Chapter 12: Practice Test – Flashcards
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1. The subfield of psychology that provides psychology's contribution to the prevention and
treatment of illness is known as
A) medical psychology.
B) health psychology.
C) behavioral psychology.
D) psychobiology.
E) organizational psychology.
answer
B
question
2. The text defines stress as
A) the experience of conflicting motives that produce anxiety and tension.
B) the method in which we argue with loved ones.
C) the blocking of an attempt to reach some important goal.
D) physical, emotional, or mental exhaustion.
E) the process by which we perceive and respond to environmental threats and challenges.
answer
E
question
3. The catharsis hypothesis refers to the idea that
A) every emotion is preceded by cognition.
B) humans tend to adapt to a given level of stimulation.
C) anger is reduced by aggressive action or fantasy.
D) successful performance is influenced by level of physiological arousal.
E) different emotions are associated with similar physiological reactions.
answer
C
question
4. When the mayor ordered a salary increase for the city's police officers, there was a sudden
loss of morale among the city's firefighters. The firefighters' sudden dissatisfaction best
illustrates the
A) James-Lange theory.
B) adaptation-level phenomenon.
C) spillover effect.
D) two-factor theory.
E) relative deprivation principle.
answer
E
question
5. Milan is upset with his wife because she was over an hour late in picking him up at the
airport. He is likely to deal most effectively with his feelings of irritation toward her by
telling her
A) "I'm really angry that I had to wait so long for you to get here."
B) "From now on, I'll ask someone at the office to pick me up."
C) "Darn it, why can't you be more responsible?"
D) "I'm dying of hunger! It's 7:45 and I haven't had dinner yet."
E) "I was starting to worry that you had a car accident on your way over here."
answer
A
question
6. After receiving an unexpected "A" on his psychology test, Jordan was easily persuaded to
baby-sit his little sister while his parents went out for dinner. This best illustrates the
A) catharsis hypothesis.
B) adaptation-level phenomenon.
C) feel-good, do-good phenomenon.
D) relative deprivation principle.
E) facial feedback effect.
answer
C
question
7. Carroll Izard has suggested that love is a mixture of interest-excitement and
A) pride.
B) surprise.
C) fear.
D) joy.
E) lust.
answer
D
question
8. Research suggests that monkeys reared in the wild fear snakes because they
A) are biologically predisposed to fear nearly all primitive forms of life.
B) have a particularly strong nervous system reaction to snake bites.
C) have encountered snakes near dead monkeys.
D) have observed other monkeys' fearful reactions to snakes.
E) frequently compete with snakes for control of territory and natural resources.
answer
D
question
9. In describing the two dimensions of emotion, fear is to terror as anger is to
A) shame.
B) grief.
C) guilt.
D) pain.
E) rage.
answer
E
question
10. A television producer believes that violent TV programs provide viewers an opportunity to
reduce their own anger through fantasy. The producer appears to accept the
A) James-Lange theory.
B) adaptation-level principle.
C) relative deprivation principle.
D) catharsis hypothesis.
E) two-factor theory.
answer
D
question
11. People are fearful of so many different objects and events because
A) the nervous system is naturally aroused by novel and unfamiliar stimuli.
B) they learn to fear things associated with naturally painful or traumatic experiences.
C) they are biologically predisposed to be most fearful of things that most threaten their
physical survival.
D) they are biologically predisposed to fear almost anything.
E) the brain reacts to most new stimuli with a fear response.
answer
B
question
12. A wage increase of $1000 is more likely to improve the subjective well-being of low-income
workers than of middle-income executives. This illustrates the importance of
A) the feel-good, do-good phenomenon.
B) the general adaptation syndrome.
C) the diminishing returns phenomenon.
D) the spillover effect.
E) the critical period hypothesis.
answer
C
question
13. Subjective well-being among university and college students
A) correlates positively with the extent to which love is valued and positively with the
extent to which money is valued.
B) correlates positively with the extent to which love is valued and does not correlate with
the extent to which money is valued.
C) does not correlate with the extent to which love is valued and correlates positively with
the extent to which money is valued.
D) does not correlate with the extent to which love is valued and does not correlate with
the extent to which money is valued.
E) correlates positively with the extent to which love is valued and negatively with the
extent to which money is valued.
answer
E
question
14. Researchers have found that certain factors are related to happiness. One of these is that
happy people tend to
A) be well educated.
B) have many children.
C) have a satisfying marriage or close friendship.
D) be over 50 years old.
E) be physically attractive.
answer
C
question
15. A disturbing implication of the adaptation-level phenomenon is that
A) people who lose some of their wealth will never experience normal levels of happiness.
B) seeking happiness through financial security requires ever-increasing wealth.
C) middle-income people are destined to be perpetually unhappy.
D) comparing ourselves with those who are less fortunate increases our insecurity.
E) people who experience frustration will often resort to violence.
answer
B
question
16. The facial expressions associated with particular emotions are
A) learned in early childhood.
B) different in Eastern and Western cultures.
C) the same throughout the world.
D) more similar in adults than they are in children or adolescents.
E) more similar in women than in men.
answer
C
question
17. Researchers have found that people experience cartoons as more amusing while holding a
pen with their teeth than while holding it with their lips. This finding best serves to support
the
A) relative deprivation principle.
B) Cannon-Bard theory.
C) adaptation-level principle.
D) James-Lange theory.
E) catharsis hypothesis.
answer
D
question
18. The most unambiguous nonverbal clue to our specific emotional state is provided by our
A) respiration rate.
B) hand gestures.
C) facial muscles.
D) body posture.
E) pupil contraction and dilation.
answer
C
question
19. It has been suggested that baring the teeth is universally associated with the expression of
anger because this ability to convey threats has helped humans to survive. This suggestion
best illustrates the
A) evolutionary perspective.
B) relative deprivation principle.
C) Cannon-Bard theory.
D) two-factor theory.
E) adaptation-level principle.
answer
A
question
20. Couples who are passionately in love most frequently communicate intimacy by means of
A) averted glances.
B) contraction of the pupils.
C) winking.
D) prolonged eye-gazing.
E) raising just the inner parts of the eyebrows.
answer
D
question
21. The suggestion that "a happy face creates a merry soul" is most consistent with the
A) Cannon-Bard theory.
B) catharsis hypothesis.
C) adaptation-level principle.
D) James-Lange theory.
E) relative deprivation principle.
answer
D
question
22. Researchers who explore emotion from a social-cultural level of analysis are especially
likely to emphasize cultural differences in
A) autonomic nervous system arousal.
B) the adaptation-level phenomenon.
C) emotional expressiveness.
D) the spillover effect.
E) amygdala responsiveness
answer
C
question
23. Research has shown that neck-level spinal cord injuries reduce the intensity of certain
emotional experiences. This finding supports the
A) Cannon-Bard theory.
B) adaptation-level principle.
C) James-Lange theory.
D) catharsis hypothesis.
E) relative deprivation principle.
answer
C
question
24. According to the ________, you would be able to experience emotion even without
sympathetic nervous system arousal.
A) Cannon-Bard theory
B) James-Lange theory
C) two-factor theory
D) catharsis hypothesis
E) adaptation-level principle
answer
A
question
25. Increased activity in the right prefrontal cortex is to ________ as increased activity in the
left frontal lobe is to ________.
A) anger; fear
B) disgust; joy
C) love; hate
D) elation; depression
E) love; lust
answer
B
question
26. The polygraph measures the changes in ________ that accompany emotion.
A) blood sugar level
B) hormone secretions
C) pupil dilation
D) heart rate
E) facial expression
answer
D
question
27. An inexperienced pilot prepares for an emergency landing after her single-engine plane loses
power. Her emotional arousal is likely to be accompanied by
A) decreased respiration.
B) pupil constriction.
C) increased blood sugar levels.
D) increased salivation.
E) decreased perspiration.
answer
C
question
28. According to the Cannon-Bard theory, the experience of an emotion
A) depends on the intensity of physiological arousal.
B) can occur only after physiological arousal.
C) occurs simultaneously with physiological arousal.
D) precedes physiological arousal.
E) is similar across cultures worldwide.
answer
C
question
29. Evidence that visual input is routed from the thalamus directly to the amygdala has been
used to support the claim that
A) the cortex sends more neural projections to the amygdala than it receives back.
B) emotion tends to distort our perceptions of the world.
C) a visual stimulus always triggers a stronger emotional response than does an auditory
stimulus.
D) some emotional reactions may occur without conscious thinking.
E) blind people must learn expressions of emotion.
answer
D
question
30. When confronted by an armed robber, your emotional arousal is likely to be accompanied
by
A) decreases in blood sugar levels.
B) slowing of digestion.
C) increases in salivation.
D) constriction of pupils to increase visual acuity.
E) decreases in respiration rate.
answer
B
question
31. When students perceive the arousal that accompanies test-taking as energizing rather than
debilitating, they experience much less anxiety. This is best understood in terms of the
A) relative deprivation principle.
B) James-Lange theory.
C) adaptation-level principle.
D) catharsis hypothesis.
E) two-factor theory.
answer
E
question
32. One problem with the use of the polygraph for lie detection is that
A) polygraph assessments are more expensive than brain scans.
B) anxiety, irritation, and guilt feelings all prompt similar physiological reactivity.
C) emotions involve expressive behaviors as well as autonomic nervous system arousal.
D) innocent people are presumed to be guilty at the very beginning of any lie detector test.
E) polygraphs can cause autonomic nerve damage in rare cases.
answer
B
question
33. For purposes of lie detection, investigators have most commonly made use of a(n)
A) electrocardiograph.
B) electroencephalograph.
C) myograph.
D) tomograph.
E) polygraph.
answer
E
question
34. Observers watching fearful faces show more brain activity in the ________ than do those
watching angry faces.
A) cerebellum
B) thalamus
C) amygdala
D) hippocampus
E) medulla
answer
C
question
35. Astrid was emotionally aroused by a TV horror movie. She became extremely angry when
her younger brother momentarily blocked her view of the screen. When her movie viewing
was interrupted by a phone call from her boyfriend, however, she experienced unusually
intense romantic feelings. Astrid's different emotional reactions to her brother and her
boyfriend are best explained by the
A) catharsis hypothesis.
B) James-Lange theory.
C) adaptation-level principle.
D) two-factor theory.
E) Cannon-Bard theory.
answer
D
question
36. Which of the following suggests that the experience of emotion results from an awareness of
our own physiological responses to an emotion-arousing event?
A) the Cannon-Bard theory
B) the catharsis hypothesis
C) the James-Lange theory
D) the adaptation-level phenomenon
E) the relative deprivation principle
answer
C
question
37. The two-factor theory of emotion places more emphasis on the importance of ________
than do other theories of emotion.
A) cognitive activity
B) subjective well-being
C) physiological arousal
D) catharsis
E) overt behavior
answer
A
question
38. A small cluster of neurons, the nucleus accumbens, is highly active when people experience
A) pleasure.
B) anger.
C) fear.
D) depression.
E) disgust.
answer
A
question
39. Boyd, a suspect in a criminal investigation, has agreed to take a lie detector test. The
machine used in this test is most likely to measure his
A) blood sugar levels.
B) pupil dilation.
C) hormone secretions.
D) perspiration levels.
E) eye movements.
answer
D
question
40. According to the Cannon-Bard theory, body arousal is related to the subjective awareness
of emotion in the same way as the ________ is related to the ________.
A) parasympathetic nervous system; thalamus
B) sympathetic nervous system; cortex
C) thalamus; hypothalamus
D) cerebellum; cortex
E) parasympathetic nervous system; sympathetic nervous system
answer
B
question
41. Jeff, who is 14, engages in rigorous tennis drills or competitive play at least four hours
every day because he wants to master the sport and play on one of the best college teams in
the country. His goal and behavior best illustrate the concept of
A) set point.
B) 360-degree feedback.
C) human factors psychology.
D) achievement motivation.
E) homeostasis.
answer
D
question
42. The consumption of carbohydrates is most likely to
A) lower the body's set point.
B) decrease blood glucose levels.
C) reduce tension and anxiety.
D) prevent bulimia nervosa.
E) activate the lateral hypothalamus
answer
C
question
43. Aptitude tests are specifically designed to
A) predict ability to learn a new skill.
B) compare an individual's abilities with those of highly successful people.
C) assess learned knowledge or skills.
D) assess the ability to produce novel and valuable ideas.
E) measure educational achievement.
answer
A
question
44. In very stressful or embarrassing situations, Sanura is able to maintain her poise and help
others to feel comfortable. Sanura's ability best illustrates the value of
A) extrinsic motivation.
B) heritability.
C) divergent thinking.
D) savant syndrome.
E) emotional intelligence.
answer
E
question
45. The confirmation bias refers to the tendency to
A) search for information that supports our preconceptions.
B) judge the likelihood of events on the basis of how easily we can remember examples of
them.
C) overestimate the accuracy of our beliefs and judgments.
D) overestimate the degree to which other people share our beliefs.
E) use heuristics instead of algorithms to solve problems.
answer
A
question
46. A single, memorable case of welfare fraud has a greater impact on estimates of the frequency
of welfare abuse than do statistics showing that this case is actually the exception to the
rule. This illustrates that judgments are influenced by the
A) confirmation bias.
B) representativeness heuristic.
C) belief perseverance phenomenon.
D) framing effect.
E) availability heuristic.
answer
E
question
47. Karl and Dee had a joyful wedding ceremony. After their painful divorce, however, they
began to remember the wedding as a somewhat hectic and unpleasant event. Their
recollections best illustrate the nature of
A) proactive interference.
B) memory construction.
C) the spacing effect.
D) the serial position effect.
E) repression.
answer
B
question
48. When we fall in love, we tend to overestimate how much we liked our partner when we first
began dating. This best illustrates the dynamics of
A) automatic processing.
B) the spacing effect.
C) proactive interference.
D) the serial position effect.
E) memory construction.
answer
E
question
49. The psychologist most closely associated with the study of operant conditioning was
A) Skinner.
B) Pavlov.
C) Watson.
D) Bandura.
E) Garcia.
answer
A
question
50. Which of the following is an unconditioned response?
A) playing jump rope
B) running through a maze to get a food reward
C) sweating in hot weather
D) clapping after a thrilling concert performance
E) getting money as a reward
answer
C
question
51. Color constancy refers to the fact that
A) light waves reflected by an object remain constant despite changes in lighting.
B) objects are perceived to be the same color even if the light they reflect changes.
C) the perceived color of an object has a constant relation to its brightness.
D) the frequency of light waves is directly proportional to the light's wavelength.
E) colors remain the same hue even when the tint changes under our difference threshold.
answer
B
question
52. Damage to the basilar membrane is most likely to result in
A) loss of movement.
B) accommodation.
C) conduction hearing loss.
D) loss of the sense of balance.
E) nerve deafness.
answer
E
question
53. For Regis to think it's wrong to drive over the speed limit simply because he might get
punished for doing so is demonstrating Kohlberg's ________ stage of morality.
A) conventional
B) postconventional
C) preconventional
D) preoperational
E) formal operational
answer
C
question
54. A child's realization that others may have beliefs which the child knows to be false best
illustrates that the child is not completely
A) assimilated.
B) egocentric.
C) imprinted.
D) habituated.
E) accommodated.
answer
B
question
55. An integrated understanding of gender differences in behavior in terms of gender roles, sex
hormones, and individual expectations regarding gender appropriate behavior is most clearly
provided by
A) gender schema theory.
B) molecular genetics.
C) a biopsychosocial approach.
D) evolutionary psychology.
E) social learning.
answer
C
question
56. Gender identity refers to
A) one's biological sex.
B) the sense of being male or female.
C) the set of expected behaviors for males and for females.
D) how masculine a boy is or how feminine a girl is.
E) a person's identification with the parent of the opposite sex.
answer
B
question
57. When people are experiencing vivid dreams
A) their bodies often move in accordance with what they dream.
B) their eyes are likely to move under their closed eyelids.
C) they are more likely to sleepwalk than during any other stage of sleep.
D) their slow brain-wave patterns indicate that they are deeply asleep.
E) they intermittently stop breathing.
answer
B
question
58. If your ________ is destroyed, the left side of your brain could not control the movements
of your right hand.
A) cerebral cortex
B) amygdala
C) hippocampus
D) angular gyrus
E) corpus callosum
answer
E
question
59. A meta-analysis is most useful when:
A) there are not enough subjects in an experiment.
B) a particular issue has generated a large number of studies, some of which have produced
weak or contradictory results.
C) the statistical analysis indicates that the results are statistically significant but the
hypothesis is not supported.
D) the experiment has never been replicated.
answer
B
question
60. Wilhelm Wundt's laboratory work involved experimental studies of
A) animal intelligence.
B) personality development.
C) learning and memory.
D) reactions to sensory stimulation.
E) association and generalization.
answer
D