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FALL FINAL REVIEW STUDY GUIDE 1 Multiple Choice: 1. A __________ is a system that translates data from outside the nervous system into neural activity, thus giving the brain information about the world. a. perception b. stimulus c. receptive field d. sense 2. While walking outside, you notice the sun shining. Your ability to see the sunshine is related to visual processing of the light in your brain. The process by which physical energy (the sunshine) has been converted to neural activity in your brain is called a. reticular formation. b. habituation. c. transduction. d. accommodation. 3. Liz Lemon needed to remember to pick up lunch for her writing staff, so she tied a string around her finger to help remember. Unfortunately, by noon, she no longer noticed the string around her finger. This was most likely due to a. perceptual constancy. b. kinesthetic perception. c. transduction. d. sensory adaptation. 4. Brittany observed that the people having conversations on cell phones were quite loud-spoken, while those having conversations on pay phones were quite soft-spoken. Those using cell phones were producing a higher __________ of sound waves than were those using pay phones. a. amplitude b. frequency c. timbre d. wavelength 5. After an accident, sound waves that reach Mason's left tympanic membrane cannot become amplified onto the oval window near the cochlea. Mason has damaged his a. basilar membrane. b. acoustic nerve. c. pinna. d. malleus, incus, and stapes. 6. In doing research on auditory processing, you find a relationship between the location on the basilar membrane that a sound wave has its biggest peak and the detection of pitch. This supports the __________ theory of hearing. a. frequency-matching b. volley c. place d. opponent-process 7. Z. Z. Bottom has been playing loud rock music for so long that his hearing is impaired. What has probably happened is that the a. hair cells have been damaged on the basilar membrane. b. primary auditory cortex has been damaged. c. tympanic membrane has been punctured. d. pinna has grown thicker in response to the loud sounds. 8. What color we sense depends mainly on a. light intensity. b. the amount of photoreceptors in our retinas. c. brightness. d. light wavelength. 9. According to the opponent-process theory of color vision, staring at a red image for a minute will produce a __________ afterimage if one looks at a white surface next. a. blue b. yellow c. green d. pink 10. As electromagnetic radiation enters the eye, it is transformed by the accessory structures of the __________ before transduction occurs. a. cornea, lens, and rods b. cones and rods c. photopigments d. cornea, lens, and pupil 11. Rajesh smells the perfume of his ex-girlfriend and this causes him to feel sad. All of the following structures are involved in Rajesh's experience except his a. olfactory receptors. b. amygdala. c. thalamus. d. olfactory bulb. 12. Tiffany is enjoying her favorite beverage, hot cocoa. Which of the following is not true? a. The cocoa's sweetness is partly due to its warmth. b. The cocoa's flavor is stronger because the cocoa is hot. c. Tiffany's senses of smell and taste are working together. d. The cocoa's chocolate is tasted by chocolate receptors located in Tiffany's taste buds. 13. During an intense game of volleyball, Shay slipped and banged her knee on the floor. "Ouch!" she cried, as she wished her brain would produce more a. GABA. b. endorphins. c. dopamine. d. acetylcholine. 14. When Celeste sprained her ankle, gently rubbing the ankle seemed to help reduce the pain. According to the __________ theory of pain, impulses coming from the nonpainful stimulus (rubbing) prevent impulses coming from the painful stimulus (the injury) from reaching the brain. a. gate-control b. somatosensory c. tacticular d. naloxone 15. Brian is pulled over for drunk driving. The officer asks him to close his eyes, hold his arms out in front of him, and touch his two index fingers together. Brian fails miserably at this task. The alcohol has affected Brian's a. sense of equilibrium. b. common sense. c. kinesthetic perception. d. semicircular canals. 16. If sensation equals raw data, then perception equals a. internal noise. b. analysis and interpretation. c. statistical significance. d. psychophysics. 17. A psychologist conducts an experiment in which he presents tones to subjects at various levels of intensity (that is, soft, moderate, and loud). The point at which the tone can be detected 50 percent of the time is known as a. the absolute threshold. b. Fechner's threshold. c. the stimulus threshold. d. the psychophysical threshold. 18. The Ju-Ju Bunny Candy Company is trying to decide whether to use subliminal messages placed in movies to boost its sales at refreshment stands. As a consultant to the Ju-Ju Bunny Candy Company, you would advise the company to a. scrap the idea and just go with a regular ad before the movies because subliminal messages have little effect. b. go ahead with the idea because research suggests subliminal messages work well. c. use subliminal messages only during action adventure films when the level of cortical arousal is high. d. use subliminal messages only during adult movies, as children lack the sensitivity to perceive them. 19. Kent and Marcel are each carrying a pile of bricks. A friend adds one brick to the pile that Kent is carrying and one brick to the pile that Marcel is carrying. After this, Kent says, "Gee, my pile doesn't feel any heavier," while Marcel says, "My pile seems heavier now." Using Weber's law allows us to conclude that a. Kent cannot experience a just-noticeable difference. b. Kent is more sensitive to stimulus differences. c. Kent has more bricks to start with than Marcel does. d. Marcel has more bricks to start with than Kent does. 20. Which of the following best illustrates figure-ground discrimination of perceptual organization? a. When you look at a field of flowers, you notice that the details of the flowers fade as you look toward the horizon. b. As you drive in a car, the mailboxes seem to fly by you faster than buildings in the distance. c. While at a party, you can clearly see the person with whom you are talking, but you don't really notice all the other people behind her. d. Monkeys appear pretty big if they are close to you, but they appear small if they are far away. 21. Claire worked all night on a 500-piece jigsaw puzzle but misplaced 10 of the puzzle's pieces. She showed the puzzle to her friend Karen. Even though the puzzle was missing ten pieces, Karen could still perceive a complete picture by using the perceptual process of a. proximity. b. continuity. c. texture. d. closure. 22. At a recent family reunion, the Boltinis were all told to wear a red, white, and green shirt to show their Italian pride. The few people who did not wear such shirts stood out from the group. This occurred because of what grouping principle? a. Proximity b. Closure c. Similarity d. Continuity 23. The main question behind the study of depth and motion perception is a. how the senses accommodate to incoming depth and motion cues. b. how the body in motion collects perceptual information. c. how the brain converts two-dimensional sensory input into three-dimensional perceptions. d. what parts of the brain are most involved with the interpretation of motion and distance. FALL FINAL REVIEW STUDY GUIDE 3 24. A brochure displays a long stretch of road. The lines that make up the road are drawn so that they converge at the horizon. The result is that the picture creates a sense of distance. This is based on an environmental depth cue called a. gradient of texture. b. linear perspective. c. relative size. d. eye convergence. 28. Upon awakening from a nap, you open your eyes and immediately have the image of a cat's paw rapidly expanding on your retina. Which concept explains why you perceive this image as moving and not as an expanding object fixed in space? a. Retinal disparity b. Perceptual constancy c. Movement gradient d. Eye convergence 25. Burt has to wear a patch on one eye. Which of the following cues to depth perception will be unavailable to him now? a. Movement gradient b. Eye convergence c. Linear perspective d. Relative size 29. With bottom-up processing, a person is using __________ to recognize an object. With top-down processing, recognition is based on the use of __________. a. ocular accommodation; retinal disparity b. schemas; feature detection c. feature detection; schemas d. retinal disparity; ocular accommodation 26. Noel bet Alexa $5 that he can make Alexa see a piece of gum in two different places without moving it. Alexa agrees to the bet. Noel holds the stick of gum about six inches in front of Alexa's face and tells her to close her eyes. Then Noel instructs Alexa to open one eye and remember where the gum is relative to other objects in the background. Next, he tells Alexa to close that eye and open the other one. Noel will win the $5 because of which depth cue? a. Gradient of texture b. Gradient of movement c. Eye convergence d. Retinal disparity 30. Nine-month-old Keisha watches her ball bounce down the stairs. As she approaches the top of the stairs, she backs up and hesitates to go down the stairs. This indicates that Keisha has developed a. perceptual constancies. b. binocular vision. c. depth perception. d. proximity. 27. Malcolm was born with a unique birth defect that does not allow the lenses in his eyes to change shape. Which of the following visual cues will this affect? a. Eye convergence b. Retinal disparity c. Looming d. Ocular accommodation Old Material Review: Unit I Approaches: Gestalt Psychology (also ties in with unit IV) Evolutionary Psychology Humanistic approach Industrial-Organizational psychology Behavioral Approach Psychoanalytic theory Cognitive psychology Unit II Research: Correlation (positive and negative) Mean, median, mode, standard deviation Dependent/Independent Variable 31. A study tested drivers for reaction times to road hazards while they were using cell phones, listening to the radio, and listening to a conversation inside the vehicle. These drivers reacted much more slowly to the hazards than did drivers not engaged in these activities. Which of the following statements could apply to the results of the study? a. Driving is automatic, so there is no explanation for increased reaction times. b. PDP processing is superior to top-down processing. c. The attentional resources of the drivers were exhausted. d. Drivers are more vigilant when paying attention to multiple stimuli. Research methods: case study, experimental, correlation, naturalistic observation Cross-sectional research design Positively skewed distribution Brain imaging: PET scan, MRI Longitudinal studies (disadvantages) American Psychological Association Ethical Guidelines Descriptive vs. Inferential (inference) Statistics Requirements for experiments (one independent variable, operation definition, etc. ) Unit III Biological: Wernecke’s area Agonist, Antagonistic, and excitatory neurotransmitters and IPSP and EPSP Occipital Lobe Amygdala Dopamine, Serotonin, Acetylcholine (know functions and disorders associated with) Homeostatic process Identify location and function of the pons Resting potential of neurons Reuptake (neurotransmitters) Reflex initiation Sympathetic/parasympathetic (be able to determine which causes the physiological response) Endocrine system Major Divisions of the nervous system (i.e. peripheral is divided into the somatic and autonomic) Cerebellum Unit VI: Learning: Operant conditioning Operant response Classical conditioning, higher-order conditioning Shaping Latent learning Positive/negative reinforcement Conditioned stimulus vs. unconditioned stimulus Stimulus discrimination/habituation Extinction Variable Ratio schedule of reinforcement Unit VII: Memory and Cognition Heuristic (representative and availability) Algorithm Episodic/Semantic/procedural memory Short-term memory Transfer from short term memory to long term memory Morpheme/phoneme Serial position effect Belief Perseverance Hindsight bias Functional fixedness Priming Overgeneralization Framing Explicit memory Unit XI: Testing and Individual Differences Spearman’s concept of g Construct/predictive validity Stereotype threat Cattell’s fluid/crystallized intelligence Aptitude Practical Intelligence