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AP Fall Final Test Bank 1. Which of the following approaches to psychology emphasizes observable responses over inner experiences when accounting for behavior? (AP94) (A) Behaviorist (B) Cognitive (C) Existentialist (D) Psychodynamic (E) Structuralist 2. The first area of psychology to be studied as a science is known as (AP99) (A) Psychoanalysis (B) Phrenology (C) Classical conditioning (D) Mesmerism (E) Psychophysics 3. Early behaviorists believed that psychology should not focus on “the mind” because “the mind” is (AP04) (A) Too complex (B) Genetically determined (C) Largely unconscious (D) Unobservable (E) Environmentally determined 4. John B. Watson was a pioneer in which of the following perspectives of psychology? (AP04) (A) Biological (B) Functionalism (C) Psychoanalytic (D) Structuralism (E) Behaviorism 5. A researcher studies the effects of brain lesions in rats. This research study reflects which of the following perspectives? (AP04) (A) Cognitive (B) Biological (C) Behavioral (D) Humanistic (E) Psychoanalytic ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM In an experiment designed to determine whether watching violent scenes on television increases the frequency of aggressive behavior in children, one group of subjects saw a nonviolent cartoon and another group saw a violent cartoon. In the play period that followed the viewing of the cartoons, researchers observed the two groups of children together and counted instances of aggressive behavior. (AP94) 6. The control group in the experiment is the group that (AP94) (A) The researchers thought would be most aggressive (B) Performed the larger number of aggressive acts (C) Performed the smaller number of aggressive acts (D) Watched the violent cartoon (E) Watched the nonviolent cartoon 7. The dependent variable in the experiment is the (AP94) (A) Amount of aggressive behavior exhibited by the children (B) Amount of time that each child spent interacting with the other children (C) Group in which each child was originally placed (D) Violent cartoon (E) Nonviolent cartoon 8. According to the ethical guidelines set by the American Psychological Association (APA) , which of the following is true of psychological research in which animals are used as subjects? (AP94) (A) It must not involve the use of surgical procedures. (B) It is no longer permitted by the APA without special authorization. (C) It should conform to all APA ethical guidelines for animal research. (D) It must be limited to investigations that use correlational procedures. (E) It may not be conducted by psychologists who do not have a license. 9. In which of the following types of research are the same children tested periodically at different points in their development? (AP94) (A) Clinical case study (B) Between subjects (C) Cross-sectional (D) Ethnographic (E) Longitudinal 10. In an experiment, which of the following variables refers to the outcome that is measured by the experimenter? (AP99) (A) Independent (B) Dependent (C) Control ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (D) Random (E) Stimulus 11. Drawing a random sample of people from a town for an interview study of social attitudes ensures that (AP99) (A) Each person in town has the same probability of being chosen for the study (B) An equal number of males and females are selected for interviews (C) The study includes at least some respondents from every social class in town (D) The study will uncover widely differing social attitudes among the respondents (E) The sample will be large enough even though some people may refuse to be interviewed 12. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) The most distinctive characteristic of the experimental method is that it (AP99) Studies a few people in great depth Studies subjects in their natural environment Is an efficient way to discover how people feel Seeks to establish cause-effect relationships Provides a chronological basis for reaching conclusions 13. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) . In experimental psychology, a significant difference refers to a (AP99) Difference not likely due to chance Difference not likely due to faulty design Result that indicates a correlation equal to 1.0 Result that departs from previous findings Result that proves a new theory 14. (A) (B) (C) rat (D) (E) A double-blind control is essential for which of the following? (AP99) A study comparing the IQ test scores of children from different educational systems A study of relationships among family members An experiment to determine the effect of a food reward on the bar-pressing rate of a Assessment of a treatment designed to reduce schizophrenic symptoms A survey of drug use among teenagers 15. A researcher asks elementary, junior high, senior high, and college students to define the term “cheating”, and analyzes differences in their definitions across age groups. This is an example of which type of study? (AP04) (A) Longitudinal (B) Sequential (C) Cross-sectional (D) Case study (E) Observational ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 16. Which of the following would be used to measure the relationship between age and reaction time? (AP04) (A) Correlation (B) Central tendency (C) A histogram (D) Standard deviation (E) A t test 17. Of the following research methods, which can best establish a cause and effect relationship? (AP04) (A) Naturalistic observation (B) A survey (C) A test (D) A case study (E) An experiment 18. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) If the variance of a set of scores is 100, the standard deviation will be (AP04) 5 10 25 50 125 19. For a language test with normally distributed scores, the mean was 70 and the standard deviation was 10. Approximately what percentage of the test scored 60 and above? (AP04) (A) 16 (B) 34 (C) 68 (D) 84 (E) 95 Questions 96-98 refer to the following study. A student hypothesizes that high school student’s consuming different flavors of a drink before a spelling test will perform differently. A study to test the hypothesis finds that with a bitter drink, performance is best 6 hours after drinking it, whereas with a sweet drink, performance is better one hour after drinking it. 20. Which of the following are the independent variables? (AP04) (A) Test scores and high school students (B) Test scores and time of consumption ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (C) Flavor of drink and time of consumption (D) Flavor of drink and high school students (E) Flavor of drink and test scores 21. Which of the following is the dependent variable? (AP04) (A) Flavor of drink (B) Participant’s spelling scores (C) Participant’s ages (D) Time the drink was consumed (E) Number of drinks consumed 22. An interaction between variables complicates the researcher’s explanation of findings. Which of the following are most likely involved in this interaction? (AP04) (A) Test scores and high school students (B) Test scores and time of consumption (C) Flavor of drink and time of consumption (D) Flavor of drink and high school students (E) Flavor of drink and test scores 23. Which of the following is evidence of the reliability of a new intelligence test? (AP04) (A) A correlation of +0.90 exists between scores on the new test and scores on the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (B) The test predicts student’s ability to succeed in college (C) The correlation between scores for identical twins taking the test is +0.90 (D) Baseline data for test norming are obtained from a diverse sample of several thousand participants (E) The correlation between scores of participants who take two forms of the test is +0.90 24. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) Which of the following correctly describes the firing of neurons? (AP94) A protoplasmic transfer of ions A finely graded response An all-or-none response An osmotic process A symbiotic function 25. Activation of the sympathetic branch of the autonomic nervous system results in (AP94) (A) An increase in salivation (B) An increase in digestion (C) An increase in respiratory rate (D) A decrease in heart rate ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (E) A decrease in pupil dilation 26. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) The primary effect of the myelin sheath is to (AP94) Increase the velocity of conduction of the action potential along the axon Increase the velocity of conduction of the action potential across the synapse Facilitate the incoming stimulus signals at sensory receptors Reduce the amount of unused neurotransmitter in the synaptic cleft Protect the terminal buttons of the neuron from destruction by enzymes 27. Which of the following occurs when a neuron is stimulated to its threshold? (A) The movement of sodium and potassium ions across the membrane creates an action potential. (AP99) (B) The neuron hyperpolarizes. (C) Neurotransmitters are released from the dendrites. (D) The absolute refractory period of the neuron prevents it from responding. (E) The neuron's equilibrium potential is reached. 28. The role of the parasympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system is to (AP99) (A) Facilitate the body's fight-or-flight response (B) Prepare the body to cope with stress (C) Promote rapid cognitive processing (D) Prompt the body to use its resources in responding to environmental stimuli (E) Establish homeostasis after a fight-or-flight response 29. Which of the following are most involved in the action potential of a neuron? (AP04) (A) Calcium and sodium (B) Sodium and potassium (C) Potassium and calcium (D) Chloride and calcium (E) Chloride and sodium 30. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) Painkilling substances produced by the brain are known as (AP94) cortisols Endorphins glucocorticoids Pheromones Hormones 31. Dopamine, norepinephrine, and acetylcholine are all (AP94) (A) Hormones excreted by the endocrine glands (B) Secretions of the exocrine glands ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (C) Drugs used in the therapeutic treatment of memory disorders (D) Enzymes involved with the degradation of interneuron signals (E) Neurotransmitters that excite or inhibit a neural signal across a synapse 32. Which of the following is considered the fundamental building block of the nervous system? (AP04) (A) Nucleus (B) Neuron (C) Synapse (D) Neurotransmitter (E) Electrical impulse 33. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) The occipital lobes contain (AP94) The primary visual cortex The prefrontal cortex The somatosensory cortex The pons Sensory and motor connections to other brain Regions 34. Which of the following allows the examination of living brain tissue visually without performing surgery? (AP94) (A) Computerized axial tomography (B) Stereotaxic examination (C) Retrograde degeneration (D) Biofeedback (E) Ablation 35. For most people, which of the following is an activity based in the right hemisphere of the brain? (AP94) (A) Muscular control of the right hand (B) Simple spatial reasoning (C) Arithmetic reasoning (D) Language comprehension (E) Speech 36. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) Which of the following is true of the reticular activating system? (AP94) It is the major system in the brain for controlling emotions. It functions primarily in the control of motor responses. It regulates levels of arousal. It regulates body temperature. It controls the uptake of pituitary hormones. ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 37. (A) (B) (C) (D) The thalamus processes information for all of the following senses EXCEPT (AP99) Smell Hearing Taste Vision 38. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) Which of the following parts of the brain is most active in decision-making? (AP99) Reticular formation Corpus callosum Hypothalamus Cerebral cortex Pituitary gland 39. Which of the following is a brain-imaging technique that produces the most detailed picture of brain structure? (AP99) (A) Electroencephalography (EEG) (B) Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (C) Positron emission tomography (PET) (D) Computerized axial tomography (CAT) (E) Electromyography (EMG) 40. People who have experienced severe damage to the frontal lobe of the brain seldom regain their ability to (AP99) (A) Make and carry out plans (B) Recognize visual patterns (C) Process auditory information (D) Process olfactory information (E) Integrate their multiple personalities 41. Stimulation of portions of the left temporal lobe of the brain during surgery will cause the patient to (AP99) (A) See lights (B) Lose the sense of smell (C) Jerk the left arm (D) Extend the tongue (E) Hear sounds] 42. Which of the following areas of the body has the largest number of sensory neurons? (AP99) (A) Back (B) Foot (C) Ear ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (D) Lips (E) Wrist 43. Neurosurgeons cut the corpus callosum in the brain disrupting communication between the right and left hemispheres to(AP04) (A) Prevent the spread of epileptic seizures (B) Reduce anxiety attacks and phobic reactions (C) Reduce the incidence of violent behaviors (D) Treat schizophrenia (E) Reduce mood swings 44. Which component of the limbic system has an essential role in the formation of new memories? (AP04) (A) Amygdala (B) Hippocampus (C) Pituitary gland (D) Hypothalamus (E) Thalamus 45. A person who has a brain injury is having difficulty seeing and hearing. These symptoms indicate that damage has occurred in the (AP04) (A) Parietal and occipital lobes (B) Occipital and temporal lobes (C) Frontal and temporal lobes (D) Temporal lobe only (E) Frontal lobe only 46. Prozac functions as an antidepressant medication because it (AP04) (A) Enhances production of acetylcholine (B) Blocks the reuptake of the neurotransmitter serotonin (C) Causes select memory loss for depression producing events (D) Produces a steady, mild state of euphoria (E) Inhibits frontal lobe activity related to depression 47. The human brain differs from the brains of most other animals by the relative amount of brain mass devoted to which of the following? (AP04) (A) The occipital lobe (B) The cerebellum (C) The cerebral cortex (D) The homunculus (E) The pituitary gland ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 48. Which of the following neurotransmitters is most directly associated with Alzheimer’s disease? (AP04) (A) Dopamine (B) Serotonin (C) Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) (D) Acetylcholine (ACh) (E) Glutamate 49. Which of the following structures of the brain has been linked with the regulation of hunger and thirst? (AP04) (A) The occipital lobe (B) The cerebellum (C) The cerebral cortex (D) The hypothalamus (E) The pituitary gland 50. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) For most people, speech functions are primarily localized in the (AP99) Right cerebral hemisphere Left cerebral hemisphere Occipital lobe Corpus callosum Cerebellum 51. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) A genetically programmed action pattern is the ethologist's definition of (AP99) Habit Instinct Adaptation Altruism Releasing mechanism 52. The result of the evolutionary process that preserves traits that enhance the adaptation of an organism and suppresses traits that do not is called (AP99) (A) Habituation (B) Accommodation (C) Natural selection (D) Eugenics (E) Species assimilation 53. Assume that R represents a dominant gene in rats for normal running and that r represents a recessive gene in rats for an abnormal gait called waltzing. Mating a female Rr rat with a male RR rat will produce offspring that are (AP99) (A) 50% runners and 50% waltzers ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (B) (C) (D) (E) 25% runners and 75% waltzers 75% runners and 25% waltzers 100% waltzers 100% runners 54. The evolutionary perspective (sociobiology) argues that (AP04) (A) Humans are motivated by a desire to maintain optimum hormonal levels (B) Humans are genetically programmed to ensure that there is a new generation of the species (C) Humans strive to minimize inconsistent thoughts and actions (D) There is a relationship among task difficulty, physical arousal, and task performance (E) Conditioning explains most human behavior 55. Which of the following reflects the inborn and stable rudiments of personality, such as excitability? (AP04) (A) Imprinting (B) Social referencing (C) Individuation (D) Temperament (E) Accommodation 56. In a famous series of experiments conducted by Harry Harlow, infant monkeys were separated from their mothers at birth. The infants were then given two surrogate mothers, each of which alternately had a nursing bottle that provided food to the infants. The experimental results showed that in frightening situations the infant monkeys(AP94) (A) Were more likely to become aggressive toward the wire mother than toward the terry-cloth mother (B) Failed to seek out either of the mothers because of their lack of experience in seeking contact comfort (C) Preferred the wire mother, even when the terry-cloth mother had the nursing bottle (D) Preferred the terry-cloth mother, even when the wire mother had the nursing bottle (E) Would run and cling to whichever mother had the nursing bottle 57. Which of the following is a genetic disorder that results in a deficiency of a liver enzyme which, if not treated soon after birth, may eventually lead to profound mental retardation? (AP94) (A) Down syndrome (B) Tay-Sachs disease (C) Fetal alcohol syndrome (D) Toxoplasmosis (E) Phenylketonuria (PKU) ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 58. Which of the following accurately describes a major change in perspective in the field of developmental psychology over the past twenty-five years? (AP94) (A) A shift from an emphasis on childhood and adolescence to an interest in development over the life span (B) A shift from a cognitive to a psychoanalytic interpretation of developmental phenomena (C) A shift in research focus from cognitive to personality development (D) A decrease in interest in the physiological factors affecting growth and development (E) A decrease in interest in the study of the cognitive components of intellect 59. The debate over whether development occurs gradually, without discernible shifts, or through a series of distinct stages is termed (AP94) (A) Nature vs. nurture (B) Developmental vs. cognitive (C) Cross-sectional vs. longitudinal (D) Continuity vs. discontinuity (E) Maturation vs. learning 60. In their discussions of the process of development, the advocates of nature in the nature-nurture controversy emphasize which of the following? (AP94) (A) Socialization (B) Cognition (C) Maturation (D) Experience (E) Information processing 61. Which of the following theoretical frameworks would argue most strongly that a healthy child will choose what is good for his or her growth? (AP04) (A) Social learning theory (B) Psychoanalytic (C) Behavioral (D) Humanistic (E) Psychodynamic 62. According to Jean Piaget, what is the earliest stage at which a child is capable of using simple logic to think about objects and events? (AP94) (A) Sensorimotor (B) Preoperational (C) Symbolic (D) Concrete operational (E) Formal operational ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 63. A baby looks under the sofa for a ball that has just rolled underneath it. According to Jean Piaget, the baby's action shows development of (AP99) (A) conservation of mass (B) Reversibility (C) Object permanence (D) Logical thinking (E) metacognition 64. Mary Ainsworth's Strange Situation paradigm is typically used to test young children's (AP99) (A) Ego strength (B) Intelligence (C) Reaction time (D) Attachment (E) Incidental learning 65. Keisha was able to roll over at two months, crawl at five months, and walk at ten months. This sequence of development is most likely due to (AP04) (A) Egocentrism (B) Social context (C) Maturation (D) Attachment (E) Assimilation 66. A researcher dabs color on a 16-month-old child’s face and places the child in front of a mirror. Which of the following developmental milestones has been reached if the child realizes that there is something wrong with its face? (AP04) (A) Visual discrimination (B) Recognition of a human form (C) Recognition of self (D) Identification of the gender of the image (E) Perception of the image as a playmate 67. Which Piagetian stage of cognitive development is characterized by mastery of conversation tasks? (AP04) (A) Sensorimotor (B) Preoperational (C) Concrete operations (D) Formal operations (E) Tertiary circular reactions ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 68. A 14-month-old toddler is placed in an unfamiliar situation with the child’s mother, who then leaves the room for a time. When the mother returns, the child squirms and tries to get away from the mother when picked up, but also seems distressed when placed back on the floor. Mary Ainsworth would consider this evidence of which of the following? (AP04) (A) Hyperactivity (B) Narcissistic personality type (C) A resistant or ambivalent attachment style (D) Disorganized behavior (E) Avoidance 69. Which of the following is typically cited as a characteristic of autistic children? (AP94) (A) Minor developmental delays in academic achievement (B) Above-average performance on tests of creativity (C) Severely impaired interpersonal communication (D) Tendency to seek younger playmates (E) Paranoia comparable with that experienced in schizophrenia 70. A schema can be described as (AP04) (A) An outer layer of the eye (B) A mental construct (C) A fissure between lobes of the brain (D) An optical illusion (E) A fixed response to a particular stimulus 71. The most well-adjusted and socially competent chi1dren tend to come from homes where parents employ which of the following parental styles? (AP94) (A) Minimal supervision (B) Authoritarian (C) Authoritative (D) Indulgent (E) Permissive 72. Lawrence Kohlberg's theory of moral reasoning is best described by which of the following? (AP94) (A) Personal conscience is innate and all human beings develop it at the same rate. (B) By adulthood, all people judge moral issues in terms of self-chosen principles. (C) Ethical principles are defined by ideals of reciprocity and human equality in individualistic societies, but by ideals of law and order in collectivistic societies. (D) Children grow up with morals similar to those of their parents. ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (E) Children progress from a morality based on punishment and reward to one defined by convention, and ultimately to one defined by abstract ethical principles. 73. Which of the following regularities in behavior can most likely be accounted for by the existence of a group norm? (AP99) (A) Students tend to use less profanity with adults than they do with their peers. (B) Most people sleep at least six hours a night. (C) The average annual income of industrial workers in 1972 was $7,250. (D) Male infants have a higher infant mortality rate than female infants. (E) People perform well-learned behaviors better in the presence of others than when alone. 74. A nine-year-old girl first learning about her capabilities on the playground and in the classroom would be in which of Erikson's stages of development? (AP99) (A) Industry vs. inferiority (B) Identity vs. role confusion (C) Autonomy vs. shame and doubt (D) Integrity vs. despair (E) Trust vs. mistrust 75. Carol Gilligan’s criticism of Lawrence Kohlberg’s developmental theory is based on the argument that Kohlberg's (AP99) (A) Work has been invalidated by changes in the structure of families in the United States (B) Stages are too limited in their critical-period parameters (C) Theory underestimates the capabilities of infants and children (D) Stages do not apply equally well to all racial and ethnic groups (E) Theory fails to account sufficiently for differences between males and females 76. A normally functioning 65-year-old who cannot solve abstract logic puzzles as quickly as he did when he was younger is experiencing a (AP99) (A) Phenomenon that is uncommon for people of his age (B) Phenomenon predicted by Erik Erikson as part of the eight stages of psycho-social development (C) Decrease in his crystallized intelligence (D) Decrease in his fluid intelligence (E) Difficulty with concrete operational thinking 77. (A) (B) (C) The most common form of color blindness is related to deficiencies in the (AP94) blue-yellow system red-green system Process of visual summation ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (D) Bipolar cells (E) Secretion of rhodopsin 78. The change in the curvature of the lens that enables the eye to focus on objects at various distances is called (AP94) (A) Accommodation (B) Adaptation (C) Conduction (D) Convergence (E) Consonance 79. If Carmelita stares at a red spot for one minute and then shifts her gaze to a white piece of paper, she is likely to experience an afterimage that is (AP94) (A) Green (B) Red (C) Blue (D) Violet (E) Black 80. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) The place in the retina where the optic nerve exits to the brain is called the (AP94) Lens Sclera Fovea Blind spot Aqueous humor 81. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) Intense artificial light is most successfully used as therapy for (AP99) Disorganized (hebephrenic) schizophrenia Seasonal affective disorder Essential hypertension Bipolar disorder Panic disorder 82. When struck by light energy, cones and rods in the retina generate neural signals that then activate the (AP99) (A) Parietal lobe (B) Ganglion cells (C) Bipolar cells (D) ciliary muscle (E) Optic nerve fibers ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 83. Which of the following is a possible reason why cats can see better at night that can humans? (AP04) (A) Cats have a higher proportion of rods to cones (B) Cat’s pupils can contract to a smaller opening (C) Cats have a smaller blind spot (D) Cats have a larger optic nerve tract (E) The visual cortex of cats is located farther forward in the cortex 84. Receptors that are especially important for helping a person maintain balance are located in the (AP94) (A) gyrus cinguli (B) Inner ear (C) Tendons (D) ossicles (E) Ligaments 85. A person is asked to listen to a series of tones presented in pairs, and asked to say whether the tones in each pair are the same or different in pitch. (AP94) 86. In this situation the experimenter is most likely measuring the individual's (A) Sound localization ability (B) Dichotic listening ability (C) Difference threshold (D) Echoic memory (E) Attention span 87. The intensity at which a sound becomes audible for a given individual is known as the individual's (AP94) (A) Contrast sensitivity (B) Absolute threshold (C) Response threshold (D) Critical frequency (E) Just noticeable difference 88. Gustatory receptors are sensitive to all of the following taste qualities EXCEPT (AP99) (A) bitter (B) Sweet (C) Salty (D) Spicy (E) Sour ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 89. When participants in dichotic listening experiments are repeating aloud a message presented in one ear, they are most likely to notice information on the unattended channel if that channel (AP99) (A) Switches from one language to another (B) Switches to a nonlanguage (C) Mentions the participant's name (D) Presents information similar to that on the attended channel (E) Presents information in a foreign language 90. The longer an individual is exposed to a strong odor, the less aware of the odor the individual becomes. This phenomenon is know as sensory (AP04) (A) Acuity (B) Adaption (C) Awareness (D) Reception (E) Overload 91. The coiled tube in the inner ear that contains the auditory receptors is called the (AP99) (A) Semicircular canal (B) ossicle (C) pinna (D) Cochlea (E) Oval window 92. Which of the following is the correct sequence of anatomical structures through which an auditory stimulus passes before it is perceived as sound? (AP04) (A) Cochlea, ossicles, eardrum, oval window, auditory canal (B) Eardrum, cochlea, auditory canal, ossicles, oval window (C) Oval window, auditory canal, eardrum, cochlea, ossicles (D) Ossicles, eardrum, cochlea, auditory canal, oval window (E) Auditory canal, eardrum, ossicles, oval window, cochlea 93. (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) The general function of the bones in the middle ear is to (AP99) Convert the incoming sound from pounds per square inch to decibels Protect the cochlea Regulate changes in the air pressure of the inner ear Transfer sound information from the tympanic membrane to the oval window Provide information to the vestibular system 94. The human vestibular sense is most closely associated with the (AP04) (A) Skin ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (B) Semicircular canals (C) Taste buds (D) Olfactory bulb (E) Rods and cones 95. Eleanor Gibson and her colleagues have used the visual cliff to measure an infant's ability to perceive (AP94) (A) Patterns (B) Depth (C) Size constancy (D) Shape constancy (E) Different hues 96. A person with sight in only one eye lacks which of the following visual cues for seeing in depth? (AP94) (A) Retinal disparity (B) Linear perspective (C) Motion parallax (D) Relative size (E) Texture gradient 97. The tendency of most people to identify a threesided figure as a triangle, even when one of its sides is incomplete, is the result of a perceptual process known as (AP94) (A) Closure (B) Proximity (C) Similarity (D) Feature analysis (E) Shape constancy 98. Climbing an irregular set of stairs is more difficult for an individual who wears a patch over one eye primarily because (AP99) (A) Some depth perception is lost (B) Half of the visual field is missing (C) The ability to perceive interposition is lost (D) The patch disrupts the functioning of the vestibular system (E) The patch alters the ability of the open eye to compensate 99. (A) (B) (C) (D) In psychology, Gestalt principles are used to explain (AP99) Statistical probabilities Somatic behavioral disorders Perceptual organization stimulus-detection thresholds ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (E) Altered states of consciousness 100. Which of the following is NOT a Gestalt principle of perceptual organization? (AP04) (A) Proximity (B) Similarity (C) Closure (D) Intensity (E) Continuity 101. The minimum intensity at which a stimulus can be detected at least 50 percent of the time is known as the (AP04) (A) Visual cliff (B) Just noticeable difference (C) Perceptual set (D) Receptor potential (E) Absolute threshold 102. When Jason practices the drums, he tends not to hear the phone. Today he is expecting a call from a record producer and answers the phone each time it rings even when he is practicing the drums. Which of the following explains why Jason hears the phone today? (AP04) (A) Weber’s law (B) Accommodation (C) Frequency theory (D) Signal detection theory (E) Harmonics 103. When a pair of lights flashing in quick succession seems to an observer to be one light moving from place to place, the effect is referred to as (AP99) (A) Stroboscopic movement (B) The phi phenomenon (C) autokinetic motion (D) Binocular vision (E) Induced displacement 104. REM sleep, generally an "active" state of sleep, is accompanied by which of the following paradoxical characteristics? (AP99) (A) Slowed heart rate (B) Slowed respiration rate (C) Lowered blood pressure (D) Lowered muscle tone ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (E) Reduced eye movements 105. Which of the following is a circadian rhythm? (AP99) (A) The ebb and flow of an individual's emotions during a 24-hour period (B) Jet lag experienced after an airline flight from Los Angeles to Tokyo (C) A cycle of biological functioning that lasts about 25 hours (D) The series of five stages that people go through during a normal night's sleep (E) The systematic alternation between alpha waves and delta waves during the different sleep stages 106. A student participates in a month-long sleep study designed to examine free-running circadian rhythms. If all time cues are removed, the student’s total sleep-wake cycle is likely to (AP04) (A) Average about 25 hours (B) Average about 12 hours (C) Average whatever it had averaged when the student began the study (D) Become even more dependent than usual on the student’s activity level (E) Become extremely variable 107. Which of the following is characterized by a periodic appearance of sleep spindles? (AP04) (A) Stage 2 sleep (B) Stage 3 sleep (C) Stage 4 sleep (D) REM sleep (E) Night terrors 108. Hypnosis has been found useful in the treatment of (AP94) (A) Pain (B) Autism (C) Dementia (D) Paranoia (E) Schizophrenia 109. Hypnosis is best described as a state that (AP99) (A) Gives the hypnotist complete control over the thoughts and emotions of the hypnotized individual (B) Induces heightened suggestibility in the hypnotized individual (C) is similar to an obsessive-compulsive personality disorder (D) Is similar to the condition produced by excessive alcohol consumption (E) is similar to the REM stage of sleep ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 110. The painful experience associated with termination of the use of an addictive substance is known as (AP94) (A) Discontinuance (B) Tolerance (C) Withdrawal (D) Forced independence (E) Transduction 111. In terms of the effect on the central nervous system, alcohol is most accurately classified as which of the following types of drug? (AP94) (A) Depressant (B) Narcotic (C) Psychoactive (D) Stimulant (E) Hallucinogen 112. The psychological effects of alcohol are powerfully influenced by the users (AP04) (A) Expectations (B) Success in developing a social network (C) Agility (D) Intelligence quotient (IQ) (E) Brain dopamine level 113. An individual who sees and feels imaginary spiders crawling on his arms and legs is experiencing (AP04) (A) A fixation (B) A hallucination (C) An illusion (D) An eidetic image (E) A phobia 114. Which of the following will NOT increase behavioral and mental activity? (AP99) (A) Cocaine (B) Caffeine (C) Benzedrine (D) Amphetamines (E) Barbiturates 115. A central nervous system depressant that produces a false feeling of well-being and efficiency and results in slower reaction time to stimulation is (AP04) (A) Cocaine (B) Marijuana ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (C) Dopamine (D) Alcohol (E) Nicotine 116. Which of the following responses was most likely acquired through classical conditioning? (AP94) (A) The startle response of a baby the first time the baby hears thunder (B) A child's fear of dogs after the child has been bitten by a dog (C) The cry of pain expressed by a man whose hand has been cut on a piece of broken glass (D) The uncontrollable blinking of a woman who has just gotten dust in her eye (E) The salivation of a dog that is halfway through a bowl of its favorite food 117. In Ivan Pavlov's experiments in classical conditioning, the dog's salivation was (AP94) (A) An unconditioned stimulus only (B) An unconditioned response only (C) A conditioned response only (D) Both an unconditioned and a conditioned stimulus (E) Both an unconditioned and a conditioned response 118. A monkey is conditioned to flinch at the sound of a bell that was previously paired with a puff of air to the monkey’s cheek. Which of the following explanations would be consistent with a cognitive interpretation of this conditioning? (AP04) (A) The animal cannot control its tendency to flinch because the response of flinching is simply a reflex to the bell (B) The strength of the flinch response is a function of the time interval between the onset of the bell and the air puff. (C) The monkey interprets the bell as a signal that the air puff will follow. (D) The bell is merely a substitute stimulus for the air puff. (E) Monkeys are intelligent and know that they should flinch when they hear tones that are paired with stimuli the elicit reflexes. QUESTIONS 10-12 REFER TO THE FOLLOWING DEFINITIONS. EACH DEFINITION CAN BE USED ONCE, MORE THAN ONCE, OR NOT AT ALL. (A) Prototype matching to organize information into categories (B) Maintaining information in memory through repetition (C) Differential treatment, usually negative, based on group membership (D) Recognizing an object as distinct from its surroundings (E) Learning to respond differently to similar stimuli ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 119. Which is a definition of discrimination that most directly applies to classical conditioning? (AP04) (A) A (B) B (C) C (D) D (E) E 120. Which of the following statements is true of behaviorism? (AP94) (A) It was formulated to account for cognitive development. (B) It is rooted in Sigmund Freud's view of the importance of early experiences. (C) It focuses on the development of thought processes and knowledge. (D) It holds that development is largely a product of learning. (E) It emphasizes the dominance of heredity over environ 121. After several trials during which a dog is given a certain kind of food at the same time that a specific tone is sounded, there is evidence of conditioning if the dog salivates when (AP94) (A) The tone only is presented (B) The food only is presented (C) The food and tone are presented together (D) A different tone is presented with the food (E) A different kind of food is presented without a tone 122. If a man who is a heavy smoker is given an electric shock every time he takes a puff on a cigarette, which of the following behavior-modification techniques is being used? (AP94) (A) Systematic desensitization (B) Modeling (C) Aversive conditioning (D) Homogeneous reinforcement (E) lnterlocking reinforcement 123. Because studies of learning show that events occurring close together in time are easier to associate than those occurring at widely different times, parents should probably avoid which of the following? (AP94) (A) Corporal punishment (B) Mild punishment (C) Consistent punishment (D) Inescapable punishment (E) Delay of punishment ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 124. The technique of strengthening behavior by reinforcing successive approximations is called (AP94) (A) Positive reinforcement (B) Negative reinforcement (C) Distributed practice (D) Modeling (E) Shaping 125. Responses extinguish fastest when they are learned through which type of reinforcement schedule? (AP94) (A) Continuous (B) Negative (C) Variable-interval (D) Variable-ratio (E) Fixed-interval 126. Punishment is most effective in eliminating undesired behavior when the (AP99) (A) Behavior is complex (B) Behavior was very recently acquired (C) Punishment is delivered soon after the behavior (D) Punishment is delivered by someone with authority (E) Punishment is both mental and physical 127. One major objection to the early Skinnerian approach to psychology is that it (AP99) (A) Did not take into account internal thoughts and feelings (B) Did not take into account overt physical behaviors (C) Did not take into account accumulated experiences (D) Focused primarily on childhood experiences (E) Focused primarily on the unconscious 128. John Garcia showed that when rats ingested a novel substance before becoming nauseated from radiation of drugs, the acquired a (AP04) (A) Conditioned taste preference for the substance (B) Generalized taste preference for similar substances (C) Conditioned taste aversion for the substance (D) Conditioned taste aversion for any novel substance (E) Conditioned taste preference for any novel substance 129. Research indicates that many animals are more likely to associate sickness with a taste they experienced in conjunction with the illness than with a tone or light. This finding supports which of the following claims (AP04) ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (A) The tone or light must not have been appropriately paired with the onset of illness (B) Illness is not necessarily punishing to subjects (C) Animals may be biologically prepared to learn some things over other things (D) Extrinsic reinforcers may be more effective than intrinsic reinforcers (E) Positive reinforcers are more effective than punishers 130. Rats in an experiment learned to associate sweetened water with a drug that causes immune suppression. Later, the sweetened water alone produced the immune suppression. This outcome is an example of which of the following? (AP04) (A) Learned helplessness (B) Systematic desensitization (C) Operant conditioning (D) Classical conditioning (E) Biofeedback 131. In operant conditioning, the concept of contingency is exemplified by an "if A, then B" relationship in which A and B, respectively, represent (AP99) (A) stimulus, response (B) Response, reinforcement (C) Stimulus, reinforcement (D) Response, stimulus (E) Stimulus, stimulus 132. Taking a painkiller to relieve a toothache is behavior learned through which of the following processes? (AP99) (A) Shaping (B) Punishment (C) Positive reinforcement (D) Negative reinforcement (E) Omission training 133. Studies of learning have shown that animals develop an aversion for tastes associated with (AP99) (A) electric shock (B) Extinguished associations (C) Sickness (D) Novel stimuli (E) Starvation 134. A two year old child is frightened by a small dog. A few weeks later the same child sees a cat and becomes frightened. The child’s reaction is most likely an example of which of the following? (AP04) ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (A) Stimulus discrimination (B) Second-order conditioning (C) Stimulus generalization (D) Sensory preconditioning (E) Spontaneous recovery 135. The terms "modeling" and "imitation" are most closely associated with which of the following? (AP94) (A) Classical conditioning (B) Gestalt theory (C) Hypothesis testing (D) Operant conditioning (E) Social learning theory 136. After seeing her parents give her brother a dollar for cleaning his room, Sarah begins to clean her own room. According to social-learning theorists, Sarah’s behavior is an example of which of the following? (AP04) (A) Classical conditioning (B) Spontaneous recovery (C) Stimulus generalization (D) Discrimination training (E) Observational learning 137. When rehearsal of incoming information is prevented, which of the following will most likely occur? (AP94) (A) The information will remain indefinitely in short-term memory. (B) There will be no transfer of the information to long-term memory. (C) The sensory register will stop processing the information. (D) Retrieval of the information from long-term memory will be easier. (E) Information already in long-term memory will be integrated with the incoming 138. A teen-ager would most probably draw on which of the following to recall her tenth birthday party? (AP94) (A) Episodic memory (B) Semantic memory (C) Echoic memory (D) Eidetic imagery (F) State-dependent learning 139. According to the information-processing view of memory, the first stage in memory processing involves (AP99) (A) Retrieval ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (B) (C) (D) (E) Storage Rehearsal Encoding Transfer 140. An individual's ability to remember the day he or she first swam the length of a swimming pool is most clearly an example of which of the following kinds of memory? (AP99) (A) Semantic (B) Flashbulb (C) Procedural (D) Priming (E) Episodic 141. The ability to choose specific stimuli to learn about, while filtering out or ignoring other information, is called (AP04) (A) Selective attention (B) Subliminal perception (C) Time-sharing (D) Masking (E) Shadowing 142. Material that an individual cannot remember but is on the “tip of the tongue” is (AP04) (A) In episodic memory, but not in semantic memory (B) In sensory memory, but not in iconic memory (C) In short-term memory, but not in long-term memory (D) Available, but not accessible (E) Retrieved, but not encoded 143. Elena is presented with a list of 20 numbers. When asked to recall this list, she remembers more numbers from the beginning than from the end of the list. This phenomenon demonstrates which of the following types of effect? (AP94) (A) Mnemonic (B) Primacy (C) Recency (D) Secondary (E) Clustering 144. John suffered a head injury in an accident five years ago. He now has clear memories of events that occurred before the accident, but he has great difficulty ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM remembering any of the experiences he has had since the accident. John's symptoms describe (AP99) (A) anterograde amnesia (B) Broca's aphasia (C) cue-dependent forgetting (D) Selective amnesia (E) Retroactive interference 145. When a list of words is learned in order, the words most likely to be forgotten are those that are (AP99) (A) At the beginning of the list (B) At the end of the list (C) In the middle of the list (D) Hardest to pronounce (E) Easiest to spell 146. When Shelly first had cable television service installed, Public broadcasting (PBS) was on channel 9. Her cable company then switched PBS to channel 16. Shelly now has trouble remembering that PBS is on channel 16 and not on channel 9. This memory problem represents (AP04) (A) Memory decay (B) Retrograde amnesia (C) Reconstructive errors (D) Retroactive interference (E) Proactive interference 147. Remembering how to roller skate involves which of the following kinds of memory? (AP04) (A) Semantic (B) Episodic (C) Priming (D) Procedural (E) Prospective 148. Which of the following is and example of retrograde amnesia? (AP04) (A) Ty cannot recall the face of the thief he saw running from the scene of the crime (B) Cassie’s vivid memory of the explosion of the space shuttle Challenger is not corroborated by those she was with at the time (C) Alberto is unable to remember anything since the accident that destroyed portions of his hippocampus (D) Katie attributes her poor performance on a standardized test to the fact that she took the exam in a room other than the one that she learned the material. ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (E) Alyse cannot remember any details of what happened right before her car accident 149. On a fishing trip, Ed realizes that he has mistakenly packed the sewing box instead of the tackle box. He wants to fish but returns home because he does not have any line or hooks. Ed's failure to realize that sewing thread can be used as fishing line and that a bent needle can be used as a hook is an example of (AP94) (A) Poor problem representation (B) Cognitive accommodation (C) Backward masking (D) Functional fixedness (E) Proactive interference 150. A prototype is best defined as (AP94) (A) An example of habituation (B) An example of bottom-up processing (C) The equivalent of feature abstraction (D) The hypothetical "most typical" instance of a category (E) An essential element of category membership 151. A teacher asks students to think of as many uses for a brick as possible. By listing 50 uses, most of which the class finds new and unusual, Susan is displaying (AP94) (A) Computational learning (B) paired-associate learning (C) Hypothetical thinking (D) Divergent thinking (E) Convergent thinking 152. Processing every possible combination of the letters DBRI to arrive at the word BIRD is an example of the use of (AP99) (A) An algorithm (B) An expert system (C) An inference rule (D) A hypothesis (E) A heuristic 153. The practice of solving problems by using a mental shortcut is an example of (AP04) (A) An insightful operation (B) A confirmation bias (C) A hypothesis test (D) The use of a heuristic (E) The use of an algorithm ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 154. Wolfgang Kohler considered a chimpanzee's sudden solving of a problem evidence of (AP99) (A) Instinct (B) Modeling (C) Learning set (D) Insight (E) Spontaneous recovery 155. A word or part of a word that is in itself meaningful, but that cannot be broken into smaller meaningful units, is called a (AP94) (A) Grapheme (B) Morpheme (C) Phoneme (D) performative (E) holophrase 156. According to Benjamin Whorfs linguistic relativity hypothesis, which of the following is true? (AP94) (A) Individuals have a natural predisposition to learn language. (B) Individuals learn positive instances of concepts faster than they learn negative instances. (C) Children learn their first language from their relatives and their peer group. (D) Different languages predispose those individuals who speak them to think about the world in different ways. (E) Children learn quantifying words such as "more" and "further" sooner than they do absolutes such as "every" and "all." 157. Noam Chomsky's view of language proposes that (AP99) (A) There is an inherent language acquisition device (B) Thinking is merely subvocal language (C) Different levels of language ability are hereditarily determined (D) Language acquisition can be explained by social modeling (E) Language is learned principally through verbal reinforcement 158. The rules of grammar are rules of (AP99) (A) Phonemes (B) Morphemes (C) Syntax (D) Semantics (E) Pragmatics ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 159. Language acquisition cannot be fully accounted for by associative learning processes for which of the following reasons? (AP04) (A) Language use is creative (B) Speakers construct rules for utterances by imitating the models they hear (C) Effective communication depends on one’s level of emotional experience (D) Language production is reinforced by the listener (E) Infants are too young to learn associatively 160. The intelligence quotient (IQ) has traditionally been based on the relationship between an individual's mental age and his or her (AP94) (A) Stage of cognitive development (B) Level of physiological development (C) Reading ability (D) Chronological age (E) Quantitative aptitude 161. The hypothesis that intelligence is in part inherited is best supported by the fact that the IQ correlation for (AP94) (A) Pairs of twins reared together is greater than the correlation for pairs of twins reared apart (B) Pairs of identical twins is greater than for pairs of fraternal twins (C) Pairs of fraternal twins is greater than the correlation for other pairs of siblings (D) Adopted children and their adoptive parents is greater than zero (E) Adopted children and their adoptive parents is greater than the correlation for the same children and their biological parents 162. Which of the following types of test is designed to measure an individual's knowledge of a subject? (AP94) (A) Achievement (B) Attitude (C) Aptitude (D) Projective (E) Interest inventory 163. Which of the following is the most appropriate criterion for evaluating the predictive validity of an intelligence test? (AP99) (A) Intelligence quotient (B) Mental age (C) Chronological age (D) Scholastic aptitude (E) School grades ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 164. Which of the following methods is used in studies designed to determine the primary components of intelligence? (AP99) (A) Test-retest (B) Alternate forms (C) Random sampling (D) Factor analysis (E) Standardization 165. According to the Stanford-Binet formula for an intelligence quotient (IQ) , the IQ of a ten year-old child with a mental age of eight and a half years is (AP99) (A) 85 (B) 95 (C) 100 (D) 105 (E) 115 166. The performance of the group on which an IQ test is standardized sets the (AP99) (A) Method of administration most suitable for the test (B) Extent to which IQ is determined by environment (C) Criteria for the diagnostic significance of intelligence (D) Degree of validity of the IQ test (E) Norms against which the performance of later test takers can be evaluated 167. A test that fails to predict what it is designed to predict lacks (AP04) (A) Standardization (B) Norms (C) Fairness (D) Validity (E) Reliability 168. The correlations between the IQ scores of identical twins reared apart are lower than those of identical twins reared together. This difference is best explained by which of the following? (AP04) (A) Heredity plays an important role in determining IQ (B) Environment plays an important role in determining IQ (C) Heredity plays no role in determining IQ (D) Environment plays no role in determining IQ (E) Heredity and environment play an equal role in determining IQ 169. Alfred Binet’s most important contribution to psychology was in the area of (AP04) (A) Intelligence testing (B) Visual perception ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (C) Psychopathology (D) Comparative psychology (E) Classical conditioning 170. A complex pattern of organized, unlearned behavior that is species-specific is called (AP94) (A) A drive (B) A need (C) A motive (D) An emotion (E) An instinct 171. Hunger and eating are primarily regulated by which of the following? (AP94) (A) Androgens (B) Estrogens (C) The hypothalamus (D) The kidneys (E) The medulla oblongata 172. Theories of motivation that assert the existence of biological motives to maintain the body in a steady state are called (AP94) (A) Mechanistic (B) Homeostatic (C) reductionistic (D) Genetic (E) Instinctual 173. An individual experiencing a low blood-glucose level would be best advised to do which of the following? (AP99) (A) Take a nap (B) Eat a snack (C) Drink a glass of water (D) Drink a diet soda (E) Get some exercise 174. Drive reduction as a motivational concept is best exemplified by which of the following? (AP99) (A) The sweet taste of chocolate (B) Electric stimulation to the pleasure center of the brain (C) A monkey using its tail as a fifth limb to climb higher in a tree (D) The injection of heroin by an addict to avoid withdrawal symptoms (E) The enjoyment of a frightening movie ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM 175. Cognitive theorists emphasize the (AP99) (A) Powerful unconscious impulses that motivate behavior (B) Formation and modification of schemas (C) Impact of rewards and punishments (D) individual's desire to become self-actualized (E) Social norms that determine expected behavior 176. Rudolph spends hours painting in his studio, even though he sells few pictures. Which of the following explains Rudolph’s creative productivity? (AP04) (A) Functional fixedness (B) Inductive reasoning (C) Intrinsic motivation (D) Incubation (E) Heuristics 177. Which of the following terms is used in hunger and weight control research to denote the concept that each person has a body fat level that remains fixed and resistant to change? (AP04) (A) Hyperphagia (B) Hypophagia (C) Glucagon theory (D) Set point (E) Metabolic conversion 178. A brain tumor that results in obesity would most likely be located in the (AP99) (A) Left frontal lobe (B) Base of the brain stem (C) Area of the hypothalamus (D) Reticular activating system (E) somatosensory cortex 179. Leadership, job satisfaction, and employee motivation are all studied in which of the following psychological disciplines? (AP94) (A) Human factors psychology (B) Industrial-organizational psychology (C) Community psychology (D) Counseling psychology (E) Experimental psychology 180. Carla tutors other students because she likes to be helpful, whereas Jane tutors classmates strictly for pay. Their behaviors demonstrate the difference between (AP94) ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) Primary and secondary drives Instinctive and derived drives Appetitive and aversive motivation Intrinsic and extrinsic motivation Positive and negative reinforcement 181. Which of the following is most useful in understanding an employer's interpretation of an employee's poor performance? (AP94) (A) Cannon's theory (B) Reinforcement theory (C) Attribution theory (D) Arousal theory (E) Cognitive dissonance 182. Montgomery prepares his resume carelessly and arrives late for his job interview. He is rejected by the prospective employer. Montgomery concludes that "It's all a matter of dumb luck, anyway." Montgomery's judgment of his situation most clearly reflects (AP99) (A) Delay of gratification (B) The mechanism of reaction formation (C) Unconscious inference (D) Fixation and regression (E) External locus of control 183. Which of the following is most likely to characterize the behavior of students who have high achievement motivation and are intrinsically motivated to play a musical instrument? (AP04) (A) If promised a reward for practicing a difficult piece of music selected by the teacher, they will practice more than if they selected the piece themselves. (B) If permitted to choose there own pieces of music, they will select very difficult ones that are beyond their present ability to play. (C) If permitted to choose their own pieces of music, they will select easy pieces that they can master in one practice session. (D) If permitted to choose their own pieces of music, they will select moderately difficult pieces that they can master if they practice them conscientiously. (E) They will enjoy practicing the piano more if their parents promise them a reward for mastering each piano piece. 184. All of the following are conditions that may lead to conflict within organizations EXCEPT (AP04) (A) Scarce resources (B) Jurisdictional ambiguity ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM (C) Inequities in status (D) Insufficient communication (E) Superordinate goals ©Garber2010(840968954) 5/4/2017 2:51:47 AM