PSYC 273 study guide
Which drug, when used repetitively, can produce a psychotic state akin to schizophrenia? LSD Heroin Amphetamine Aspirin
Amphetamine
Which of the following is an example of an obsession? Checking 15 times that all doors and windows are locked before leaving the house An overwhelming fear that something terrible will happen at any moment Ritualized hand washing once per hour The overpowering need to repeatedly go in and out of a door
An overwhelming fear that something terrible will happen at any moment
A large frontal lesion in the left hemisphere can produce _______ aphasia. Broca's conduction Wernicke's subcortical
Broca's
A patient who has difficulty speaking but has good comprehension of verbal material is most likely suffering from _______ aphasia. Wernicke's Broca's conduction global
Broca's
Because chimpanzees seem able to learn a version of American Sign Language (ASL), some researchers have concluded that they are able to acquire language. Those who disagree, however, offer which criticism of this conclusion? Sign language is simply not a language. Chimpanzees do not produce novel sequences of signs. Chimpanzees may only be imitating the gestures of trainers. Chimpanzees do not have the fine motor control to fully execute ASL.
Chimpanzees may only be imitating the gestures of trainers.
"Where's Waldo?" is a puzzle in which one must find the right combination of features to identify Waldo in a busy scene. Which type of attentional process does this refer to? Feature search Conjunction search Binding analysis "Pop-out"
Conjunction search
Which of the following genes has been associated with schizophrenia? neuregulin 1 DISC1 schizotypy orexin
DISC1
_______ dyslexia is a form of acquired dyslexia in which the patient incorrectly reads a word as another semantically-related word. Deep Surface Superficial Fluent
Deep
The adage "cells that fire together, wire together" refers to a hypothesis proposed by Charles Sherrington. Alan Baddeley. Raymond Kesner. Donald Hebb.
Donald Hebb.
What effect do benzodiazepines have on GABA synapses? Complete blocking of inhibition Enhancement of GABA-mediated inhibition Enhancement of GABA-mediated excitation Reduction of chloride permeability
Enhancement of GABA-mediated inhibition
Children with ADHD have slightly reduced brain volume in which of following brain regions? Frontal lobe Temporal lobe Occipital lobe Parietal lobe
Frontal lobe
Which of the following is a positive symptom of schizophrenia? Social withdrawal Blunted affect Impoverished speech Hallucinations
Hallucinations
Which of the following statements is most true of childhood aphasia? Aphasia produced by brain injury in childhood is severe and permanent. Language abilities impaired by childhood brain injury are usually restored by adulthood. Childhood aphasia and adult aphasia are similar in their recovery patterns. The brain progressively increases its ability to compensate for injury with aging.
Language abilities impaired by childhood brain injury are usually restored by adulthood.
Which memory store holds the largest number of items? Iconic memory Working memory Intermediate-term memory Long-term memory
Long-term memory
Which of the following protects neurons from apoptosis? Methylation Neurotrophic factors Neurogenesis markers Death genes
Neurotrophic factors
Which of the following is the most commonly exhibited OCD symptom? Intrusive nonsense vocalizations Performing excessive or ritualized behaviors Sudden angry outbursts Fatigue
Performing excessive or ritualized behaviors
Which of the following drugs has been shown to inhibit the symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disorder? Tricyclic antidepressants SSRIs Typical neuroleptics Benzodiazepines
SSRIs
Which of the following is a feature of birdsong that suggests it is analogous to human speech? Some birds require early exposure to species-typical birdsong in order to develop their characteristic song. Removal of the left temporal cortex of birds eliminates characteristic song patterns. Brain damage results in permanent song elimination. Deafened female birds are more sensitive to left-brain injury.
Some birds require early exposure to species-typical birdsong in order to develop their characteristic song.
_______ dyslexia is a form of acquired dyslexia in which the patient has difficulty with the details and sounds of letters. Deep Surface Superficial Fluent
Surface
Which circuit of the brain is active during quiet, introspective thought? The dorsal stream The ventral stream The temporoparietal junction The default mode network
The default mode network
Which attention network is responsible for top-down control of endogenous attention? The dorsal frontoparietal system The temporoparietal system The ventral frontal cortical system The medial orbitoparietal system
The dorsal frontoparietal system
Directed attention toward novel or unexpected stimuli is controlled by which cortical system? The dorsal frontoparietal system The temporoparietal system The ventral frontal cortical system The medial orbitoparietal system
The temporoparietal system
OCD and _______ are believed to be part of a spectrum of related disorders. PTSD schizophrenia Tourette's syndrome bipolar disorder
Tourette's syndrome
Which cue will typically elicit the fastest reaction time to the target in the symbolic cuing task? Invalid Neutral Valid Colorful
Valid
A patient who produces seemingly fluent but largely unintelligible speech and has poor comprehension of verbal material is most likely suffering from _______ aphasia. Wernicke's Broca's conduction global
Wernicke's
The discovery of the relationship between syphilis and paralytic dementia revealed that a mental disorder turned out to have a physiological cause. schizophrenia often co-occurred in patients with sexually transmitted infections like syphilis. both sexually transmitted infections and mental disorders can have a common viral cause. people with paralytic dementia tend to be promiscuous.
a mental disorder turned out to have a physiological cause.
Neurofibrillary tangles are clumps of dead neurons in the brains of Alzheimer's patients. senile plaques in the brains of Alzheimer's patients. abnormal tangles of neurofilaments. patches of dead and dying axons.
abnormal tangles of neurofilaments.
Disturbance in reading is called anomia. apraxia. alexia. agnosia.
alexia.
Henry Molaison's (patient H.M.) surgery involved removal of the hippocampus and the amygdala. dorsomedial thalamus. mammillary bodies. temporal stem.
amygdala.
The likelihood that the spouse of a person with schizophrenia will develop the disease is similar to the likelihood that ______ will do so. the patient's parent the patient's sibling the patient's first cousin an individual in the general population
an individual in the general population
Pharmacological treatment of Tourette's syndrome involves drugs that antagonize dopamine. inhibit norepinephrine. enhance levels of dopamine. enhance GABA.
antagonize dopamine.
The most striking impairment suffered by Henry Molaison (patient H.M.) was prosopagnosia. anterograde amnesia. retrograde amnesia. episodic amnesia.
anterograde amnesia.
Episodic memory concerns general knowledge. nondeclarative information. semantic information. autobiographical information.
autobiographical information.
Imaging studies indicate that the learning of sensorimotor skills, perceptual skills, and cognitive skills are all affected by damage specifically to the basal ganglia. motor cortex. hippocampus. amygdala.
basal ganglia.
It has been proposed that posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can be reduced or eliminated by the administration of drugs that accelerate forgetting. block the effects of emotional stress on memory. inhibit behavioral sensitization. reduce frontal lobe activity.
block the effects of emotional stress on memory.
The increase of cortical thickness with enriched experience is probably mainly due to the increased size of synaptic junctions. number of axons. branching of dendrites. fluid content of cortical tissue.
branching of dendrites.
According to some studies, stroke patients given _______ therapy can show about a 75% return of normal use of a paralyzed arm within a relatively short period of time. melodic intonation constraint-induced movement edema reduction intense massage
constraint-induced movement
A person credited with having "eyes in the back of their head" more probably is skilled at covert attention. overt attention. selective tuning. the cocktail party effect.
covert attention.
The symptoms of schizophrenia are associated with _______ activity in the _______ lobes. decreased; frontal decreased; temporal increased; parietal increased; occipital
decreased; frontal
According to the theory of perceptual load, a large perceptual load decreases perceptual resources for unattended items. increases perceptual resources for unattended items. decreases problem-solving capacities. increases problem-solving capacities.
decreases perceptual resources for unattended items.
Prevalence rates for _______ are much higher for women than for men. depression anxiety schizophrenia drug abuse
depression
The monoamine hypothesis of depression proposes that -depression is a result of too little stimulation at monoamine synapses. -depression is a result of too much stimulation at monoamine at synapses. -monoamine is absent in very depressed people. -monoamine is overproduced in very depressed people.
depression is a result of too little stimulation at monoamine synapses.
Children who have inherited PKU can be helped by surgery. dietary manipulation. enriched environments. gene therapy.
dietary manipulation
The main subdivisions of the prefrontal cortex are the _______ and _______ areas. sensory; motor motor; premotor dorsolateral; orbitofrontal dorsolateral; mediofrontal
dorsolateral; orbitofrontal
Unusual groupings of cells in the outer layers of the cerebral cortex have been seen in postmortem studies of dyslexia. apraxia. childhood aphasia. Broca's aphasia.
dyslexia.
ERP stands for _______ potential. evoked response event-related evoked-related event response
event-related
Reflexive attention is also called endogenous attention. exogenous attention. stimulus cuing. symbolic cuing.
exogenous attention.
Childhood hemispherectomy is often followed by the need for a respirator for the rest of the individual's life. extensive functional deficits that are permanent. extensive seizure activity. extensive functional recovery.
extensive functional recovery.
In the Wada test, anesthetizing the right hemisphere interferes with a subject's ability to recognize words. faces. songs. spoken language.
faces.
The primary symptom of hemispatial neglect is:
failure to pay any attention to objects presented to one side of the body
The primary symptom of hemispatial neglect is forgetfulness. difficulty steering visual gaze. distractibility, impulsivity, and hyperactivity. failure to pay any attention to objects presented to one side of the body.
failure to pay any attention to objects presented to one side of the body.
The amygdala is directly involved in spatial location learning. fear conditioning. memory consolidation. skill learning.
fear conditioning.
Functional imaging studies indicate that drugs that alleviate symptoms of schizophrenia tend to increase activation of the frontal cortex. basal ganglia. amygdala. cerebellum.
frontal cortex.
The natural ligand for the AMPA receptor is Mg2+. Ca. glutamate. Na+.
glutamate.
The P3 component of auditory processing is associated with impaired sensory processing. recognized visual stimuli. higher-order cognitive processing of stimuli. early sensory processing.
higher-order cognitive processing of stimuli.
In people with Alzheimer's disease, amyloid plaques are found in the _______, cortex, and associated limbic system sites.
hippocampus
In people with Alzheimer's disease, amyloid plaques are found in the _______, cortex, and associated limbic system sites. hippocampus amygdala basal ganglia cerebellum
hippocampus
In the adult brain, neurogenesis is evident in the amygdala. extrastriate cortex. hippocampus. basal ganglia.
hippocampus
Place cells, which are located in the _______, become active when searching for previously-hidden food. amygdala caudate nucleus hippocampus extrastriate visual cortex
hippocampus
Some patients with posttraumatic stress disorder have anatomical anomalies of the:
hippocampus
Adult rats living in enriched conditions produce new neurons in the cortex. amygdala. hypothalamus. hippocampus.
hippocampus.
Some patients with posttraumatic stress disorder have anatomical anomalies of the hippocampus. basal ganglia. olfactory pathways. caudate nucleus.
hippocampus.
The "easy problem of consciousness" refers to understanding how particular patterns of activity create specific conscious experiences. the brain processes that result in a person's unique subjective experience. the effects of quantum particles on the pineal gland. the neural correlates of free will and agency.
how particular patterns of activity create specific conscious experiences.
In the delayed non-matching-to-sample task in monkeys, the subject traces a picture while viewing it in a mirror. reads mirror-reversed text. identifies an unfamiliar object in a pair of objects. searches for food hidden in a maze.
identifies an unfamiliar object in a pair of objects
A viewer presented with two videos projected onto the same screen will be aware of only one at any given moment due to an attentional phenomenon called shadowing. inattentional blindness. filter failure. differential blindness.
inattentional blindness.
Tricyclic antidepressants inhibit the enzyme monoamine oxidase. inhibit the reuptake of norepinephrine, serotonin, and/or dopamine. block the active sites of three specific serotonin receptors. block cholinergic synapses.
inhibit the reuptake of norepinephrine, serotonin, and/or dopamine.
Methylation is the process by which gene expression is _______ through _______. facilitated; DNA modification inhibited; DNA modification facilitated; chromosomal deletion inhibited; chromosomal deletion
inhibited; DNA modification
Martin has been treated with lithium for bipolar disorder for most of his adult life. He finds he takes his medication for a while but then stops. The most likely reason he does this is because the side effects are unbearable. it interacts with his dietary choices, resulting in bad headaches. it robs him of the exhilaration of the manic phase. he feels like a zombie when takes it.
it robs him of the exhilaration of the manic phase.
In instrumental conditioning, an association is formed between an organism's behavior and the environmental context. the unconditioned response. its consequences. several attributes.
its consequences.
The main cause of Korsakoff's syndrome is lack of thiamine. encephalitis. syphilis. concussion.
lack of thiamine.
Hemispheric specialization is also known as prosopagnosia. lateralization. hemispheric centrality. location of function.
lateralization.
The drug _______ is often used to treat bipolar disorder. diazepam lithium haloperidol phencyclidine
lithium
People with Korsakoff's syndrome often show damage in parts of limbic system, especially the trigeminal nucleus and hippocampus mammillary bodies and dorsomedial thalamus. cranial motor nuclei and frontal lobes. fornix and hippocampus.
mammillary bodies and dorsomedial thalamus.
Aphasic patients may produce nonsensical or meaningless words called paraphasias. dyslexias. confabulations. neologisms.
neologisms.
Diminished social insight, distractibility, and emotional lability are associated with injuries to the _______ cortex. premotor orbitofrontal intraparietal dorsolateral prefrontal
orbitofrontal
Hillyard's classic study of auditory attention found that ERPs for attended stimuli are smaller in amplitude than those for nonattended stimuli. localized to the same side of the brain as the attended ear particularly evident in the N1 component. difficult to detect when the attended stimuli is in a low threshold range.
particularly evident in the N1 component.
At present, the only way to identify Alzheimer's disease with confidence is through olfactory testing. genetic screening. postmortem examination. MRI.
postmortem examination.
A principal effect of the drug chlorpromazine is the postsynaptic blocking of dopamine receptors. postsynaptic blocking of acetylcholine. release of norepinephrine. facilitation of GABA actions.
postsynaptic blocking of dopamine receptors
Birdsong is similar to human speech in that proper expression of the FOXP2 gene appears to be crucial. the right hemisphere has a greater effect on vocal behavior. juveniles do not have to be exposed to vocal adults to develop normal singing behavior. both human and bird communication incorporate prosody.
proper expression of the FOXP2 gene appears to be crucial.
Prosopagnosia is the inability to identify objects by touch. learn the names of objects that are seen. distinguish different patterns of visual stimuli. recognize faces.
recognize faces.
In LTP formation, nitric oxide may serve as a(n) synaptic transmitter. inhibitor of protein synthesis. synaptic modulator. retrograde transmitter.
retrograde transmitter.
The _______ hemisphere plays a major role in the perception of music. The _______ hemisphere plays a major role in prosody. right; left left; right right; right left; left
right; right
Family studies of schizophrenia reveal that virtually all relatives of patients have had or will have schizophrenia at one time or another. schizophrenia is more evident among first-degree relatives of patients than it is among more distant relatives. schizophrenia is sex-linked. schizophrenia is seen only in siblings of patients, but never in their parents.
schizophrenia is more evident among first-degree relatives of patients than it is among more distant relatives.
Abnormal visual tracking of moving objects is a symptom associated with panic. depression. schizophrenia. obsessive-compulsive disorder.
schizophrenia.
Finding your way to your Brain & Behavior class requires dichotic learning. prosidy. spatial cognition. DTI tractography.
spatial cognition.
In humans, electrical stimulation of Broca's area is most likely to produce organized, coherent words. grunts and groans. speech arrest. wild gestures.
speech arrest.
When the term schizophrenia was first introduced in the early twentieth century, one of the original descriptions indicated that functions of the mind (e.g., memory, perception, etc.) in the sufferer were exquisitely sensitive. split from one another. primitive and underdeveloped. undifferentiated.
split from one another.
In posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), when a traumatic memory is reactivated it returns to a labile state; it becomes even stronger when reconsolidated in the presence of stress hormones. beta-blockers. intense fear. too many people.
stress hormones.
A common movement disorder caused by traditional neuroleptics is called neurogenic ataxia. ataxic dyskinesia. neuroleptic ataxia. tardive dyskinesia.
tardive dyskinesia.
One's enhanced perception of a particular conversation in a crowded room is referred to as covert attention. overt attention. selective tuning. the cocktail party effect.
the cocktail party effect.
The physician's report on the effects of Phineas Gage's brain injury provided early information about the functional role of the parietal cortex. the premotor areas. the frontal lobes. Wernicke's area.
the frontal lobes.
A model of the environmental stress and genetics involved in schizophrenia proposes that the disease emerges from a single dominant gene. a marked anatomical abnormality. intense episodes of personal and social stress. the interaction of stress and genetic factors.
the interaction of stress and genetic factors
Nonverbal visual stimuli are best processed if they are presented to the left visual field. the right visual field. the left hemisphere. None of the above; responses are the same in either hemisphere.
the left visual field.
NMDA receptors are gated by the ligand glutamate only. the ligand glutamate and a strong depolarization of the membrane. the ligand glutamate and the ligand AMPA. a strong depolarization of the membrane.
the ligand glutamate and a strong depolarization of the membrane.
Because voluntary attention is under direct, conscious control, researchers refer to it as a _______ process. conceptual shifting symbolic cuing bottom-up top-down
top-down
Transcranial magnetic stimulation has been promoted as an important treatment for bipolar disorder. posttraumatic stress disorder. unipolar depression. Tourette's syndrome.
unipolar depression.
The angular gyrus links the auditory and visual regions. auditory region and Wernicke's area. visual region and Wernicke's area. interhemispheric regions.
visual region and Wernicke's area.
The average reaction time in an uncomplicated choice-reaction-time test (i.e., the time it takes from the initial visual signal until the subject pushes the choice button) is approximately _______ ms. 35 110 175 250
250
Atypical neuroleptics tend to be more effective on _______ receptors. 5-HT2 D1 NE D2
5-HT2
Wernicke's aphasia is usually associated with lesions of the angular gyrus. the right inferior frontal region. Broca's area. the left posterior temporal region.
the left posterior temporal region.