Question 1
Question
_______ is the process of self-notes and self-reporting
Answer
-
Introspectionism
-
Behaviorism
-
Cognitive Psychology
-
Self Perception
Question 2
Question
______ is only studying what we can observe completely
Answer
-
Observational Psychology
-
Introspectionism
-
Behaviorism
-
Cognitive Psychology
Question 3
Question
___________ uses the experimental methods of psych to study learning how people remember, pay attention, and think.
Answer
-
Experimental Psychology
-
Cognitive Psychology
-
Behaviorism
-
Introspectionism
Question 4
Question
Information Processing Psychology assumes we can explain cognition using the same concepts we use to explain _______
Answer
-
People
-
The stock market
-
Airplanes
-
Computers
Question 5
Question
What concepts from Computer Science have made important contributions to the study of Cognitive Psychology?
Question 6
Question
Inputs are received at ______, can be either excitatory (positive) or inhibitory (negative), those from many different synapses on dendrites are combined to determine _____
Answer
-
dendrites, outputs
-
threshold, inputs
-
Neurotransmitter synapse
-
Dendrites, inputs
Question 7
Question
Output
Outputs are all or none: fires only after input reaches ______.
Action potential travels full length of axon without losing strength
When it reaches end of axon, triggers the release of ______
Answer
-
threshold, neurotransmitters
-
Inputs, outputs
-
threshold, synaptic vesicles
-
potential, neurotransmitters
Question 8
Question
______ vesicles contain neurotransmitter
Action potential causes vesicles to fuse with outer membrane and release neurotransmitter into synaptic cleft
_______ molecules travel across cleft and attach to receptors on other side.
Answer
-
Synaptic, Neurotransmitter
-
Input, Output
-
Output, Input
-
Neurotransmitter, Synaptic
Question 9
Answer
-
Inability to speak
-
Inability to recognize objects
-
Ignoring of some parts of space
-
inability to perceive color
Question 10
Answer
-
Inability to speak
-
Inability to recognize objects
-
Ignoring of some parts of space
-
Inability to perceive color
Question 11
Answer
-
Inability to speak
-
Inability to recognize objects
-
Ignoring of some parts of space
-
Inability to perceive color
Question 12
Question
Achromatopsia is:
Answer
-
Inability to speak
-
Inability to recognize objects
-
Ignoring of some parts of space
-
Inability to perceive color
Question 13
Question
Electroencephalogram (EEG):
Answer
-
Excellent temporal and not as good spatial resolution because electrical signals from
several neurons all combined together
-
Shows precise image of brain, shows structure NOT function
-
Excellent temporal and spatial resolution BUT putting electrode through skull
Question 14
Question
X-ray Computer Tomography (CAT)
Answer
-
Shows precise image of brain, shows structure NOT function
-
Excellent temporal and not as good spatial resolution because electrical signals from several neurons all combined together
-
Excellent temporal and spatial resolution BUT putting electrode through skull
Question 15
Question
Single-Cell Recording:
Answer
-
Excellent temporal and spatial resolution BUT putting electrode through skull
-
Excellent temporal and not as good spatial resolution because electrical signals from
several neurons all combined together
-
Shows precise image of brain, shows structure NOT function
Question 16
Question
Positron Emission Tomography (PET):
Answer
-
Function NOT structure, okay spatial BAD temporal resolution
-
Structure NOT function, shows map of fat/water
-
Primarily function, measures blood flow
Question 17
Question
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
Answer
-
Function NOT structure, okay spatial BAD temporal resolution
-
Structure NOT function, shows map of fat/water
-
Primarily function, measures blood flow
Question 18
Question
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
Answer
-
Function NOT structure, okay spatial BAD temporal resolution
-
Structure NOT function, shows map of fat/water
-
Primarily function, measures blood flow
Question 19
Answer
-
Heart rhythm, breathing, posture,
balance; Cerebellum
-
Coordinating movements, eye
movements, auditory info
-
Hypothalamus, limbic system,
thalamus, cortex
Question 20
Answer
-
Heart rhythm, breathing, posture,
balance; Cerebellum
-
Coordinating movements, eye
movements, auditory info
-
Hypothalamus, limbic system,
thalamus, cortex
Question 21
Answer
-
Heart rhythm, breathing, posture,
balance; Cerebellum
-
Coordinating movements, eye
movements, auditory info
-
Hypothalamus, limbic system,
thalamus, cortex
Question 22
Answer
-
Planning, working memory, motor
control
-
Spatial location, manipulating objects,
touch
-
Object recognition, LTM, auditory
processing
-
Early visual processing
Question 23
Answer
-
Planning, working memory, motor
control
-
Spatial location, manipulating objects,
touch
-
Object recognition, LTM, auditory
processing
-
Early visual processing
Question 24
Answer
-
Planning, working memory, motor
control
-
Spatial location, manipulating objects,
touch
-
Object recognition, LTM, auditory
processing
-
Early visual processing
Question 25
Answer
-
Planning, working memory, motor
control
-
Spatial location, manipulating objects,
touch
-
Object recognition, LTM, auditory
processing
-
Early visual processing
Question 26
Question
Cones are ______ sensitive to light and there are/is _____ type. More heavily represented in ______
Question 27
Question
Rods are ______ sensitive to light and there are/is _____ type. More heavily represented in ______
Question 28
Question
Colorblindness is due to:
Answer
-
Which cones are present
-
Injury
-
Which rods are present
-
Because my mom said so
Question 29
Question
Information from one side of the visual field is routed to the _____ side of the brain.
Answer
-
contralateral
-
lateral
-
retinal
-
both
Question 30
Question
The superior colliculus is important for _____ movements
Question 31
Question
The axons of the retinal ganglion cells lead from the retina to the________ of the ________
Answer
-
Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (LGN), thannalmus
-
Primary Visual Cortex, V1 monocular
-
Cones, forebrain
-
Rods, hypothalamus
Question 32
Question
WHAT Pathway: Object recognition, receives information about color, orientation, form. Damage can cause visual agnosia; Inferotemporal Cortex
Question 33
Question
WHERE Pathway: Representing locations of things, includes representation of speed and direction of motion. Damage can cause spatial neglect; Located in the Posterior Parietal Cortex
Question 34
Question
The word superiority effect is the data pattern in which research participants are more accurate and more efficient in recognizing letters if the letters appear within [blank_start]word[blank_end] than they are in recognizing letters appearing in [blank_start]isolation[blank_end].
Answer
-
a word
-
isolation
-
nonsense
-
isolation
-
a word
-
nonsense
Question 35
Question
Repetition priming is a pattern of priming that occurs simply because a stimulus is presented [blank_start]a second time[blank_end]
Answer
-
a second time
-
at all
-
for the first time
-
in text
Question 36
Question
A problem with object recognition is:
Answer
-
Distance
-
Orientation
-
Depth
-
Spelling
-
Color
Question 37
Question
Biederman: Recognition-by-Components (RBC) assumes complex shapes are made of combinations of simple shapes, these simple shapes may be recognizable at different orientations. These shapes, known as _______, make up objects.
Answer
-
Geons
-
Klingon
-
Leons
-
Neons
Question 38
Question
The Feature Integration Theory: (Triesman and Gelade) proposes feature differences can be detected in parallel,_______. Different types of features must be combined using _______.
Answer
-
Without attention, with attention
-
With attention, without attention
-
With a little attention, with a lot of attention
-
With a lot of attention, with a little attention
Question 39
Question
Illusory Conjunctions:
Answer
-
Attention is necessary to combine features from different dimensions
-
If features cannot be correctly “bound” by attention, then they may be combined incorrectly
-
Experiment involving black letters and shapes
-
Assumes complex shapes are made of combinations of simple shape
-
Word appears for brief second, then “mask” follows at same position to stop processing of stimulus
Question 40
Question
According to Shiffrin and Schneider (1977), practice can eliminate interference in some tasks. To examine this, they used two different types of mapping. _______ Mapping, in which target-set and distractor-set are not alike (i.e. numbers and letters). _______ Mapping, in which target-set and distractor-set are the same
Answer
-
Consistent, varied
-
Varied, consistent
-
Consistent, interference
-
Interference, consistent
Question 41
Question
Each cognitive task draws on a collection of cognitive resources. When two tasks require the same resources, they:
Answer
-
Interfere with one another
-
Work together
-
Draw from the same resource with no effect
-
Cause the brain to explode
Question 42
Question
Long-term Memory (LTM):
Answer
-
Significantly larger capacity than STM
-
Info can remain in LTM for years
-
Info must be loaded into STM to be recalled
-
One way to get information into Long Term Memory is through rehearsal
-
Significantly smaller capacity than STM
-
Info can remain in LTM forever
-
Info doesn't need the STM to be recalled
Question 43
Question
The recency involves the recall of memory. In recalling,
Answer
-
Words are still in STM, easy to recall. However effect can be weakened by overloading STM (participants count back by 3’s)
-
Words are still in LTM, easy to recall. However effect can be weakened by overloading LTM (participants count back by 3’s)
-
More rehearsal means better recall. A slower presentation of words means a greater effect.
-
Less rehearsal means better recall. A slower presentation of words means a smaller effect.
Question 44
Question
The primacy involves the recall of memory. In recalling,
Answer
-
Words are still in STM, easy to recall. Effect can be weakened by overloading STM (participants count back by 3’s)
-
Words are still in LTM, easy to recall. Effect can be weakened by overloading LTM (participants count back by 3’s)
-
More rehearsal means a better recall. If words are presented more slowly, then effect greater,
-
Less rehearsal means a better recall. If words are presented more slowly, then effect smaller,
Question 45
Question
The phonological buffer is used:
Answer
-
as a passive storage system used for holding a representation of recently heard or self-produced sounds.
-
for storing visual materials such as mental images, in much the same way that the rehearsal loop stores speech-based materials.
-
with the proposal that this term is merely the name for an organized set of activities
-
to set goals, make plans for reaching those goals, and select the steps needed for implementing those plans.
Question 46
Question
What sort of symptoms ailed patient H.M.?
Answer
-
Severe anterograde amnesia,
-
Weak retrograde amnesia after surgery
-
No new explicit long term memories
-
Can carry on a normal conversation
-
Cannot carry on a normal conversation
-
Was able to remember everything prior to injury, but new memories are not retained
Question 47
Question
Damage to the [blank_start]hippocampus[blank_end] and related brain structures impairs ability to form new long-term explicit memories, not working memory or implicit memory.
Answer
-
Hippocampus
-
Hypothalamus
-
Cerebellum
-
Cortex
Question 48
Question
Subjects are generally faster to identify a word as a word if they have seen it recently. As with tachistoscopic reading, not a direct memory test, demonstrates some type of memory. The priming in this is another demonstration of memory without awareness, or implicit memory
Question 49
Question
When identifying famous names, subjects often choose unknown names that they saw
24 hours previously. These names sometimes seem familiar, but without any source memory as to where they were seen. Shows the effect of exposure to a stimulus, without asking for explicit memory of the episode in which the stimulus was seen.
Question 50
Question
According to Collins & Quillian (1969), it takes [blank_start]longer[blank_end] to confirm that a canary is an animal than that a canary is a bird. Possibly because it takes [blank_start]longer[blank_end] to reach in the hierarchy .
Answer
-
longer
-
the same amount of time
-
longer
-
shorter
-
the same amount of time
Question 51
Question
According to Anderson (1974), it takes [blank_start]longer[blank_end] to build up activation when the nodes involved have [blank_start]many[blank_end] connections. This could be due to the Fan Effect: number of connections to a node.
Answer
-
longer
-
shorter
-
the same amount of time
-
many
-
few
-
no
Question 52
Question
According to Barbara Tversky, performance [blank_start]better[blank_end] when subjects can tailor their encoding for the specific type of test.
Answer
-
is better
-
is worse
-
is no different
Question 53
Question
Episodic memory:
Answer
-
Recall of event, recall generally requires a source memory
-
Being reminded of the learning context helps retrieval because the context is encoded along with the learned material
-
When a word seems familiar, but you cannot remember specifically learning/hearing it
-
Produce list of items seen before without examples
Question 54
Answer
-
Our ability to combine words into sentences.
-
Set of syntactic rules that determine whether a sequence of words is a
grammatical sentence
-
If the structure of a sentence can be described by the phrase structure rules, then it is grammatical.
-
All of the above
-
None of the above
Question 55
Answer
-
Relatively good comprehension, have problems with function words. Severely disrupted production
-
Unable to comprehend speech. Produce speech that is fluent but meaningless.
-
Cannot name objects. May be only certain classes of objects: concrete nouns, abstract nouns, inanimate objects, colors
-
Good hearing, can speak, write, and read. Cannot understand speech
Question 56
Question
Wernicke's Aphasia
Answer
-
Relatively good comprehension, have problems with function words. Severely disrupted production.
-
Unable to comprehend speech. Produce speech that is fluent but meaningless.
-
Cannot name objects. May be only certain classes of objects: concrete nouns, abstract nouns, inanimate objects, colors.
-
Good hearing, can speak, write, and read. Cannot understand speech.
Question 57
Answer
-
Relatively good comprehension, have problems with function words. Severely disrupted production
-
Unable to comprehend speech. Produce speech that is fluent but meaningless.
-
Cannot name objects. May be only certain classes of objects: concrete nouns, abstract nouns, inanimate objects, colors
-
Good hearing, can speak, write, and read. Cannot understand speech
Question 58
Question
Pure Word Deafness
Answer
-
Relatively good comprehension, have problems with function words. Severely disrupted production
-
Unable to comprehend speech. Produce speech that is fluent but meaningless.
-
Cannot name objects. May be only certain classes of objects: concrete nouns, abstract nouns, inanimate objects, colors
-
Good hearing, can speak, write, and read. Cannot understand speech
Question 59
Question
Image scanning done by Stephen Kosslyn found the [blank_start]longer[blank_end] the "distance" scanned in the image, the [blank_start]longer[blank_end] the time before the scan is completed.
Answer
-
longer
-
shorter
-
longer
-
lack of change
Question 60
Question
In tests of mental rotation done by Roger Shepard, reaction time [blank_start]increases[blank_end] with the amount of rotation from the normal orientation.
Answer
-
increases
-
decreases
-
displays no change
Question 61
Question
A propositional, or descriptive, representation has:
Question 62
Question
Analog (depictive) Representation is something about form of representation that ______ form of thing it represents.
Answer
-
matches
-
does not match the
-
is a true
-
is an untrue
Question 63
Question
According to Kosslyn, what does imagery rely on?
Answer
-
analog image buffer
-
phonological buffer
-
visual buffer
-
visiospatial buffer
Question 64
Question
When Bisiach & Luzzatti (1979) studied a patient from Milan with left neglect, they found:
Answer
-
They only attended to things on the right visual field
-
They only attended to things on the left visual field
-
Describes only buildings to the right
-
Describes only buildings to the left
-
When switching to the opposite side, they now only describe only buildings on right, which were the buildings previously ignored
-
When switching to the opposite side, they now only describe only buildings on left, which were the buildings previously ignored
Question 65
Question
[blank_start]Availability[blank_end] Heuristic: Strategy for estimating the frequency with which something occurs.
Answer
-
Availability
-
Representativeness
-
Frequency
Question 66
Question
[blank_start]Representativeness[blank_end] Heuristic: Estimate probability that an exemplar belongs in a category by assessing how representative that event is of the appropriate category.
Answer
-
Representativeness
-
Availibility
-
Probability
Question 67
Question
Most people tend to seek [blank_start]confirming[blank_end] evidence rather than [blank_start]disconfirming[blank_end] evidence due to [blank_start]confirmation[blank_end] bias.
Answer
-
confirming
-
disconfirming
-
confirmation
-
disconfirmation
-
disconfirming
-
confirming
Question 68
Question
In functional fixedness, there is a tendency to be rigid in thinking about an object’s function. The problem set is like a heuristic, which helps to reduce options, but may also eliminate possible solutions. What is the key for solving this problem?
Question 69
Question
Wallas (1926) argued that creative thought proceeds in four stages. What are these four stages?
Answer
-
Preparation
-
Incubation
-
Illumination
-
Verification
-
Intelligence
-
Fluid thinking
Question 70
Question
What is general intelligence?
Answer
-
One pervasive measure. Factor analysis: looks for common factors—“ingredients”, reveals a general intelligence factor, or g
-
The ability to deal with new and unusual problems
-
Acquired knowledge, including your verbal knowledge and your experience
-
Intelligence needed in day-to-day settings
Question 71
Question
What is specialized intelligence?
Answer
-
Each measure is separate
-
Own's emotions and others’ and the ability to control your emotions
-
Intelligence needed in day-to-day settings
-
The ability to deal with new and unusual problems
Question 72
Question
What is hierarchical intelligence?
Answer
-
Some aspects are shared across tests
-
Each measure is separate
-
Intelligence needed in day-to-day settings
-
Own emotions and others’ and the ability to control your emotions
Question 73
Question
What is fluid intelligence?
Answer
-
The ability to deal with new and unusual problems. Decreases with age.
-
Acquired knowledge, including your verbal knowledge and your experience. Improved with age
-
Intelligence needed in day-to-day settings
-
Own emotions and others’ and the ability to control your emotions
Question 74
Question
What is crystallized intelligence?
Answer
-
Acquired knowledge, including your verbal knowledge and your experience. Improved with age
-
The ability to deal with new and unusual problems. Decreases with age.
-
Intelligence needed in day-to-day settings.
-
Own emotions and others’ and the ability to control your emotions
Question 75
Question
What is practical intelligence?
Answer
-
Intelligence needed in day-to-day settings
-
The ability to deal with new and unusual problems
-
Own emotions and others’ and the ability to control your emotions
-
Acquired knowledge, including your verbal knowledge and your experience
Question 76
Question
What is emotional intelligence?
Answer
-
Intelligence needed in day-to-day settings
-
Own emotions and others’ and the ability to control your emotions
-
The ability to deal with new and unusual problems
-
One pervasive measure
Question 77
Question
What are some examples of Multiple Inteligences as proposed by Howard Gardner?
Answer
-
psychometric
-
linguistic
-
spatial
-
musical
-
naturalistic
-
tv fun facts
-
food recipes
Question 78
Question
Environment and genetics play the largest role in intelligence.
Question 79
Question
In the Flynn Effect, intelligence decrease up 3 points per decade and can be genetic
Question 80
Question
There are no reliable difference between men and women in their overall IQ scores
Question 81
Question
Genetic similarities and economic differences are great for intelligence, leads to stereotype threats.
Question 82
Question
The word “consciousness” is used to refer to a number of different things such as:
Answer
-
Awareness
-
Thinking
-
Self-consciousness
-
Experience
-
Ability
-
Grades
Question 83
Question
Awareness refers to:
Answer
-
We are aware of some mental events, but not others
-
Solving problems, learning, executing
-
Introspection, mental representation of self
-
What is it like to be conscious? Could your conscious experience be produced by the activity in your brain?
Question 84
Question
Thinking refers to:
Answer
-
We are aware of some mental events, but not others
-
Solving problems, learning, executing
-
Introspection, mental representation of self
-
What is it like to be conscious? Could your conscious experience be produced by the activity in your brain?
Question 85
Question
Self consciousness refers to:
Answer
-
We are aware of some mental events, but not others.
-
Solving problems, learning, executing
-
Introspection, mental representation of self
-
What is it like to be conscious? Could your conscious experience be produced by the activity in your brain?
Question 86
Question
Experience refers to:
Answer
-
We are aware of some mental events, but not others.
-
Solving problems, learning, executing
-
Introspection, mental representation of self
-
What is it like to be conscious? Could your conscious experience be produced by the activity in your brain?
Question 87
Question
A person has damage to primary visual cortex (V1) . Patient claims to be blind in affected area. When forced to guess about visual stimuli, responses more accurate than chance. They have access to visual information that they are unaware of. Even though they are unaware of this information, it can be used to guide their behavior as they avoid obstacles when walking. What does this patient have?
Answer
-
Broca's aphasia
-
Blindsight
-
Achromatopsia
-
Anomia