Exam 3: Recognizing Objects
Exam 1: The Science of the Mind60 Questions
Exam 2: The Neural Basis for Cognition59 Questions
Exam 3: Recognizing Objects60 Questions
Exam 4: Paying Attention58 Questions
Exam 5: The Acquisition of Memories and the Working-Memory System60 Questions
Exam 6: Interconnections Between Acquisition and Retrieval60 Questions
Exam 7: Remembering Complex Events62 Questions
Exam 8: Concepts and Generic Knowledge60 Questions
Exam 9: Language61 Questions
Exam 10: Visual Knowledge62 Questions
Exam 11: Judgment and Reasoning63 Questions
Exam 12: Problem Solving and Intelligence61 Questions
Exam 13: Conscious Thought, Unconscious Thought58 Questions
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You are shown an odd-looking image and asked to identify it. According to our knowledge of object recognition, your first step would be gathering the raw data, and the second would be
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On one trial of an experiment, a participant is shown the sequence GWXT. On a different trial, the participant is shown the sequence PAFE. On the basis of prior research, we should expect that
(Multiple Choice)
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Mistakes in word reading occur under a feature-net model of recognition. This results because the feature net encourages _____ over _____.
(Multiple Choice)
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If visual information conflicts with other information, we usually
(Multiple Choice)
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You are driving in your car listening to the radio when a new song by your favorite artist comes on. Describe how top-down and bottom-up processing both contribute to your ability to identify (either correctly or incorrectly) the lyrics of the song.
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Which of the following statements is TRUE about the recognition of inverted faces?
(Multiple Choice)
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In order to summarize the Gestalt psychologists' movement in a few words, one might say,
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When identifying nonword letter-strings that are presented very briefly, participants tend to make specific kinds of errors. How would these errors be best described?
(Multiple Choice)
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Recognition errors (like mistaking CQRN for CORN ) lead us to what conclusion about feature nets?
(Multiple Choice)
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Participants are shown a visual stimulus for just 30 ms and are then asked, "Was there an E or a K in the stimulus?" We would expect the BEST performance if the stimulus is
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Imagine you are putting together a puzzle. The lid of the box comes with a picture of the completed puzzle, and you reference that while you are working. The lid is acting as a
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Researchers have used transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to disrupt portions of the healthy brain. When asking participants to search for a target, we expect TMS applied to the parietal lobe to
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Argue for or against the notion that "face processing is a special case." Support your perspective by referencing behavioral or neuropsychological evidence.
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Imagine you are reading a puzzling email from a friend. You identify the words, but have a hard time "reading between the lines." In this example, word identification involves _____ processing while "reading between the lines" involves _____ processing.
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