Deck 3: Germany and the Birth of a New
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Deck 3: Germany and the Birth of a New
1
A 19th-century philosophy of education that changed the nature of universities in Germany, ushering in a new freedom of teaching and research, was called
A)Wissenschaft
B)Grundzüge
C)Gesellschaft
D)Weltanschauung
A)Wissenschaft
B)Grundzüge
C)Gesellschaft
D)Weltanschauung
A
2
The birth year of the science of psychology corresponds to the publication of the first research from Wilhelm Wundt's psychology laboratory at the University of Leipzig.What year was that?
A)1855
B)1879
C)1885
D)1904
A)1855
B)1879
C)1885
D)1904
B
3
For Wundt, the distinction between the natural sciences and psychology, was that the former investigated ___________________, whereas the latter investigated ___________________.
A)mediate experience; immediate experience
B)direct experience; indirect experience
C)structure; function
D)sensation; perception
A)mediate experience; immediate experience
B)direct experience; indirect experience
C)structure; function
D)sensation; perception
A
4
Recognizing the willful and active nature of the mind, Wundt referred to his system of experimental psychology as
A)structuralism
B)Völkerpsychologie
C)voluntarism
D)mental chronometry
A)structuralism
B)Völkerpsychologie
C)voluntarism
D)mental chronometry
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5
According to Wundt, the process that brings some part of conscious experience into maximal clarity is
A)apprehension
B)self-observation
C)voluntarism
D)apperception
A)apprehension
B)self-observation
C)voluntarism
D)apperception
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6
Wundt studied consciousness using a method that is greatly similar to the experimental method used in modern psychology. What was this method called?
A)apperception
B)method of limits
C)experimental self-observation
D)apprehension
A)apperception
B)method of limits
C)experimental self-observation
D)apprehension
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7
Wundt studied the speed of mental events using a procedure known as
A)apperception
B)experimental self-observation
C)reaction time method
D)method of limits
A)apperception
B)experimental self-observation
C)reaction time method
D)method of limits
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8
Three separate continua -- pleasant-unpleasant, tension-relaxation, excitement-
Depression -- were used by Wundt to describe
A)emotions
B)memories
C)consciousness
D)abnormal behavior
Depression -- were used by Wundt to describe
A)emotions
B)memories
C)consciousness
D)abnormal behavior
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9
Wundt's 10-volume work, entitled Völkerpsychologie, covered a vast number of topics including
A)sensation, perception, memory
B)learning, cognition, emotion
C)thinking, reasoning, problem solving
D)culture, language, art
A)sensation, perception, memory
B)learning, cognition, emotion
C)thinking, reasoning, problem solving
D)culture, language, art
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10
Wundt's first American doctoral student in psychology was
A)William James
B)James McKeen Cattell
C)Edward Bradford Titchener
D)Harry Kirke Wolfe
A)William James
B)James McKeen Cattell
C)Edward Bradford Titchener
D)Harry Kirke Wolfe
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11
The distinction for Ebbinghaus' studies of memory is that he
A)studied the actual formation of associations
B)studied associations that were already formed
C)differentiated sensory and verbal associations
D)showed that most words had multiple associations
A)studied the actual formation of associations
B)studied associations that were already formed
C)differentiated sensory and verbal associations
D)showed that most words had multiple associations
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12
To minimize meaningfulness in his stimuli and the problem of prior associations, Ebbinghaus invented
A)a replication procedure
B)the word association test
C)nonsense syllables
D)delayed stimulus presentations
A)a replication procedure
B)the word association test
C)nonsense syllables
D)delayed stimulus presentations
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13
Ebbinghaus' studies were methodologically rigorous because of his
A)attention to the constancy of conditions in his experiments
B)use of large numbers of individuals who served as subjects in his studies
C)randomization of subjects to various memory conditions
D)sophisticated use of statistical techniques such as analysis of variance
A)attention to the constancy of conditions in his experiments
B)use of large numbers of individuals who served as subjects in his studies
C)randomization of subjects to various memory conditions
D)sophisticated use of statistical techniques such as analysis of variance
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14
In studying the curve of forgetting, Ebbinghaus found that most forgetting occurs
A)at a steady rate for the first 24 hours, then declines sharply
B)in the first few hours after learning
C)a week or more after the learning takes place
D)more than a month after the initial learning trials
A)at a steady rate for the first 24 hours, then declines sharply
B)in the first few hours after learning
C)a week or more after the learning takes place
D)more than a month after the initial learning trials
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15
Franz Brentano's molar psychology is known by the name
A)Gestalt psychology
B)systematic psychology
C)act psychology
D)voluntary psychology
A)Gestalt psychology
B)systematic psychology
C)act psychology
D)voluntary psychology
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16
Carl Stumpf's research contributed to the psychology of
A)learning
B)education
C)perception
D)music
A)learning
B)education
C)perception
D)music
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17
Stumpf and his student Oskar Pfungst discovered that Clever Hans, "the counting horse," was able to perform so many arithmetic calculations because
A)his owner gave him subtle cues to indicate the correct answer
B)persons in the crowd watching his performances had been paid to cooperate
C)the sequence of correct numbers was always the same in each performance
D)the horse actually possessed some extrasensory abilities
A)his owner gave him subtle cues to indicate the correct answer
B)persons in the crowd watching his performances had been paid to cooperate
C)the sequence of correct numbers was always the same in each performance
D)the horse actually possessed some extrasensory abilities
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18
Georg Müller's work on memory pioneered studies of forgetting including an understanding of the role of
A)disuse
B)relearning
C)decay
D)interference
A)disuse
B)relearning
C)decay
D)interference
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19
Oswald Külpe's method of introspection
A)divided the experience into meaningful components
B)did not involve retrospection
C)demonstrated that images always accompanied thinking
D)avoided replication as a means to minimize fatigue
A)divided the experience into meaningful components
B)did not involve retrospection
C)demonstrated that images always accompanied thinking
D)avoided replication as a means to minimize fatigue
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20
Imagine that you were a graduate student in Wilhelm Wundt's psychology laboratory in Leipzig in the late 1800s. Write a letter home to your parents describing what you were studying and the research methods you were using.
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21
Describe how you would use the simple and choice reaction time methods to measure the speed of thinking, for example to decide whether a light is green or red.
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22
Ebbinghaus' memory studies are described as "perhaps the single most brilliant investigation in the history of experimental psychology." Defend that statement citing specifics of his research methods and findings.
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23
Compare and contrast the memory studies of Ebbinghaus and Georg Müller.
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24
Compare Oswald Külpe's method of systematic experimental introspection with Wundt's experimental self-observation. Compare these techniques to the modern experimental method in which an experimenter manipulates an independent variable and measures its impact (if any) on a dependent variable. Was Wundt's or Külpe's method closer to modern experimentation? Explain your answer.
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