Taylor  Carre-Riddell
Quiz by , created more than 1 year ago

Moral Psychology, SMR, SCR, Moral intuition and reasoning, Processes of Moral Judgements, Regression Models, Social Influence on Behaviour and Attitude, Evolution Psych, Personality, Nature, Nurture, Situations

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Taylor  Carre-Riddell
Created by Taylor Carre-Riddell over 7 years ago
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S/P Psych Lecture/Tute Qs

Question 1 of 116

1

Consequences of social and self categorization include:

Select one of the following:

  • Change the way that ambiguous behavior is interpreted

  • Structural consequences
    Category differentiation model
    (Doise, 1978):
    Intergroup differentiation

  • Outgroup homogeneity

  • Explanatory consequences
    Explaining ingroup and outgroup behaviour
    Attribution: explaining other people’s behavior (esp. in relation to causes) via situational behavior and dispositional behavior.

  • Ingroup favoritism: prejudice

  • All these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 2 of 116

1

Personality psychology can be defined as:

Select one of the following:

  • Attempts to understand the self and the social world with an emphasis on how stable individual differences influence behavior, thought and feeling

  • Attempts to understand the self and the social world with an emphasis on how the situation shapes behavior, thought and feeling

  • Person vs. situation
    E.g., conflict

  • Broad discipline with fuzzy boundaries: Blend into other areas (biological, cognitive, developmental…)

Explanation

Question 3 of 116

1

The signature moral response can be defined as:

Select one of the following:

  •  The signature moral response (SMR):
     Serious, wrong, bad
     Punishable
     Authority independent (wrong regardless of authority claims)
     General in scope (universal)
     Appeals to harm

  • The key distinguishing feature of stimulus: harm or welfare (also rights and justice)

  •  Less serious, less wrong, less bad
     Less punishable
     Authority dependent
     Local in scope
    No appeals to harm

  • None of these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 4 of 116

1

Systematizing variability in moral responses currently includes:

Select one of the following:

  • Shweder et al. (1997) ) Looked at other concepts/key terms that occurred with morality eg. right and wrong, good and bad, associated concepts in everyday language. Proposed 3 Domains of Ethics

  • Moral Foundations Theory (Haidt & Graham, 2004, 2007)

  •  Between-culture differences
     WEIRD – Western. Educated. Industrialized. Rich. Democratic.
     Moralize harm/care and fairness/reciprocity
     NON-WEIRD (Not Western)
     Moralize all five domains, loyalty, authority respect
     Within-culture differences
    SocioEconomicStatus differences: SES Increase, community and purity domains decrease.

  • all of the above are correct

Explanation

Question 5 of 116

1

Moral Psychology can be thought of as:

Select one of the following:

  • Run experiments to uncover empirical regularities or facts about moral judgment and behaviour with an aim to uncovering psychological mechanisms underlying moral judgment and behavior, with a naturalized approach (no supernatural), base explanations in biology.

  • not endorsing, just exploring phenomena and the processes involved

  • response-dependent: what counts as moral is that set of phenomena to which people have ‘moral’ responses

  • All these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 6 of 116

1

Some theories propose that either emotional or reason is the process behind moral judgement.

Select one of the following:

  • Social Intuitionist Model (SIM; Haidt, 2001) supports arguments for reasoning MJ

  • Social Intuitionist Model (SIM; Haidt, 2001) supports arguments for emorional/intuitive MJ

  •  Dual process model: revised Competition Theory (e.g., Paxton & Greene, 2010)
     Both in the moral black box and they often conflict
     What drives moral judgment is a of function properties of the stimuli (e.g., personal vs. impersonal) as well as situational factors (e.g., mood) and individual differences
     Emotion drives deontological reactions, reasoning drives utilitarian responses and the competition between these two processes informs moral judgment

  • Social Intuitionist Model (SIM; Haidt, 2001) supports arguments for emorional/intuitive MJ, and
    Dual process model: revised Competition Theory (e.g., Paxton & Greene, 2010)
     Both in the moral black box and they often conflict
     What drives moral judgment is a of function properties of the stimuli (e.g., personal vs. impersonal) as well as situational factors (e.g., mood) and individual differences
     Emotion drives deontological reactions, reasoning drives utilitarian responses and the competition between these two processes informs moral judgment

Explanation

Question 7 of 116

1

moral reasoning and moral intuition are defined as, respectively:

Select one of the following:

  • conscious mental activity that consists of transforming given information about people in order to reach a moral judgment. To say that moral reasoning is a conscious process means that the process is intentional, effortful, and controllable and that the reasoner is aware that it is going on
    and
    sudden appearance in consciousness of a moral judgment, including an affective valence (good-bad, like-dislike), without any conscious awareness of having gone through steps of searching, weighing evidence, or inferring a conclusion. Moral intuitions are largely dependent on emotions

  • sudden appearance in consciousness of a moral judgment, including an affective valence (good-bad, like-dislike), without any conscious awareness of having gone through steps of searching, weighing evidence, or inferring a conclusion. Moral intuitions are largely dependent on emotions
    and
    conscious mental activity that consists of transforming given information about people in order to reach a moral judgment. To say that moral reasoning is a conscious process means that the process is intentional, effortful, and controllable and that the reasoner is aware that it is going on

  • (Reason, reasoning, rationality) vs. (emotion, intuition, gut feeling)

  • All are correct

Explanation

Question 8 of 116

1

Dual process models of individual attitude change

Select one of the following:

  • D  Individual differences
     Need for cognition: high – central; low – peripheral

  • C Situational
     Mood: happy – peripheral; sad – central
     Importance to self: important – central; unimportant – peripheral

  •  B Peripheral (heuristic) route: taken when people are unwilling or unable to think carefully about message content

  •  A Central (systematic) route: taken when people are motivated and capable of thinking carefully about message content

  • A and B

  • C and D

Explanation

Question 9 of 116

1

Kohlberg (1963) Stage Theory of Moral Development supports:

Select one of the following:

  • Reasoning and rational processing of MJ

  • Different ages people will engage with these concepts using different concepts. Young children will use obedience/punishment, individualism and exchange, then social order.
    When people see a stimulus, people use different, varied, deliberate, conscious, logical, moral reasoning according to a set of social rules to conjure a judgement
     Stages:
     obedience/punishment,
     individualism/exchange,
     roles,
     social order,
     individual rights,
     universal principles
     Emphasis on consciously accessible rules that were applied at the time of judgment.
     Stimulus – reasoning – judgment

  •  Dual process model: revised Competition Theory (e.g., Paxton & Greene, 2010)
     Both in the moral black box and they often conflict

  • All these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 10 of 116

1

The minimal conditions of us vs. them thinking states:

Select one of the following:

  • don’t need rich cultural contexts to engage in categorization

  • Us vs. them categorization happens under any social conditions

  • Tajfel et al (1971):
    Schoolchildren do a Point allocation task: Klee or Kandinsky paintings- no association b/w preferences and allotted group they were told they belong too, a label. Intergroup discrimination occurred despite random categorization. Mere categorization (based on minimal group conditions) elicited ingroup favoritism
    This study's hypothesis were supported

  • All these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 11 of 116

1

Both kinds of processes are likely involved in moral judgments, but they “compete” in order to give rise to a response.

Select one of the following:

  • This is known as Competition Theory Greene et al. (2001, 2004). 
    Each problem pits a deontological option (what is “good” is based on the rule: do not kill innocents) against a utilitarian option (greatest good for greatest number)
     Deontological response driven by gut-reactions, emotion, intuition
     Utilitarian response driven by controlled, effortful reasoning processes

  •  Dual process model (e.g., Paxton & Greene, 2010)
     Both in the moral black box and they often conflict
     What drives moral judgment is a of function properties of the stimuli (e.g., personal vs. impersonal) as well as situational factors (e.g., mood) and individual differences
     Emotion drives deontological reactions, reasoning drives utilitarian responses and the competition between these two processes informs moral judgment

  • Other factors that influence moral judgement beyond emotion and reasoning:
    Decision framing (how you word the moral story (e.g., Petrinovich & O’Neill, 1996)

  • Greene et al (2001) Competition Theory and the revised version are correct

Explanation

Question 12 of 116

1

You can define Correlation as:

Select one of the following:

  • Standardised metric quantifying degree and
    direction of linear relationship between two numeric
    variables (i.e., X and Y)

  • As how 1 variable causes another

  • How two variables can be present in different contexts

  • None of the above

Explanation

Question 13 of 116

1

Why is correlation important?

Select one of the following:

  • One of the most frequently used statistics
    – Important to be able to interpret it correctly

  • Fundamental to theory building in psychology – and outside of psychology as well!

  • It helps determine when 2 variables of interest are associated with each other

  • All of these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 14 of 116

1

Examples of when Non-Linear Forms of the Correlation Relationship include:

Select one of the following:

  • arousal and
    performance

  • intensity of
    signal and
    probability of
    detection

  • frequency of
    tap drip and ability
    to concentrate

  • All these are true examples

Explanation

Question 15 of 116

1

Homoscedasticity
is:

Select one of the following:

  • Homoscedasticity
    In statistics, a sequence or a vector of random variables is homoscedastic if all random variables in the sequence or vector have the same finite variance. This is also known as homogeneity of variance

  • scatterplot of residuals against predicted values to check for
    heteroscedasticity.
    • Absence of any systematic pattern supports the assumption of
    homoscedasticity

  • None of these answers are correct

  • Both these answer are correct

Explanation

Question 16 of 116

1

The Purpose of Social categorization is:

Select one of the following:

  • To create boundaries/definitions between communities and cultures

  • To classify parameters such as age and SES

  • To classify participants in studies

  • None of these answers are correct: it's used to navigate/orient ourselves in the world, effort minimizing, pressed for time, communicative

Explanation

Question 17 of 116

1

Null Hypothesis testing in Correlation proccess involves:

Select one of the following:

  • The null hypothesis for correlation is:
    The correlation in the population is zero.
    1 If the probability associated with this null hypothesis is small (p < .05), then we reject the null
    hypothesis.

  • 2 So, we infer that the correlation value for the population is NOT zero

  • 3 There is a significant association between the two variables

  • None of these steps are in order

  • These steps are in order

Explanation

Question 18 of 116

1

Degree of Relationship involves:

Select one of the following:

  • every change in the X variable is
    accompanied by a corresponding change in the Y variable

  • With some research questions, correlations of .05 can be large
    With others, correlations as high as .6 or .8 can be low

  • Correlations range from -1 to +1

  • All these answers are true

Explanation

Question 19 of 116

1

• Y = a + bX + e (Regression Model formula)

Select one of the following:

  • • Y = a + bX + e
    l a is the intercept parameter (sometimes called the constant)
    l b is the slope parameter
    l e is an error or residual term.
    l Errors are assumed to be:
    – Independent
    – Normally distributed

  • » Normally distributed with a mean of 0
    – Homoscedastic
    » Equal error variance for levels of predicted Y

  • • Y = a + bX + e
    l a is the intercept parameter (sometimes called the constant)
    l b is the slope parameter
    l e is an error or residual term.

  • All of the above are correct

Explanation

Question 20 of 116

1

Pendry & Carrick (2001) demonstrates:

Select one of the following:

  • Outgroup compliance is less than ingroup

  • a group tendency in behaviour, belief etc. These perceptions of what others do or think we should do influence our behavior in powerful ways

  • Have conformity/rebellious in mind, impact own conformity during a task

  • None of these answers are true

Explanation

Question 21 of 116

1

The Pearson correlation coefficient (r):

Select one of the following:

  • It compares how much the two variables vary together compared with how much they vary seperately

  • Extreme
    scores or
    outliers can
    greatly
    influence
    value of
    correlation.

  • r = Covariability of X / Variability of X and Y Separately

  • All these answers are true

Explanation

Question 22 of 116

1

The differnce between these two formulas are:

Select one of the following:

  • There is no difference

  • Y = a + bx + e is observed Y ascore (acual data) whereas Yˆ = a + bx is precicted Y score

  • Y = a + bx + e is precicted Y score Yˆ = a + bx is observed, actual Y score

  • They are used in univariate or bivariate data

Explanation

Question 23 of 116

1

Evolution is:

Select one of the following:

  • Those individuals with greater chances of survival and reproductive success (due to the possession of adaptive traits

  • offspring will tend to resemble their parents (i.e. inherit their traits).Thus certain adaptive traits are selected for.

  • These adaptive traits increase in frequency in future generations, thus coming to be widespread within a species.

  • All these answers are true

Explanation

Question 24 of 116

1

Exacerbating (enhancing) factors of intergroup conflict include:

Select one of the following:

  • Individual differences:
    Right-Wing Authoritarianism (RWA): Tendency to submit to established authorities and adhere to social conventions
    Social Dominance Orientation (SDO): desire to promote intergroup hierarchies (egalitarianism is bad as promotes equal authority) and for one’s in-groups to dominate their out-groups

  • Competition
    Realistic Conflict Theory (LeVine & Campbell, 1972): intergroup hostility arises from competition among groups for scarce (and thus valued) material resources. Intergroup bias goes up when survival is tough.

  • Intergroup Threat: Integrated Threat Theory (Stephan & Stephan, 1985)
    Realistic threat: threats to the material well-being of the ingroup, such as their economic benefits, political power, and health (from another outgroup)
    Symbolic threat: threats to the ingroup’s system of values-immigrant rhetoric
    Intergroup anxiety: feelings of anxiety people experience during intergroup interactions associated with negative outcomes for the self (embarrassed, rejected, ridiculed)

  • All these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 25 of 116

1

Correlation regression involves

Select one of the following:

  • All of these answers are true

  • If we know two variables are related (correlation) we can use this
    knowledge to make predictions about behaviour.

  • A linear relationship between two variables

  • Regression model
    Y = a + b X + (error)

Explanation

Question 26 of 116

1

Functions of influence include:

Select one of the following:

  • To keep social order

  •  Normative influence: going along to fit in/connect/belong (often only public/surface)
     Informational influence: going along to be accurate (often private/deep)

  • To navigate the world, for surivival

  • None of these answers are true

Explanation

Question 27 of 116

1

In Regression Toward the Mean with imperfect correlation, an extreme score on one measure tends to be followed by a less extreme score on the other measure

Select one of the following:

  • Extreme scores are often (but not always) due to chance

  • If it’s due to chance, it’s extremely unlikely that the other value will also be extreme

  • Both these are correct

Explanation

Question 28 of 116

1

Benefits of learning stats include:

Select one of the following:

  • – Tool for understanding the world and developing
    psychological theory
    – About explaining variability
    – About generalising from a set of observations to the
    broader population

  • • Aim is to improve experimental design and
    analyses

  • • Training you to bridge the research and applied
    world
    – Critically evaluate existing research
    – Conduct and report your own research
    – Build a more sophisticated understanding of reality,
    which can then be applied to helping others

  • All answers are true

Explanation

Question 29 of 116

1

Regression parameters include:

Select one of the following:

  • Intercept (a)
    Estimated value of Y when X = 0.
    May or may not be a meaningful quantity

  • Slope (b) indicates:
    - whether there is a relationship between X and Y
    - whether that relationship is positive or negative (cf correlation)
    - estimate of expected change in Y when X increases by 1
    Slope can be translated into standardised form
    convert X and Y into z-scores and then do the regression
    standardised regression coefficient (called beta in SPSS.)
    compare with correlation coefficient for bivariate data
    Can also have confidence intervals for regression coefficients

  • None of these answers are correct

  • All of these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 30 of 116

1

Attitudes can guide behaviour ....

Select one of the following:

  • Attitudes can guide behaviour without much thought

  • Attitudes can guide behaviour through considered intentions

  • Attitudes can guide behaviour in relation to self presentation/norms

  • All answers are true

Explanation

Question 31 of 116

1

Theusefullness of the F test for Regression is:

Select one of the following:

  • The F test tells us whether the variance explained is
    significantly different from zero.

  • If the F test is not significant, the regression is worthless. The predictor does not explain the
    outcome variable at all.

  • There is no relationship

  • The two details are correct

Explanation

Question 32 of 116

1

Kin selection, Hamilton’s rule states:

Select one of the following:

  •  Based on Hamilton’s rule, one is more likely to perform altruistic act X (with fixed cost C and fixed benefit B) For kin than non-kin

  •  rB > C
     r=degree of genetic relatedness; B=benefit to recipient; C=cost to helper.

  • All of these answers are true

  • None of these answers are true

Explanation

Question 33 of 116

1

Reciprocal altruism

Select one of the following:

  • : altruism for non-kin can evolve as long as such altruism is reciprocated (either at the time or at some later date)

  • both helper and recipient benefit

  • Social contract theory (Cosmides & Tooby, 1992) (Detecting cheats)
     Reciprocal altruism can evolve if it is protected from cheaters
     Evolved cheater detection systems: recognition of individuals, memory for interaction histories, communication of one’s values, model others’ values, represent costs and benefits

  • All answers are true

Explanation

Question 34 of 116

1

When do Attitudes Guide Behaviour?

Select one of the following:

  • Attitude Accessibility:
    To influence behaviour, the “right” attitude must be accessible.
    Those who are low in self-monitoring have more accessible attitudes.
    Attitudes can become aware deliberately - reminding people to think about their attitudes.
    Self-awareness makes attitudes more accessible.
    Attitudes can become accessible automatically.

  • Attitude Compatibility:
    Specific attitudes influence specific behaviours.

  • Personal Control:
    If we believe we can control our behaviour, attitudes have a big influence.
    When we believe our behaviour is not under our personal control, attitudes have little influence.

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 35 of 116

1

Basic psychological processes that give rise to intergroup include:

Select one of the following:

  • Social Identity Theory (SIT)
    People prefer to have a positive self-concept, boost positive self-esteem. Personal identity (attributes of you as an individual) and social identity (those parts of the self-concept derived from our knowledge and feelings about our ingroups).

  • Self-categorization theory:
    Categorize ourselves as group members
    Such self-categorization leads to depersonalization, assimilation (behavior) to ingroup norms, and self-stereotyping

  • Social categorization: the placement of individuals into a class of similar individuals, often based on features such as gender, ethnicity, nationality…Primitives: age, gender, race (contested): we can’t help but categorize people. Other salient groups apply

  • All of these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 36 of 116

1

 Cialdini et al. (1990) , in a Group (imagined) – NV – behaviour context, shows:

Select one of the following:

  •  Descriptive norm influenced behavior

  •  Cross-norm inhibition: norm-adherence inhibited or undermined by violations of other norms (break one rule, break many)

  • None of the above

  • All of the above

Explanation

Question 37 of 116

1

Consequences of social categorization include:

Select one of the following:

  • Social categorization can automatically activate information consistent with the ST

  • Stereotyping: process of viewing an individual in light of a stereotype, draw upon group stereotype to understand individual

  • expectancies about a social group (probable behaviors, traits, features) can be positive or negative (cf. prejudice- judging negative)

  • All these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 38 of 116

1

Social Identity Theory (SIT) is:

Select one of the following:

  • People prefer to have a positive self-concept, boost positive self-esteem
    Our selves are composed of personal (individual) and group-related identities: Personal identity (attributes of you as an individual) and social identity (those parts of the self-concept derived from our knowledge and feelings about our ingroups). See ingroup identity a more positive relative to outgroup identity to boost self-esteem.

  • Intergroup differentiation ; Within group homogeneity (especially for outgroups)

  • Cross-race identification bias (Other race effect- they all look/think the same)

  • All these answers are correct:

Explanation

Question 39 of 116

1

Asch (1951) shows:

Select one of the following:

  • surface conformality

  • Mirror Neuron activity

  • Perception and behaviour links

  • All of these answers

Explanation

Question 40 of 116

1

Resolving conflict solutions involve

Select one of the following:

  • Extended contact: knowledge that other ingroup members have outgroup friends can reduce intergroup bias

  • Intergroup contact:
    The more contact one has with an outgroup, the less prejudice one expresses

  • Individual differences (the good kind): fostering positive individual differences: “building character”

  • All these answers are correct

  • Changing categorization: Change the cognitive representation of outgroup members so it is no longer simply us vs. them

  • Promoting cooperation:

Explanation

Question 41 of 116

1

self schema is:

Select one of the following:

  • All answers are correct

  • Organize and guide the processing of self-related information that are part of the individual’s social experience.

  • Are derived from past experience.

  • Are cognitive generalizations about the self

Explanation

Question 42 of 116

1

Milgram's Study shows:

Select one of the following:

  • None of these things

  • All of these things

  • Authority pushes people to do things

  •  Punishment in learning

Explanation

Question 43 of 116

1

Sherif (1936) demonstrates:

Select one of the following:

  •  Convergence: Authority pushes people to do things

  • Cultural norms change overtime, but we are always influenced by norms

  • people look to others in uncertain circumstance, use other peopl’es information to secure reality

  • None of these answers are true

Explanation

Question 44 of 116

1

Moderators of normative influence include

Select one of the following:

  •  Self-confidence decrease
     Task difficulty increase
     Stereotypes…

  •  Group cohesion increase
     Group size (but with a plateau of about 30-35% conformity at n = 3)
     Social support for deviant position decrease

  • All of these answers are true

  • None of these answers are true

Explanation

Question 45 of 116

1

Individual – V – behaviour increases of compliance include:

Select one of the following:

  • All these answers are correct

  • Commitment

  • Authority

  • Liking

  • Reciprocity

Explanation

Question 46 of 116

1

Challenges and Criticisms (and rebuttals) of Evolution Psych include:

Select one of the following:

  • All answers are correct

  •  Naturalistic fallacy

  • Genetic determinism
     No nurture

  • Reductionism

Explanation

Question 47 of 116

1

Intergroup Conflict involves:

Select one of the following:

  • B and C are correct

  • A Three primitives – sex, age, “race”

  •  B Us vs. them thinking

  • C Age and sex make sense from ev. perspective, but race does not. Race is not a factor in the EEA

Explanation

Question 48 of 116

1

 Race is not a factor in the EEA as:

Select one of the following:

  • All answers are true

  • If such patterns are correlated with physical features, these features would come to serve as cues in the coalition detection system (e.g., dress, gait, dialect)

  •  By-product of alliance/coalition detection

  • lived in bands and often formed coalitions within bands. Moreover, neighboring bands often came into contact/conflict. These alliances needed to be tracked.

Explanation

Question 49 of 116

1

 Petty & Cacioppo (1984) demonstrated:

Select one of the following:

  • Factors influencing attitude change in the Central route include:  Present participants with weak or strong arguments
     Some participants were highly involved; others not
     argument quality matters

  •  Factors influencing attitude change in the Peripheral route include:
     Source expertise
     Source attractiveness

  • Neither of these answers are correct: reverse them

  • These answers are correct

Explanation

Question 50 of 116

1

Implicit Measures of Attitude include:

Select one of the following:

  • Implicit Association Test (IAT)

  • Go/No-Go Association Task (GNAT)

  • Attitudes can also be inferred from observing behaviour.

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 51 of 116

1

Can behaviour predicted by implicit and/or explicit attitudes?

Select one of the following:

  • Implicit attitudes are thought to reflect more automatic, less controlled evaluations

  • Explicit attitudes are thought to reflect conscious thoughts and considered reactions to the object.

  • Explicit attitudes predict controlled behaviour.

  • Implicit attitudes predict more spontaneous behaviour.

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 52 of 116

1

 Moderators of mimicry:

Select one of the following:

  •  Affiliation goal (desire to connect) and attempting to reconnect
     Group membership: ingroup > outgroup
      Group cohesion increase
     Power: powerless > powerful
     Mood: good > bad

  •  Self-confidence decrease
     Task difficulty increase
     Stereotypes…

  •  Group cohesion increase
     Group size (but with a plateau of about 30-35% conformity at n = 3)
     Social support for deviant position decrease

  • None of these answers

Explanation

Question 53 of 116

1

Assumptions of EP include:

Select one of the following:

  • Domain specific

  • Composed of collection of evolved psychological mechanisms (modules)

  • All these answers are true

  • Adaptations

Explanation

Question 54 of 116

1

Types of Attitude Explicit Measures are:

Select one of the following:

  • Guttman scales:

  • Likert scales

  • Semantic Differentials

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 55 of 116

1

History of psychology includes the following movement

Select one of the following:

  • All these answers are true

  •  Cognitive revolution

  • Standard Social Science Model (SSSM)
    Blank slate written on by experience

  • Behaviorism

Explanation

Question 56 of 116

1

Attitude Properties include:

Select one of the following:

  • Complexity:
    The number of elements in the attitude.

  • Strength:
    Certainty or probability – how strong the attitude is.

  • Valence:
    Evaluation – whether the attitude object is viewed positively or negatively

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 57 of 116

1

Actions of the self include:

Select one of the following:

  • Material and social self-seeking involve things, such as proving for our needs, and social things, such as being friendly, curious, and emulating others.

  • Spiritual self-seeking involves “every impulse towards psychic progress”, including intellectual, moral, and spiritual pursuits in the narrow sense.

  • All answers are true

  • Neither answer is true

Explanation

Question 58 of 116

1

Altruistic behavior

Select one of the following:

  • All these answers are correct

  • Kin selection

  • Mate choice

  •  Morality

Explanation

Question 59 of 116

1

The difference between Implicit and Explicit Attitudes are:

Select one of the following:

  • Explicit is self aware, reporting

  • Implicit involves subconscious, unaware, detailed

  • None of these answers are true

  • All of these answers are true

Explanation

Question 60 of 116

1

Social Influence

Select one of the following:

  •  Functions of conformity: informational, normative
     Conformity also communicates something to others: agreeableness

  • Non-conformity also serves as a signal: uniqueness, independence

  • Both answers are true

  • None of these answers are true

Explanation

Question 61 of 116

1

The components of attitude are:

Select one of the following:

  • Affective component – liking or feelings about the attitude object.

  • Behavioural component – how we behave toward the attitude object.

  • Cognitive component – our thoughts and beliefs about the attitude object.

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 62 of 116

1

Motives of the self include:

Select one of the following:

  • Self-improvement: Desire to improve a particular aspect of the self. Elicited by circumstances involve past threat or failure

  • Self-verification: Desire for consistency in self knowledge. Elicited by circumstances which involve failure.

  • Self-enhancement: Desire to achieve and maintain a positive sense of self. Elicited by circumstances involving both success and failure, especially when the particular self-view is important.

  • Self-assessment: Desire to have accurate information about the self. Elicited by circumstances involving both success and failure, especially when knowledge of one’s ability is uncertain.

  • All answers are true

Explanation

Question 63 of 116

1

Similarity beyond the actual self: Robins & Boldero (2003) argued that relationship formation involves more than similarity in actual selves. This means:

Select one of the following:

  • All these answers are correct

  • When a potential partner is like one’s ought self, we interpret this as “this person is how I should to be”.

  • When a potential partner is like one’s ideal self, we interpret this as “this person is how I would like to be”.

  • When one’s own and a potential partner’s actual selves are similar (or commensurable), we interpret this as “this person is like me”.

Explanation

Question 64 of 116

1

The limitations of Personality traits

Select one of the following:

  •  How valid are self-report assessments of personality

  •  Are traits or situations more useful for predicting behaviour

  • But much of our personality is highly contextualised, and shared a consensus but not an objective proof

  • All these answers are true

Explanation

Question 65 of 116

1

Mate choice involves:

Select one of the following:

  • Due to the Parental investment theory (Trivers, 1972): the sex that invests most in the offspring (usually the female) will be more selective

  • Ancestors who had an aversion to incest had greater reproductive fitness (produced more viable offspring)

  • Both answers are true

  • None of these answers are true

Explanation

Question 66 of 116

1

Constituents of the Self include:

Select one of the following:

  • The Ego - aspect of self that actively experiences the world.
    The stream of consciousness that gives us our sense of personal identity.
    “It is the sense of a sameness perceived by thought and predicated of things thought-about.”

  • The Me - aspect of self that is the object of attention.

  • Neither answer is true

  • Both answers are true

Explanation

Question 67 of 116

1

Ajzen’s (1991) Attitude Measure

Select one of the following:

  • Theory of Reasoned Action, Ajzen specified that attitudes should be assessed by taking the product of two factors

  • Behavioural Beliefs: Behavioural beliefs are the beliefs about the outcomes associated with the attitude object.

  • Outcome evaluations: Outcome Evaluations are the evaluations of the outcomes associated with the attitude object.

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 68 of 116

1

Self-reference effects in encoding ...

Select one of the following:

  • Self-reference leads to deeper processing which is superior to semantic processing.

  • linear trend with self-reference processing requiring longer times

  • Superiority of “yes” words supports schema – “yes” fit with schema whereas “no” do not

  • All answers are true

Explanation

Question 69 of 116

1

self-regulatory factors and links of self-regulatory factors with psychological problems include:

Select one of the following:

  • All answers are correct

  • Promotion and prevention failure along with higher assessment are associated with higher levels of vulnerable narcissism

  • Assessment – the tendency to assess the self, others, and different options for action.

  • Locomotion – the tendency to move between state to state.

Explanation

Question 70 of 116

1

Regulatory fit effects include:

Select one of the following:

  • All answers are true

  • Form stronger intentions to conform to a persuasive message and are more persuaded by the message (Ceasario et al., 2004).

  • Feel more guilty about their past behaviour – a negative not positive event (Camancho et al., 2003).

  • Anticipate more enjoyment from the task

Explanation

Question 71 of 116

1

Self-Regulation is:

Select one of the following:

  • Self-regulation is the tendency to change the
    self with respect to some reference value or
    goal (may involve maintaining a present state
    or striving to achieve a desired future state

  • Self-regulatory models assume that individuals are motivated to approach desired end-states

  • Both answers are true

  • Neither answer is true

Explanation

Question 72 of 116

1

What is the relative strength of the self-enhancement and self-verification motives?

Select one of the following:

  • Both answers are correct

  • Neither answer is correct

  • Suggests that self-enhancement is stronger than self-verification motive.

  • Consistent with self-enhancement model, there was a preference for diagnostic information for positive central traits.

Explanation

Question 73 of 116

1

Principles of Self regulation include:

Select one of the following:

  • Regulatory Focus

  • Regulatory Reference

  • Regulatory Anticipation

  • All answers are true

Explanation

Question 74 of 116

1

Regulatory Focus Theory states:

Select one of the following:

  • In terms of a prevention-framed goal, success is viewed as the avoidance of an undesired end-state) and failure is experienced when one does not avoid it. 

  • For a promotion-framed goal, success is experienced as achieving a desired end-state and failure is experienced as a failure to achieve it.

  • Both answers are true

  • Neither answer is true

Explanation

Question 75 of 116

1

Three categories of the empirical self:

Select one of the following:

  • The spiritual self - all things that are not tangible that carry the designation my or mine - attributes or abilities, pleasure and pain. To think about ourselves as thinkers.

  • The social self - how we are regarded and recognized by others. We have as many social selves as people who recognize us.

  • The material self - all tangible objects, people, or places that carry the designation my or mine.

  • All answers are true

Explanation

Question 76 of 116

1

Interpersonal ties serve the function of:

Select one of the following:

  • Informational

  • Emotional

  • Instrumental

  • All of the above

Explanation

Question 77 of 116

1

Sternberg’s (1986) model of love states that love as 3 divisions, including:

Select one of the following:

  • Commitment – deciding about and maintaining love.

  • Passion – romance, physical, and sexual attraction.

  • Intimacy – feeling close, connected, and bonded.

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 78 of 116

1

Natural selection involves:

Select one of the following:

  •  Differential reproduction
     Some characteristics will lead to greater survival or reproduction

  •  Genetic inheritance
     Characteristics must be passed down from parents to offspring through genes.

  •  Variation
     For evolved biological changes to occur, variation in a characteristic must exist (otherwise there is no source of change).

  • All of these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 79 of 116

1

Common Life Narratives include:

Select one of the following:

  • The ‘Growth Story’
    Personal development, or ‘becoming’ as a central theme

  • Redemption Sequences’
    Significant episodes whose form goes from worse to better (overcoming adversity, undergoing a transformation etc)

  • Both these answers are true

  • Neither of these answers are true

Explanation

Question 80 of 116

1

Life History Theory involves:

Select one of the following:

  •  1) Resources vary in their availability over time and space

  •  2) Fitness maximisation is not a ‘one-shot game’
     - long vs. short-term strategies

  •  3) Trade-offs must be made: Trade-offs are influenced by varying individual and environmental circumstances.
     Thorough exploring increases likelihood of finding high quality resources, but delays reproduction

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 81 of 116

1

Greatest impact of Social Context on Characteristic Adaptations and life narratives. Aspects of personality concerned with time, role, place, and identity are deeply grounded in social context and culture

Select one of the following:

  • goals, and values tend to be related to interdependence in collectivist cultures and with independence in individualistic cultures (Markus & Kitayama, 1991)

  •  e.g., timing and content of social roles varies across culture and social context
     e.g., caregiver role construal… (Friedlmeier et al., 2008)

  •  e.g., personal narratives draw on the stories and metaphors that are salient in our culture

  • All of these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 82 of 116

1

Why does similarity lead to attraction?

Select one of the following:

  • Shared attitudes suggest mutual attraction. If I like someone and they like the same things as me, I can infer that they will like me too

  • when we learn that someone has the same attitudes and beliefs as us, it feels good as it suggests we have sound judgment.

  • Both answers are true

  • Neither answer is true

Explanation

Question 83 of 116

1

Behavioural (Quantitative) Genetics:
 A set of statistical methods to partition variation in traits into:

Select one of the following:

  • Environmental variance (i.e., ‘nurture’): influence of experiences
     Shared variance: environmental influences that are common to the individuals being studied
     Nonshared variance: environmental influences that differ across the individuals being studied

  • Genetic variance or ‘heritability’ (i.e., ‘nature’): influence of genes inherited from biological parents

  • Neither answers are correct

  • Both answers are correct

Explanation

Question 84 of 116

1

Major criticisms of attachment theory

Select one of the following:

  • Caregiver responsiveness largely determines the quality of attachment relationships.

  • Working models tend to be stable across the lifecycle

  • A “deterministic” view of development.

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 85 of 116

1

Interdependence – the basis of close relationship: the 3 types are...

Select one of the following:

  • Affective
    Individuals emotions are influenced by and influence their partner’s emotions.

  • Behavioural
    Individual’s behaviour is influenced by and influences their partner’s behaviour.

  • Cognitive
    Thinking about the self and partner as inextricably linked, as part of a whole rather than separate individuals.

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 86 of 116

1

The role of reciprocity is:

Select one of the following:

  • Reciprocity via Rewards:
    We like others who reinforce our behaviour (at the beginning of relationships, costs are discounted … but not later on!).

  • Reciprocity via Good Moods:
    We infer liking from our mood states.

  • Direct reciprocity:
    We like others who like us .
    Social approval – being positively evaluated is intrinsically rewarding.
    Correlations between mutual liking are around .5 (which is substantial).

  • All answers are true

Explanation

Question 87 of 116

1

Characteristic Adaptations involve:

Select one of the following:

  • concerns an individuals particular life circumstances
    highly contextualised

  • Relatively stable goals, interpretations, and strategies, specified in relation to an individual’s particular life circumstances

  • Motivational, social-cognitive, and developmental adaptations, contextualized in time, place, and/or social role

  • All of these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 88 of 116

1

Selective Neutrality makes restrictive assumptions
Balancing Selection may be more plausible as it considers:

Select one of the following:

  • Frequency-dependent selection: If all your neighbours are pursuing one strategy it may pay to pursue another, explain traits

  • Environmental heterogeneity (‘niches’)

  • Antagonistic pleiotropy (fitness trade-offs)

  • All of these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 89 of 116

1

Themes of The Big Five Personality traits:

Select one of the following:

  • Interpersonal responses

  • Emotional responses

  • Responses to achievement settings

  • All answers are true

Explanation

Question 90 of 116

1

Social context (Reciprocal effects of traits and social environments) includes:

Select one of the following:

  •  Parenting- Serious problems:
     Causal ambiguity: (e.g., childhood introversion may elicit overprotective parenting)
     Genetic confounding: (e.g., behaviour of the parents and the child may be influenced by common genetics)

  •  Birth order-Large multinational samples that control for these confounds find no relation between birth order and personality

  •  Social Learning Theory (Bandura, 1977)
     Behaviour is learned via the examples of others, as well as via direct rewards/punishments. The ‘bobo doll’ study of aggression

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 91 of 116

1

The next challenges in Behavioural (Quantitative) Genetics

Select one of the following:

  • Genetic variance or ‘heritability’ (i.e., ‘nature’): influence of genes inherited from biological parents

  • Environmental variance (i.e., ‘nurture’): influence of experiences
     Shared variance: environmental influences that are common to the individuals being studied
     Nonshared variance: environmental influences that differ across the individuals being studied

  • Neither answer is correct

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 92 of 116

1

Fiske’s (1991) relational models

Select one of the following:

  • The market pricing model in which relationships are organized to a common scale of ratio values such as money.

  • The equality matching model in which relationships are organized with reference to their degree of balance.

  • The authority ranking model organizes relationships in asymmetrical terms. Individuals are hierarchically organized with higher-ranked individuals having the authority to organize, dominate etc.

  • The communal sharing model which organizes relationships in terms of collective belonging or sharing

  • All of the above

Explanation

Question 93 of 116

1

How are relationships described using relational models?

Select one of the following:

  • Fiske proposed that relationships based on one model would be rare and that all relationships to some degree would be described by the models.

  • Close relationships were described more by the communal sharing model than acquaintance relationships

  • Relationships with close friends were also described by the equality matching model, whereas equality matching and market pricing models described relationships with acquaintances.

  • All of the above

Explanation

Question 94 of 116

1

The exposure effect (Zajonc, 1968) states

Select one of the following:

  • We like people we meet often.

  • All answers are correct

  • Physical proximity is also important.

  • the sheer frequency of encountering a neutral or positive stimulus enhances its evaluation.

Explanation

Question 95 of 116

1

Models of emotions experienced in relationships and relationship maintenance. Several models focus on the role of perceived discrepancies as the important determinants of emotional outcomes in relationships. These social exchange models start with the premise that the distribution of rewards and costs between the partners in relationships are experienced as positive and negative feelings in the relationship, thus signaling how well we are “doing” relative to one’s partner.

In addition, these emotions are proposed to be the determinants of whether the relationship is likely to continue or not.

Select one of the following:

  • Equity Theory(Walster, Walster, & Berscheid, 1978): According to this model, relationships are perceived to be fair if each persons’ outcomes are proportional to their contributions. Receiving less or more than one contributes results in lower satisfaction, although receiving less is worse than receiving more

  • Interdependence TheoryThibaut & Kelly (1959): Individuals are motivated to maximize rewards relative to costs in relationships.

    Satisfaction and attraction are defined in terms of expectations and outcomes.

    Individuals compare relationship outcomes to two standards – the comparison level (CL) and the comparison level for alternatives (CLalt).
    The comparison levels are determined either using others’ relationships or past relationships.

    The CL is the standard against which the attractiveness of the relationship is evaluated. When the level of outcomes exceeds this, the individual is satisfied with the relationship.

    The CLalt is the standard used to determine whether to stay or leave the relationship. If an alternative is not available (this may include no relationship), the individual may continue in the relationship.

  • Investment Model(Rusbult, 1980): The Investment Model is an extension of Interdependence Theory which includes relationship commitment and investments.

    Commitment is a function of high satisfaction, few alternatives, and high investment.

    Satisfaction is a function of rewards minus costs. Alternatives are the perceived desirability of other relationships.

  • Ideal Standards Model(Simpson, Fletcher, & Campbell, 2001): The ideal standards model is an extension of Interdependence theory and Self-discrepancy theory.

    Partner and relationship ideals are chronically-accessible knowledge structures that influence relationship judgments.

    These standards have three functions: evaluation, explanation, and regulation.

    Larger discrepancies between perceptions of a partner or the relationships with these standards results in lower evaluations of the partner and the relationship.

  • Attatchment Theory:
    This is a psychological, evolutionary, and ethological theory that provides a descriptive framework for understanding interpersonal relationships.

    Begins with the premise that infants have a need for a secure relationship with adult caregivers.

    The relevant infant behaviour is primarily a process of seeking proximity with an identified attachment figure.

  • All of these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 96 of 116

1

Personality will cease to predict behaviour in “strong situations”, characterized by…

Select one of the following:

  • Clear behavioural expectations

  • Individual ability to meet the demands of the situation

  • Incentives for compliance (or threats for non-compliance)

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 97 of 116

1

Predictors of Violence include:

Select one of the following:

  • Moreover, both male and female physical violence was highest in couples where a male partner had high attachment avoidance paired with a female partner with high attachment anxiety.

  • Male violence predicted female violence.

  • Female attachment anxiety predicted violence.

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 98 of 116

1

Limits to the attractiveness effect include:

Select one of the following:

  • Although romantic partners and male friends’ physical attractiveness are correlated (r =.48 & .38), female partners’ attractiveness doesn't correlate (r = .00) (Feingold, 1988).

  • People who conform to gender roles, care more about physical attractiveness (Andersen & Bem, 1981).

  • People prefer good companions, considerate, honest, affectionate, dependable, intelligent, kind, understanding, interesting, and loyal long-term mates (Buss & Barnes, 1986).

  • All of the answers are correct

Explanation

Question 99 of 116

1

Growth of pro-situation Theories

Select one of the following:

  • Mischel (1968) argued that behaviour on one occasion was unrelated to behaviour on a second occasion; therefore personality cannot exist

  • Shweder (1975): “The Conceptual Similarity Critique”
     “How people classify” is mistaken as “how to classify people”
    Coherence of personality traits (discovered by factor analysis [week 10]) simply reflect judgements of conceptual similarity

  • The Fundamental Attribution Error” (also called “correspondance bias”; Gilbert & Malone, 1995). People mistakenly explain behaviour in terms of dispositional factors rather than to situational factors

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 100 of 116

1

The Big Eight “DIAMONDS” model, Like a “big five” framework for situational characteristics includes:

Select one of the following:

  • All answers are correct

  • Duty

  • Mating

  • Sociality

Explanation

Question 101 of 116

1

Personality/ situation transactions work together to influence behaviour in combination in what ways?

Select one of the following:

  • 1. Situational selection:
     Where traits predict entering a strong or consequential situation
     e.g., extraversion and accidents

  • 2. Situational evocation:
     Where traits impact on the dynamics of a particular situation
     e.g., traits (e.g., low agreeableness)  relationship quality  divorce

  • 3. Situational perception:
     Where traits shape appraisals of a situation, and thus an individual’s experience of that situation, e.g.,
     agreeableness  opportunities to cooperate;
     neuroticism  negativity and frustrations;
     openness/intellect  intellectually engaging

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 102 of 116

1

Life Narratives,the richest level of personality description, involve:

Select one of the following:

  •  Focus of content analyses:
     Tone (Positive/optimistic/utopian, negative/pessimistic/dystopian)
     Themes (Preoccupations with certain problems, goals etc)
     Form (Stability? Change? Slow vs. rapid progress? Inertia?)

  • The unity and purpose of the self: A ‘personal myth’

  • Narrative Identity: The internal, dynamic life story that an individual constructs to make sense of his or her life

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 103 of 116

1

Problems with Cattell’s 16 traits:

Select one of the following:

  •  Subjectivity:
     Different people reach a different reduced set of Allport & Odbert’s descriptors

  •  (Poor) Replicability / Reproducibility:
     Using Cattell’s 171 personality descriptors, many people failed to obtain his same 16 factors

  •  Redundancy:
     Many of his factors correlated too highly for them to really be ‘different’ traits

  • All of these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 104 of 116

1

Other factors influencing attraction

Select one of the following:

  • religion

  • gender

  • age

  • All these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 105 of 116

1

Stability in personality:

Select one of the following:

  •  Personality has a developmental trajectory, but in relative terms remains fairly stable

  • Mean level stability is relatively low

  • All answers are correct

  •  Personality changes for everyone - development and ‘maturation’

Explanation

Question 106 of 116

1

Why does similarity lead to attraction?

Select one of the following:

  • None of these answers are correct

  • Both these answers are correct

  • When two people like each other and discover that they are similar, this represents a balanced state.

  • Unbalanced states involve negative affect.

Explanation

Question 107 of 116

1

Milgram’s (1962) wanted “to study behavior in a strong situation of deep consequence for the participants
Milgram measured personality in (only) one of his ~20 studies… and found effects of personality:

Select one of the following:

  • All answers are correct

  •  Authoritarianism: more obedience from those who respect and value authority
     Locus of control: more obedience from those with an external locus of control

  • that people are exposed to powerful treatments, the role of the individual differences among them are minimized”

  •  above average trait-behaviour effects emerge even in ‘strong situations’ in replicated studies.

Explanation

Question 108 of 116

1

Consistency of behaviour proving the consistency of personality involved:

Select one of the following:

  •  Fleeson (2001): Individuals vary over time and space in their personality state expressions……but also are highly stable:

  •  Average levels of personality states are well predicted by personality trait questionnaires

  •  Techniques for assessing behaviours/experiences multiple times per day for several days or weeks

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 109 of 116

1

What is personality?

Select one of the following:

  • • Regularities in behaviour and experience

  •  A person’s typical mode of response

  • Our identity and our reputation

  • There is no one definition

Explanation

Question 110 of 116

1

Personality involves:

Select one of the following:

  • Dispositional traits

  • Life Narratives

  • Characteristic Adaptions

  • All of these answers are true

Explanation

Question 111 of 116

1

 Allport and Odbert (1936) produced the theory of:

Select one of the following:

  • Important characteristics will, over human history, be coded in language.  Collected an exhaustive list of personality descriptors – about 18,000 terms (e.g., sociable, aggressive…)

  • Personality traits are probabilistic descriptions of regularities in behaviour and experience

  • Factor Analysis
    A statistical method that reduces several correlated variables to much fewer composite variables or factors…

  • None of these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 112 of 116

1

Cattell’s Method allows us to:

Select one of the following:

  • a personality system or taxonomy system

  •  describing the structure of personality

  •  Organizing the universe of trait descriptors

  • All these answers are correct:

Explanation

Question 113 of 116

1

Sherman et al., 2015 study states
personality and situations independently predicted state expressions and to a similar extent – no person x situation interaction.

A potential problem with Sherman et al’s (2015) study…

Select one of the following:

  •  Moderate trait-situation correlations, e.g.,
     Neuroticism  situations high in Negativity,
     Extraversion  situations high in Sociality,
     Conscientiousness  situations high in Duty

  •  Correlated predictors can make it harder to detect interactions

  • Breil & Vazire, 2017
     Possible role of situation perception, inflating trait-situation correlations

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 114 of 116

1

Distal causes of personality are:

Select one of the following:

  •  Genetics and evolutionary history

  •  Upbringing, parenting

  •  Social context and culture

  • All answers are correct

Explanation

Question 115 of 116

1

Behavioural (Quantitative) Genetics designs include:

Select one of the following:

  • 1. Family studies: siblings vs. more distant relatives

  • 2. Twin studies: identical vs. fraternal twins

  • 3. Adoption studies: siblings raised together vs. apart

  • All of these answers are correct

Explanation

Question 116 of 116

1

The Rise of Situationism has Two key claims:

Select one of the following:

  • Personality a weak predictor of behaviour (r ~ .30).

  • Behaviour varies considerably over situations.

  • Both answer is correct

  • Neither answer is correct

Explanation