Deck 5: Cognitive Development: Improvements in Thinking, Reasoning, and Decision Making

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Question
Piaget's fourth stage of cognitive development,which extends from eleven or twelve years of age on,is:

A) concrete operational.
B) formal operational.
C) preoperational.
D) sensorimotor.
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Question
Karl sees the full moon at night and is sure that it must be lonely in the sky all alone.This is an example of preoperational thinking called:

A) centering.
B) animism.
C) seriation.
D) syncretism.
Question
Piaget's third stage of cognitive development,which extends from about seven to eleven or twelve years of age is:

A) concrete operational.
B) formal operational.
C) preoperational.
D) sensorimotor.
Question
The approach to the study of cognition that examines the steps in the way adolescents receive,perceive,and remember things is:

A) Eriksonian.
B) Information Processing.
C) Piagetian.
D) Psychometric.
Question
Piaget's stage of cognitive development in which mental operations are abstract and hypothetical is:

A) concrete operational.
B) formal operational.
C) preoperational.
D) sensorimotor.
Question
Once when Sangeeta was playing video games she started to sneeze uncontrollably.She now thinks that video games cause her to sneeze,so she won't play them anymore.What kind of reasoning is she exhibiting?

A) Centering
B) Animism
C) Inductive
D) Transductive
Question
Piaget's stage of cognitive development in which operations are carried out in action,not mentally,is:

A) concrete operational.
B) formal operational.
C) preoperational.
D) sensorimotor.
Question
Piaget's first stage of cognitive development,which extends from birth to about two years of age,is:

A) concrete operational.
B) formal operational.
C) preoperational.
D) sensorimotor.
Question
The approach to the study of cognition that measures quantitative changes in adolescent intelligence is:

A) Eriksonian.
B) Information Processing.
C) Piagetian.
D) Psychometric.
Question
Jill's parents always take her to a restaurant on her birthday.This year she looked around and said,"Look at all the other people having birthdays." This best illustrates:

A) centering.
B) inductive reasoning.
C) seriation.
D) syncretism.
Question
Quinn is still working on learning how to move her own body and how she can affect the world around her.What Piagetian stage is she in?

A) Concrete operational
B) Formal operational
C) Preoperational
D) Sensorimotor
Question
All of the following are approaches to understanding cognition EXCEPT:

A) information-processing.
B) Piagetian.
C) psychoanalytic.
D) psychometric.
Question
During which of Piaget's stages does a child move from a body-centered world to an object-centered world?

A) Formal operational
B) Concrete operational
C) Sensorimotor
D) Preoperational
Question
All of the following are typical of Piaget's preoperational stage EXCEPT:

A) centering.
B) egocentrism.
C) seriation.
D) syncretism.
Question
Piaget's second stage of cognitive development,which extends from about two to about seven years of age,is:

A) concrete operational.
B) formal operational.
C) preoperational.
D) sensorimotor.
Question
The approach to the study of cognition that emphasizes the qualitative changes in adolescent thought is:

A) Eriksonian.
B) Information Processing.
C) Piagetian.
D) Psychometric.
Question
Inductive reasoning is:

A) proceeding from the particular to the general.
B) proceeding from the general to the particular.
C) proceeding from the particular to the particular.
D) proceeding from the general to the general.
Question
Cognition refers to the process of:

A) sensing.
B) developing .
C) creating.
D) knowing.
Question
Language is acquired during Piaget's ________ stage.

A) concrete operational
B) formal operational
C) preoperational
D) sensorimotor
Question
The type of reasoning that children do during Piaget's preoperational stage is:

A) deductive.
B) inductive.
C) reductive.
D) transductive.
Question
According to Piaget,the tendency of children to focus attention on one detail and be unable to shift their attention to other aspects of the situation is called:

A) centering.
B) egocentrism.
C) seriation.
D) animism.
Question
LeBron has a yo-yo that glows in the dark.Unlike his 3-year-old sister,LeBron knows perfectly well that when the yo-yo is glowing it's not suddenly a different object.This illustrates the concrete operation called:

A) associativity.
B) combinativity.
C) identity or nullifiability.
D) reversibility.
Question
Ben can line up a set of sticks in order from shortest to longest.This illustrates:

A) abstract thinking.
B) hierarchical classification.
C) understanding class inclusion relationships.
D) seriation.
Question
Cary knows that daughters can also be granddaughters at the same time.This best illustrates:

A) abstract thinking.
B) hierarchical classification.
C) understanding of class inclusion relationships.
D) seriation.
Question
Marwan understands that when a ball of clay is flattened into a pancake shape that there's still the same amount of clay.He says,"you could just bunch up the clay into a ball again-it's still the same thing." He is exhibiting:

A) conservation.
B) identity.
C) reversibility.
D) all of the above
Question
Alicia can sort figures into circles and squares and then into red and blue squares and red and blue circles.This illustrates:

A) transitive inference.
B) identity or nullifiability.
C) understanding class inclusion relationships.
D) seriation.
Question
All of the following can be performed by the concrete operational child EXCEPT:

A) associativity.
B) combinativity.
C) hypothetical-deductive thinking.
D) identity or nullifiability.
Question
Tasha feels fine about having her hair put in a braid,because if she doesn't like it she can just undo it and go back to her usual hair style.This illustrates:

A) conservation.
B) reversibility.
C) combinativity.
D) seriation.
Question
In order to make transitive inferences,a child must first be able to understand:

A) conservation.
B) seriation.
C) associativity.
D) identity.
Question
All of the following are typical of Piaget's concrete operational stage EXCEPT:

A) abstract thinking.
B) hierarchical classification.
C) understanding class inclusion relationships.
D) seriation.
Question
Four-year-old Gordon's mother tries to stop him from taking other kids' toys by asking him to imagine how upset the other kids feel.This strategy likely won't work well because of Gordon's:

A) centering.
B) seriation.
C) animism.
D) egocentrism.
Question
Four-year-old Jinni thinks that when she flattens out a ball of clay there is more than there was before because the clay is wider on the table.This is an example of:

A) centering.
B) egocentrism.
C) seriation.
D) syncretism.
Question
Which of the following preoperational stage phenomena best explains young children's tendency to think trees and flowers have thoughts and feelings?

A) Centering
B) Seriation
C) Animism
D) Egocentrism
Question
Piaget divided the stage of formal operations into how many substages?

A) 2
B) 3
C) 4
D) 5
Question
Diane understands that her collection of penguin toys can be added to her collection of owl toys to make a collection of bird toys.This illustrates the concrete operation called:

A) associativity.
B) combinativity.
C) identity or nullifiability.
D) transitive inference.
Question
Three-year-old Lee doesn't recognize her father when he arrives home without his beard.Even when he talks to her,she is sure that he isn't really her father.Lee is demonstrating the lack of:

A) reversibility.
B) identity.
B) nullafiability.
D) all of the above
Question
Nina is organizing her book collection into groups and subgroups.This best demonstrates:

A) hierarchical classification.
B) seriation.
C) class inclusion.
D) transitive inferences.
Question
Matt realizes that whether he pours his lemonade into a large cup or a medium one,the amount is still the same.This illustrates what Piaget calls:

A) associativity.
B) conservation.
C) hypothetical-deductive thinking.
D) seriation.
Question
Soon-Lee knows that her socks are smaller than her mother's socks and that her mother's socks are smaller than her father's socks,so that means her own socks are smaller than her father's socks.This shows that Soon-Lee understands:

A) transitive inference.
B) hierarchical classifications.
C) combinativity.
D) all of the above
Question
What tests did Piaget use to determine whether children had entered the concrete operations stage?

A) Conservation problems
B) Intelligence tests
C) The pendulum problems
D) Deductive reasoning tests
Question
Stuart keeps getting the multiple choice questions wrong because he overanalyzes them and makes them complex when they're actually quite simple.This illustrates the concept of:

A) pseudostupidity.
B) egocentrism.
C) the personal fable.
D) cognitive dialectics.
Question
What is the term for the tendency to approach problems at too complex a level and then fail at them when they're actually simple?

A) The personal fable
B) Cognitive dialectics
C) Pseudostupidity
D) Egocentrism
Question
Which of the following statements about formal operational thinking is FALSE?

A) It involves scientific reasoning.
B) Problem-solving is not exhaustive.
C) Thinking is flexible.
D) It involves systematic reasoning.
Question
According to Elkind,imaginary audience and personal fable are both aspects of adolescent:

A) daydreaming.
B) egocentrism.
C) hypocrisy.
D) pseudostupidity.
Question
Briana realizes that in order to figure out whether the length of a pendulum string or the weight on the end of it affects how fast the pendulum swings,she needs to vary string length and weight one at a time.This best illustrates:

A) transitive inference.
B) introspection.
C) hypothetico-deductive reasoning.
D) the personal fable.
Question
The adolescent feeling of uniqueness and invulnerability is known as:

A) the messianic complex.
B) the personal fable.
C) pseudostupidity.
D) the imaginary audience.
Question
Elkind believes that adolescent pseudostupidity results from their lack of:

A) creativity.
B) experience.
C) intelligence.
D) logical thinking.
Question
The adolescent's ability to think about their own thinking illustrates:

A) abstract thinking.
B) hypothetical reasoning.
C) introspection.
D) logical thinking.
Question
Chip is certain that everyone will notice the pimple on his cheek,so he doesn't want to go to school.Chip is experiencing:

A) the imaginary audience.
B) hypocrisy.
C) introspection.
D) pseudostupidity.
Question
Adolescents' newfound ability to compare what is to what could be often results in:

A) introspection.
B) idealism.
C) hypocrisy.
D) the imaginary audience.
Question
The adolescent's ability to systematically examine a problem by changing only one factor at a time is called:

A) abstract thinking.
B) hypothetico-deductive reasoning.
C) introspection.
D) logical thinking.
Question
Tyrone is committed to helping disadvantaged people because he feels that he will have a huge role in saving all these people from poverty.This best illustrates:

A) introspection.
B) the imaginary audience.
C) hypocrisy.
D) idealism.
Question
According to Elkind,young adolescents may seem to be hypocrites because they are:

A) likely to approach problems at too complex a level.
B) much too idealistic.
C) pressured to conform to society.
D) unable to relate general theory to specific practice.
Question
Yolanda wonders about her own thoughts and emotions.This illustrates:

A) introspection.
B) the imaginary audience.
C) idealism.
D) pseudostupidity.
Question
The belief that others are as concerned with your appearance and behavior as you are is called:

A) idealism.
B) the personal fable.
C) pseudostupidity.
D) the imaginary audience.
Question
The discrepancy between idealism and behavior is called:

A) hypocrisy.
B) introspection.
C) egocentrism.
D) idealism.
Question
Which of the following statements best illustrates the personal fable?

A) "I know that everyone is watching what I do."
B) "I'm so embarrassed about my new hair cut."
C) "I wonder what she thinks of me."
D) "Don't worry about my speeding-I'm a great driver."
Question
According to Piaget,formal operational thinking differs from the thinking of previous stages in that it involves all of the following EXCEPT:

A) abstract thinking.
B) hypothetical reasoning.
C) introspection.
D) transductive reasoning.
Question
Which of the following did recent research discover about the personal fable?

A) Adolescents who felt unique were unlikely to be depressed.
B) Adolescents who felt omnipotent were likely to feel suicidal.
C) Adolescents who felt invulnerable were likely to feel good about themselves.
D) all of the above
Question
Giselle can exhibit formal operational thinking in some situations,but not in others.Piaget would likely classify her in what stage?

A) Concrete operations
B) III-A
C) III-B
D) Problem-finding
Question
The third step in information processing is:

A) selection.
B) interpretation.
C) memory.
D) inference.
Question
Information that is being focused on in the conscious mind is in which memory?

A) Echoic
B) Long-term
C) Short-term
D) Iconic
Question
Iconic and echoic memories are both types of ________ memory.

A) sensory
B) long-term
C) immediate
D) short-term
Question
Which approach to cognition examines the steps in selecting,interpreting,and reasoning about information?

A) Information-processing
B) Piagetian
C) Psychoanalytic
D) Psychometric
Question
All of the following are step in information processing EXCEPT:

A) interpretation.
B) selection.
C) inference.
D) metacognition.
Question
Which of the following statements about memory is FALSE?

A) Long-term memory is characterized by how long information has been held.
B) Rehearsal helps keep information in short-term memory.
C) Adolescents' short-term memory is better than children's.
D) Long-term memory has to do with depth of processing.
Question
How fast the brain perceives and uses information is termed:

A) cognitive fluidity.
B) memory span.
C) processing speed.
D) confirmation speed.
Question
The sound of dogs barking is first held in ________ storage.

A) echoic
B) iconic
C) long-term
D) short-term
Question
Which of the following is NOT a criticism of Piaget's theory?

A) Cultural plays a large role in the attainment of formal operational thought.
B) Young children are less cognitively advanced than he believed.
C) There may be a stage or quality of thinking beyond formal operations.
D) Some adolescents and adults never reach the formal operational stage.
Question
The sight of a maple tree is first held in ________ storage.

A) echoic
B) iconic
C) long-term
D) short-term
Question
Thinking about one's own thoughts is called:

A) egocentrism.
B) metacognition.
C) the imaginary audience.
D) idealism.
Question
According to the three-stage model of memory,information is held for only a fraction of a second in:

A) intermediate storage.
B) long-term storage.
C) sensory storage.
D) short-term storage.
Question
Compared to young adults,adolescents:

A) take longer to retrieve information from memory.
B) are less efficient at deep processing.
C) are more likely to use effective memory strategies.
D) all of the above
Question
Barney and Fred both hear the same loud noise.Barney thinks it's thunder whereas Fred thinks it's a dinosaur.Their different reactions are based on different:

A) memories.
B) interpretations.
C) retrieving.
D) selection.
Question
In the selection step of information processing,what is selected?

A) Interpretations
B) Possible solutions to problems
C) Short-term or long-term memory
D) Stimuli
Question
All of the following are parts of the three-stage model of memory EXCEPT:

A) immediate storage.
B) long-term storage.
C) sensory storage.
D) short-term storage.
Question
Adolescents' increased processing speed is likely linked to neurons in the brain becoming:

A) larger and heavier.
B) responsive to increases in pubertal hormones.
C) covered with an insulating fatty material.
D) dependent on a greater variety of neurotransmitters.
Question
Which of the following is NOT a difference between Piaget's theory and current views of cognitive development?

A) Piaget's theory is stage theory, but most contemporary theories are not.
B) Contemporary theorists, unlike Piaget, believe that cognition is domain-specific.
C) Unlike contemporary theorists, Piaget focused on a micro-level of analysis.
D) all of the above
Question
Stages are to __________ development as gradual change is to __________ development.

A) macrolevel; microlevel
B) continuous; discontinuous
C) discontinuous; continuous
D) microlevel; macrolevel
Question
Which form of thinking includes the ability to integrate conflicting pieces of information and to realize that many aspects of life are interconnected?

A) Formal operational
B) Hypothetico-deductive
C) Dialectic
D) Transitive
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Deck 5: Cognitive Development: Improvements in Thinking, Reasoning, and Decision Making
1
Piaget's fourth stage of cognitive development,which extends from eleven or twelve years of age on,is:

A) concrete operational.
B) formal operational.
C) preoperational.
D) sensorimotor.
B
2
Karl sees the full moon at night and is sure that it must be lonely in the sky all alone.This is an example of preoperational thinking called:

A) centering.
B) animism.
C) seriation.
D) syncretism.
B
3
Piaget's third stage of cognitive development,which extends from about seven to eleven or twelve years of age is:

A) concrete operational.
B) formal operational.
C) preoperational.
D) sensorimotor.
A
4
The approach to the study of cognition that examines the steps in the way adolescents receive,perceive,and remember things is:

A) Eriksonian.
B) Information Processing.
C) Piagetian.
D) Psychometric.
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k this deck
5
Piaget's stage of cognitive development in which mental operations are abstract and hypothetical is:

A) concrete operational.
B) formal operational.
C) preoperational.
D) sensorimotor.
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6
Once when Sangeeta was playing video games she started to sneeze uncontrollably.She now thinks that video games cause her to sneeze,so she won't play them anymore.What kind of reasoning is she exhibiting?

A) Centering
B) Animism
C) Inductive
D) Transductive
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Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Piaget's stage of cognitive development in which operations are carried out in action,not mentally,is:

A) concrete operational.
B) formal operational.
C) preoperational.
D) sensorimotor.
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Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Piaget's first stage of cognitive development,which extends from birth to about two years of age,is:

A) concrete operational.
B) formal operational.
C) preoperational.
D) sensorimotor.
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Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The approach to the study of cognition that measures quantitative changes in adolescent intelligence is:

A) Eriksonian.
B) Information Processing.
C) Piagetian.
D) Psychometric.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Jill's parents always take her to a restaurant on her birthday.This year she looked around and said,"Look at all the other people having birthdays." This best illustrates:

A) centering.
B) inductive reasoning.
C) seriation.
D) syncretism.
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k this deck
11
Quinn is still working on learning how to move her own body and how she can affect the world around her.What Piagetian stage is she in?

A) Concrete operational
B) Formal operational
C) Preoperational
D) Sensorimotor
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Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
12
All of the following are approaches to understanding cognition EXCEPT:

A) information-processing.
B) Piagetian.
C) psychoanalytic.
D) psychometric.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
During which of Piaget's stages does a child move from a body-centered world to an object-centered world?

A) Formal operational
B) Concrete operational
C) Sensorimotor
D) Preoperational
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14
All of the following are typical of Piaget's preoperational stage EXCEPT:

A) centering.
B) egocentrism.
C) seriation.
D) syncretism.
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k this deck
15
Piaget's second stage of cognitive development,which extends from about two to about seven years of age,is:

A) concrete operational.
B) formal operational.
C) preoperational.
D) sensorimotor.
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16
The approach to the study of cognition that emphasizes the qualitative changes in adolescent thought is:

A) Eriksonian.
B) Information Processing.
C) Piagetian.
D) Psychometric.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Inductive reasoning is:

A) proceeding from the particular to the general.
B) proceeding from the general to the particular.
C) proceeding from the particular to the particular.
D) proceeding from the general to the general.
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18
Cognition refers to the process of:

A) sensing.
B) developing .
C) creating.
D) knowing.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Language is acquired during Piaget's ________ stage.

A) concrete operational
B) formal operational
C) preoperational
D) sensorimotor
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The type of reasoning that children do during Piaget's preoperational stage is:

A) deductive.
B) inductive.
C) reductive.
D) transductive.
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21
According to Piaget,the tendency of children to focus attention on one detail and be unable to shift their attention to other aspects of the situation is called:

A) centering.
B) egocentrism.
C) seriation.
D) animism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
LeBron has a yo-yo that glows in the dark.Unlike his 3-year-old sister,LeBron knows perfectly well that when the yo-yo is glowing it's not suddenly a different object.This illustrates the concrete operation called:

A) associativity.
B) combinativity.
C) identity or nullifiability.
D) reversibility.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Ben can line up a set of sticks in order from shortest to longest.This illustrates:

A) abstract thinking.
B) hierarchical classification.
C) understanding class inclusion relationships.
D) seriation.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Cary knows that daughters can also be granddaughters at the same time.This best illustrates:

A) abstract thinking.
B) hierarchical classification.
C) understanding of class inclusion relationships.
D) seriation.
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Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Marwan understands that when a ball of clay is flattened into a pancake shape that there's still the same amount of clay.He says,"you could just bunch up the clay into a ball again-it's still the same thing." He is exhibiting:

A) conservation.
B) identity.
C) reversibility.
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Alicia can sort figures into circles and squares and then into red and blue squares and red and blue circles.This illustrates:

A) transitive inference.
B) identity or nullifiability.
C) understanding class inclusion relationships.
D) seriation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
All of the following can be performed by the concrete operational child EXCEPT:

A) associativity.
B) combinativity.
C) hypothetical-deductive thinking.
D) identity or nullifiability.
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Unlock Deck
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28
Tasha feels fine about having her hair put in a braid,because if she doesn't like it she can just undo it and go back to her usual hair style.This illustrates:

A) conservation.
B) reversibility.
C) combinativity.
D) seriation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
In order to make transitive inferences,a child must first be able to understand:

A) conservation.
B) seriation.
C) associativity.
D) identity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
All of the following are typical of Piaget's concrete operational stage EXCEPT:

A) abstract thinking.
B) hierarchical classification.
C) understanding class inclusion relationships.
D) seriation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Four-year-old Gordon's mother tries to stop him from taking other kids' toys by asking him to imagine how upset the other kids feel.This strategy likely won't work well because of Gordon's:

A) centering.
B) seriation.
C) animism.
D) egocentrism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Four-year-old Jinni thinks that when she flattens out a ball of clay there is more than there was before because the clay is wider on the table.This is an example of:

A) centering.
B) egocentrism.
C) seriation.
D) syncretism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Which of the following preoperational stage phenomena best explains young children's tendency to think trees and flowers have thoughts and feelings?

A) Centering
B) Seriation
C) Animism
D) Egocentrism
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Piaget divided the stage of formal operations into how many substages?

A) 2
B) 3
C) 4
D) 5
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Diane understands that her collection of penguin toys can be added to her collection of owl toys to make a collection of bird toys.This illustrates the concrete operation called:

A) associativity.
B) combinativity.
C) identity or nullifiability.
D) transitive inference.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Three-year-old Lee doesn't recognize her father when he arrives home without his beard.Even when he talks to her,she is sure that he isn't really her father.Lee is demonstrating the lack of:

A) reversibility.
B) identity.
B) nullafiability.
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Nina is organizing her book collection into groups and subgroups.This best demonstrates:

A) hierarchical classification.
B) seriation.
C) class inclusion.
D) transitive inferences.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Matt realizes that whether he pours his lemonade into a large cup or a medium one,the amount is still the same.This illustrates what Piaget calls:

A) associativity.
B) conservation.
C) hypothetical-deductive thinking.
D) seriation.
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39
Soon-Lee knows that her socks are smaller than her mother's socks and that her mother's socks are smaller than her father's socks,so that means her own socks are smaller than her father's socks.This shows that Soon-Lee understands:

A) transitive inference.
B) hierarchical classifications.
C) combinativity.
D) all of the above
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40
What tests did Piaget use to determine whether children had entered the concrete operations stage?

A) Conservation problems
B) Intelligence tests
C) The pendulum problems
D) Deductive reasoning tests
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41
Stuart keeps getting the multiple choice questions wrong because he overanalyzes them and makes them complex when they're actually quite simple.This illustrates the concept of:

A) pseudostupidity.
B) egocentrism.
C) the personal fable.
D) cognitive dialectics.
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42
What is the term for the tendency to approach problems at too complex a level and then fail at them when they're actually simple?

A) The personal fable
B) Cognitive dialectics
C) Pseudostupidity
D) Egocentrism
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43
Which of the following statements about formal operational thinking is FALSE?

A) It involves scientific reasoning.
B) Problem-solving is not exhaustive.
C) Thinking is flexible.
D) It involves systematic reasoning.
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44
According to Elkind,imaginary audience and personal fable are both aspects of adolescent:

A) daydreaming.
B) egocentrism.
C) hypocrisy.
D) pseudostupidity.
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45
Briana realizes that in order to figure out whether the length of a pendulum string or the weight on the end of it affects how fast the pendulum swings,she needs to vary string length and weight one at a time.This best illustrates:

A) transitive inference.
B) introspection.
C) hypothetico-deductive reasoning.
D) the personal fable.
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46
The adolescent feeling of uniqueness and invulnerability is known as:

A) the messianic complex.
B) the personal fable.
C) pseudostupidity.
D) the imaginary audience.
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47
Elkind believes that adolescent pseudostupidity results from their lack of:

A) creativity.
B) experience.
C) intelligence.
D) logical thinking.
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48
The adolescent's ability to think about their own thinking illustrates:

A) abstract thinking.
B) hypothetical reasoning.
C) introspection.
D) logical thinking.
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49
Chip is certain that everyone will notice the pimple on his cheek,so he doesn't want to go to school.Chip is experiencing:

A) the imaginary audience.
B) hypocrisy.
C) introspection.
D) pseudostupidity.
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50
Adolescents' newfound ability to compare what is to what could be often results in:

A) introspection.
B) idealism.
C) hypocrisy.
D) the imaginary audience.
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51
The adolescent's ability to systematically examine a problem by changing only one factor at a time is called:

A) abstract thinking.
B) hypothetico-deductive reasoning.
C) introspection.
D) logical thinking.
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52
Tyrone is committed to helping disadvantaged people because he feels that he will have a huge role in saving all these people from poverty.This best illustrates:

A) introspection.
B) the imaginary audience.
C) hypocrisy.
D) idealism.
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53
According to Elkind,young adolescents may seem to be hypocrites because they are:

A) likely to approach problems at too complex a level.
B) much too idealistic.
C) pressured to conform to society.
D) unable to relate general theory to specific practice.
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Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
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54
Yolanda wonders about her own thoughts and emotions.This illustrates:

A) introspection.
B) the imaginary audience.
C) idealism.
D) pseudostupidity.
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55
The belief that others are as concerned with your appearance and behavior as you are is called:

A) idealism.
B) the personal fable.
C) pseudostupidity.
D) the imaginary audience.
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Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
56
The discrepancy between idealism and behavior is called:

A) hypocrisy.
B) introspection.
C) egocentrism.
D) idealism.
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57
Which of the following statements best illustrates the personal fable?

A) "I know that everyone is watching what I do."
B) "I'm so embarrassed about my new hair cut."
C) "I wonder what she thinks of me."
D) "Don't worry about my speeding-I'm a great driver."
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k this deck
58
According to Piaget,formal operational thinking differs from the thinking of previous stages in that it involves all of the following EXCEPT:

A) abstract thinking.
B) hypothetical reasoning.
C) introspection.
D) transductive reasoning.
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59
Which of the following did recent research discover about the personal fable?

A) Adolescents who felt unique were unlikely to be depressed.
B) Adolescents who felt omnipotent were likely to feel suicidal.
C) Adolescents who felt invulnerable were likely to feel good about themselves.
D) all of the above
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k this deck
60
Giselle can exhibit formal operational thinking in some situations,but not in others.Piaget would likely classify her in what stage?

A) Concrete operations
B) III-A
C) III-B
D) Problem-finding
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61
The third step in information processing is:

A) selection.
B) interpretation.
C) memory.
D) inference.
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62
Information that is being focused on in the conscious mind is in which memory?

A) Echoic
B) Long-term
C) Short-term
D) Iconic
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63
Iconic and echoic memories are both types of ________ memory.

A) sensory
B) long-term
C) immediate
D) short-term
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64
Which approach to cognition examines the steps in selecting,interpreting,and reasoning about information?

A) Information-processing
B) Piagetian
C) Psychoanalytic
D) Psychometric
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65
All of the following are step in information processing EXCEPT:

A) interpretation.
B) selection.
C) inference.
D) metacognition.
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66
Which of the following statements about memory is FALSE?

A) Long-term memory is characterized by how long information has been held.
B) Rehearsal helps keep information in short-term memory.
C) Adolescents' short-term memory is better than children's.
D) Long-term memory has to do with depth of processing.
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67
How fast the brain perceives and uses information is termed:

A) cognitive fluidity.
B) memory span.
C) processing speed.
D) confirmation speed.
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68
The sound of dogs barking is first held in ________ storage.

A) echoic
B) iconic
C) long-term
D) short-term
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k this deck
69
Which of the following is NOT a criticism of Piaget's theory?

A) Cultural plays a large role in the attainment of formal operational thought.
B) Young children are less cognitively advanced than he believed.
C) There may be a stage or quality of thinking beyond formal operations.
D) Some adolescents and adults never reach the formal operational stage.
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Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
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70
The sight of a maple tree is first held in ________ storage.

A) echoic
B) iconic
C) long-term
D) short-term
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k this deck
71
Thinking about one's own thoughts is called:

A) egocentrism.
B) metacognition.
C) the imaginary audience.
D) idealism.
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Unlock for access to all 184 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
72
According to the three-stage model of memory,information is held for only a fraction of a second in:

A) intermediate storage.
B) long-term storage.
C) sensory storage.
D) short-term storage.
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73
Compared to young adults,adolescents:

A) take longer to retrieve information from memory.
B) are less efficient at deep processing.
C) are more likely to use effective memory strategies.
D) all of the above
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74
Barney and Fred both hear the same loud noise.Barney thinks it's thunder whereas Fred thinks it's a dinosaur.Their different reactions are based on different:

A) memories.
B) interpretations.
C) retrieving.
D) selection.
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75
In the selection step of information processing,what is selected?

A) Interpretations
B) Possible solutions to problems
C) Short-term or long-term memory
D) Stimuli
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76
All of the following are parts of the three-stage model of memory EXCEPT:

A) immediate storage.
B) long-term storage.
C) sensory storage.
D) short-term storage.
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77
Adolescents' increased processing speed is likely linked to neurons in the brain becoming:

A) larger and heavier.
B) responsive to increases in pubertal hormones.
C) covered with an insulating fatty material.
D) dependent on a greater variety of neurotransmitters.
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k this deck
78
Which of the following is NOT a difference between Piaget's theory and current views of cognitive development?

A) Piaget's theory is stage theory, but most contemporary theories are not.
B) Contemporary theorists, unlike Piaget, believe that cognition is domain-specific.
C) Unlike contemporary theorists, Piaget focused on a micro-level of analysis.
D) all of the above
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79
Stages are to __________ development as gradual change is to __________ development.

A) macrolevel; microlevel
B) continuous; discontinuous
C) discontinuous; continuous
D) microlevel; macrolevel
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80
Which form of thinking includes the ability to integrate conflicting pieces of information and to realize that many aspects of life are interconnected?

A) Formal operational
B) Hypothetico-deductive
C) Dialectic
D) Transitive
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Unlock Deck
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