Assignment
Part 1
Q1. Who studied color vision and what is now known as the action potentials of neurons?
Charles Darwin
Francis Bacon
René Descartes
Hermann von Helmholtz
Q2. The _____ approach to psychology emphasized the study of mental processes and focused on inner sensations, feelings, and thoughts.
structuralism
introspection
psychoanalysis
functionalism
Q3. Who studied perception and cognition in children?
George Miller
Jean Piaget
Carl Rogers
B. F. Skinner
Q4. What subfield of psychology examines the power of the social environment?
Gestalt psychology
Structuralism
Humanism
Social psychology
Q5. Who developed the hierarchy of needs?
Sigmund Freud
Charles Darwin
Abraham Maslow
Jean Piaget
Q6. Psychology has been an academic discipline for:
less than 100 years.
less than 300 years.
more than 300 years.
less than 200 years
Q7. Who was the father of empiricism?
René Descartes
Francis Bacon
Charles Darwin
John Locke
Q8. Who taught the first course in scientific psychology?
Wilhelm Wundt
Edward Titchener
Hermann Ebbinghaus
John Locke
Q9. Who was the leader in functionalism?
Wilhelm Wundt
Hermann Ebbinghaus
William James
Edward Titchener
Q10. _____ was the first women to get a doctorate degree in psychology and studied animal behavior.
Mary Washburn
Margaret Floy Washburn
Ingrid Thorndike
Mary Whiton Calkins
Q11. What subfield of psychology emphasizes the positive potential of humans?
Structuralism
Humanism
Gestalt psychology
Social psychology
Q12. _____ was a Greek philosopher, who was a nativist, believing aspects of a person's character and intelligence were innate and present at birth.
René Descartes
Plato
Aristotle
Francis Bacon
Q13. _____ was a Greek philosopher who was an empiricist, believing that everything a person knows comes from experiences and environment.
René Descartes
Aristotle
Plato
Francis Bacon
Q14. _____ argued that the mind was a blank slate, or tabula rasa.
John Locke
René Descartes
Charles Darwin
Francis Bacon
Q15. The _____ approach to psychology emphasized the purpose of each type of behavior, with a focus on the adaptive functions that the behavior played in helping our ancestors survive.
structuralism
psychoanalysis
functionalism
introspection
Q16. _____ was denied her doctorate degree in psychology from Harvard.
Mary Washburn
Mary Whiton Calkins
Ingrid Thorndike
Margaret Floy Washburn
Q17. What did Ivan Pavlov study?
operant conditioning
classical conditioning
the Pavlovian box
the law of effect
Q18. _____ was a researcher who proclaimed that the behavioral findings of animal research could be applied to humans and did so with "Little Albert."
John Watson
B. F. Skinner
Ivan Pavlov
Edward Thorndike
Q19. _____ was the researcher who discovered the "magical number 7."
Carl Rogers
B. F. Skinner
Jean Piaget
George Miller
Q20. What subfield of psychology examines the adaptive significance of behavior and views natural selection as needed to promote survival?
Structuralism
Gestalt psychology
Social psychology
Evolutionary psychology
Part 2
Q1. The four major research perspectives in psychology are:
biological, cognitive, behavioral, and sociocultural.
genetic, environmental, humanistic, and psychodynamic.
qualitative, quantitative, descriptive, and case study.
clinical, counseling, consulting, and educational.
Q2. With respect to the four major perspectives reviewed in the textbook, internal influences on behavior are to external influences on behavior as the _____ perspective is to the _____ perspective.
sociocultural; cognitive
behavioral; sociocultural
biological; cognitive
biological; behavioral
Q3. One who believes that environmental events condition observable conduct is taking the _____ perspective.
behavioral
biological
cognitive
sociocultural
Q4. Which sampling procedure is MOST likely to produce a random sample?
A researcher goes to a dealership to obtain a list of the people who purchased luxury automobiles to gather information about the driving habits of American drivers.
A researcher surveys first-year psychology students to gather information about the school's first-year students' feelings of homesickness.
A researcher stands outside a football stadium entrance before a game asking people to fill out a survey to obtain the opinions of all city residents about the building of a new stadium.
A researcher draws 60 names from a hat that contains the names of all 300 construction workers on a job site to survey them about the job site's safety practices.
Q5. A factor that can take on more than one value is called a(n):
correlation.
operational definition.
hypothesis.
variable.
Q6. Even if two variables are highly correlated, one cannot say that their relationship is one of _____. Instead, the relationship may be the result of _____.
cause-effect; the placebo effect
predictability; random assignment
predictability; control
cause-effect; a third variable
Q7. A table or figure that depicts the number of participants receiving each score for a given variable is called a(n):
frequency distribution.
correlation coefficient.
inferential statistic.
scatterplot.
Q8. If one plotted the height of every adult male in the United States on a piece of paper, one would end up with a:
bell-shaped line.
jagged line.
horizontal line.
vertical line.
Q9. When comparing two normal distributions with the same mean but different standard deviations, the one with the smaller standard deviation would:
be shifted to the right.
have a bell shape that is narrower and taller.
be shifted to the left.
have a bell shape that is wider and shorter.
Part 3
Q1. A ______ shows two variables combined as individual points on a graph.
scatterplot
positive correlation
negative correlation
frequency distribution
Q2. Professor Rossi wants to represent the data she collected on age and income as single points on a chart. She can accomplish this using a:
negative correlation.
frequency distribution.
positive correlation.
scatterplot.
Q3. Professor McManus shows a scatterplot of data that show that grades increase as the number of hours spent studying increases. Professor McManus has shown that:
a positive correlation between studying and grades.
a negative correlation between studying and grades.
studying causes grades to increase.
not studying causes grades to decrease.
Q4. A positive correlation:
indicates that one variable causes an increase in the other variable.
indicates that one variable causes a decrease in the other variable.
indicates that as one variable increases, the other variable decreases.
indicates that as one variable increases, the other variable increases.
Q5. Michael notices that the plants in his garden that are in the shade most of the day are smaller than the ones that are in the sun. What can Michael conclude about the relationship between sunlight and plant growth?
that plants in the shade get less food from the soil.
a negative correlation between amount of sunlight and plant growth.
that plants in the sun get more food from the soil.
a positive correlation between amount of sunlight and plant growth.
Q6. Professor Gliserman is studying the effect of alcohol on response time. Professor Gliserman will likely find _____ between the two variables.
no relationship
negative correlation
a scatterplot
positive correlation
Q7. An upward sloping scatterplot indicates:
a correlation coefficient that is less than zero.
negative correlation.
positive correlation.
no relationship.
Q8. A downward sloping scatterplot indicates:
no relationship.
a correlation coefficient that is greater than zero.
negative correlation.
positive correlation.
Q9. The correlation coefficient is represented by:
r.
c.
k.
d.
10. Which of the following correlation coefficients may represent a strong positive correlation?
0.80
0.10
1.20
-0.80
Q11. Correlation coefficients can range from:
-2 to 2.
0 to 1.
-1 to 1.
-1 to 0.
Q12. Professor Hartwick finds that people who tend to score low on one variable tend to score low on another variable. Professor Hartwick has found:
a positive correlation.
no relationship.
a negative correlation.
a correlation coefficient that is less than zero.
Q13. Which of the following is a correct representation of a strong negative correlation?
r = -0.22
c = -0.82
r = -0.82
c = -0.22
Q14. Which of the following correlation coefficients would you expect to see between month of birth (1 through 12) and scores on an intelligence test?
r = 0.52
r = -0.62
r = -0.02
r = 0.72
Q15. Scatterplots show:
the frequency of individual test scores.
bars representing different variables.
two scores represented as individual points on the graph.
causal relationships between two variables.
Q16. Professor Andrews found that as the number of days absent increases, students grades decrease. Professor Andrews has found:
that days absent causes grades to decrease.
that attending class causes grades to increase.
a positive correlation between days absent and grades.
a negative correlation between days absent and grades.
Q17. If high values in one variable are associated with both high and low values of the other variables, the variables are:
positively correlated.
negatively correlated.
a correlation coefficient.
uncorrelated.
Q18. Which of the following correlation coefficients represents the weakest negative correlation?
-0.20
-0.80
-1.01
0.10
Q19. Dr. Velasquez found a correlation of r = 0.02 in a recent study. The two variables in his study are:
uncorrelated.
downward sloping.
negatively correlated.
positively correlated.
Q20. Professor Zhang found a correlation of -0.76. What data could this correlation represent?
the relationship between month of year and anxiety
the relationship between antidepressant dose and depressive symptoms
the relationship between depressive symptoms and gender
the relationship between depressive symptoms and age.
Attachment:- MCQ.rar