Intro To Psychology Exam
Question 51 1 / 1 point
Max, an early researcher in psychology, was interested in how the mind worked. He attempted to break experiences down into its component parts. Max was most likely a:
Question options:
a) structuralist.
b) behaviorist.
c) psychoanalyst.
d) functionalist.
Question52 1 / 1 point
Emil Kraepelin was the first to describe “dementia praecox,” the mental disorder now known as _____________.
Question options:
a) major depressive disorder
b) bipolar disorder
c) Munchausen’s syndrome
d) schizophrenia
Question 53 1 / 1 point
Which of the following fields is considered a “parent” of the discipline of psychology?
Question options:
a) Philosophy
b) Literature
c) Chemistry
d) Physics
Question 54 1 / 1 point
In the 1870s the first laboratories in psychology were opened in _____________.
Question options:
a) Germany
b) Austria
c) the United States
d) China
Question 55 1 / 1 point
Julie is a psychologist and she is conducting research on the effect of talking on a hands-free cell phone while driving. Based on this information we can say that Julie is a(n) ______________ psychologist.
Question options:
a) developmental
b) evolutionary
c) cognitive
d) educational
Question 56 1 / 1 point
According to evolutionary psychology, language and science are examples of _____________.
Question options:
a) softwiring
b) by-products of adaptation
c) chance mutations
d) natural selection
Question 57 1 / 1 point
According to the view of mind-body dualism:
Question options:
a) the mind and the body refer to the same entity.
b) the mind controls the body.
c) the soul is the confluence of mind and body.
d) the mind and the body are controlled by our genetic makeup.
Question 58 1 / 1 point
______________ philosophy emphasizes the interdependence of body and mind.
Question options:
a) Eastern
b) Gestalt
c) Developmental
d) Clinical
Question 59 1 / 1 point
The point of view that human behavior is solely the result of ______________ appears to be a very Western, very North American idea.
Question options:
a) nature
b) inborn tendencies
c) nurture
d) genetics
Question 60 1 / 1 point
Which of the following topics is most likely to be studied by a developmental psychologist?
Question options:
a) Are people who interact extensively with other people via Facebook more or less outgoing than those who do not?
b) What is the effect of gender on interest and participation in social networking sites?
c) What is the effect of talking on a hands-free cell phone while driving?
d) How much of people’s personality is reflected in their Facebook profiles?
Question 61 1 / 1 point
More than just about any other area of psychology, ______________ psychology lends itself to a rich set of research questions regarding electronic interactions.
Question options:
a) cognitive
b) positive
c) social
d) clinical
Question 62 1 / 1 point
Which of the following is true about behavioral measures?
Question options:
a) Behavioral measures provide more objective measurements because they come from a trained outside observer.
b) Behavioral measures are not very time-intensive.
c) Behavioral measures are more susceptible to social desirability bias than are self-report measures.
d) Under this measure, people cannot modify their behavior even if they know they are being observed.
Question 63 1 / 1 point
Jessica wants to conduct a study about differences in jealousy between men and women. She asks 400 college men and women a series of questions about hypothetical scenarios of partner infidelity.
What is Jessica’s sample?
Question options:
a) Women in the college
b) The 400 college men and women chosen
c) Men and women in the United States
d) Men in the United States
Question 64 1 / 1 point
The advantage of naturalistic observation is:
Question options:
a) it is easy to administer to large numbers of participants.
b) it allows the researcher to ask people directly or indirectly what they think, feel, or have done.
c) it gives researchers a look at real behavior in the real world.
d) it allows the psychologist to control the conditions and demonstrate cause-and-effect relationships between variables.
Question 64 1 / 1 point
The major limitation of the correlational approach is:
Question options:
a) it influences the behavior of the participants via the experimenter’s knowledge of who is in which condition.
b) it does not establish whether one variable actually causes the other or vice versa.
c) people do not always accurately report their true thoughts or feelings.
d) the probability of social desirability bias is extreme.
Question 65 1 / 1 point
Which of the following indicates the magnitude and the direction of the relationship between two variables?
Question options:
a) An experiment
b) Confounding variables
c) A random assignment
d) Correlation coefficients
Question 66 1 / 1 point
Dr. Bischer is conducting a study to determine if men who wear a new type of soccer uniform made from a specially designed fabric will perform better in soccer matches. She recruits a professional soccer team to participate. She randomly assigns half of the men to wear the new-material uniforms made in the color blue and the other half to wear old-material uniforms made in the color red. Although the men know of the uniform test, they are not told which of the uniforms is made from the new material. They are asked to wear their assigned uniforms and score as many goals as possible in a practice game against one another. Dr. Bischer is noting the number of goals scored. Ultimately, the men who are wearing the old uniforms score more goals and therefore win the game. Dr. Bischer speculates that the new uniforms are not more beneficial to performance than the old uniforms, but she will rerun her study a few more times.
What is the independent variable in Dr. Bischer’s study?
Question options:
a) The men who did not know their roles in the study
b) The type of uniform worn—old or new material
c) The number of goals scored
d) Trying to score as many goals as possible
Question 67 1 / 1 point
In a study on sugar consumption and activity level, an artificial sweetener would be an appropriate ____________.
Question options:
a) pseudoscope
b) nocebo
c) ipsative
d) placebo
Question 68 1 / 1 point
A graph of frequency scores is known as a ____________.
Question options:
a) correlation
b) contingency table
c) distribution
d) tabulation
Question 69 1 / 1 point
5% is the most frequent choice made by psychological researchers and is referred to as the ____________.
Question options:
a) statistical inference
b) probability-level
c) variance
d) standard deviation
Question 70 1 / 1 point
The ____________ is calculated by adding all the numbers together and dividing by the number of scores in the series.
Question options:
a) standard deviation
b) mean
c) median
d) mode
Question 71 1 / 1 point
The feeling of being in love is attributed to:
Question options:
a) subjective consciousness.
b) objective consciousness.
c) psychic consciousness.
d) intelligence.
Question 72 1 / 1 point
The limited capacity to process information that is under conscious control refers to:
Question options:
a) encoding.
b) reasoning.
c) chunking.
d) attention.
Question 73 1 / 1 point
Susanne is in an unresponsive condition though she can open her eyes. This suggests that she is in a ________ state.
Question options:
a) hemiplegic
b) quadriplegic
c) vegetative
d) catatonic
Question 74 1 / 1 point
Which of the following tests is used to study sustained attention?
Question options:
a) Raven’s Progressive Matrices Test
b) Stanford-Binet Test
c) Continuous Performance Test (CPT)
d) Stroop Test
Question 75 1 / 1 point
Which of the following is true?
Question options:
a) The less hippocampal activation shown during high-wave sleep, the worse the person performs on the task the next day.
b) The more hippocampal activation shown during high-wave sleep, the better the person performs on the task the next day.
c) The more hippocampal activation shown during slow-wave sleep, the better the person performs on the task the next day.
d) The more hippocampal activation shown during slow-wave sleep, the worse the person performs on the task the next day.
Question 76 1 / 1 point
EEG studies of people suffering from narcolepsy reveal:
Question options:
a) protracted REM sleeping patterns.
b) absence of sleep spindles.
c) abnormality in sleep spindles.
d) normal REM sleeping patterns.
Question 77 1 / 1 point
Why are women more likely to be affected by insomnia?
Question options:
a) They are more prone to sleep less than two to four hours a day for two weeks or more.
b) Women are more likely to consume alcohol.
c) They are less likely to cope with medical conditions.
d) They are more likely to be iron deficient.
Question 78 1 / 1 point
Which of the following holds true with regard to hypnosis?
Question options:
a) Hypnotized people are in reality awake.
b) Hypnotized people have voluntary control over their own behavior.
c) Hypnotized people are in reality asleep.
d) Hypnotized people retain critical faculties of mind.
Question 79 1 / 1 point
What did research by neuroscientist Amir Raz and colleagues reveal?
Question options:
a) Highly hypnotizable people had more activity in the areas of the brain that normally process word meaning
b) Less hypnotizable people were able to suppress the Stroop effect
c) Highly hypnotizable people had less activity in the areas of the brain that normally process word meaning
d) Both the highly hypnotizable and less hypnotizable people could remain resistant and show the same activity in the areas of the brain that normally process word meaning,
Question 80 1 / 1 point
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