makes his pitches faster. This is an example of: A. Assuming that above average performance is typical B. Inappropriate or bad comparisons C. A skewed distribution of performance D. Incorrectly believing that correlation is causation
Incorrectly believing that correlation is causation
Sexual orientation and gender identity are: A. Are dependent on each other with gender identity arising from sexual orientation B. Are dependent on each other with sexual orientation arising from gender identity C. Independent from each other D. Are both completely a function of parental behavior
Independent from each other
Women students in ___ rate their actual shape as closer to the cultural ideal. In ____ cultures, however, the rise in eating disorders has coincided with an increasing number of women having a poor ____.
India Western body image
Which of the following statements is correct?
Infant intelligence tests are useful in identifying neuromotor abnormalities.
Stored Images
Information from memory. We use these to apply past experiences to problem solving.
"Reverse Vision"
Information from the eyes normally activates the brain's primary visual area, creating an image. Other brain areas the help us recongnize the imafges by relating it to sotred knowledge. When you form a mental image, the system works in reverse. Brain areas where memories are stored send signals back to the visual cortexx where once again an image is created. For example: if you visualize a friend's face right now, the area of your brain that specializes in perceiving face will become more active.
rehearsal
Information is quickly "dumped" from short-term memory and forever lost unless you silently say the information over and over to yourself through a process known as
Which of the following sequences best reflects the order of events in a typical experimental session? A. Informed consent -> debriefing -> experiment B. Debriefing -> informed consent -> experiment C. Experiment -> informed consent -> debriefing D. Informed consent -> experiment -> debriefing
Informed consent -> experiment -> debriefing
Erikson's final stage of adult development is focused on the issues of: A. Stagnation versus productivity B. Competence versus incompetence C. Integrity versus despair D. Isolation versus intimacy
Integrity versus despair
observed directly.
Intelligence cannot be
Verbal Intelligence
Intelligence measures by answering questions involving vocabulary, general information, arithmetic, and other language- or symbol-oriented tasks
Intuition
Intuition is a quick, impulsive thought that does not make use of formal logic or clear reasoning. It may provide fast answers, btu it can also be misleading and sometimes disastrous.
Wayne is pretty good at certain things, such as solving problems and counting up to 20 objects; however, he is not very good at explaining why he solves problems in particular ways. Wayne is probably still in what substage of development?
Intuitive substage of the preoperational period
The school of Gestalt: A. Includes the role of environment on behavior B. Examines how social situations influence behavior C. Is based on scientifically researched forms of therapy D. Is based on the idea that the whole is different than the sum of its parts
Is based on the idea that the whole is different than the sum of its parts
This scientist won a Novel Prize for his work on the digestive system, work that made a fundamental contribution to the study of conditioned responses. A. Ivan Pavlov B. B. F. Skinner C. Daniel Kahneman D. John Watson
Ivan Pavlov
The psychologist who contributed significantly to our understanding of the cognitive development of children is
Jean Piaget.
Lesser and colleagues' (1965) research on patterns of cognitive skills found that the greatest differences between lower- and middle-class children were for
Jews
Four early psychologists suddenly appear in the psychology department of an American university. Which psychologist would be most dismayed by the emphasis on mental processes in today's psychology?
John Watson
One of the first researcher to recognize the problems of cross-sectional and lognitudinal studies of intelligence was ______.
K. Warner Schaie
maintenance rehearsal.
Keeping a short-term memory alive by silently repeating it is called
muscular sensations
Kinesthetic imagery is created from remembered or imagined
Kinesthetic Imagery
Kinesthetic images are created from muscular sensations. Such images help us think about movements and actions. Kinesthetic sensations can guide the flow of ideas. These are important in music, sports, dance, skateboarding, martial arts and other movement-oriented skills. People with good kinesthetic imagery learn such skills faster than those with poor imagery.
is a good predictor of his or her IQ later in life.
Knowing a child's IQ at age 11
A relatively permanent change in behavior that is not due to maturation but is due to experience is called: A. Habituation B. Behaviorism C. Operant shaping D. Learning
Learning
Lower, lower; higher, higher
Longer sound waves have ________ frequency and produce a__________ pitch, whereas shorter waves have ________ frequency and a ________ pitch.
Adam is studying the intelligence of a group of people as they progress through early adulthood to old age. Her approach should involve: A. Random assignment B. Experimental research C. Cross-sectional research D. Longitudinal research
Longitudinal research
Which of the following relationships is NOT correct? A. Cocaine - dopamine receptors B. Marijuana - THC receptors C. Opiates - opiate receptors D. MDMA - acetylcholine receptors
MDMA - acetylcholine receptors
validity
Many "free" tests you encounter, such as those found in magazines and on the Internet, have little or no
The 2 researchers who identified a four-stage sexual response cycle are ____ and ____. In order, the stages of the cycle are the ____ phase, the ____ phase, _____ and the ____ phase.
Masters Johnson excitement plateau orgasm resolution
Alcohol intake by the biological father: A. Has been shown to impact male offspring more than female offspring B. May impact the fetus through epigenetic mechanisms C. Will have no impact on the fetus provided there is no contact after birth D. Will only impact his offspring through genetic risk for alcoholism
May impact the fetus through epigenetic mechanisms
Unusual Uses Test
Measures divergent thinking. You would be asked to think of as many uses as possible for some object, such as the plastic containers.
Anagrams Test
Measures divergent thinking. You would be given a word such as creativity and asked to make as many new words as possible by rearranging he letters.
Consequences Test
Measures divergent thinking. You would list the consequences that would follow a basic change in the world. For example, "What would happen if everyone suddenly lost their sense of balance and could no longer stay upright?"
SB5
Measures five cognitive factors (types of mental abilities) that make up general intelligence: 1. fluid reasoning 2. knowledge 3. quantitative reasoning 4. visual-spatial processing 5. working memory (each with verbal and nonverbal questions) (Best suited for children and adolesence)
Working Memory
Measures the ability to use short-term memory "Correctly remember the order of colored beads on a stick" "After hearing several sentences, name the last word form each sentence"
Hearing, balance, skin senses
Mechanical reactions are the basis of which sense(s)?
Which of the following statements regarding mediational systems is NOT true?
Mediational systems include sensation and perception.
Deviation IQs
Modern Tests use these. They are an IQ obtained statistically from a person's relative standing in his or her age group; that is, how far above or below average the person's score was relative to other scores. (This goes by percentile)
taste and smell
Molecular reactions are the basis of which sense(s)?
How is Term's more successful Termites differ from the less successful?
Most of them had educated parents who taught them to value learning. They also had intellectual determination, which is a desire to know, excel and perserve.
Prototypes
Most of us tend to think of and identify concepts in terms of ideals or models called?
Relative to human biological evolution, cultural evolution has occurred: A. Much faster B. About the same speed C. Much slower D. No way to know
Much faster
recall
Naming the seven dwarfs with no hints or clues involves measuring memory by
Occasionally, Jon will fall asleep while working with a customer. Jon is experiencing which sleep disorder? A. Sleep apnea B. Insomnia C. Narcolepsy D. All of the choices
Narcolepsy
Students who study a little for tests tend to make more errors on tests; students who study a lot tend to make fewer errors; If a researcher collected data on such test scores, she would likely spot a(n): A. Negative correlation B. Variable standard deviation C. Positive correlation D. Inferential statistic
Negative correlation
Taking away a child's video game for bad behavior is a form of: A. Positive reinforcement B. Negative reinforcement C. Negative punishment D. Positive punishment
Negative punishment
"Obama Effect"
Obama is providign a role model, inspiring better acedemic performance in African-American students.
In scientific research, a researcher's expectations about a study can lead to systematic errors in observation. This phenomenon is called: A. The third variable problem B. The directionality problem C. Critical thinking skills D. Observer bias
Observer bias
Familial Intellectual Disability
Occurs mostly in very poor households where nutrition, intellectual stimulation, medical care, and emotional support may be inadequate. This is based largely on an impoverished environment. Thus, better nutrition, education, and early childhood enrichment programs can prevent many cases of intellectual disability.
The precise way a researcher measures and defines a variable is known as the: A. Central tendency B. Response accuracy C. Operational definition D. Stimulus judgment
Operational definition
According to Piaget, what is the process by which simple mental structures are combined into more complex systems?
Organization
For psychologists, theory of mind refers to: A. Our ability to recognize that others have mental states that might explain their behavior B. The tendency to explain our own behavior in terms of environmental factors and the behavior of others in terms of their mental states C. The belief that nonhumans have minds that are much like our own D. The fact that the mind cannot be observed directly but must be inferred
Our ability to recognize that others have mental states that might explain their behavior
The James - Lange theory of emotion states that: A. The emotions we experience cause our bodily reactions B. None of the choices C. Our emotions and bodily responses occur simultaneously D. Our perception of bodily responses leads to our emotions
Our perception of bodily responses leads to our emotions
Digestive tract hormone that signals fullness: ____.
PYY
gate-control theory of pain
Pain is determined by the operation of two types of nerve fibers in the spinal cord. One set of smaller nerve fibers carries pain from the body to the brain, whereas a second set of larger fibers is designed to stop or start the flow of pain.
Of the following family characteristics, which is the LEAST likely to be associated with higher IQ scores in the children?
Parents who are strict and demanding
Jonas has experienced a relatively severe right hemisphere stroke. As a result, he has been diagnosed with hemineglect. That is, he is unable to notice anything on the left side of his body. The location of the stroke is most likely within the: A. Frontal lobe B. Temporal lobe C. Parietal lobe D. Occipital lobe
Parietal lobe
Mental Images
People with good imaging abilities tend to score higher on tests of creativity. Stephen Kosslyn found that smaller an image is, the harder it is to "see" its details.
Hamdi wakes up in the middle of the night and tries to see the clock in the dim light. The numbers are very faint. He will more likely be able to read the time if he looks at the clock with his _____ because it has the largest number of ______. A. Fovea; rods B. Periphery; rods C. Periphery; cones D. Fovea; cones
Periphery; rods
Recent research in the area of conservation has consistently found that
Piaget underestimated the capacities of young children
Which of the following is true of the impact of Piaget's theory on cognitive development?
Piaget's ideas lead to a wealth of new research on cognitive development.
images
Picture-like mental representations are called
If a key is pressed on a piano, the frequency of the resulting sound will determined the _______, and the amplitude will determine the ______ of the perceived musical note.
Pitch; loudness
The early Greek philosopher ____ concluded that individuals differed in their natural endowments.
Plato
Dion keeps having nightmares and flashbacks about his brief time in the military. His chronic anxiety is most likely due to which disorder? A. Posttraumatic stress disorder B. Obsessive-compulsive disorder C. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder D. Attention deficit disorder
Posttraumatic stress disorder
Street Smart
Practical Intelligence
_____________ aspect concerns the ability to adapt to the contextual demands of a given situation. This type of thinking is particularly useful for managing the conflicting personalities is a______or __________.
Practical; family; organization
Which one of the following stages does NOT occur during the sensorimotor stage of development?
Preconceptual period
Jay believes that the world revolves around him and that the universe was created for him. Jay has a lot of difficulty seeing any point of view besides his own. This egocentricity is characteristic of what substage of the preoperational stage of development?
Preconceptual substage
Which of the following is NOT one of the primary purposes of intelligence testing?
Predicting income and success.
Bonnie, age 4, is a very bright and imitative child. The other day, Grandma took Bonnie for a car ride where Bonnie saw a train speeding down the tracks. Today, Bonnie has a set of blocks she is pushing while saying, "Choo-choo, toot-toot." Bonnie is probably in what stage of development, according to Piaget?
Preoperational
Alice's 3-month-old baby, Joshua, finds sucking his fingers very pleasurable after accidentally placing his hand in his mouth one day before nap time. Joshua now prefers to suck on his fingers instead of his blue pacifier. Joshua is most likely in which substage of Piaget's sensorimotor stage of development?
Primary circular reactions
Positive reinforcement and negative reinforcement are similar in that both: A. Involve the removal of a stimulus B. Produce an increase in the probability of a behavior C. Produce a decrease in the probability of a behavior D. Involve the administration of a stimulus
Produce an increase in the probability of a behavior
When people meet on the Internet, they have the freedom to present themselves in any way that they please. Research on mating strategies suggests that to be most successful in generating interest from the opposite sex, men should present themselves as ____ and women should present themselves as _____. A. Professionally successful; intelligent and kind B. Intelligent; kind C. Professionally successful; physically attractive D. Physically attractive; physically attractive
Professionally successful; physically attractive
Consider the pattern: XXY XXY XXY. People perceive this pattern as consisting of three groups of three letters each. Which Gestalt principle accounts for this outcome? A. Proximity B. Similarity C. Common region D. Good continuation
Proximity
In the 1960's researchers ______and _________ differentiated two aspects of intelligence, which they called _______ and __________intelligence.
Raymond Cattel; John Horn: fluid; crystallized
joints, ligaments, and muscles
Receptors for proprioception are located in the _______________________.
Penny's new baby, Trevor, is 3 weeks old. Trevor finds natural satisfaction and contentment by sucking on the nipple of his bottle. Trevor is in what substage of Piaget's sensorimotor stage of development?
Reflex activity
People with good imaging abilities score higher on creativity measures.
Regarding the use of mental imagery, which of the following statements is TRUE?
Suppose you need to learn the following list: "pen, ship, log, cup, paper, radio, rose, sun, chair, glass, fork, and wave." Which of the following types of study would lead you to the best recall? A. Think about whether each word rhymes with 'den' B. Count the number of vowels in each word C. Passively listen to the list while counting backward from 100 by 3s D. Relate each word to a fond childhood memory
Relate each word to a fond childhood memory
exposure to loud noises
Research indicates that sensorineural hearing loss is usually caused by ___________.
On Monday, Manuel interviewed for a job that he really wants. The interviewer told Manuel that he would call on Friday to tell Manuel if he got the job. On late Friday afternoon, Manuel is in the shower, straining to hear the phone above the nose of the water. Whenever he hears a sound, he thinks it is the phone. Manuel is showing _____, a concept describes in ______. A. Response bias; signal detection theory B. Sensory adaptation; psychophysics C. Sensory adaptation; signal detection theory D. Response bias; psychophysics
Response bias; signal detection theory
Which theory of sleep would explain why Jon slept an extra four hours after running a marathon? A. Facilitation of learning theory B. All choices C. Restorative theory D. Circadian rhythms theory
Restorative theory
The phase of information processing that is most similar to a Google search is: A. Encoding B. Rehearsal C. Storage D. Retrieval
Retrieval
The researcher who disagrees with Zajonc and argues that most emotions require cognitive processing is ____. According to this view, emotions arise when we ____ an event as beneficial or harmful to our well being.
Richard Lazarus appraise
The nature of Insight
Robert Sternberg and Janet Davidson believe that insight involves three abilities: 1. Selective encoding which refers to selecting information that is relevant to a problem while ignoring distractions. 2. Selective combination or bringing together seemingly unrelated bits of useful information. 3. Selective comparison. This is the ability to compare new problems with old information or with problems already solved.
practical
Robert Sternberg referred to a person with "street smarts" as having __________ intelligence.
analytic
Robert Sternberg referred to people with "book learning" as having __________ intelligence
The theorist who has proposed that intelligence is composed of 3 fundamental aspects is ___________. The __________aspect consists of the mental processes that foster academic proficiency by making efficient learning, remembering, and thinking possible. This type of thinking is particularly valued at _________(what stage of life)?
Robert Sternberg; analytic; emerging adulthood.
The Cannon - Bard Theory argues that physiological responses and emotional experiences occur: A. Sequentially beginning with emotional experiences B. Sequentially and independently C. Roughly simultaneously and independently D. Sequentially beginning with physiological responses
Roughly simultaneously and independently
Transformation Rules
Rules by which a simple declarative sentence may be changed to other voices or forms (past tense, passive voice, and so forth). We use these rules to change a simple declarative sentence to other voices or forms (past tense, passive voice, and so forth)
Modern Intelligence test orginated with attempts to measure the mental abilities of children in Paris
SB5
Which of the following statements is true?
Schemata change as children develop.
Beverly's baby, Grant, at the age of 6 months loves to shake his yellow rattle, which makes soft sounds interesting to Grant. This child is probably in what substage of Piaget's sensorimotor stage of development?
Secondary circular reactions
ability to choose information that is relevant to a problem while ignoring distractions.
Selective encoding is the
8. selective optimization with compensation
Selective optimization with compensation is Paul and Margaret Baltes' theory describing the tendency of adults to select certain aspects of their lives to focus on, and optimize, to compensate for declines in other areas.
Anna is reading her psychology text. The activation of receptors in her retina is called _____; her interpretation of the stimuli as particular words is termed _____. A. Perception; perception as well B. Perception; sensation C. Sensation; sensation as well D. Sensation; perception
Sensation; perception
Which of the following is the correct order of Piaget's stages of intellectual development?
Sensorimotor; preoperational; concrete; formal
sweet, salty, sour, bitter, piquancy (spicy), and umami (savory)
Sensors that are located on the surface of the tongue respond to six basic tastes. What are the six basic tastes?
When Petra jumps into a cold lake, she feels as though she is freezing. After a few minutes, she no longer notices the cold and feels comfortable in the water. This change is an example of: A. Coarse coding B. Sensory adaptation C. Just noticeable difference D. Sensory threshold
Sensory adaptation
iconic memory
Sensory images that persist for about one-half second after being seen are referred to as
You are trying to get your roommate to keep things neater, so you leave a nice note after she makes any attempt to pick things up. After a while, you leave a note only after she has stacked the dirty dishes, then only after she has brought them to the kitchen, and finally only when she puts them in the dishwasher. This process is an example of: A. Punishing B. Generalizing C. Shaping D. Chaining
Shaping
What of the following characteristics is NOT a basic quality of taste? A. Umami B. Salty C. Sharp D. Sweet
Sharp
Your aunt who drinks just got pregnant. What of the following actions would your recommend to her? A. It is already too late to avoid harm to her fetus, so it does not matter what she does B. She should stop drinking, but could begin to smoke C. She can drink safely up until the end of the first trimester D. She should quit drinking immediately
She should quit drinking immediately
The thalamus receives nearly all sensory information before relaying it to the cortex. What is the one sensation that is the EXCEPTION to this rule? A. Auditory B. Smell C. Visual D. None of these choice
Smell
Random Search Strategy
Solving problems often requires a strategy, If the number of alternatives is small, this may work. This is trying possible solutions to a problem in a more or less random order. This is another example of trial-and-error thinking in which all possibilities are tried, more or less randomly.
place theory of hearing
Sounds of different frequencies set off waves in the cochlea that peak at different locations along the tube that makes up the cochlea.
Lewis Terman's revision of Binet's test is referred to as the _____. This test enables one to derive a(n) ___ for an individual.
Stanford-Binet intelligence quotient
The notion of practical intelligence is associated with __________.
Sternberg
sensation
Stimulation of the cells in the back of the eye by light energy (photons) is an example of ___________.
The ability to respond with an appropriate conditioned response to a conditioned stimulus and with no response to a very similar yet substantially different stimulus is known as: A. Stimulus discrimination B. Valence differentiation C. Stimulus generalization D. Salience response
Stimulus discrimination
The olfactory cells; nerve impulses
Substances give off volatile molecules that are drawn into the nose, dissolve in mucus, and activate __________ . The function of these cells is to produce _______________ that are sent to the olfactory bulb and brain for processing.
Alex sees a girl stealing a candy bar in a convenience store. When the police question him, Alex says the thief was wearing a red shirt. Later in the interrogation, the officer asks what candy the girl in the blue shirt stole. Months later, when Alex testifies in court, he describes the girl as having worn a blue shirt. Alex's testimony at the trial shows the influence of: A. Cryptomnesia B. The sleeper effect C. Source misattribution D. Suggestibility
Suggestibility
As Andre came into the room in which his introductory psychology exam would take place, he noticed that his heart rate had increased due to his _____. As he settled into the test and was able to correctly answer the questions, he called down. This response was due to the _____. A. Endocrine system; autonomic nervous system B. Endorphins; peripheral nervous system C. Central nervous system; peripheral nervous system D. Sympathetic nervous system; parasympathetic nervous system
Sympathetic nervous system; parasympathetic nervous system
10. Compared with novices, exerts tend to be more intuitive and less sterotyped in their work performance.
T
4. Longitudinal research usually shows that intelligent in most abilities increase through out early and middle adulthood.
T
6. IQ scores have shown a steady upward drift over most of the twentieth century.
T
9. Today, most researcher studying cognitive abilities believe that intelligence is multi-dimensional
T
T/F Items; 1: Age impairs processing speed and short-term memory.
T
Recently, researchers have found that children as young as 3 years old can identify the correct perspective from different positions in the three-mountain task if they make the task more accessible and comprehensible to young children. Which of the following is not one of the changes to the tasks, which results in better comprehension of the task for young children?
Telling children to close their eyes and imagine the three mountains before they answer the questions
Which of the following statements is NOT true of teratogens? A. Teratogens are often avoidable B. Teratogens include any chemical in the environment that negatively affects a developing embryo or fetus C. Teratogens include alcohol, prescription drugs, and environmental chemicals D. Teratogens are a group of recessive genes that affect the child while still in the womb
Teratogens are a group of recessive genes that affect the child while still in the womb
Little Malcolm, at 16 months, loves to place his toy cars and blocks on the coffee table and push them off, just to watch them fall to the floor. Malcolm's curiosity has led him to experiment with other objects, such as his mother's cookie jar, in his fascination with falling objects. Malcolm is probably in what substage of the sensorimotor stage of development
Tertiary circular reactions
Shannon has a biology exam next week. To be sure that she really knows the material, she should: A. Cram the night before the test B. Test herself on the material C. Use maintenance rehearsal D. Make up multiple-choice questions
Test herself on the material
The most important hormone for sexual functioning in men is ______ and in women is _____. A. Testosterone; testosterone B. Estrogen; estrogen C. Androgen; progesterone D. Testosterone; estrogen
Testosterone; testosterone
After transduction, most of the sensory neural information passes through which structure? A. Hippocampus B. Hypothalamus C. Amygdala D. Thalamus
Thalamus
If groups of African American and European American students were told that a test they were about to take was diagnostic of intelligence and another set of groups were told the test was not diagnostic of intelligence, which group would be likely to perform the poorest?
The African American group who was told the test was diagnostic of intelligence
made up of age-ranked questions that get a little harder at each age level.
The Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale is
****red/green colorblindness
The Young-Helmholz theory best explains ____________.
iris
The ________ is a muscle that regulates the size of the pupil.
vestibular system
The ability to keep track of where the body is moving is also provided by the ___________________ , a set of liquid-filled areas in the inner ear that monitors the head's position and movement, maintaining the body's balance
Depth perception
The ability to perceive three-dimensional space and to accurately judge distance.
Bilingualism
The ability to speak two different languages
Phonemes
The basic speech sounds of a language.
Psychophysics
The branch of psychology that studies the effects of physical stimuli on sensory perceptions and mental states.
fovea
The central point of the retina where we have the best vision for detail
One sign that a child is securely attached to his or her caregivers is that: A. The child continues to play happily when the caregiver leaves B. In the caregiver's absence, the child can be comforted by a stranger C. When the caregiver returns after an absence, the child ignores the caregiver D. The child is not afraid of strangers when the caregiver is present
The child is not afraid of strangers when the caregiver is present
retinal disparity
The difference in the images sensed by the left eye and the right eye contributes to depth perception
Which of the following developments was most important in the rise of the cognitive approach in psychology? A. The emergence of computers B. The ability to identify different kinds of neurons C. The identification of the unconscious D. The understanding of the effects of reward and punishment of behavior and thinking
The emergence of computers
Denotative Meaning
The exact, dictionary definition of a word or concept; its objective meaning.
You are conducting an informal study in which, for a month, you play a particular song for your best friend right before you serve dinner to her. Eventually, you play the song, and then wait to see how your friend responds. She begins to salivate and says she has hunger pains. In this scenario, what is the unconditioned stimulus? A. the time of day B. The food C. The song D. Salivation
The food
Which of the following statements is true regarding crystallized intelligence and fluid intelligence? A. Both begin to decline around age 30, with the former showing the bigger losses B. Both remain stable until about age 60 and then decline dramatically C. The former increases across age, whereas the latter begins to decline around age 30 D. Both remain relatively stable across the life span
The former increases across age, whereas the latter begins to decline around age 30
déjà vu.
The illusion that you have already experienced a new situation that you are actually seeing for the first time is called
absolute threshold
The intensity of a stimulus that allows an organism to just barely detect it.
convergence
The inward turning of our eyes that is required to focus on objects that are less than about 50 feet away from us
operational
The items actually selected for an intelligence test provide which type of definition of intelligence?
Weber's law
The just noticeable difference of a stimulus is a constant proportion of the original intensity of the tumulus.
Dualism is the idea that: A. There is no mind, just the brain B. The mind and the brain are opposing forces C. The mind and the brain are the same entity D. The mind and the brain are separate entities
The mind and the brain are separate entities
Internal Representation
The most basic thinking... Mental expression. Ex. a chess player who mentally tries out several moves before actually touching a chess piece... and then planning
standard deviation.
The most commonly used statistical index of variability in a group of scores is the...
Framing
The most general conclusion about intuition is that the way a problem is stated or framed, affects decisions. Framing is in thought, the terms in which a problem is stated or the way that it is structured. People tend to look for positive qualities that can be awarded to something else. When questions are framed, it can channel us down a narrow path so we attend to only part of the information provided rather than weighing all the pros and cons. Usually, the broadest way of framing or stating a problem produces the best decisions. Framing decisions so narrowly greatly increases the risk of maing a poor choice.
Pitch
The perceived frequency of a sound
Intellectual Disability (formerly mental retardation)
The presence of a developmental disability, a formal IQ score below 70, or a significant impairment of adaptive behavior.
Accommodation
The process of changing the curvature of the lens to keep the light entering the eye focused on the retina.
Concept Formation
The process of classifying information into meaningful categories. At its most basic, it is based on experience with positive and negative instances (examples that belong, or do not belong to the comcept class)
Cognition
The process of thinking or mentally processing information (images, words, rules, and symbols)
Transduction
The process of turning energy detected around us into nerve impulses.
wavelength
The property that differentiates the part of the electromagnetic spectrum that we can see from the part we cannot see is __________________.
Latent content is to ____ as manifest content is to _____. A. Seeing a tower in a dream; the psychological meaning of the tower B. The psychological meaning of a tower; seeing a tower in a dream C. The ability to physically climb a ladder; the ability to identify a ladder in a dream D. The ability to identify a ladder in a dream; the ability to physically climb the ladder
The psychological meaning of a tower; seeing a tower in a dream
Filter theory was developed to explain: A. The processing of personally irrelevant information B. The selective nature of attention C. Change blindness D. Shadowing
The selective nature of attention
olfaction
The sensory system that detects smells is __________.
When remembering words on a list, people tend to remember words at the beginning of the list and words at the end of the list better than words in the middle of the list. This phenomenon is known as: A. Retroactive interference B. The serial position effect C. Spreading activation effect D. Motivated forgetting
The serial position effect
Morphemes
The smallest meaningful units in la language, such as syllables or words. ex. in english the sound m,b,w cannot forma syllable mbwa. In Swahilim they can.
limitless
The storage capacity of long-term memory is best described as
Connotative Meaning
The subjective, personal, or emotional meaning of a word or concept. This can be measured with a technique called semantic differential. When we rate words or concepts, most of their connotative meaning boils down to the dimensions good/bad, strong/weak, active/passive.
Semantics
The sudy of meanings in words and language. It is here that the link between words and thinking becomes most evident.
senses
The systems we have throughout our bodies that allow us to detect information and transform energy into neural impulses
a mental set
The tendency to perceive a problem in a way that blinds us to possible solutions is called
the least amount of stimulation that can be detected
The term absolute threshold refers to ________________________.
encoding, storage, retrieval.
The three basic processes of memory are
eidetic memory
The three stages of memory include all of the following EXCEPT
Created Images
These are assembled or invented rather than simply remembered. Ex. a artist proposing a sculpture before beginning work.
Quantitative Reasoning
These measure a person's ability to solve problems involving numbers "If I have six marbles and you give me another one, how many marbles will I have?" "Given the numbers 3,6,9,12, what number would come next"
Group Tests
These usually require people to read, follow instructions, to solve problems of logic, reasoning, mathematics, or spatial skills
Which of the following is one of the reasons why children in the preoperational stage cannot conserve
They focus on the end state rather than the transformation.
Convergent Thinking
Thinking directed toward discovery of a single established correct answer; conventional thinking. (lines of thought converge on the answer)
Inductive Thought
Thinking in which a general rule or principle is gathered from a series of specific examples; for instance, inferring the laws of gravity by observing many falling objects. (going from specific facts or observations to general principles)
Divergent Thinking
Thinking that produces many ideas or alternatives; a major element in original or creative thought. (it is the reverse in which many possibilities are developed from one starting point)
Functional Fixedness
This is a prime example of restricted thinking. This is a rigidity in problem solving caused by an inability to see new uses for familiar objects. Karl Duncker illustrated the effects of functional fixedness by using a candle.
Fixation
This is one of the most important barriers to problem solving. This is the tendency to repeat wrong solutions or faulty responses, especially as a result of becoming blind to alternatives. Usually this occurs when we place unnecessary restrictions on our thinking.
Wechsler Adult Intelligene Scale--Third Edition (WAIS III) / for children: Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children--Fourth Edition (WISC-IV)
This is specifically designed to test adult intelligence. However, both this is and SB5 measure performance and verbal intelligence
Deductive Thought
Thought that applies a general set of rules to specific situations; for example, using the laws of gravity to predict the behavior of a single falling object. (going from general principles to specific situations)
Illogical Thought
Thought that is intuitive, haphazard, or irrational. This is intuitive, associative, or personal.
____ people use social exclusion, or ____, to control social behavior.
Throughout the world ostracism
Opposing Spearman, ____ identified seven clusters of ____.
Thurstone primary mental abilities
use mental rotation.
To answer the question, "Does a frog have lips and a stubby tail?"most people
Jason is fascinated by his physics course; he gets excited every time he walks into class. However, Jason has always considered himself someone who does not like science, so he does not recognize that his excitement is due to the class. Instead, he decides that he must be attracted to his lab partner. Jason's misattribution of his arousal is compatible with which theory of emotion? A. Cannon-Bard B. Two-Factor C. Cerebral symmetry D. James-Lange
Two-Factor
When a _____ person is angered, bloodflow is diverted away from the internal organs, including the liver, which is responsible for removing ____ and fat from the blood. Thus, such people have elevated levels of these substances in the blood.
Type A cholesterol
According to your textbook, one of the limitations of Piaget's analysis of child development is that it: A. Did not emphasize conservation B. Underestimated the mental capacities of young children C. Stressed the dynamic of accommodation in schema formation at the expense of the assimilation factor D. Placed too much emphasis on social factors in child development
Underestimated the mental capacities of young children
Which of the following is NOT a core knowledge system during infancy
Understanding how to solve multi-step problems relating to physical objects
Faulty Concepts
Using inaccurate concepts often leads to thinking errors. Ex. social stereotypes are over simplified concepts of groups of people. A related problem is all-or-nothing thinking (one dimensional thought). In this case, we classify things as absolutely right or wrong, good or abd, fair or unfair etc.
Down syndrome
Usually loving and responsive, Mae, who has a moderate intellectual disability, can do most of the things that other children can, only slower. She has almond-shaped eyes, a slightly protruding tongue, a stocky build, and stubby hands with deeply creased palms. Mae most likely has which condition?
semicircular canals and vestibular sacs
Vestibular sense organs are located in the _______________ in the inner ear.
Research on event knowledge during infancy relies on which method?
Violation-of-expectation method
cones
Visual neurons that are specialized in detecting fine detail and colors
Rods
Visual neurons that specialize in detecting black, white, and gray colors.
The sociocultural theory of cognitive development was proposed by
Vygotsky.
One example of an automatic process is: A. Threading a needle B. Taking a test C. Walking D. Driving in stormy weather
Walking
Erikson argues that most adults are motivated by what he calls generatibity. By this he means that people: A. Wants to give something of themselves to others B. Wish to produce as much as possible C. Generate many sentences D. Wish to be creative
Wants to give something of themselves to others
The law that states that the just noticeable difference between two stimuli is based on a proportion of the original stimulus is: A. Wernicke's law B. Fechner's law C. Koehler's law D. Weber's law
Weber's law
The most widely used intelligence test is the ____. Consisting of 11 subtests, it provides not only a general intelligence score but also separate scores for ____, ____, ____ and ____.
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale verbal comprehension perceptual organization working memory processing speed
wavelength
What differentiates light energy we can perceive visually from light energy we cannot perceive visually?
Sensorineural
What is the most common form of permanent hearing loss and frequently occurs with age.
smell
What is the one sense thats nerve route skips the thalamus?
Gate-control theory
What theory suggests that nerve fibers carrying messages that pressure is being applied to some part of the body can prevent pain messages from getting through to the brain?
frequency theory of hearing
Whatever the pitch of a sound wave, nerve impulses of a corresponding frequency will be sent to the auditory nerve.
lens;retina
When a person is nearsighted, the ______ focuses light from objects far away in front of the ______ instead of on it.
obvious external markers, like skin color, have little to do with underlying genetic differences.
When actual blood-group testing was conducted, there was no significant correlation found between ethnic ancestry and IQ scores because
a small desk at the front of a huge warehouse filled with filing cabinets.
When discussing the relationship between short-term and long-term memory, the authors of your textbook use the analogy of short-term memory being like
one's IQ is over 100.
When one's mental age is higher than one's actual age in years, then
The beta effect
When two images near each other are presented in succession, we perceive that it is one object that has moved. This is known as ____________.
"Reverse vision"
When you form a mental image of "a kite flying in the sky," the brain area where memories are stored send signals back to the visual cortex to create that image. This process is known as
frequency theory of hearing
When you hear a tone of 200 Hz, the hair cells in the cochlea begin vibrating 200 times per second. This is the idea behind the ______________.
Fragile X syndrome
Which hereditary cause of intellectual disability affects male children at a rate of about 1 out of every 3800 males with up to three-fourths of individuals with this disorder also suffering from hyperactivity and attention disorders?
sensory memory
Which memory stage are we largely unaware of but which holds information just long enough for it to be moved to the second memory stage?
a. increasing one's knowledge about other cultures
Which of the following could enhance your selective comparison ability and aid you in becoming a more flexible and resourceful thinker?
Those with savant syndrome have suffered damage to the left hemisphere, which freed them from the "distractions" of language, concepts, and higher-level thoughts
Which of the following is a possible explanation for the remarkable abilities displayed by individuals with savant syndrome?
looking up a phone number and remembering it while you dial
Which of the following would be an example of short-term memory?
quantitative reasoning
Which section of the Stanford-Binet (SB5) would have questions similar to the following: "Given the numbers 3, 6, 9, 12, what number would come next?"
lens
Which structure of the eye determines whether a person has abnormal vision (e.g., is nearsighted or farsighted)?
place theory
Which theory holds that the pitch we hear is determined by the particular location on the cochlea where the hair cells vibrate the most?
cones
Which type of neural cell is responsible for color vision?
cognitive psychology
Which type of psychology involves the study of concepts, problem-solving, language, and creativity?
There are three reasons. First, our eyes are constantly moving, so they take in information from different locations. Second, one eye takes in information that the other eye misses. Third, our visual cortex fills in what is missing.
Why don't we have a gap in our vision due to our blind spot?
Which of the following psychologists is most closely associated with the school of functionalism?
William James
____ are the immunologically stronger gender. This makes them less susceptible to ____, but more susceptible to ____ diseases such as ____ and ____.
Women infections self attacking lupus multiple sclerosis
11. women's work
Women's work is an older term once used to downplay the importance of domestic care giving tasks that were once thought to be appropriate for women but not men.
Which of the following is the most likely cause of insomnia? A. Narcolepsy B. Disrupted sleep cycles C. Worrying about sleep D. Altered theta waves
Worrying about sleep
sensation
You answer your cell phone without checking to see who is calling. You recognize your best friend, Maria, from her voice. This is an example of _____________.
perception
You are alone in your house at night and hear a loud noise. You check to see if someone is trying to break into the house. Your response of checking for an intruder is based directly on your ___________.
retrieval
You are taking a psychology test and are trying to remember what you studied. The memory process being used when you try to remember the psychology material is
Intelligence Quotients (IQ)
You have to compare the mental age, chronicle age, and intelligence quotient. When the SB5 was first used, IQ was defined as mental age divided by chronological age (CA) and multiplied by 100. Calculating IQ scores allows a comparison between children with different chronological and mental ages. (10 yr old has a mental age of 12, IQ score is 120) A persons IQ score will be 100 when their mental age equals their chronological age 100=average intelligence
beta effect
You perceive motion based on the succession of images being presented.
phi phenomenon
You perceive motion because the objects are appearing and disappearing.
Interference
Your instructor is lecturing in class when security knocks on the door. The instructor goes to the door, gets the note from security, and gives it to a student, who exits the classroom. The instructor looks at the class and asks, "Now where was I in the lecture notes?" This situation illustrates how short-term memory is affected by
The incremental view of intelligence views intelligence as
a body of skills and knowledge that can be increased with effort.
Down syndrome
a chromosomal disorder leading to mental retardation caused by the presence of all or part of an extra 21st chromosome
According to Spearman, intelligence is composed of
a general underlying factor (g) plus a number of specific factors (s).
Annabel has a helpless style of achievement motivation. When she fails at a problem she is likely to attribute her failure to
a lack of ability.
gestalt
a meaningfully organized whole
In any context, intelligence can be defined as ___.
a mental quality consisting of the ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to new situations
Image
a mental representation that has picture-like qualities;an icon
Motivation is defined as ____.
a need or desire that energizes behavior and directs it toward a goal
The intelligence quotient (IQ) is an index of
a person's performance relative to other people's performance who are the same age
Deviation IQ is defined by how much
a person's score on an intelligence test deviates from the average score for other people their age.
Mercedes takes her one-year-old son, Justice, to visit a day-care center where she plans to enroll him. Justice eagerly explores the playroom as long as Mercedes is present. When his mom leaves the room to fill out some forms, Justice becomes somewhat upset, but when Mercedes returns, he quickly calms down. Mercedes exhibits
a secure attachment.
Historically, psychologists have thought of intelligence as ________(a single entity/ several distinct abilities).
a single entity
pupil
a small opening in the center of the eye, allows light to enter
cochlea
a snail-shaped liquid-filled tube in the inner ear
Large discrepancies between verbal and performance scales (verbal lower than performance) on a Wechsler IQ test suggests
a specific learning problem.
Administering a test to groups of people having similar characteristics (such as age) in order to develop scoring patterns is called
a test norm.
Cite three reasons that longitudinal finding may be misleading.
a. People who are retested several times may improve their performance simply as a result of pratice b. Because people may drop out of lengthy longitudinal studies the remaining subjects my be a self-selected sample c. Longitudinal research takes a long time
Psychologists have found that when anger has been provoked, retaliation may have a calming effect under certain circumstances. List the circumstances.
a. Retaliation must be directed against the person who provoked the anger b. Retaliation must be justifiable c. The target of the retaliation must not be someone who is intimidating
3. The accumulation of facts that comes about with education and experience has been classified as
a. The accumulation of facts that comes about with education and experience has been classified as b. Although intelligence is characterized by plasticity, "plastic intelligence" is not discussed as a specific type of intelligence. c. Fluid intelligence consists of the basic abilities that go into the understanding of any subject. d. Rote memory is based on the conscious repetition of to-be-remembered information.
9. The Flynn effect refers to
a. The trend toward increasing aver IQ
List two suggestions offered by experts for handling anger.
a. Wait to calm down b. Deal with anger in a way that involves neither chronic anger nor sulking
Sharetta knows more about her field of specialization now at age 45 than she did at age 35.
a. an increase in crystallized intelligence b&c: (an increase in fluid intelligence & an increases in both fluid and crystallized intelligence) According to the research, fluid intelligence declines during adulthood. d. (a cohort difference) Cohort effects refer to generational differences in life experiences.
In Sternberg's theory, which aspect of intelligence is most similar to the abilities comprising fluid intelligence?
a. analytical This aspect consists of mental processes fostering academic proficiency by making efficient learning, remembering and thinking possible b. (creative) This aspect concerns the extent to which intellectual functions are applied to situations that are familiar or novel in a person's history. c. (practical)This aspect concerns the extent to which intellectual functions are applied to situations that are familiar or novel in a person's history.
10. The shift form conscious, deliberate processing of information to a more unconscious, effortless performance requires
a. automatic responding b. (subliminal execution)this was not discussed in the chapter c. Plasticity refers to the flexible nature of intelligence. d. encoding refers to the placing of information into memory.
Progress Test 1: 1. Most of the evidence for an age-related decline in intelligence came from
a. cross-sectional research b.(longitudinal research) Although results from this tpe of research may also be misleading, longitudinal studies often demonstrate age-related increases in intelligence. c. (cross-sequential research) Cross-sequential reseasrch is the technique devised by K. Warner Schaie that combines the strengths of the cross-sectional and longitudinal methods. d.(random sampling) Random sampling refers to the selection of subjects for a research study.
8. Charles Spearman argued for the existence of a sing general intelligence factor, which he referred to as
a. g b. (Practical intelligence) refer to the intellectual skills used in everyday problem solving and is identified in Sternberg's theory. c&d:(analytic & creative intelligence) These are two other aspects of intelligence indentified in Sternberg's theory.
7. practical intelligence
a. intellectual skills used in everyday problem solving.
During World War I psychologists were convinced that intelligence peaks during
a. late childhood
2. The major flaw in cross-sectional research is the virtual impossiblity of
a. selecting subjects who are similar in every b. (tracking all subjects over a number of years) this is a problem in longitudinal research c&d: (personal interviews & both cross-sectional and longitudinal methods) neither of these is particularly troublesome in cross-sectional research.
The risk of obesity are greater for people who carry their weight at their ___. It also has been linked in women to their risk of late-life ___ disease and brain tissue loss.
abdomens (stomachs) Alzheimer's
After being administered the Stanford-Binet Test, the psychometrician told you that your child's mental age scored higher than his chronological age. Your child's IQ is
above 100.
The know-how involved in comprehending social situations and managing oneself successfully differs from ___ intelligence and is referred to as ____ intelligence.
academic social
When the child adjusts his schemata to fit a new experience, the child is
accommodating.
During the substage of Piaget's sensorimotor stage called coordination of secondary circular reactions, children can combine schemata to
achieve a goal and solve a problem.
Tests designed to measure what you already have learned are called ___ tests. Tests designed to predict your ability to learn something new are called ___ tests.
achievement aptitude
Psychologists refer to the desire for significant accomplishments for mastering skills or ideas, for control, and for attaining a high standard as ____.
achievement motivation
During the substage of Piaget's sensorimotor stage called tertiary circular reactions, children first begin to
act as "little scientists."
The idea that happiness is relative to one's recent experience is stated by the _____ phenomenon.
adaptation-level
Fear can by and large be seen as a(n) ____ response.
adaptive
When determining the norm of a test, one would
administer the test to groups having the same characteristics of those who are to be tested.
For the first half of the twentieth century, psychologists were convinced that intelligence peaks during _____and then gradually declines. Durling the 1950s, Nancy Bayley and Melita Oden found that on several tests of concept master, the scores of gifts individiual _____________(increased/decreased-remained unchanged) between 20 and 50.
adolescence; increased
Radziszewska and Rogoff (1988) found that in planning efficient routes through an imaginary town,
adult-child dyads were more efficient planners.
Sustained exercise that increases heart and lung fitness is known as ____ exercise.
aerobic
List 5 factors that are evidently unrelated to happiness.
age gender education parenthood physical attractiveness
During the first phase of the GAS--the ____ reaction--the person is in a state of shock due to the sudden arousal of the ____ nervous system.
alarm sympathetic
Historically, ____ of the world's cultures have been predominantly heterosexual. Most homosexuals begin thinking of themselves as gay or lesbian around ____.
all the late teens or early twenties
An underlying principle of Piaget's developmental stage theory is that
all children pass through the same sequence of the stages, but the rate of passage through the stages varies
Patients who have lost use of the ____ are unusually trusting of scary-looking people.
amygdala
A key to fear learning lies in the ____, a neural center in the ____ system. Following damage in this area, humans who have been conditioned to fear a loud noise will ____ the conditioning but show no ____ effect of it.
amygdala limbic remember emotional
Brain scans reveal more activity in the ____ among ____ who are viewing erotica.
amygdala men
Concept
an idea representing a category of related objects or events
Today's tests compute ____ by comparing the individual's performance to the average performance of people of ____ age(s). These tests are designed so that a score of ____ is considered average.
an intelligence test score the same 100
Peter, a college student who quickly recognizes the correct answers to multiple choice questions:
analytical intelligence
Females exposed to high levels of ________ during prenatal development tend to have masculine interests and preferences for male playmates.
androgen
Two characteristics of the preconceptual stage are
animistic thinking and egocentricity.
In the preconceptual stage, children often attribute life and living characteristics to inanimate objects. This is known as
animistic thinking.
Sonya, who is 3 years old, is playing with her many dolls and stuffed animals. Sonya believes the dolls talk to each other and can feel when she hugs them. Sonya is probably engaging in
animistic thinking.
The disorder in which a person becomes significantly underweight and yet feels fat is known as ____.
anorexia nervosa
How well the lie detector works depends on whether a person exhibits ____ while lying.
anxiety
This definition highlights the fact that stress arises less from the events than from how we ____ them and that stressors can have ____ effects, depending on how they are perceived.
appraise both positive and negative
A criticism of Maslow's theory is that the sequence ____ and not ____ experienced.
arbitrary universally
In the sense that they detect differences caused by cultural experiences, intelligence tests probably ____ biased.
are
Research has shown that erotic stimuli ____ nearly as arousing for women as for men.
are
The Stanford-Binet and the Wechsler Scales ____ periodically re-standardized, thereby keeping the average score near ____.
are 100
The brain circuits underlying different emotions ____ different. For example, seeing a fearful face elicits greater activity in the ____ than seeing a(n) ____ face. People who have generally negative personalities, and those who are prone to ____, show more _____ lobe activity.
are amygdala angry depression right frontal
Under the skin, the races ___ alike. Race ____ a neatly defined biological category.
are is not
The theories of Sigmund Freud and his followers:
are based on the idea that much of human behavoior is determined by mental processes operating below the level of conscious awareness
According to Vygotsky, elementary mental functions
are biological in basis and emerge spontaneously in children's interaction with the world.
The effects of social class and ethnicity on intelligence
are critical to our understanding of intelligence
The performance items on the Wechsler Intelligence scales
are less likely to be influenced by formal education than other items on the scales.
Which of the following is NOT one of the ways in which middle- and lower-class mothers differ in their interactions with their children? Middle-class mothers
are more concerned with strict discipline.
Most psychologists agree that, in terms of predictive validity, the major aptitude tests ____ racially biased.
are not
Childhood events and family relationships ____ important factors in determining a person's sexual orientation. Also, homosexuality ____ involve a fear of the other gender that leads people to direct their sexual desires toward members of their own gender.
are not does not
Socioeconomic status and ethnicity
are often associated with one another, and the effects of each of these can be very difficult to disentangle in research.
Cross-cultural research on the development of cognitive abilities suggests that cultures value and develop those skills that
are useful in the daily activities required in their cultural settings
The spillover effect refers to occasions when our ____ response to one event carries over into our response to another event.
arousal
Human motivation aims not to eliminate ___ but to seek ____ of arousal.
arousal optimum levels
Responding too strongly, the immune system may attack the body's tissues and cause ____ or an ____ reaction. Or it may ____. allowing a dormant herpes virus to erupt or ____ cells to multiply.
arthritis allergic under react cancer
For Vygotsky, development is best understood
as a product of social interaction.
According to Vygotsky, children use egocentric speech
as a way to guide thought and behavior.
On an infant intelligence measure (preference for looking at novel stimuli), Black infants score _____ White infants.
as well as
Stice and Shaw found that when young women were shown pictures of unnaturally thin models, they felt more ____, ____ and ____ with their own bodies.
ashamed depressed dissatisfied
Jesse recently learned the word "cookie" to identify his recognition of vanilla wafers. However, he also says, "cookie" when given pretzels, crackers, small pieces of bread, and even large French fries. According to Piaget, Jesse is
assimilating.
The two processes of adaptation are
assimilation and accommodation.
Culture-fair tests are intelligence tests that
attempt to minimize biased content based on experience or cultural background.
The factor analytic approach to intelligence
attempts to determine whether there are distinct factors that make up intelligence.
Second, many elements of expert performance become ___, almost instinctive, which enable experts to process information more quickly and efficiently. This type of thinking is called _______ ____.
automatic; automatic processing
One of the criticisms of Piaget's theory of cognitive development is that
b) Piaget may have underestimated the influence of cultural factors on cognitive development.
8. At the present stage of research in adult cognition, which of the following statement has the most research support?
b. Each person's cognitive development occurs in a unique context influenced by variations in genes, life experiences, and cohort effects. a. (Intellectual abilities inevitably decline from adolescence onward) there is agreement that intelligence does NOT peak during adolescence. c. (some 90% of adults tested in cross-sectional studies show no decline in intellectual abilities until age 40) Cross-sectional research usually provides evidence of declining ability throughout adulthood. d. (Intelligence becomes crystallized for most adults between ages 32 and 41) Crystalized intelligence refers to the accumulation of knowledge with experience; intelligence does not "crystallize" at any specific age. ...
13. Which of the following is a drawback of longitudinal studies of intelligence?
b. People who are retested my show improved performance as a result of practice. a. (They are especially prone to the distortion of cohort effects) This is a drawback of cross-sectional research. c. (The biases of the experimenter are more likely to distort the results than is true of other research methods) Longitudinal studies are no more sensitive to experiments bias than other research methods.
2. Which of the following generational differences emerge in Schaie's studies of intelligence?
b. Recent cohorts of young adults were better at reasoning ability, but worse at math, than those who were young in previous decades.
5. general intelligence
b. Spearman's idea that intelligence is one basic trait, underlying all cognitive abilities.
When Merle retired from teaching, he had great difficulty adjusting to the changes in his lifestyle. Robert Sternberg would probably say that Merle was somewhat lacking in which aspect of his intelligence?
b. creative Creative intelligence enables the person to accommodate successfully to changes in the environment, such as those accompaniment of retirement. a. (analytic)This aspect of intelligence consists of mental processes that foster efficient learning, remembering, and thinking. c.(fluid) Fluid intelligence is not an aspect of Sternberg's theory. Moreover, it refers to basic mental abilities such as short-term memory. d. (plasticity) Plasticity refers to the fexile nature of intelligence; it is not an aspect of Sternberg's theory.
Joseph has remained associated with interesting and creative people throughout his life. In contrast, James has become increasingly isolated as he has aged. Given these lifestyle differences, which aspect of intelligence will be most affected in Joseph and James?
b. crystalized intelligence Because the maintenance of crystallized intelligence depends partly on how it is used, the consequences of remaing socially involved or of being socially isolated become increasingly apparent in adulthood.
10. Research indicates that during adulthood declines occur in
b. fluid intelligence a,c,d: (crystallized intelligence & fluid) Crystallized intelligence typically INCREASES during adulthood.
9. Research on expertise indicates that during adulthood, intelligence
b. increases in specific areas of interest to the person.
14. To a developmentalist, an expert is a person who
b. is significantly better at a task than people who have not put time and effort into performing that task.
Regarding their accuracy in measuring adult intellectual decline, cross-sectional research is to longitiudinal research as _________is to __________-
b. overestimate; underestimate c&d:(accurate;inaccurate & inaccurate; accurate) both cross-sectonoal and longitudinal research are potentially misleading.
Compared with her 20 yr old daughter, 40 yr old Lynda is likely to perform better on measure of what type of intelligence?
b. practical
Vestibular nerve, thalamus, cerebellum (rear of brain)
balance sensation nerve route in brain
The rate of energy expenditure in maintaining basic functions when the body is at rest is the _____ rate. When food intake is reduced, they body compensates by ____ this rate.
basal metabolic lowering
Gifted children tend to
be able to use their cognitive skills more efficiently than most people
In cultures where extremely adverse health or nutritional factors exist, the genetic contributions to intelligence will
be less pronounced (expressed less within the population).
Some psychologists believe that in order for an idea to be truly creative, it must
be useful to some area of life.
Similarly, moving our body as we would when experiencing a particular emotion causes us to feel that emotion. This is the ____ effect.
behavior feedback
The field that integrates behavioral and medical knowledge relevant to health and disease is _____. The subfield of psychology that contributes to behavioral medicine is called ____ psychology.
behavioral medicine health
When given intelligence tests in the early 1900s, immigrants arriving in the United States often scored ____ average. This is because the tests were based on particular ___ background.
below cultural
Introverts are ____ at reading others' emotions, whereas extraverts are themselves ____ to read.
better easier
Women are generally ____ than men at detecting nonverbal signs of emotion and in spotting ____. Women posses greater emotional ____ than men, as revealed by the tendency of men to describe their emotions in ____ terms. This gender difference may contribute to women's greater emotional ____.
better lies literacy simpler responsiveness
A system for recording a physiological response and providing information concerning it is called ____. The instruments used in this system ____ the individual with a means of monitoring physiological responeses.
biofeedback provide
Paul Baltes believes that ________, is significant during childhood but that ________becomes increasingly important in adulthood.
biology; culture
Gardner proposes that
bodily-kinesthetic, musical, intrapersonal, and interpersonal abilities are just as important to human functioning as linguistic and spatial abilities.
Which of the following is an accurate portrayal of the relationship between bipolar disorder and unipolar depressive disorder and the threat of suicide?
both bipolar and unipolar disorder are linked to an enhanced risk of suicide
An important component of scaffolding is
breaking a task down into simpler components.
At the preconventional level, the child decides if things are good or bad (moral) on the basis of whether they
bring punishment or reward.
A more common disorder is ____, which is characterized by repeated ______ episodes and by feelings of depression or anxiety. When bouts of excessive eating followed by remorse are not accompanied by excessive exercise or fasting, the ____ disorder may be diagnosed.
bulimia nervosa binge-purge binge-eating disorder
15. The psychologist who has proposed that intelligence is composed of analytic, creative and practical aspects is
c. Robert Sternberg. a. Charles Spearman proposed the existence of an underlying general intelligence, which he called g. b. Paul Baltes coined the term selective optimization with compensation d. K. Warner Schaie was one of the first researchers to recognize the potentially distorting cohort effects on cross-sectional research..
13. Which of the following describes the results of Nancy Bayley's follow-up study of members of the Berkeley study?
c. The typical person at age 36 was still improving on the most important sub tests of the intelligence scale. b. (The typical person at age 36 improved on 2 of 10 sub tests of adult intelligence scales; picture completion and arithmetic) the text does not indicate that they improved on those tests. d. (No conclusions could be reached because the sample of subjects was not representative)no such criticism was made of Bayley's study.
A psychlogist has found that the mathematical ability of adults born in the 1920s is significantly different from that of those born in the 1950's she suspects that this difference is a reflection of the different educational emphasis of the two historical periods. This is an example of
c. a cohort effect a&b: (longitudinal research & sequential research) From the information given, it is impossible to determine which research method the psychologist used.
3. analytic intelligence
c. all the mental abilities that foster academic proficiency
Dr. Hatfield want to analyze the possible effects of retesting, cohort differences, and aging on adult changes in intelligence. Which research method should she use?
c. cross-sequential a&b: (cross-sectional& longitudinal) Schaie developed the cross-sequential research method to overcome the drawbacks of the cross-sectional and longitudinal methods which were susceptible to cohort and retesting effects, respectively. d. (case study) A case study focuses on a single subject and therefore could provide no information on cohort effects.
5. Thinking that is more intuitive, flexible, specialized and automatic is characteristic of
c. expertise.
6. The basic mental abilities that go into learning and understanding any subject have been classified as
c. fluid intelligence a. Crystallized intelligence is the acumulation of facts and knowledge that comes with educatoin and experience. b. Although inteligence is characterizd by plasticity, "plasatic intelligence" is not discussed as a specific type of intelligence. d. Rote memory is memory that is based on th econscious repetition of to-be-remembered information.
A contemporary developmental psychologist is most likely to DISAGREE with the statement that
c. intelligence peaks during adolescence and declines thereafter.
Progress Test 2 : 1: The debate over the status for adult intelligence focuses on the question of its inevitable decline and on
c. its possible continuing growth
6. IQ scores increased over the 20th century in part because
c. later cohorts have had more education
Professor Iglesias is a psychometrician. This means that she specializes in the
c. measurement of psychological characteristics especially intelligence.
5. Which of the following is most likely to DECREASE with age?
c. working memory a,b,d: (vocabulary & accumullated facts & practical intelligence) these often increase with age
11. Concerning expertise, which of the following is true?
c.In performing tasks, experts tend to be more flexible and to enjoy experimentation more than novices do. a,b,d: (In performing tasks, experts tend to be more set in t heir eways, preferring to use strategies that have worked in the past & The reasoning of experts is ususally more formal, disciplined, and sterotypic than that of the novice * Experts often have difficulty adjusting to situations that are exceptions to the rule).These are more typical of novices than experts.
Robert Zajonc believes that the feeling of emotion ____ precede our cognitive labeling of that emotion.
can
The size of fat cells ____ be decreased by dieting; the number of fat cells ____ be decreased by dieting.
can cannot
The results from the Carolina Abecedarian Project suggest that intensive interventions that provide cognitive stimulation and parental education
can prevent deterioration in intellectual skills that ordinarily occurs in economically deprived conditions.
The study of sexual behavior and what motivates it ____ be free of values.
cannot
When Matthew saw his older brother's bicycle fall off its kick stand, Matthew told his brother that the bicycle must be tired from being ridden too much. Matthew's statement illustrates the type of thinking that Piaget referred to as
centration.
Accommodation occurs when one attempts to understand new information by
changing existing schemata in order to fit the new experience
Effective leaders tend to exude a self-confident ___ that is a mix of a ____ of some goal, an ability to ____ the goal clearly, and enough optimism to ____ others to follow. Leadership that inspires others to transcend their own self interests for the sake of the group is called ____ leadership.
charisma vision communicate inspire transformational
The presence of several risk factors, such as poor maternal mental health, low maternal education, and high incidence of stressful events, is associated with low IQ for
children in both high- and low-income families.
Friedman and Rosenman discovered that tax accountants experience an increase in blood ____ level and blood- ____ speed during tax season. This showed there was a link between coronary warning indicators and ____.
cholesterol clotting stress
Which type of psychologists study, assess, and treat individuals with psychological disorders?
clinical
When asked what makes life meaningful, most people mention _____.
close, satisfying relationships with family, friends, or romantic partners
cilia
cochlea contains about 16,000 hair cells, each of which holds a bundle of fibers known as _____ on its tip
Information-processing approaches to intelligence emphasize
cognitive processing skills, such as memory and problem solving.
Mrs. Garcia has set up her classroom so that children work together in shared activities, often learning from each other. She believes it is her job to facilitate the process of peer learning and to coordinate the opportunities for peer interactions. Mrs. Garcia's classroom is an example of a(n)
community of learners.
Acupuncture, massage therapy, homeopathy, and similar treatments comprise the growing health care market called _______. In China, ____ therapies have flourished for centuries, as have acupuncture and acupressure therapies that claim to correct imbalances in the flow of energy called ____.
complementary and alternative medicine herbal Qi or Chi
Although girls have an edge in math ____, boys score higher in math _____. Boys tend to outscore girls on tests of _____.
computation problem solving mental rotation
During which stage in Piaget's system is the child first able to handle conservation problems and hierarchical classification problems?
concrete operations
Following Spearman's work from the factor analytic perspective, recent researchers have
confirmed the existence of a general cognitive ability because different cognitive tests are in fact correlated with one another.
The principle of ____ suggests that physical properties of substances, such as volume, number, and mass, remain constant in spite of changes in their shape or appearance.
conservation
The idea that even if an object changes shape or appearance the underlying quantity of the object remains the same is Piaget's principle of
conservation.
The degree to which a test measures the behavior it was designed to measure is referred to as the test's ____.
content validity
Your cousin finds balancing his checkbook easy and knows how to solve complex mathematical problems while working at a bank. This is an example of Sternberg's component of
context.
Frank claims that when he is confronted with a problem, he likes to come up with one correct solution. Frank practices ______________.
convergant thinking
binocular depth cue
convergence is an example of a(n) __________.
Standard intelligence tests, which demand single correct answers to questions, measure ____ thinking. Tests that allow multiple possible answers to problems measure ___ thinking.
convergent divergent
People learn to ____ with stress by finding ____, ____ or ____ ways to alleviate it.
cope emotional cognitive behavioral
The leading cause of death in North America is ____. List several risk factors for developing this condition.
coronary heart disease smoking, obesity, high-fat diet, physical inactivity, elevated cholesterol level
Satisfied and successful people devote less time to ____ than to _____.
correcting deficiencies accentuating strengths
Cannon proposed that emotional stimuli in the environment are routed simultaneously to the ____, which results in awareness of the emotion, and to the ____ nervous system, which causes the body's reaction. Because another scientist concurrently proposed similar ideas, this theory has come to be known as the _____ theory.
cortex sympathetic Cannon-Bard
One of the principles of successful intervention programs involves
creating a support system that the child will need to maintain their academic progress
A combination of flexibility in thinking and reorganization in understanding to produce innovative ideas is important in _______________.
creative thinking
Jose is always coming up with new solutions to a problem. As his teacher, you believe that he is
creative.
The ____aspect enables the person to be flexible and innovation when dealing with new situations. This type of thinking is always ____rather than __________, meaning that such thinkers frequently find ______solutions to problems rather than ______ meaning that such thinkers frequently find ______solutions to problems rather than relying on the one that has always been considered correct.
creative; divergent; convergent; unusal (unexpected, imaginative)
The ability to produce ideas that are both novel and valuable is called ____. The relationship between intelligence and creativity holds only up to a certain point--an intelligence score of about ____.
creativity 120
Positive moods at work contribute to worker ____, ____ and _____. Researchers have also found a positive correlation between measures of organizational success and employee ____ or the extent of workers' involvement, satisfaction, and enthusiasm.
creativity persistence helpfulness engagement
The degree to which a test predicts further performance of a particular behavior, called the test's ____ is referred to as the test's ___.
criterion predictive validity
The difference between using critical thinking explanations and everyday explanations for psychological phenomena is that:
critical thinking relies on evidence and scientific support for making conclusions
Schaie developed a new research technique combining cross-sectional and longitudinal approach- research Briefly explain this type of research design.
cross-sequential In this approach, each time the original group of subjects is retested, a new group is added and tested at each age interval.
The accumulation of facts, information and knowledge that comes with education and experience with a particular culture is referred to as ________________intelligence.
crystallized
Sexual expression varies widely from one ____ to another and with the passage of ____. Rates of teen intercourse are roughly similar in ____ and ____ but much lower in ___ and ____ countries and among North Americans of ____ descent.
culture time Western Europe Latin America Asian Arab Asian
Research by Dasen (1984) on the acquisition of cognitive concepts and skills suggests that
culture influences the rate of cognitive skill development.
A principle of Vygotsky's sociocultural theory is that
cultures provide settings and institutions that facilitate cognitive development.
Critics of alternative medicine point out that such treatments seem especially effective with ____ diseases such as arthritis and ____ as well as with diseases that disappear naturally--a phenomenon called ____. Critics also argue that the seeming effectiveness of alternative medicine is due to a ____ effect.
cyclical allergies spontaneous remission placebo
3. Because of the limitations of toher research methods, K.Warner Schaie developed a new research design based on
d. .both cross-sectional and longitudinal methods a,b,c:(observe-participant methods & in-depth questionnaires & personal inerviews) Cross-seequential research as described in this chapter is based on objective intelligence testing.
7. Which of the following is NOT true regarding family skills?
d. A "maternal instict" is innate to every mother. The following are true regarding family skills: - a. They were undervalued skills in earlier generations. - b. They were once considered the primary responsibility of women - c. They are now recognized and valued as expert work by both women and men.
14. Which of the following is NOT one of the general conclusions of research about intellectual changes during adulthood?
d. Intelligence becomes less specialized with increasing age. In fact, intelligence often becomes more specialized with age.
15. One reason for variety in pattern to adult intelligence is that during adulthood
d. People develop specialized competencies in activities that are personally meaningful.
4. Why don't traditional intelligence tests reveal age-related cognitive decline during adulthood?
d. They yield a single IQ score, allowing adulthood increases in crystallized intelligence to mask these declines a&b: (They measure only fluid intelligence & They measure only crystallized intelligence)Traditional IQ tests measure both fluid and crystallized intelligence.
Compared with novice chess players, chess experts most likely
d. are quite flexible in their play, relying on their years of practice and accumulated experience a&b.(have superior long-term memory & have superior short-term memory):The text does not suggest that experts have special memory abilities! c. (are very disciplined in their play, sticking closely to formal rules for responding to certain moves their opponents might make.)This describes the performance of novice rather than experts.
12. In general, as people age they specialize in activities that are personally meaningful. In other words, each person
d. becomes a selective partner
7. Some psychologist content that intelligence consists of fluid intelligence, which _________during dulthood, and crystallized intelligence, which ______________
d. declines;increases
8. Seattle Longitudinal Study
d. first study of adult intelligence that used a cross-sequential research design
4. According to the text, the current view of intelligence recognizes all the following characteristics EXCEPT
d. g This is Charles Spearman's term for his idea of a general intelligence, like which intelligence is a single entitiy. a. Multidirectionality simply means that abilities follow different trajectories with age, as explained throughout the chapter. b. Plasticity simply refers to the ability to change. c. Inter-individual variation is a way of sayng that each person is unique.
11. Fluid intelligence is based on all the following :
d. general knowledge this is an aspect of crystallized intelligence
12: In recent years, researchers are more likely than before to consider intelligence as
d. made up of several abilities. a. (a single entity) contemporary researchers emphasize the different aspects of intelligence. b&c: (primarily determined by heredity & entirely the product of learning) contemporary researchers see intelligence as the product of both heredity and learning.
For most people, the most significant sources of stress are _____. The stresses that accompany poverty and unemployment, for example, often compounded by _____, may account for the higher rates of ____ among residents of impoverished areas.
daily hassles racism hypertension
During the 1960s and 1970s, college entrance aptitude scores showed a steady ____. At the same time, intelligence test performance ____. This phenomenon is called the ____.
decline improved Flynn effect
Stress can suppress the lymphocyte cells, resulting in a(n) _____ in disease resistance. Stress diverts energy from the ____ to the ____ and ____, mobilizing the body for action and making us more vulnerable to disease.
decrease immune system brain muscles
When a child is able to imitate a complex behavior exhibited by a model at a previous time, the child is capable of
deferred imitation.
vestibular sense
detects movement and provides information about the body's orientation.
Jocelyn is 25-years-old and she feels very insecure about some of the personal and career choices she has made so far. Consequently, at this point in her life she is unwilling to form a serious, committed relationship with another person. Based on Erikson's theory, Jocelyn may
develop a sense of isolation.
When rats had their stomach removed, hunger ____ continue.
did
Earlier studies ____ reveal a clear cut correlation between head size (relative to body size) and intelligence score.
did not
Schacther and Singer found that physically aroused college men told that an injection would cause arousal ____ become emotional in response to an accomplice's aroused behavior. Physically aroused volunteers not expecting arousal ____ become emotional in response to an accomplice's behavior.
did not did
Gestures have ___ meanings in different cultures.
different
Cross-cultural researchers have demonstrated that it is difficult to take measures of a specific task to indicate a child's stage or level of cognitive development because
different cultures stress different concepts, which are tapped by different tasks.
he definition of creativity involving divergent thinking differs from other definitions in that it ....
divergent thinking involves the number of possible answers a person can come up with to a single question.
Studies of adoptees and twins ____ provide evidence of a genetic influence on obesity. A particular variant of the gene called ___ has been shown to nearly double a person's risk of becoming obese.
do FTO
Studies indicate that neglected children ____ show signs of recovery in intelligence and behavior when placed in more nurturing environments. Although normal brain development can be retarded by ____, ____ deprivation and _____, there is no sure environment that will transform a normal baby into a genius.
do malnutrition sensory social isolation
Studies of twins suggest that genes probably ____ play a role in homosexuality. Research has confirmed that homosexual men have more homosexual relatives on their ____ side than on their ___ side.
do mother's father's
Psychologists ____ agree on a definition of intelligence.
do not
Researchers have found that levels of happiness ____ mirror differences in standards of living.
do not
Sex hormone levels ____ predict sexual orientation.
do not
Group differences in intelligence scores ____ provide an accurate basis for judging individuals. Individual differences within a race are ___ between race differences.
do not greater than
By and large, experts ____ that lie detector tests are highly accurate.
do not agree
Same-sex attraction ___ occur among animals.
does
If we know a trait has perfect heritability, this knowledge ____ enable us to rule out environmental factors in explaining differences between groups.
does not
Stress ____ create cancer cells.
does not
A person's sexual orientation ___ appear to be voluntarily chosen. Several research studies reveal that sexual orientation among ____ tends to be less strongly felt and potentially more changeable than among the other gender. This phenomenon has been called the gender difference in ____.
does not women erotic plasticity
Most people ____ a predictable career path, which is one reason that many colleges and universities focus less on ____ and more on ____.
does not have training job skills enlarging capacities for understanding, thinking and communicating in any work environment
Being slightly overweight ____ serious health risks. In the US over ____ percent of adults are obese. Significant obesity increases the risk of ____.
does not pose 34 diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, gallstones, arthritis, and certain types of cancer
A limitation to Vygotsky's theory is that it
does not provide a specific description of age-related change.
The study conducted by Radziszewska and Rogoff (1988) investigating adult-child dyads and peer partner planning of efficient routes through an imaginary town
does support Vygotsky's view of the zone of proximal development.
The absence of nonverbal cues to emotion is one reason that communications sent as ____ are easy to misread.
Matching items: 1: Fluid intelligence
e. flexible reasoning used to draw inferences
According to Gardner
each type of intelligence has is own developmental path guided by its own forms of perception, learning, and memory
During Erikson's crisis of intimacy versus isolation the key concern involves developing the capacity to share intimacy with others. This stage is associated with
early adulthood.
Paulo is playing with his building blocks. He is muttering in a soft voice, "This block goes here, then this block goes there." Paulo is using
egocentric speech.
John and Jodie, both 4 years old, have the belief that the universe is organized and created for them and that everything is and should be centered around them. According to Piaget, this type of thought is called
egocentrism
Piaget developed a three-mountain task to test children's ability to see things from the perspective of others. This task tested children for
egocentrism
If a child says that the sun shines to keep him warm, the child is exhibiting
egocentrism.
Erikson divided the life span into ____ stages associated with ____.
eight; psychosocial crises
At the end of the ____ stage of prenatal development, the developing organism is about one inch long and has already developed most of the vital organs and bodily structures.
embryonic
Developing structures generally are most vulnerable to damage from environmental factors during the ____ of prenatal development.
embryonic stage
Which prenatal period begins at the second week and ends at the second month of pregnancy?
embryonic stage
When we attempt to alleviate stress by avoiding it and attending to emotional needs, we are using ____ coping.
emotion-focused
Some scholars believe that the concept of ____ intelligence stretches the idea of multiple intelligences too far.
emotional
A critical part of social intelligence is ____--the ability to ____, ____, ____ and ____ emotions.
emotional intelligence perceive understand manage use
According to Piaget, basic reflexes such as grasping, kicking, and looking help infants to
engage with and learn about the world
The concept of cumulative risk is used to describe the idea that as the number of
environmental risk factors increase, children's performance on IQ tests decreases
Monozygotic twins over the course of their lifetimes show increasing differences in their: A. mitochondrial DNA B. epigenomes C. genes D. genotypes
epigenomes
In most mammals, females are sexually receptive only during ovulation, when the hormones, the ____ (such as ____), have peaked.
estrogens estradiol
The misguided movement called ___ proposed measuring human traits and using the results to determine who should be allowed to reproduce.
eugenics
Psychologists who support ____ theories suggest that certain basic cognitive abilities are biologically built into, or prewired into, the neural make-up of humans.
evolutionary
With respect to cognitive abilities, ______ theories attempt to find out which abilities are prewired, with the belief that such abilities had adaptive significance for our ancestors.
evolutionary
Working from an ____ perspective, some theorists speculate that these gender differences in spatial manipulation helped our ancestors survive.
evolutionary
If stress continues, the person enters the stage of ____. During this stage, a person is ____ vulnerable to disease.
exhaustion more
Lily is 85-years-old and she has recently begun writing her life story. As she thinks back over all that she has done, she comes to the conclusion that her life has had no real meaning or purpose. Based on Erikson's theory, Lily may
experience feelings of despair and bitterness.
Some develop-mentalists believe that as we age, we develop specialized competencies, or ___in activities that are important to us in other words, each person becomes a ________ ______
expertise; selective expert
The implications of the function of the epigenome include that
exposure to toxins of you today could impact your future children's risk for cancer
A pathway from the ____ via the ____ to the ___ enables us to experience emotion before ____. For more complex emotions, sensory input is routed through the ____ for interpretation.
eye or ear thalamus amygdala cognition cortex
6. creative intelligence
f. the capacity for flexible and innovative thinking.
The _____ effect occurs when expressions amplify our emotions by activating muscles associated with specific states.
facial feedback
The statistical procedure used to identify groups of items that appear to measure a common ability is called _____.
factor analysis
Children with incremental and entity views of intelligence differ in their performance on tasks after
failure.
In developing societies where people face ____, obesity is considered a sign of ____ and ____.
famine affluence social status
In industrialized nations, the nature of work has changed from ____ to _____ to ____.
farming manufacturing knowledge work
Studies looking at a range of tasks have found that people with high intelligence scores tend to process and retrieve information ____ than people with low intelligence scores.
faster
The immediate determinant of body fat is the size and number of ____ one has. This number is, in turn, determined by several factors, including _____.
fat cells genetic predisposition, early childhood eating patterns, adult overeating
The emotions ____ and ____ stimulate different facial muscles.
fear joy
The emotions ____ and ____ are sometimes accompanied by differing ____ temperatures and ____ secretions.
fear rage finger hormone
The amygdala plays an important role in ________, whereas the hippocampus plays an important role in ________.
fear or emotional reactions; spatial memory
Interviewers tend to ____ in their ability to predict job performance from unstructured interviews. These impressions tend to be highly ____.
feel confident error prone
Which of the following is NOT one of the three phases of prenatal development?
fertilization stage
Surveys of life satisfaction reveal that ____ satisfaction is strongly predictive of subjective well-being in poorer nations, whereas ____ satisfaction matters more in wealthy nations and ____ in individualist nations.
financial home-life self-esteem
Gays and lesbians may have certain physical traits that fall midway between straight males and females, including ____ patterns, greater odds of being ____ handed and anatomical traits of the ____ within the hearing system.
fingerprint left cochlea
A final difference is that experts are more _____.
flexible (or creative)
Psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi formulated the concept of ____, which is defined as a focused state of ____ and diminished awareness of ____ and time. People who experience this state also experience increased feelings of ___, ____ and ____.
flow consciousness self self-esteem, competence, well being
Tests like the Stanford-Binet and Wechsler scales that focus on products of intelligence and current performance have demonstrated that IQ ___________, whereas tests that focus on the cognitive processes underlying intelligence demonstrate that IQ ____________.
fluctuates over time; is stable over time
During adulthood, _______intelligence declines markedly, primarily because of everything slows down with age. However, if a person's intelligence is simply measured by one ____score, this decline is temporarily disguised by a ___ (increase/decrease) in _________intelligence.
fluid; IQ; increase; crystallized
As its name implies, __________intelligence is flexible reasoning used to draw inferences and understand relations between concepts. This type of intelligence is also made up of basic mental abilities, including __________ ______, _____________ __________and _______ _______ _.________
fluid; abstract analysis; working(short-term) memory: speed of thinking
Timothy is in preschool. When asked to describe himself, he will probably
focus on activities he likes to do.
The most successful early intervention programs
focus on improving the family support system and the child's educational needs
According to the James-Lange theory, emotional states ____ physiological responses.
follow
Researchers have found that students who mentally rehearsed the times they ____ someone who had hurt them had lower bodily arousal than when they thought of times when they did not.
forgave
Piaget believed that children first become capable of hypothetical thinking during the a) concrete operational stage. b) sensorimotor stage. c) d) preoperational stage.
formal operational stage.
There are several indifferences between experts and novices. first , novices tend to rely more on ____________(formal/ informal) procedures and rules to guide them, where as experts rely more on their ______ ___and the immediate ______to guide them. this makes the actions of experts more _________ and less _____.
formal; past experiences; context; intuitive; stereotypic...
In one study, students who were induced to smile ____ cartoons more amusing.
found
During the sensorimotor stage of development, the child shifts
from being reflexive to using symbolic thought
When people ponder intelligence test questions, for example, an area in the brain's _____ becomes especially active in the ___ brain for verbal questions and ____ for spatial questions. People who are able to more quickly retrieve information from memory tend to score high in ___ ability.
frontal lobe left on both sides of the brain verbal
Arousal ____ emotion; cognition ___ emotion.
fuels channels
4. selective optimization with compensation
g. the tendency of adults to optimize certain aspects of their lives in order to offset declines in other areas.
Most obese persons who lose weight ____ it back.
gain
In studying animals' reactions to stressors, Hans Selye referred to the bodily response to stress as the ______.
general adaption syndrome
Charles Spearman, one of the developers of this technique, believed that a factor called g, or ____ runs through the more specific aspects of intelligence.
general intelligence
The best predictor of long term job performance for most jobs is ____. Interviewers tend to ____ estimate their interviewing skills and intuition--a phenomenon labeled the ____.
general mental ability over interviewer illusion a. Interviews disclose the interviewee's good intentions, which are less revealing than their typical behaviors b. Interviewers tend to follow the successful careers of people they hired and lose track of those they did not hire c. Interviewers mistakenly presume that how interviewees present themselves reflects only their enduring traits d. Interviewers preconceptions and moods influence their perceptions of job applicants
Mental retardation
generalized disorder ascribed to people who have an IQ below 70, who have experienced deficits since childhood, and who have trouble with basic life skills, such as self-care and communicating with others.
Taste preferences for sweet and salty are ____. Other influences on taste include ___ and ____.
genetic conditioning culture
The hunger arousing hormone secreted by an empty stomach is ____.
ghrelin
Longitudinal research reveals that a ____ at age 50 predicts healthy aging better than ____ at the same age.
good marriage low cholesterol
Erica is in the concrete operational stage of development. When asked to sort flowers, she will most likely be able to
group flowers according to the type of flower and the color of the flower.
distribution
group of people
A test that assesses a suspect's knowledge of details of a crime that only the guilty person should know is the ____.
guilty knowledge test
2. crystallized intelligence
h. the accumulation of facts, information, and knowledge
With repeated exposure, the emotional response to an erotic stimulus often ____.
habituates
Performance appraisal is subject to bias. When the overall evaluation of an employee biases ratings of work-related behaviors a ____ has occurred. The tendency to be too easy or too harsh results in ___ and ____ errors respectively. When raters focus on easily remembered recent behavior, they are committing the ___ error.
halo error leniency severity recency
Casey likes to play with blocks and he has several different kinds: square wooden ones, large waffle-like ones, small plastic ones that easily interlock, as well as a variety of other types. At first Casey just referred to these objects as "blocks." Now, when his mom suggests he play with his blocks, he replies, "Which ones?" Piaget would interpret his response to indicate that Casey
has accommodated his schema for blocks to differentiate among types of blocks.
If a ball that a five-month-old infant is playing with rolls under a chair (and out of sight), the infant will not look for it. Piaget believed that this occurs because the infant
has not developed object permanence.
Educational initiatives, support groups, and other efforts to control stress ____ been shown to have positive consequences on HIV-positive individuals.
have
Experiments ____ been able to demonstrate conclusively that such exercise reduces anxiety, depression, and stress.
have
Stressful life circumstances ____been shown to accelerate the progression of this chronic disease.
have
Most women and men ____ sexual fantasies. Compared with women's fantasies, men's sexual fantasies are more ____. Sexual fantasies ____ indicate sexual problems or dissatisfaction.
have frequent, physical, and less romantic do not
Over the last several decades, IQ differences between African Americans and European Americans
have been declining.
Gardner and Sternberg
have collaborated on a program which teaches tacit knowledge needed to succeed in school.
The problem with assertions made by Arthur Jensen over 30 years ago is that
he failed to consider socioeconomic factors that influence intelligence.
Simple relaxation procedures have been shown to help alleviate ____, ____, ____ and _____. Lowered blood pressure, hear rate, and oxygen consumption have been found to be characteristic of people who regularly practice _____. The ____ response is a state of calm resulting from sitting quietly, with closed eyes while breathing deeply.
headaches hypertension anxiety insomnia meditation relaxation
At the high extreme, Lewis Terman's "gifted children" turned out to be ____ well-____, and unusually successful ____.
healthy adjusted academically
Describe the major physiological changes that each of the following undergoes during emotional arousal.
heart: heart rate increases muscles: muscles become tense liver: liver pours out extra sugar into the blood stream breathing: breathing rate increases digestion: digestion slows pupils: pupils dilate blood: blood tends to clot more rapidly skin: skin perspires
The finding that environmental factors are most likely to cause damage to specific structures of a developing embryo or fetus when those structures are undergoing rapid development BEST reflects the unifying theme in psychology that
heredity and environment jointly influence behavior.
The amount of variation in a trait within a group that is attributed to genetic factors is called its ____. For intelligence, this has been estimated at ___ percent.
heritability 50
List 6 factors that have been shown to be positively correlated with feelings of happiness.
high self-esteem satisfying marriage or close friendships meaningful religious faith optimistic, outgoing personality good sleeping habits and regular exercise having work and leisure that engage our skills
Some studies have found that infants who quickly become bored when looking at a picture score ___ on tests of brain speed and intelligence up to 21 years later.
higher
Although Asian students on the average score ____ than North American students on math tests, this difference may be due to the fact that ____.
higher Asian students have a longer school year and spend more time studying math
According to Vygotsky, voluntary attention and abstract thinking are considered
higher mental functions.
People who have suffered damage to the ____ will show the _____ but _____ be able to remember why.
hippocampus emotional reaction will not
The aim of drive reduction is to maintain a constant internal state, called ____.
homeostasis
Children may master some form of conservation before others. Piaget called this
horizontal decalage.
One of the most problematic aspects in Piaget's theory of cognitive development is why some children can solve some concrete operational problems, but not others. This concept is referred to as
horizontal decalage.
In animals and some rare human cases, sexual orientation has been altered by abnormal ____ conditions during prenatal development. In humans, prenatal exposure to hormone levels typical of ___, particularly between ____ and ____ months after conception may predispose an attraction to males.
hormone females 2 5
frequency distribution
how frequently each score (in this case, each IQ score) appears in our group
It is announced that the number of minority students in a particular program has increased by 200% in the past four years. In order to judge the importance of this increase, the most important question that you should ask is:
how many minority students were in the program four years ago
normal distribution/bell curve
how many people have each score on the IQ scale or the scale for any other test or measure (e.g., height, weight, achievement test score, and many others).
Researchers have found that life events may be less stressful for people who have a good sense of ____.
humor
Examples of such illness are certain types of ____ and some _____. Such illnesses appear to be linked to _____.
hypertension headaches stress
Researcher Simon LeVay discovered a cluster of cells in the ____ that is larger in ___ men than in all others. Gay and lesbians differ from their straight counterparts in their preference for sex related ____. Other studies have found that the brain's ____ is larger in lesbian women and heterosexual men.
hypothalamus heterosexual odors right hemisphere
The brain area that plays a role in hunger and other bodily maintenance functions is the ____. Animals will begin eating when the ____ is electrically stimulated. When this region is destroyed, animals ____.
hypothalamus lateral hypothalamus decreases ventromedial hypothalamus overeat
Physiologists have discovered that in response to stress the cerebral cortex, via the ____ and the ____ gland, triggers the outer part of the ____ to release ____ stress hormones such as ____.
hypothalamus pituitary adrenal glands glucocorticoid cortisol
9 selective expert
i. trend toward increasing average IQ
The first intelligence test was designed by Binet and Simon to
identify children who were unable to learn in a traditional classroom setting.
The Bayley Scales of Infant Development are useful at
identifying infants with developmental delays.
The best managers help people to ____, match tasks to ____, care how their people feel about their work, and ____ positive behaviors.
identity and measure their talents talent reinforcement
Jeremy's father and two uncles are all dentists. Jeremy first decided he wanted to be a dentist when he spent afternoons at his father's office as a young child. Jeremy has not considered any other potential careers. Jeremy is MOST likely in the identity status of
identity foreclosure.
Amy has just finished college. She feels optimistic about her future and thinks that she could travel anywhere and do anything. According to Arnett, what stage of life is Amy in?
identity versus confusion
In Erikson's theory, the psychosocial crisis during adolescence is
identity versus confusion.
The body's system of fighting disease is the ____ system. This system includes 2 types of white blood cells, called _____: the____, which fight bacterial infections, and the _____, which form in the ____ and attack viruses, cancer cells and foreign substances.
immune lymphocytes B lymphocytes T lymphocytes thymus
Optimal testing situations, such as familiarizing the child with the environment and materials, giving them encouragement on specific tasks, and using material rewards, have been found to
improve performance of economically deprived children more than middle-class children.
The shift away from an egocentric orientation is important for all of the following EXCEPT
improved academic achievement.
Formal operations may occur late or be absent
in cultures that do not emphasize symbolic skills
Behavior is often not so much pushed by our drives as it is pulled by ____ in the environment.
incentives
Rather than reduce a physiological need, some motivated behaviors actually ____ arousal. This demonstrates that human motives ____ always satisfy some biological need.
increase do not
In animals and humans, sudden lack of control is followed by a drop in immune responses, a(n) ____ in blood pressure, and a rise in the levels of _____.
increase stress hormones
Follow-up research by Bayley demonstrated a general ____________(increased/decrease) in intellectual functioning from childhood through young adulthood. This developmental trend was true on tests of __________ __________, and __________.
increase; vocabulary; comprehension; information
Depression _____ one's risk of having a heart attack or developing other heart problems.
increases
Vulnerability to eating disorders ____ with greater body dissatisfaction.
increases
During childhood, the stability of intelligence scores ____ with age. After about age ____, intelligence scores stabilize. A long term study of mental ability in Scottish children revealed that this ____ through late adulthood.
increases 7 holds
Throughout the world, studies have shown a general trend toward ______________(increasing decreasing average) IQ over successive generations. This trend is called the _____ _____
increasing; Flynn effect
The zone of proximal development represents the difference between a child's developmental level determined by solving problems
independently and a child's potential developmental level determined by solving problems with guidance.
Recent assessments of infants designed to predict educational risk focus on
indexes of attention and encoding of information.
The belief that expressing pent-up emotion is adaptive is most commonly found in cultures that emphasize ____. This is the ____ hypothesis. In cultures that emphasize ____, such as those of ____ or ____, expressions of anger are less common.
individuality catharsis interdependance Tahiti Japan
In cultures that encourage ____, emotional expressions are often intense and prolonged. Cultures such as that of Japan ____. This points to the importance of realizing that emotions are not only biological and psychological but also _____.
individuality hide their emotions social-cultural
The field of ____ psychology applies psychology's principles to the workplace. The subfield of ____ focuses on employee recruitment, training, appraisal, and development. Another subfield, _____ examines how work environments and ____ styles influence worker motivation, satisfaction and productivity. A third subfield ____ psychology focuses on the design of appliances machines and work environments.
industrial-organizational personnel psychology organizational psychology management human factors
The elementary school-age child who does well in school and who receives praise and support at home will develop what Erikson calls a sense of
industry
In order to evaluate infants' knowledge of object permanence, Baillargeon tested whether
infants would look longer at an impossible event.
According to Erikson's theory, an elementary school-age child who does poorly in school, and does not get along well with classmates, is most likely to develop a sense of
inferiority.
both sides
information from the left eye is processed on _________ of the visual cortex.
Sternberg's triarchic theory of intelligence expresses the importance of
information-processing skills, experience, and context
The Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children was the first test to focus largely on
information-processing skills.
Vygotsky's view on innate abilities attributed the child with
innate abilities such as attention, perception, and memory.
According to Piaget's theory, cognitive development is based on changes in intellectual structures that result from
innate predispositions to actively seek knowledge, organize knowledge, and adapt experiences in certain ways.
During early infancy, schemata take the form of
innate reflexes.
Tatiana is doing her math homework. Although tempted to count aloud, she tries to solve the problem by thinking in her head. Tatiana is using
inner speech.
Those who criticize lie detectors feel that the tests are particularly likely to err in the case of the ____ because different ____ all register as _____.
innocent emotions arousal
Four perspectives on motivation are ____ theory (which has been replaced by the ____ perspective), _____ theory, ____ theory, and the ____ of needs proposed by ____.
instinct evolutionary drive-reduction arousal hierarchy Maslow
As a result of Darwin's influence, many complex behaviors were classified as rigid, unlearned behavior patterns that are characteristic of a species, called ____. Although early instinct theory ____ explain human motives, the underlying assumption that ____ predispose species-typical behavior remains strong.
instincts did not genes
Increases in the hormone ____ diminish blood ____, partly by converting it to stored fat, which causes hunger to ____.
insulin glucose increase
practical intelligence
intelligence that cannot be gained from books or formal learning
One reason why there is a very low correlation between IQ and creativity is that
intelligent people excel at convergent thinking, while creative people excel at divergent thinking.
Darwin believed that when an emotion is accompanied by an outward facial expression, the emotion is ____.
intensified
Operations are schemata-based on
internal mental activities
Complex emotions are affected by our ___, ____, and ____.
interpretations expectations memories
Research has demonstrated that people generally experience a higher quality of life and greater well-being when they strive for ________ than when they strive for ____.
intimacy, my personal growth, and contribution to the community; wealth
According to Piaget, preoperational reasoning is characterized by
irreversibility
When a preoperational child, Delores, is asked if she has a sister, Delores replies, "Yes." Then, when asked further, "What's her name," Delores states, "Mary." Then Delores is asked if Mary has a sister, and Delores replies, "No." This conversational exchange reflects Delores' preoperational limitation in reasoning known as
irreversibility
The inability of a child to mentally "undo" something is referred to as
irreversibility.
The body weight "thermostat" of obese people ___ set to maintain a higher-than-average weight. When weight drops below this setting, ____ increases and ____ decreases.
is hunger metabolism
Key Terms: general intelligence (g)
is Spearman's idea that intelligence is one basic trait, underlying all cognitive abilities.
Comparing intelligence scores across cultures
is a complex process subject to misinterpretation and cultural bias.
The concept of "mental age"
is based on the number of correct test items achieved relative to a specific age group.
Tacit knowledge
is implicit knowledge shared by many people.
3. fluid intelligence
is made up of those basic mental abilities - abstract thinking, short-term memory, speed of thinking and the like-required for understanding any subject matter.
Practical intelligence _________(is/is not) related to traditional intelligence as measured by IQ tests.
is not
Generally speaking, the predictive validity of general aptitude tests ____ as high as their reliability. The predictive validity of these tests ___ as individuals move up the educational ladder.
is not diminshes
The concept of a precise body set point that drives hunger ____ by all researchers. Some researchers believe that set point can be altered by _____. In support of this idea is evidence that when people and other animals are given unlimited access to tasty foods, they tend to ____ and ____. For these reasons, some researchers prefer to use the term ____ as an alternative to the idea that there is a fixed set point.
is not accepted slow sustained changes in body weight overeat gain weight settling point
Inclusion of children with special needs into mainstream classes
is still debated as to its effectiveness.
Critical thinking is best defined as thinking that:
is systematic and reasonable
4. crystallized intelligence
is the accumulation of facts, information, and knowledge that comes with education and experience.
Familial retardation
is usually less severe than organic retardation
After years of placing individual refugee and immigrant families in ____ communities, US policies today encourage _____.
isolated chain migration
One of the reasons the zone of proximal development is important is because
it represents both an alternative approach to intelligence assessment and a way of understanding how intellectual development occurs.
10. Flynn effect
j. someone who is more skilled than the average person about personally meaningful activities
convergence
judging the distance of a nearby object based on the angle your eyes are turned towards each other uses the depth perception cue known as ______________.
11. automatic processing
k. thinking that doesn't require deliberate, conscious effort
Early in his career, Piaget was interested in epistemology, which is the study of
knowledge
Studies have found that imitating another person's facial expressions ____ to greater empathy with that person's feelings.
leads
Most human fears are acquired through _____.
learning (conditioning)
Mastery-oriented children tend to have __________ goals, while helpless children tend to have ___________ goals
learning; performance
Individuals with more active ____ lobes tend to be more cheerful than those in whom this pattern of brain activity is reversed. A cluster of neurons called the ____ becomes activated when people experience natural or drug-induced pleasure.
left frontal nucleus accumbens
When people experience positive moods, brain scans reveal more activity in the ____.
left frontal lobe
Chemical secreted by bloated fat cells: ____.
leptin
When a potion of an obese person's stomach is surgically sealed off, the remaining stomach produces ____ of this hormone.
less
One study found that obese women earned ____ than a control group of nonobese women and were less likely to be ____.
less married
Preschool children who had secure attachments during infancy tend to display all of the following characteristics EXCEPT
less persistence.
cornea
light enters the eye through here, a clear covering that protects the eye and begins to focus the incoming light
Normal hormonal fluctuations in humans have ____ effect on sexual motivation. In later life, frequency of intercourse ____ as sex hormone levels ____.
little decrease decline
Bayley's study is an example of _____________(cross-sectional/longitudal) research design. Earlier studies relied on ____________(cross-sectonal/longitudinal) research desings. Briefly explain why cross-sectional research can sometime yield a misleading picture of adult development.
longitudinal; cross-sectional Cross-sectional research may be misleading because each cohort has its own unique history of life experiences and because in each generation, academic intelligence increases a result of improved educatoin and health.
Fat tissue has a ____ metabolic rate than lean tissue. The result is that fat tissue requires ____ food energy to be maintained.
lower less
Starting from the idea that ____ needs such as the need for water take precedence over others, Maslow constructed a hierarchy of needs.
lower-level
Two other immune agents are the ____, which pursues and ingests foreign substances, and ____ cells, which pursue diseased cells.
macrophage natural killer (NK)
The current view is that children with mild retardation should be integrated, or ____ into regular classrooms.
mainstreamed
There is evidence that spatial abilities are enhanced by high levels of _____ during prenatal development.
male sex hormones
Historically, research on expertise has focused on occupations that once had more __________ (males/females) than ________(males/ females) workers. Today, more women ____(are/are not ) working in occupations traditionally reserved for me. In addition, domestic care giving tasks that were once considered ___________ _______ have gained new respect and are considered ____when performed by women and men.
males; females; are; women's work; important
Mercer's use of an adaptive functioning measure in conjunction with standardized intelligence tests was important because it showed that
many minority children who had been classified as mentally retarded could function in their environment and perform adaptive skills, such as household tasks and holding a job
Genetic factors ____ influence susceptibility to eating disorders.
may
Stereotype threat
may interfere with the performance of minority youth in intelligence tests.
Vygotsky believed that studying intellectual development outside of its cultural influences
may underestimate the child's development.
Research with amnesia patients indicates that part of knowing when to eat is our ____ of our last meal.
memory
At puberty, females experience _____ and males experience _____.
menarche; spermarche
Binet and Simon believed that
mental functions involving judgment, comprehension, and reasoning are what should be measured on intelligence tests.
Individuals whose intelligence scores fall below 70 and who have difficulty adapting to life may be labeled ___. This label applies to approximately ____ percent of the population.
mentally retarded 1
Your text associates frontal lobe damage with the long-term use of: A. LSD B. marijuana C. heroin D. methamphetamine
methamphetamine
Which of the following is NOT likely to overwhelm or minimize the genetic contribution to the intellectual functioning of an individual or group?
mixed ancestry.
Food is considered a primary reinforcer, whereas ____ is a secondary reinforcer. A. sex B. water C. none of the choices D. money
money
Research studies have found that people who have recently been widowed, fired or divorced are ____ vulnerable to illness than other people.
more
Happy people are also ____ willing to help others. This is called the ____, ____ phenomenon.
more feel-good do-good
Men who have older brothers are somewhat ____ likely to be gay. This phenomenon which has been called the ____, may represent a defensive maternal ____ response to substances produced by ____ fetuses.
more fraternal birth-order effect immune male
The intelligence scores of identical twins reared together are ____ similar than those of fraternal twins. Brain scans also reveal that identical twins have similar volume to their brain's ____, and those areas associated with ___ and ____ intelligence.
more gray matter verbal spatial
Although women are ___ likely than men to describe, themselves as empathic, physiological measures reveal a much ____ gender difference. Women are ____ likely than men to express empathy.
more smaller more
People are ____ likely to become obese when a friend becomes obese, thus demonstrating ____ influence as a factor in obesity. Obesity is ____ common among those who watch more daily TV and ___ common among people living in communities where walking is common.
more social more less
Studies of adopted children and their adoptive and biological families demonstrate that with age, genetic influences on intelligence become ____ apparent. Thus, children's intelligence scores are more like those of their ____ parents than their ____ parents.
more biological adoptive
The intelligence test scores of fraternal twins are ____ than the intelligence test scores of other siblings. This provides evidence of a(n) ____ effect because fraternal twins, being the same ____, are treated more alike.
more alike environmental age
Research has supported the finding that, compared to males, females tend to be d) more assertive.
more sensitive to subtle, nonverbal cues.
With higher economic status comes lower risks of infant _____, a low ____, smoking, and ____.
mortality birth weight violence
Bornstein and Tamus (1986) found that attentional processes in infancy were related to
mother's responsiveness.
Piaget may have underestimated children's ability to understand physical concepts because of his over-reliance on using
motor activity to gauge children's cognitive abilities.
Howard Gardner proposes that there are ____, each independent of the others. However, critics point out that the world is not so just: General intelligence scores ____ predict performance on various complex tasks and in various jobs.
multiple intelligences do
According to another view of motivation, organisms may experience a physiological ____, which creates a state of arousal that ____ the organism to reduce the need.
need drives
Stress and ____ emotions ____ been linked to cancer's rate of progression.
negative have
The Type A characteristic that is most strongly linked with coronary heart disease is _____, especially ______.
negative emotions the anger associated with an aggressively reactive temperament
Exercise increases the body's production of mood-boosting neurotransmitters such as ____, ____, and the ____. It also predicts better ____ functioning and reduced risk of ____ and Alzheimer's disease.
norepinephrine serotonin endorphins cognitive dementia
When scores on a test are compiled, they generally result in a bell-shaped pattern or ___ distribution.
normal
The stage of formal operations is different from Piaget's other stages in that
not all adults in all societies reach the stage of formal operations.
Studies like the Berkeley Guidance Study and the Fels Longitudinal Study, which assessed infant IQ with measures of sensorimotor skills, found that infant IQ scores are
not related to childhood IQ scores.
One psychologist believes that general intelligence evolved as a means of helping people solve ____.
novel problems
frequency of the sound wave is measured in...
number of waves that arrive per second
In Western societies, children usually acquire ________ conservation before ________ conservation.
number; volume
Although the actual cause of this effect is unknown, one explanation is that this is due to improved ___. The recent performance gains on the WAIS are greatest among people at the lowest ___ levels.
nutrition economic
The families of bulimia patients have a high incidence of childhood _____ and ____ self evaluation. The families of anorexia patients tend to be ____, ____ and ____.
obesity negative competitive high-achieving protective
Hormone secreted by the stomach that signals fullness:_____.
obestatin
One of the major achievements of Piaget's sensorimotor stage is the development of the concept of
object permanence.
Ray, age 5 months, watches as his father places his stuffed teddy bear beneath his baby blanket during a game of peek-a-boo. His father notices, however, that Ray forgets about the bear if it is hidden for more than a few seconds. Ray has not yet developed
object permanence.
In addition, some fears are acquired by ____ parents and friends.
observing
Congenital factors are characteristics that
occur during gestation or birth.
Effective managers ____ exhibit a high degree of both task and social leadership. The ____ effect occurs when people respond more positively to managerial decisions on which they have voiced an opinion.
often voice
People who have an ___outlook on life are less likely than others to suffer ill health.
optimistic
The hypothalamus also secretes the hunger triggering hormone ____.
orexin
A child's performance on an intelligence test is described in terms of her position relative to the performance of
other children her age.
One controversy regarding the nature of intelligence centers on whether intelligence is one of ___ ability or several ____ abilities.
overall (general) specific
Most people tend to ____ the duration of emotions and ____ their capacity to adapt.
overestimate underestimate
Sarah has learned the word ball. Now all round objects are called "ball". What is Sarah's error?
overextension
In one experiment, job applicants were rated as less worthy of hiring when they were made to appear ____.
overweight
When the need for arousal has passed, the body is calmed through activation of the ____ nervous system.
parasympathetic
Brain scans of experienced meditators reveal decreased activity in the ____ lobe and increased activity in the ____ lobe.
parietal frontal
A study of Einstein's brain revealed that it was 15% larger in the lower ___ lobe--known to be an important neural center for processing ___ and ___ information.
parietal mathematical spatial
triarchic (three-part) theory of intelligence
people may display more or less analytical intelligence, creative intelligence, and practical intelligence.
As an extension of the Carolina Abecedarian Project, Ramey and colleagues randomly assigned some children and their families to a later-starting intervention program in early elementary school. They found that the children who participated only in these later-starting programs
performed better than children who participated in only the preschool intervention program
Another toxic emotion is ____; researchers have found that _____ are more than twice as likely to develop heart disease as ____.
pessimism pessimists optimists
The creative personality
pg. 332
Fears that fall outside the average range are called ____. Fearfulness is shaped by both our ____ and our ____.
phobias experience genes
vision
photo reaction are the basis of which sense(s)?
The first operations are formed when
physical activities become internalized as a part of an organized mental structure
According to Maslow, the ____ needs are the most pressing, whereas the highest-order needs relate to ___ and ___.
physiological self-actualization self-transcendence
The two-factor theory of emotion proposes that emotion has 2 components: ____ arousal and a ____ label. This theory was proposed by ____ and _____.
physiological cognitive Stanley Schachter Jerome Singer
Emotions have 3 components: ____, ___ and ____.
physiological arousal expressive behaviors conscious experience
If you wanted the best intellectual outcome for a child being placed for adoption, based upon the results of Scarr and Weinberg (1976) you should
place the child with the adoptive family as soon after birth as possible.
One of the differences that Stevenson, Chen, and colleagues found between American and Japanese families that could account for differences in academic performance between children in these countries is that compared to Japanese mothers, American mothers
placed greater emphasis on the role of effort in academic performance.
Homosexual and bisexual people appear more often in certain populations including ___, ____ and ____.
poets fiction writers artists musicians
Because intelligence is influenced by many genes, it is said to be ____.
polygenic
The technical name for the "lie detector" is the ____.
polygraph
Individuals at the ____ level of moral development tend to use a personal code of ethics to guide their moral reasoning and behavior.
postconventional
Suggesting that a poor man who stole food to feed his family was right, because human life takes precedence over rules, is an example of
postconventional moral reasoning.
Piaget proposed four stages of cognitive development. Which of the following is NOT one of his stages?
postoperational
Linda, a newspaper reporter who has a knack for making connections with very important people:
practical intelligence
In developing their abilities, experts point to the importance of ___, usually at least several hours a day for ____(how long?) before their full potential is achieved. This highlights the importance of ______in the development of expertise.
practice: 10 years; motivation
Piaget divides the preoperational phase into two substages: the __________ period (2 to 4 years) and the __________ period (4 to 7 years).
preconceptual; intuitive
According to Kohlberg, a person who believes that Heinz should steal the drug so his wife can live and cook him dinner is reasoning at the ____ level of moral development.
preconventional
Given an ambiguous ethical dilemma, a particular child focuses on her own self - interest and whether the outcome is pleasurable, but does not conform to the rules of law and order or focus on others' disapproval of the behavior. According to Kohlberg's stage theory, in which stage is this child most likely functioning? A. preoperational B. preconventional C. conventional D. postconvetional
preconventional
Several recent studies demonstrate that religious involvement ____ health and longevity.
predicts
Recent research suggests that adolescents may be prone to engage in risky behaviors such as reckless driving and unprotected sex because the _____ area of the brain is not fully developed until late adolescence or early adulthood.
prefrontal cortex
In order to promote creativity in your children, you encourage them to engage in
pretend play.
Using this design, Schale found that on five _____ _____ _____, most people improved throughout most of adulthood. The results of his research are known collectively as the _________ _______ __________.
primary mental abilities; Seattle Longitudinal Study
When we cope directly with a stressor, we are using ____ coping.
problem-focues
People tend to use ____ coping when they feel a sense of ____ over a situation.
problem-focused control emotion-focused change
perception
process of organization and interpretation
Young Benny can reach for his Cheerios with his arm, but cannot yet pick them up with his fingers and hands. Benny's behavior BEST illustrates the ____ trend of motor development.
proximodistal
In the wake of catastrophic events, such as floods, hurricanes, and fires, there often is an increase in the rates of _____.
psychological disorders such as depression and anxiety
Measuring psychological characteristics such as intelligence is taking a _______approach to research.
psychometric
The new field of ____ investigates how psychological, neural, and endocrine systems together affect the immune system and health.
psychoneuroimmunology
In _____ illnesses, physical symptoms are produced by psychological causes.
psychophysiological
Erik Erikson's developmental stages are organized around potential turning points called
psychosocial crises.
The term _____ was once used to describe such illness. However, this term implied that symptoms were ____.
psychosomatic unreal
The stage during which sexual functions reach maturity that marks the beginning of adolescence is referred to as
puberty.
electromagnetic energy
pulses of energy waves that can carry information from place to place.
Other studies have found that the brain waves of highly intelligent people register simple stimuli more ___ and with greater ____.
quicly complexity
More specifically, the four components of emotional intelligence are as follows: the ability to ____ emotions in faces, the ability to ___ them and how they change and blend, the ability to ____ them correctly in varied situations, and the ability to use them to enable ____ or creative thinking.
recognize predict express adaptive
An infant's ability to recognize a totally novel stimulus and direct his attention to it is called
recovery.
Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences
refers to separate, diverse types of intelligence in humans
During resolution males experience a ____ during which they are incapable of another orgasm.
refractory period
After experiencing tragedy or dramatically positive events, people generally ____ their previous degree of happiness.
regain
To regard an abstract concept as a concrete entity is to commit the error known as ____. By doing this, we are viewing intelligence as something a person has, rather than a score obtained on an ____.
reification intelligence test
The principle that one feels worse off than others is known as ____. This helps to explain why the middle and upper income people who compare themselves with the relatively poor are ____ satisfied with life.
relative deprivation slightly more
If a test yields consistent results, it is said to be ___.
reliable
The psychometrician at your school is administering a new IQ test and finds that students' scores on the test vary considerably across testing sessions. The new IQ test is not
reliable.
Until fairly recently in history, the healing traditions of ____ and ____ have worked ____.
religion medicine together
During the last four decades, buying power in the US has almost tripled; personal happiness has ____.
remained almost unchanged
People who are unemployed ____ lower well being. People who view their work as a ____ report the greatest satisfaction.
report calling
This is followed by the stage of ____, in which the body's resources are mobilized to cope with the stressor.
resistance
Positive emotions ____ in the early to middle part of most days. The gloom of stressful events usually ____ the next day.
rise is gone by
Happy people tend to perceive the world as ____ and live ____ and more energized and satisfied lives.
safer healthier
Tacit knowledge has been found by Sternberg (2001) to predict
salaries and job performance of workers.
People with ____ score at the low end of intelligence tests but possess extraordinary specific skills.
savant syndrome
The instructional process that is an outgrowth of the zone of proximal development is
scaffolding.
According to Piaget's theory, cognitive structures that form a basis for organizing behavior are
schemata
The MOST common category of attachment formed by infants in the United States is the
secure attachment.
six senses
seeing, hearing, smelling, touching, tasting, and monitoring the body's positions (proprioception)
Researcher such as Paul and Margaret Baltes have found that people devises alternative strategies to compensate for age-related decline in ability. The Balteses call this ___________ _________ __ _.
selective optimization of compensation.
Researchers have found that people who are rejected are more likely to engage in ___ behaviors, to underperform on ____ and to act in disparaging or ___ ways.
self-defeating aptitude tests agressive
Research has shown that ___ is a better predictor of school performance than ____ have been. Extremely successful individuals differ from equally talented peers in their ____, their passionate dedication to a long-term goal.
self-discipline intelligence scores grit
Another way to reduce stress is to talk about it. In another study by Pennebaker, Holocaust survivors who were the most ___ had the most improved health.
self-disclosing
Feeling accepted and loved by others boosts our ____.
self-esteem
Ancel Keys observed that men became preoccupied with thoughts of food when they underwent ____.
semistarvation
vestibular sacs
sense linear accelerations
semicircular canals
sense the rotational movements of the body
The Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children involves
sequential and simultaneous processing.
Carbohydrates boost levels of the neurotransmitter ____, which ___ the body.
serotonin calms
The weight level at which an individual's body is programmed to stay is referred to as the body's ____. A person whose weight goes beyond this level will tend to feel ____ hungry than usual and expend ____ energy.
set point less more
Historically, most psychologists have considered intelligence to be comprised of
several distinct abilities.
Which of the following does NOT occur during the final three months of prenatal development?
sex organs start to develop
Problems that consistently impair sexual functioning are called _____. Examples of such problems include ____, ____ and ____.
sexual disorders premature ejaculation erectile dysfunction orgasmic dysfunction
A person's sexual attraction toward members of a particular gender is referred to as ____.
sexual orientation
Unprotected sex has led to an increase in adolescent rates of ____. Teenage girls because of their not yet fully mature biological development and lower levels of protective ____, may be especially vulnerable to STIs.
sexually transmitted infection (STI) antibodies
Researchers' values ____ be openly stated.
should
The various emotions are associated with ____ forms of physiological arousal. In particular, the emotions of ____, ____, and ____ are difficult to distinguish physiologically.
similar fear anger sexual arousal
At what age does an infant typically first exhibit separation anxiety?
six to eight months
Sensory nerves, thalamus, parietal lobes
skin sensation nerve route in brain
Obese people are often stereotyped as ___, ____, and ____.
slow lazy sloppy
olfactory nerve, limbric system
smell signal nerve route in brain
Another buffer against the effects of stress is ____ support.
social
Much of our ____ behavior aims to increase our belongings. For most people, familiarity leads to ____.
social liking
Because of ____ facilitation, people tend to eat ____ when they are with other people. The phenomenon of ____ is the tendency of mindlessly eat more when portions are larger.
social more unit bias
According to many, boys' and girls' interests and abilities are shaped in large part by ____ and divergent opportunities. The mental ability scores of males tend to vary ____ than those of females.
social expectations more
Unlike Piaget's theory of cognitive development, Vygotsky emphasizes that
social interactions and culture strongly influence the cognitive development of a child.
The correct developmental sequence in children's use of speech based upon Vygotsky's theory is
social speech, egocentric speech, inner speech.
Intelligence is a ____ constructed concept.
socially
cochlear nerve, thalamus, temporal lobes
sound signal nerve route in brain
detector neurons
specialized neurons, located in the visual cortex, that respond to the strength, angles, shapes, edges, and movements of a visual stimulus
Higher work achievement is motivated by a leader who sets ____ goals.
specific challenging
Intelligence tests typically measure
specific knowledge and skills.
Research studies indicate that the benefits of expertise are quite __________(general/specific) and that practice and specialization __________ (can/ cannot ) always overcome the effects of age.
specific; cannot
Which of the following is MOST likely to decline in the later years?
speed in processing information
Which of the following is true with regard to changes that accompany aging?
speed of processing information declines
Girls tend to outscore boys on ____ tests and are more ___ fluent. They also have an edge in ____ and ____ objects, in sensation, and in ____ detecting ability.
spelling verbally remembering locating emotion
When a person's scores for the odd and even numbered questions on a test are compared, ____ reliability is being assessed.
split-half
One requirement of a good test is the process of defining meaningful scores relative to a pretested comparison group, which is called ____.
standardization
As a psychometrician, you are concerned that you administer the test using the same procedures each time. You are concerned with
standardization.
Although Francis Galton's search for a simple intelligence measure failed, he gave us some ___ techniques that we still use, as well as the terms ___ and ____.
statistical nature nurture
When women and members of ethnic minorities are led to expect that they won't do well on a test, a ____ may result, and their scores may actually be lower.
stereotype threat
Stress is not merely a ____ or a _____. Rather, it is the _____ by which we perceive and respond to environmental threats and challenges.
stimulus response process
Cannon and Washburn's experiment using a balloon indicated that there is an association between hunger and ____.
stomach contractions
A third difference is that experts have more an better _______for accomplishing a particular task.
strategies
Researchers note that the first step to a stronger organization is to institute a ____ selection system, which matches strengths to work.
strengths-based
This early school of psychology used introspection to study subjective mental experiences:
structuralism
A more disciplined method of collecting information from job applicants is the ____, which asks the same questions of all applicants. This method enhances the ____ accuracy and ____ of the interview process.
structured interview predictive reliability
Chen, Stevenson, and colleagues have found that Asian parents are more likely than European American parents to attribute children's academic performance to
studying hard.
An individual's self-perceived happiness or satisfaction with life is called his or her ____.
subjective well-being
Some homosexuals struggle with their sexual orientation and are at increased risk of ____ attempts.
suicide
James Pennebaker has found that emotional ____ can adversely affect our physical health.
suppression
iris
surrounds the pupil, controls the size of the pupil by constricting or dilating in response to light intensity
One of the most significant accomplishments of the preoperational child is the rapid acquisition of the
symbolic function.
The stage "the invention of new means by mental combination" is characterized by the beginnings of
symbolic thought
The responses of arousal are activated by the ____ nervous system. In response to its signal, the ____ glands release the stress hormones ____ and ____, which increase heart rate, respiration, blood pressure, and blood sugar.
sympathetic adrenal epinephrine (adrenaline) norepinephrine (noradrenaline)
Postmortem analyses reveal that the brains of highly educated people have more ___ than do those of of people with less education. Other evidence suggests that highly intelligent people differ in their neural ___. Higher intelligence scores have also been linked with more ____ in brain areas known to be involved in ___, ___ and ____.
synapses plasticity gray matter memory attention language
Managers who are directive, set clear standards, organize work, and focus attention on specific goals are said to employ ____. More democratic managers who aim to build teamwork and mediate conflicts in the work force employ ____.
task leadership social leadership
Gustatory nerve, thalamus, frontal lobes
taste signal nerve route in brain
One study found that women who suffered enduring caregivers stress had especially short ____, which are pieces of ____ at the ends of ____ that are important in allowing cells to ____.
telomeres DNA chromosomes divide
A number of scientists today believe that biological factors may predispose a ____ that influences sexuality, and thus explains why sexual orientation is ____ to change. Most psychiatrists now believe that ____ plays the larger role in predisposing sexual orientation. Those who believe that sexual orientation is determined by ____ express more accepting attitudes toward homosexual persons.
temperament difficult biology biology
Another common response to stress among women has been called "_____," which refers to the increased tendency to _______.
tend and befriend seek and give support
When a test is administered more than once to the same people, the psychologist is determining its _____ reliability.
test-retest
The importance of the hormone ____ to male sexual arousal is confirmed by that fact that sexual interest declines in animals if their ____ are removed. In women, low levels of the hormone ___ may cause a waning sexual interest.
testosterone testes testosterone
Object permanence is the ability acquired when the child recognizes
that an object still exists even though it is out of the child's sight
If a test is said to be culturally biased, it would have questions
that were developed by a cultural committee.
Emotional intelligence
the ability to accurately identify, assess, and understand emotions, as well as to effectively control one's own emotions.
Emotion regulation
the ability to control and productively use one's emotions.
divergent thinking
the ability to generate many different ideas for or solutions to a single problem
proprioception
the ability to sense the position and movement of our body parts
Which of the following statements regarding personality changes in adulthood is MOST accurate?
the adult personality is characterized by both stability and change
The Flynn effect is a trend demonstrating that
the average IQ in developed nations such as the United States has increased about 15 points from 1932 to 1978.
Assume research shows there is a gender difference on Trait X and males tend to exhibit more of the trait than females. If the gender difference on Trait X is similar to other traits with gender differences, which of the following conclusions would BEST describe performance on Trait X?
the average male exhibits slightly higher levels of the trait than the average female
Two children are mentally retarded, yet one is higher in adaptive skills. One would conclude that
the child lacking adaptive skills is more likely to be labeled mentally retarded
Familial retardation includes intellectual deficits that derive from
the conditions of early infancy or childhood
Vygotsky's theory has influenced the study of child development by emphasizing
the contribution of social contexts to children's learning.
apparent motion
the cues that the brain uses to perceive motion
Arthur Jensen (1969) suggested that
the differences between African Americans and European Americans in IQ can mainly be attributed to genetic factors.
When Kohlberg presented moral dilemmas to individuals in order to evaluate their level of moral development, he placed the MOST emphasis on
the explanation the individual gave concerning the reason for his or her response.
pinna, or auricle
the external and visible part of the ear
The germinal stage of prenatal development is
the first two weeks after conception.
How do children develop special attachments to their mothers according to John Bowlby?
the infant is biologically programmed to emit behavior that triggers a protective response from adult females
The study of young street vendors in Brazil demonstrates
the influence of cultural practices on the development of mathematics skills.
Skin
the largest organ in the body, is the sensory organ for touch.
retina
the layer of tissue at the back of the eye that contains photoreceptor cells.
When researchers report a measure of central tendency, they might present:
the median
oval window
the membrane covering the opening of the cochlea
Cross-cultural research on conservation suggests that
the more experience individuals have with particular materials, the sooner they are able to understand conservation with those materials.
If the Stanford-Binet were administered to members of a rural tribe in Zimbabwe,
the results should be interpreted with extreme caution because the test norms may be invalid for this group.
Studies of adults indicate that in different cultures facial expressions have ____ meanings. Even our emotional ______ cross world cultures. Studies of children indicate that the meaning of their facial expressions ____ across cultures. The emotional facial expressions of blind children ____ the same as those of sighted children.
the same display rules does not vary are
One of the central processes of social cognition is the differentiation of
the self from other objects in the environment.
Research concerning personality development in adulthood focuses primarily on examining
the stability of personality over the life span
Kamehameha Early Education Program (KEEP) is an educational experiment based on Vygotsky's concept of
the zone of proximal development.
One theory that proposes that people develop a homosexual orientation if they are segregated with ____ gender at the time their sex drive matures. The fact that early homosexual behavior ____ make people homosexual ____ this theory.
their own does not conflicts with
The false-belief task is often used to investigate children's
theory of mind.
Piaget believed that children do not possess operations until
they are able to represent the world in their mind and use symbols.
Some African American children who succeed in school choose strategies to hide or camouflage their actual efforts to achieve academic success because
they get negative feedback from peers who may express negative attitudes toward education.
convergent thinking
thinking that is directed toward finding the correct answer to a given problem,
Most people are especially good at interpreting nonverbal ____. We read fear and ____ mostly from the ____, and happiness from the ____. Although we are good at detecting emotions, we find it difficult to detect ____ expressions.
threats anger eyes mouth deceiving
photo reaction, mechanical reactions, molecular reactions
three major types of transduction
tympanic membrane (or eardrum)
tightly stretched, highly sensitive membrane, which vibrates with the waves.
The goal of Piaget's theory of cognitive development is
to discover how children think about the world and how changes in their thinking come about.
Many argue that it is inappropriate to use heritability estimates of intelligence obtained in one population
to infer the heritability of intelligence in another population
Gelman and Williams (1998) propose that infants are born with learning mechanisms that are biologically prepared
to rapidly learn some of the critical features of their environment.
One study found that laughter caused improved ____ and increased ____.
tone bloodflow
Sternberg's ____ theory distinguishes three types of intelligence: ____ intelligence, ____ intelligence, and ____ intelligence.
triarchic analytical (academic problem solving) practical creative
If an infant's basic biological needs are met by others and sound attachments are formed during the first year of life, the infant will, MOST likely, successfully resolve the crisis associated with the ____ stage.
trust versus mistrust
When rodents were inoculated with ___ cells or given ____, tumors developed sooner in those that were also exposed to ____ stress.
tumor carcinogens uncontrollable
By one estimate, moderate exercise adds ____ years to life expectancy.
two
The adolescent growth spurt begins and puberty occurs approximately ____ in females than in males.
two years earlier
Negative situations are especially stressful when they are appraised as _____.
uncontrollable
Which of the following is NOT one of Kohlberg's levels of moral development?
unconventional
As a young man working in the laboratory of Alfred Binet, Piaget became interested in how children
understand what was being asked of them on intelligence tests
We have a natural dislike of many foods that are ____; this ____ was probably adaptive for our ancestors, and protected them from toxic substances.
unfamiliar neophobia
Because teenage sex is often ____ there is increased risk of pregnancy and ____. Compared with European teens, American teens have ____ rates of intercourse, ____ rates of contraceptive use, and thus ____ rates of teen pregnancy and abortion.
unprotected sexually transmitted infections (STIs) lower lower higher
Throughout the world, people place emotions along 2 dimensions: ____, which refers to whether a feeling is ____ or ____ and high versus low ____.
valence pleasant (positive valence) unpleasant (negative valence) arousal
A test that measures what it claims to measure is considered
valid.
While developing an intelligence test for children, you compare the children's score on the intelligence test with the criterion of their school grades. You are making sure the test is
valid.
The degree to which a test measures or predicts what it is supposed to is refereed to as the the test's ____.
validity
The most effective style of leadership ____ with the situation and/or the person.
varies
The value placed on different dimensions of intellectual ability ____________(varies/does not vary) from culture to culture _________(and /but not) from one stage of life to another. Another factor is the ___________context.
varies; and ; historical
The Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test includes questions about
various abilities: identifying emotions, facilitating thinking, understanding emotions, and managing emotions.
The fact that children in different cultures ____ in the age at which basic motor skills appear demonstrates that ____.
vary somewhat; environmental factors can slow or accelerate early motor development
the ossicles- the hammer (or malleus), anvil (or incus), and stirrup (or stapes)
vibrations are relayed into the middle ear through three tiny bones called? What are the 3 names?
Oval window
vibrations cause the ____________ to vibrate, disturbing the fluid inside the cochlea.
The series of studies by Fagan and colleagues support the view that intelligence scores in childhood can best be predicted from
visual attention behaviors in infancy.
optic nerve, thalamus, occipitual lobes
visual signal nerve route in brain
Newer studies that measure brain ____ using ____ scans reveal a ____ significant correlation between brain size (adjusted for body size) and intelligence score. The cause of this could be differing ____, nutrition, ____ or some combination of these.
volume MRI more genes environmental stimulation
Piaget's theory and research on the study of cognitive development came to the United States in the 1960s and
was an alternative to behaviorism
2. Seattle longitudinal Study
was the first study of adult intelligence that used a cross-sequental research design.
Rogoff's concept of guided participation emphasizes the
ways in which children learn as they are guided by the values and practices of others in their cultural community.
As children, most homosexuals ____ sexually victimized.
were not
farsighted
when the focus is behind the retina
nearsighted
when the focus is in front of the retina
In Carraher, Schliemann, and Carraher's study of children street vendors in Brazil, the children's accuracy was related to
whether the transaction was commercial or academic.
How does the brain change during adolescence?
white matter increases
Performance appraisal has several purposes, including helping organizations decide ____, how to appropriately ____, and how to better harness employees' ____. Performance appraisal methods include ____, ____ scales, and ____ scales.
who to retain reward and pay workers strengths checklists graphic ratings behavior rating
Most people become angry when another person's act seems ____, ____ and _____.
willful unjustified avoidable
Language
words or symbols and rules for combining them, that are used for thinking and communication. Most thinking relies heavily on language because words encode (translate) the world into symbols that are easy to manipulate. Language also plays a major role in defining ethnic communities and other social groups. Thus, language can be a bridge or a barrier between cultures. Translating languages can cause a rash of semantic problems. A language must provide symbols that stand for objects and ideas. A true language is also productive: it can generate new thoughts or ideas.
According to Freud, the healthy life is filled with ___ and ____.
work love
Health can also be improved by ____ about personal traumas in a diary.
writing
Adolescents in modern, western cultures reach puberty at _________ ages than their peers in developing countries.
younger