Deck 1: The Story of Psychology

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Question
The importance of inherited behavioral traits was most clearly highlighted by

A) John Locke.
B) Charles Darwin.
C) John B. Watson.
D) B. F. Skinner.
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Question
Focusing on the extent to which personality is influenced by motives outside our own awareness is most relevant to the ________ perspective.

A) neuroscience
B) behavioral
C) psychodynamic
D) social-cultural
Question
Wilhelm Wundt was both a

A) psychoanalyst and psychiatrist.
B) physiologist and philosopher.
C) sociologist and psychiatrist.
D) theologian and philosopher.
Question
Compared with the structuralists, early behaviorists were much less likely to focus on the study of

A) smiling.
B) screaming.
C) fighting.
D) thinking.
Question
Edward Titchener was concerned primarily with the study of

A) sensory experiences.
B) psychological disorders.
C) inherited traits.
D) social relationships.
Question
To study inner sensations, images, and feelings, Edward Titchener engaged people in self-reflective

A) psychoanalysis.
B) introspection.
C) positive psychology.
D) spaced practice.
Question
The suggestion that psychology is less a set of facts than a method of evaluating ideas best highlights the ________ character of psychology.

A) naturalistic
B) humanistic
C) scientific
D) introspective
Question
Which perspective is most relevant to understanding the links between hormone levels and sexual motivation?

A) behavioral
B) cognitive
C) psychodynamic
D) neuroscience
Question
SQ3R is an acronym for an effective

A) neuroscience perspective.
B) study method.
C) biopsychosocial approach.
D) form of psychotherapy.
Question
Who was the functionalist who authored a textbook for the emerging discipline of psychology?

A) Wilhelm Wundt
B) John B. Watson
C) Edward Titchener
D) William James
Question
Dr. Stevens provides psychotherapy to people who suffer from excessive anxiety. Dr. Stevens is most likely a ________ psychologist.

A) social
B) developmental
C) clinical
D) cognitive
Question
A study of the relationship between reasoning capacities and brain functions would be of most direct interest to

A) behaviorism.
B) humanistic psychology.
C) cognitive neuroscience.
D) the psychodynamic perspective.
Question
The growth potential of healthy people was emphasized by

A) Freudian psychology.
B) cognitive neuroscience.
C) structuralism.
D) humanistic psychology.
Question
The scientific study of behavior without reference to mental processes was of special interest to

A) Edward Titchener.
B) William James.
C) Sigmund Freud.
D) B. F. Skinner.
Question
In debating the origins of human traits, Plato and Aristotle disagreed about the relative importance of

A) basic and applied research.
B) nature and nurture.
C) behavior and mental processes.
D) structuralism and functionalism.
Question
Professor Reed attempts to assess the relative contributions of heredity and home environment on children's susceptibility to depression. Her research best illustrates the concerns of the ________ perspective.

A) psychodynamic
B) behavior genetics
C) cognitive
D) behavioral
Question
Professor Helms conducts basic research on the progressive changes in infants' perceptual skills during the first year of life. Professor Helms is most likely a ________ psychologist.

A) social
B) clinical
C) personality
D) developmental
Question
Which school of psychology was most clearly concerned with the adaptive value of complex mental processes?

A) structuralism
B) behaviorism
C) psychoanalysis
D) functionalism
Question
The marriage rituals of different ethnic groups are of most relevance to the _______ perspective.

A) evolutionary
B) social-cultural
C) psychodynamic
D) cognitive
Question
The early school of psychology that used introspection was known as

A) psychiatry.
B) behaviorism.
C) naturalism.
D) structuralism.
Question
An integrated explanation of human behavior provided by the neuroscience, cognitive, social-cultural, and other perspectives in psychology is most clearly provided by

A) SQ3R.
B) behaviorism.
C) a psychodynamic perspective.
D) a biopsychosocial approach.
Question
In its earliest days, psychology was defined as the

A) science of mental life.
B) study of conscious and unconscious activity.
C) science of observable behavior.
D) science of behavior and mental processes.
Question
In the context of debates over the origins of ideas, nature is to nurture as ________ is to Locke.

A) Aristotle
B) Plato
C) Darwin
D) Descartes
Question
Which perspective would be most helpful for understanding the role of retrieval practice on long-term memory of information?

A) psychodynamic
B) social-cultural
C) cognitive
D) behavior genetics
Question
Professor Schroeder argues that children have an innate concept of justice that enables them to distinguish between fair and unfair rules. This argument is most consistent with the views of

A) Aristotle.
B) Plato.
C) John Locke.
D) John B. Watson.
Question
Debates as to whether alcohol abuse is biologically determined or culturally influenced are most relevant to the issue of

A) nature and nurture.
B) observation and introspection.
C) behavior and mental processes.
D) structuralism and functionalism.
Question
Inherited traits are to learned habits as the ________ perspective is to the ________ perspective.

A) behavioral; social-cultural
B) evolutionary; behavioral
C) social-cultural; neuroscience
D) neuroscience; evolutionary
Question
Who introduced the early school of structuralism?

A) Edward Titchener
B) Wilhelm Wundt
C) William James
D) Mary Whiton Calkins
Question
The seventeenth-century philosopher who believed that the mind is blank at birth and that most knowledge comes through sensory experience is

A) Plato.
B) Aristotle.
C) René Descartes.
D) John Locke.
Question
Who wrote the early textbook Principles of Psychology?

A) Wilhelm Wundt
B) Ivan Pavlov
C) Jean Piaget
D) William James
Question
Professor Thurstone investigates whether a teacher's negative perceptions of some students can affect the students' test scores. Professor Thurstone is most likely a ________ psychologist.

A) clinical
B) social
C) biological
D) personality
Question
Which psychological perspective emphasizes the interaction of the brain and body in behavior?

A) neuroscience
B) cognitive
C) behavioral
D) behavior genetics
Question
Which of the following exemplifies the issue of the relative importance of nature and nurture on our behavior?

A) the issue of the relative influence of biology and experience on behavior
B) the issue of the relative influence of rewards and punishments on behavior
C) the debate as to the relative importance of heredity and instinct in determining behavior
D) the debate as to whether mental processes are a legitimate area of scientific study
Question
Which seventeenth-century philosopher believed that some ideas are innate?

A) Aristotle
B) Plato
C) René Descartes
D) John Locke
Question
Testing your ability to recall information you have just studied improves your long-term retention of that information. Psychologists have referred to this as

A) SQ3R.
B) introspection.
C) the testing effect.
D) positive psychology.
Question
Basic research on persistent human traits like optimism and pessimism is most characteristic of the specialty known as ________ psychology.

A) biological
B) personality
C) social
D) developmental
Question
Understanding why the fear of darkness may have contributed to the survival of our human ancestors is most relevant to the ________ perspective.

A) behavioral
B) cognitive
C) evolutionary
D) psychodynamic
Question
Psychologists who study the degree to which genes influence our personality are working from the ________ perspective.

A) behavioral
B) evolutionary
C) behavior genetics
D) neuroscience
Question
Who would be most likely to agree with the statement, "Psychology should investigate only behaviors that can be observed"?

A) Wilhelm Wundt
B) Sigmund Freud
C) John B. Watson
D) William James
Question
Today, psychology is defined as the

A) science of mental phenomena.
B) science of conscious and unconscious activity.
C) science of behavior.
D) science of behavior and mental processes.
Question
A psychologist who explores how Asian and North American definitions of attractiveness differ is working from the ________ perspective.

A) behavioral
B) evolutionary
C) cognitive
D) social-cultural
Question
Dr. Ernst explains behavior in terms of different situations. Dr. Ernst is working from the ________ perspective.

A) behavioral
B) evolutionary
C) social-cultural
D) cognitive
Question
Psychologists who study how brain activity is linked to memory, perception, and other thought processes are called

A) humanistic psychologists.
B) psychiatrists.
C) clinical psychologists.
D) cognitive neuroscientists.
Question
A psychologist who studies how worker productivity might be increased by changing office layout is engaged in ________ research.

A) applied
B) basic
C) clinical
D) developmental
Question
Psychologists who study, assess, and treat troubled people are called

A) basic researchers.
B) applied psychologists.
C) clinical psychologists.
D) psychiatrists.
Question
The way we encode, process, store, and retrieve information is the primary concern of the ________ perspective.

A) neuroscience
B) evolutionary
C) social-cultural
D) cognitive
Question
Who would be most likely to agree with the statement, "Psychology is the science of mental life"?

A) Wilhelm Wundt
B) John Watson
C) Ivan Pavlov
D) virtually any American psychologist during the 1960s
Question
(Close-Up) In order, the sequence of steps in the SQ3R method is

A) survey, review, retrieve, question, read.
B) review, question, survey, read, retrieve.
C) question, review, survey, read, retrieve.
D) survey, question, read, retrieve, review.
Question
Today, psychology is a discipline that

A) connects with a diversity of other fields.
B) is largely independent of other disciplines.
C) is focused primarily on basic research.
D) is focused primarily on applied research.
Question
In defining psychology, the text notes that psychology is most accurately described as a

A) way of asking and answering questions.
B) field engaged in solving applied problems.
C) set of findings related to behavior and mental processes.
D) nonscientific approach to the study of mental disorders.
Question
Two historical roots of psychology are the disciplines of

A) philosophy and chemistry.
B) physiology and chemistry.
C) philosophy and biology.
D) philosophy and physics.
Question
Dr. Jones' research centers on the relationship between changes in our thinking over the life span and changes in moral reasoning. Dr. Jones is most likely a

A) clinical psychologist.
B) personality psychologist.
C) psychiatrist.
D) developmental psychologist.
Question
The first psychology laboratory was established by ________ in the year________.

A) Wundt; 1879
B) James; 1890
C) Freud; 1900
D) Watson; 1913
Question
The Greek philosopher who believed that intelligence was inherited was

A) Aristotle.
B) Plato.
C) Descartes.
D) Simonides.
Question
Which subfield is most directly concerned with studying human behavior in the workplace?

A) clinical psychology
B) personality psychology
C) industrial-organizational psychology
D) psychiatry
Question
Which perspective emphasizes the learning of observable responses?

A) behavioral
B) social-cultural
C) neuroscience
D) cognitive
Question
In psychology, behavior is best defined as

A) anything a person says, does, or feels.
B) any action we can observe and record.
C) any action, whether observable or not.
D) anything we can infer from a person's actions.
Question
Which of the following individuals is also a physician?

A) clinical psychologist
B) experimental psychologist
C) psychiatrist
D) biological psychologist
Question
A psychologist who conducts experiments solely intended to build psychology's knowledge base is engaged in

A) basic research.
B) applied research.
C) industrial-organizational research.
D) clinical research.
Question
Carl Rogers and Abraham Maslow are most closely associated with

A) cognitive psychology.
B) behaviorism.
C) psychodynamic theory.
D) humanistic psychology.
Question
Research participants were asked to monitor and report their own immediate sensory reactions to differently colored objects. This research involved a technique known as

A) behavior genetics.
B) psychoanalysis.
C) massed practice.
D) introspection.
Question
Who was a student of William James and the first female president of the American Psychological Association?

A) Jean Piaget
B) Margaret Floy Washburn
C) Rosalie Rayner
D) Mary Whiton Calkins
Question
From the 1920s into the 1960s, American psychologists emphasized the study of

A) genetic influences.
B) self-esteem.
C) conscious thoughts and feelings.
D) observable behavior.
Question
Humanistic psychologists focused attention on the importance of people's

A) childhood memories.
B) genetic predispositions.
C) unconscious thought processes.
D) potential for healthy growth.
Question
Behaviorists dismissed the value of

A) science.
B) introspection.
C) spaced practice.
D) applied research.
Question
John B. Watson is to Edward Titchener as ________ is to ________.

A) biology; environment
B) observable behavior; inner sensations
C) mental illness; psychiatry
D) cognitive perspective; psychoanalytic perspective
Question
Who was the American philosopher-psychologist who authored a textbook in 1890 for the emerging discipline of psychology?

A) Wilhelm Wundt
B) John B. Watson
C) Sigmund Freud
D) William James
Question
Introspection was the basic research tool used by ________ in order to study people's inner sensations and mental images.

A) John B. Watson
B) Charles Darwin
C) Edward Titchener
D) B. F. Skinner
Question
The view that psychology should be an objective science that studies observable human activity without reference to mental processes is known as

A) behaviorism.
B) cognitive neuroscience.
C) humanistic psychology.
D) positive psychology.
Question
Which major force in psychology emphasized unconscious thought processes?

A) evolutionary psychology
B) Freudian psychology
C) behavior genetics
D) behaviorism
Question
The biopsychosocial approach emphasizes the importance of

A) different levels of analysis in exploring behavior and mental processes.
B) basic research over pure research.
C) pure research over basic research.
D) having a single academic perspective to guide research.
Question
The unreliability of introspection contributed to the waning popularity of

A) structuralism.
B) psychiatry.
C) cognitive psychology.
D) behaviorism.
Question
(Close-Up) A major principle underlying the SQ3R study method is that

A) people learn and remember material best when they actively process it.
B) many students overestimate their mastery of text and lecture material.
C) study time should be spaced over time rather than crammed into one session.
D) overlearning disrupts efficient retention.
Question
Wilhelm Wundt's laboratory work involved experimental studies of

A) animal intelligence.
B) personality development.
C) social influence.
D) mental processes.
Question
William James was a prominent American

A) psychoanalyst.
B) behaviorist.
C) functionalist.
D) structuralist.
Question
Aristotle suggested that a meal makes us sleepy by causing heat to collect around the

A) brain.
B) throat.
C) heart.
D) stomach.
Question
Looking inward and reporting your immediate sensations, images, and feelings is called

A) cognitive neuroscience.
B) introspection.
C) behaviorism.
D) humanistic psychology.
Question
In the 1960s, the cognitive revolution in psychology involved a renewal of interest in the scientific study of

A) mental processes.
B) hereditary influences.
C) unconscious motives.
D) learned behaviors.
Question
Functionalism was a school of psychology that focused attention on the

A) adaptive value of conscious thoughts and emotions.
B) component elements of sensory experience.
C) disruptive effects of unconscious motives.
D) treatment of psychological disorders.
Question
Edward Titchener is to structuralism as William James is to ________.

A) behaviorism
B) humanistic psychology
C) cognitive neuroscience
D) functionalism
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Deck 1: The Story of Psychology
1
The importance of inherited behavioral traits was most clearly highlighted by

A) John Locke.
B) Charles Darwin.
C) John B. Watson.
D) B. F. Skinner.
Charles Darwin.
2
Focusing on the extent to which personality is influenced by motives outside our own awareness is most relevant to the ________ perspective.

A) neuroscience
B) behavioral
C) psychodynamic
D) social-cultural
psychodynamic
3
Wilhelm Wundt was both a

A) psychoanalyst and psychiatrist.
B) physiologist and philosopher.
C) sociologist and psychiatrist.
D) theologian and philosopher.
physiologist and philosopher.
4
Compared with the structuralists, early behaviorists were much less likely to focus on the study of

A) smiling.
B) screaming.
C) fighting.
D) thinking.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Edward Titchener was concerned primarily with the study of

A) sensory experiences.
B) psychological disorders.
C) inherited traits.
D) social relationships.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
To study inner sensations, images, and feelings, Edward Titchener engaged people in self-reflective

A) psychoanalysis.
B) introspection.
C) positive psychology.
D) spaced practice.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The suggestion that psychology is less a set of facts than a method of evaluating ideas best highlights the ________ character of psychology.

A) naturalistic
B) humanistic
C) scientific
D) introspective
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Which perspective is most relevant to understanding the links between hormone levels and sexual motivation?

A) behavioral
B) cognitive
C) psychodynamic
D) neuroscience
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
SQ3R is an acronym for an effective

A) neuroscience perspective.
B) study method.
C) biopsychosocial approach.
D) form of psychotherapy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Who was the functionalist who authored a textbook for the emerging discipline of psychology?

A) Wilhelm Wundt
B) John B. Watson
C) Edward Titchener
D) William James
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Dr. Stevens provides psychotherapy to people who suffer from excessive anxiety. Dr. Stevens is most likely a ________ psychologist.

A) social
B) developmental
C) clinical
D) cognitive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
A study of the relationship between reasoning capacities and brain functions would be of most direct interest to

A) behaviorism.
B) humanistic psychology.
C) cognitive neuroscience.
D) the psychodynamic perspective.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The growth potential of healthy people was emphasized by

A) Freudian psychology.
B) cognitive neuroscience.
C) structuralism.
D) humanistic psychology.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The scientific study of behavior without reference to mental processes was of special interest to

A) Edward Titchener.
B) William James.
C) Sigmund Freud.
D) B. F. Skinner.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
In debating the origins of human traits, Plato and Aristotle disagreed about the relative importance of

A) basic and applied research.
B) nature and nurture.
C) behavior and mental processes.
D) structuralism and functionalism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Professor Reed attempts to assess the relative contributions of heredity and home environment on children's susceptibility to depression. Her research best illustrates the concerns of the ________ perspective.

A) psychodynamic
B) behavior genetics
C) cognitive
D) behavioral
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Professor Helms conducts basic research on the progressive changes in infants' perceptual skills during the first year of life. Professor Helms is most likely a ________ psychologist.

A) social
B) clinical
C) personality
D) developmental
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which school of psychology was most clearly concerned with the adaptive value of complex mental processes?

A) structuralism
B) behaviorism
C) psychoanalysis
D) functionalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The marriage rituals of different ethnic groups are of most relevance to the _______ perspective.

A) evolutionary
B) social-cultural
C) psychodynamic
D) cognitive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The early school of psychology that used introspection was known as

A) psychiatry.
B) behaviorism.
C) naturalism.
D) structuralism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
An integrated explanation of human behavior provided by the neuroscience, cognitive, social-cultural, and other perspectives in psychology is most clearly provided by

A) SQ3R.
B) behaviorism.
C) a psychodynamic perspective.
D) a biopsychosocial approach.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
In its earliest days, psychology was defined as the

A) science of mental life.
B) study of conscious and unconscious activity.
C) science of observable behavior.
D) science of behavior and mental processes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
In the context of debates over the origins of ideas, nature is to nurture as ________ is to Locke.

A) Aristotle
B) Plato
C) Darwin
D) Descartes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which perspective would be most helpful for understanding the role of retrieval practice on long-term memory of information?

A) psychodynamic
B) social-cultural
C) cognitive
D) behavior genetics
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Professor Schroeder argues that children have an innate concept of justice that enables them to distinguish between fair and unfair rules. This argument is most consistent with the views of

A) Aristotle.
B) Plato.
C) John Locke.
D) John B. Watson.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Debates as to whether alcohol abuse is biologically determined or culturally influenced are most relevant to the issue of

A) nature and nurture.
B) observation and introspection.
C) behavior and mental processes.
D) structuralism and functionalism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Inherited traits are to learned habits as the ________ perspective is to the ________ perspective.

A) behavioral; social-cultural
B) evolutionary; behavioral
C) social-cultural; neuroscience
D) neuroscience; evolutionary
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Who introduced the early school of structuralism?

A) Edward Titchener
B) Wilhelm Wundt
C) William James
D) Mary Whiton Calkins
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The seventeenth-century philosopher who believed that the mind is blank at birth and that most knowledge comes through sensory experience is

A) Plato.
B) Aristotle.
C) René Descartes.
D) John Locke.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Who wrote the early textbook Principles of Psychology?

A) Wilhelm Wundt
B) Ivan Pavlov
C) Jean Piaget
D) William James
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Professor Thurstone investigates whether a teacher's negative perceptions of some students can affect the students' test scores. Professor Thurstone is most likely a ________ psychologist.

A) clinical
B) social
C) biological
D) personality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Which psychological perspective emphasizes the interaction of the brain and body in behavior?

A) neuroscience
B) cognitive
C) behavioral
D) behavior genetics
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Which of the following exemplifies the issue of the relative importance of nature and nurture on our behavior?

A) the issue of the relative influence of biology and experience on behavior
B) the issue of the relative influence of rewards and punishments on behavior
C) the debate as to the relative importance of heredity and instinct in determining behavior
D) the debate as to whether mental processes are a legitimate area of scientific study
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Which seventeenth-century philosopher believed that some ideas are innate?

A) Aristotle
B) Plato
C) René Descartes
D) John Locke
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Testing your ability to recall information you have just studied improves your long-term retention of that information. Psychologists have referred to this as

A) SQ3R.
B) introspection.
C) the testing effect.
D) positive psychology.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Basic research on persistent human traits like optimism and pessimism is most characteristic of the specialty known as ________ psychology.

A) biological
B) personality
C) social
D) developmental
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Understanding why the fear of darkness may have contributed to the survival of our human ancestors is most relevant to the ________ perspective.

A) behavioral
B) cognitive
C) evolutionary
D) psychodynamic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Psychologists who study the degree to which genes influence our personality are working from the ________ perspective.

A) behavioral
B) evolutionary
C) behavior genetics
D) neuroscience
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Who would be most likely to agree with the statement, "Psychology should investigate only behaviors that can be observed"?

A) Wilhelm Wundt
B) Sigmund Freud
C) John B. Watson
D) William James
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Today, psychology is defined as the

A) science of mental phenomena.
B) science of conscious and unconscious activity.
C) science of behavior.
D) science of behavior and mental processes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
A psychologist who explores how Asian and North American definitions of attractiveness differ is working from the ________ perspective.

A) behavioral
B) evolutionary
C) cognitive
D) social-cultural
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Dr. Ernst explains behavior in terms of different situations. Dr. Ernst is working from the ________ perspective.

A) behavioral
B) evolutionary
C) social-cultural
D) cognitive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Psychologists who study how brain activity is linked to memory, perception, and other thought processes are called

A) humanistic psychologists.
B) psychiatrists.
C) clinical psychologists.
D) cognitive neuroscientists.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
A psychologist who studies how worker productivity might be increased by changing office layout is engaged in ________ research.

A) applied
B) basic
C) clinical
D) developmental
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Psychologists who study, assess, and treat troubled people are called

A) basic researchers.
B) applied psychologists.
C) clinical psychologists.
D) psychiatrists.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
The way we encode, process, store, and retrieve information is the primary concern of the ________ perspective.

A) neuroscience
B) evolutionary
C) social-cultural
D) cognitive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Who would be most likely to agree with the statement, "Psychology is the science of mental life"?

A) Wilhelm Wundt
B) John Watson
C) Ivan Pavlov
D) virtually any American psychologist during the 1960s
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
(Close-Up) In order, the sequence of steps in the SQ3R method is

A) survey, review, retrieve, question, read.
B) review, question, survey, read, retrieve.
C) question, review, survey, read, retrieve.
D) survey, question, read, retrieve, review.
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49
Today, psychology is a discipline that

A) connects with a diversity of other fields.
B) is largely independent of other disciplines.
C) is focused primarily on basic research.
D) is focused primarily on applied research.
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50
In defining psychology, the text notes that psychology is most accurately described as a

A) way of asking and answering questions.
B) field engaged in solving applied problems.
C) set of findings related to behavior and mental processes.
D) nonscientific approach to the study of mental disorders.
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51
Two historical roots of psychology are the disciplines of

A) philosophy and chemistry.
B) physiology and chemistry.
C) philosophy and biology.
D) philosophy and physics.
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52
Dr. Jones' research centers on the relationship between changes in our thinking over the life span and changes in moral reasoning. Dr. Jones is most likely a

A) clinical psychologist.
B) personality psychologist.
C) psychiatrist.
D) developmental psychologist.
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53
The first psychology laboratory was established by ________ in the year________.

A) Wundt; 1879
B) James; 1890
C) Freud; 1900
D) Watson; 1913
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54
The Greek philosopher who believed that intelligence was inherited was

A) Aristotle.
B) Plato.
C) Descartes.
D) Simonides.
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55
Which subfield is most directly concerned with studying human behavior in the workplace?

A) clinical psychology
B) personality psychology
C) industrial-organizational psychology
D) psychiatry
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56
Which perspective emphasizes the learning of observable responses?

A) behavioral
B) social-cultural
C) neuroscience
D) cognitive
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57
In psychology, behavior is best defined as

A) anything a person says, does, or feels.
B) any action we can observe and record.
C) any action, whether observable or not.
D) anything we can infer from a person's actions.
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58
Which of the following individuals is also a physician?

A) clinical psychologist
B) experimental psychologist
C) psychiatrist
D) biological psychologist
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59
A psychologist who conducts experiments solely intended to build psychology's knowledge base is engaged in

A) basic research.
B) applied research.
C) industrial-organizational research.
D) clinical research.
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60
Carl Rogers and Abraham Maslow are most closely associated with

A) cognitive psychology.
B) behaviorism.
C) psychodynamic theory.
D) humanistic psychology.
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61
Research participants were asked to monitor and report their own immediate sensory reactions to differently colored objects. This research involved a technique known as

A) behavior genetics.
B) psychoanalysis.
C) massed practice.
D) introspection.
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62
Who was a student of William James and the first female president of the American Psychological Association?

A) Jean Piaget
B) Margaret Floy Washburn
C) Rosalie Rayner
D) Mary Whiton Calkins
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63
From the 1920s into the 1960s, American psychologists emphasized the study of

A) genetic influences.
B) self-esteem.
C) conscious thoughts and feelings.
D) observable behavior.
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64
Humanistic psychologists focused attention on the importance of people's

A) childhood memories.
B) genetic predispositions.
C) unconscious thought processes.
D) potential for healthy growth.
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65
Behaviorists dismissed the value of

A) science.
B) introspection.
C) spaced practice.
D) applied research.
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66
John B. Watson is to Edward Titchener as ________ is to ________.

A) biology; environment
B) observable behavior; inner sensations
C) mental illness; psychiatry
D) cognitive perspective; psychoanalytic perspective
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67
Who was the American philosopher-psychologist who authored a textbook in 1890 for the emerging discipline of psychology?

A) Wilhelm Wundt
B) John B. Watson
C) Sigmund Freud
D) William James
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68
Introspection was the basic research tool used by ________ in order to study people's inner sensations and mental images.

A) John B. Watson
B) Charles Darwin
C) Edward Titchener
D) B. F. Skinner
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69
The view that psychology should be an objective science that studies observable human activity without reference to mental processes is known as

A) behaviorism.
B) cognitive neuroscience.
C) humanistic psychology.
D) positive psychology.
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70
Which major force in psychology emphasized unconscious thought processes?

A) evolutionary psychology
B) Freudian psychology
C) behavior genetics
D) behaviorism
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71
The biopsychosocial approach emphasizes the importance of

A) different levels of analysis in exploring behavior and mental processes.
B) basic research over pure research.
C) pure research over basic research.
D) having a single academic perspective to guide research.
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72
The unreliability of introspection contributed to the waning popularity of

A) structuralism.
B) psychiatry.
C) cognitive psychology.
D) behaviorism.
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73
(Close-Up) A major principle underlying the SQ3R study method is that

A) people learn and remember material best when they actively process it.
B) many students overestimate their mastery of text and lecture material.
C) study time should be spaced over time rather than crammed into one session.
D) overlearning disrupts efficient retention.
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Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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74
Wilhelm Wundt's laboratory work involved experimental studies of

A) animal intelligence.
B) personality development.
C) social influence.
D) mental processes.
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75
William James was a prominent American

A) psychoanalyst.
B) behaviorist.
C) functionalist.
D) structuralist.
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76
Aristotle suggested that a meal makes us sleepy by causing heat to collect around the

A) brain.
B) throat.
C) heart.
D) stomach.
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77
Looking inward and reporting your immediate sensations, images, and feelings is called

A) cognitive neuroscience.
B) introspection.
C) behaviorism.
D) humanistic psychology.
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78
In the 1960s, the cognitive revolution in psychology involved a renewal of interest in the scientific study of

A) mental processes.
B) hereditary influences.
C) unconscious motives.
D) learned behaviors.
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79
Functionalism was a school of psychology that focused attention on the

A) adaptive value of conscious thoughts and emotions.
B) component elements of sensory experience.
C) disruptive effects of unconscious motives.
D) treatment of psychological disorders.
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80
Edward Titchener is to structuralism as William James is to ________.

A) behaviorism
B) humanistic psychology
C) cognitive neuroscience
D) functionalism
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 141 flashcards in this deck.