Deck 14: Its All a Matter of Consequences: B.F Skinner

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Question
Behaviorism is

A) a school of thought that is centered around the affective implications of behavior
B) concerned with the cognitive implications of behavior
C) school of thought founded by William James
D) a school of psychology for which the basic subject matter is overt behavior
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Question
Radical behaviorism

A) is a new name for behaviorism, Skinner being dissatisfied with the old one
B) a form of behaviorism that eliminates classical conditioning from consideration
C) considers currently observable events and also potential, future events that can be observed and measured
D) considers only present events that have behavioral manifestations detectable either by the senses or by modern electronics
Question
Walden II (1948) described

A) a laboratory of the future in which people were the subjects of experiments and animals are the experimenters
B) a story of the demise of mentalism
C) a autobiographical novel by Skinner, disclosing his contempt for non-behaviorists
D) a book about a utopian society in which punishment is shunned and rewards guide people to full exploitation of their skills
Question
Skinner first became intrigued with psychology

A) at age 40
B) at an early age
C) during graduate training
D) during his mid-twenties
Question
All except one of the following were among the famous people who influenced Skinner early in his life. Which was NOT one of those famous people?

A) Bertrand Russell
B) Robert Frost
C) Hermann Von Helmholtz
D) H. G. Wells
Question
Among Skinner's adventures during early adult-hood was

A) living with a woman in Greenwich village
B) sky diving
C) underwater exploration
D) exploring the jungles of South America
Question
Regarding Skinner's personality, as it can be understood from his own descriptions,

A) it is difficult to pin down
B) it is definitely on the fringe of normalcy
C) it is rather uninteresting
D) it evidences cognitive simplicity
Question
Throughout his career Skinner liked to

A) praise his critics: it confused them
B) tweak the nose of the psychological establishment
C) experience the adventures that characterized his youth
D) avoid controversy
Question
Which of the following is true of Skinner?

A) He cursed the leukemia that killed him.
B) He may have rejected the "mental life" after his failure as a novelist.
C) He lamented that "Beyond Freedom and Dignity" failed to sell.
D) He actually had no mental life.
Question
According to Skinner, a consequence is

A) the same thing as a response
B) anything that happens after something else has occurred
C) an event that is initiated by the organism but is maintained by the experimenter
D) an event that occurs after a response and changes its probability
Question
Which of the following is an example of "natural selection"?

A) humming birds with beaks that, through mutation, happen to be ideal for dipping into the flowers found in their habitat
B) coyotes rummaging among the ruins of ghost towns for items useful in lair building
C) the birds that live on the rhinos
D) the fishes that take up residence in the depths of the ocean in natural caves, relative to their cousins that attempt to survive in the open at shallow levels
Question
According to Skinner, genetic endowment

A) has nothing to do with behavior
B) absolutely explains behavior at a reductionistic level
C) explains behavior for some individuals, but not others
D) pre-disposes people to certain behaviors rather than others
Question
According to Skinner, by "freedom" we mean

A) that we can choose from various behaviors rather than having our actions controlled by environment
B) that we are free to choose behaviors, except that we cannot arrange reinforcement contingencies
C) that we are not naturally prone to accepting dictatorships
D) that we naturally reject control by other people
Question
Malignant environmental circumstances may continue to control people, because

A) people are inherently masochists
B) they may bring immediate positive consequences
C) there is no way to arrange environmental circumstances to produce desired consequences
D) malignant consequences are more powerful than positive ones
Question
When we demand freedom, what do we really mean, according to Skinner?

A) freedom from institutional oppression
B) freedom to ward off the influences of others
C) freedom from negative or aversive consequences
D) freedom to do what we will to others
Question
Skinner was wrongly charged with

A) being an environmentalist
B) believing in the importance of consequences
C) advocating coercive control of behavior
D) proposing a utopian society based on operant principles
Question
According to Skinner, by "dignity" we mean

A) self-respect
B) growing old gracefully
C) giving people credit for what they do
D) making sure that everyone is respected
Question
Skinner credited one of his speeches to

A) himself
B) his genetic endowment and his particular environment
C) his speech writer
D) to happenstance: he thought it impossible to cite the multiple factors that contributed to his speech
Question
Mentalism is (Skinner)

A) the ancient notion "mind over matter"
B) the belief that thought and feelings determine behavior, not external consequences
C) the belief that, through the will, one can ultimately and absolutely control behavior
D) Jung's idea that something like archetypes ultimately determine behavior
Question
Skinner believed that mentalistic terms of today

A) were contrived purposefully by past linguists to promote mentalism
B) have evolved from those of the early language users
C) originally referred to behavior
D) are fading in use by ordinary people
Question
According to Skinner, the observation that feelings and thoughts occur at about the same time as behaviors indicates

A) absolutely nothing to anyone: it is happenstance
B) that they cause behavior
C) that they are caused by the forces that also cause behavior
D) why they are mistaken for causes of behavior
Question
All except one of the following are words that Skinner has identified as one-time references to behavior. Which is NOT a word that was at one time identified with behavior?

A) congratulate
B) experience
C) intention
D) image
Question
Operant conditioning is

A) an automatic reaction to a stimulus
B) conditioning responses such as salivation
C) operating on the environment with consequences that influence repetition
D) acting without regard to consequences
Question
According to Skinner, contingent means

A) independence of events
B) whether events are separated in time or occur together
C) inhibition of one event by another
D) dependence of an event on the prior occurrence of another event
Question
Reinforcement occurs when

A) two events occur simultaneously, one a stimulus event and the other a response event
B) some event is contingent on the prior performance of some response
C) three or more events occur in synchrony
D) a consumable objects such as food, water, etc. is present
Question
Positive reinforcement refers to

A) any event having a "+" valence
B) an event that increases the likelihood of a response upon which the event is contingent
C) an event that decreases the likelihood of a response upon which the event is contingent
D) a response contingent on a previous stimulus
Question
The Skinner Box

A) is what Skinner facetiously called his office
B) is where Skinner raised his daughter
C) is where Skinner keep notes on his experiments
D) is a cage for conditioning animal's responses
Question
Which of the following is an operantly conditioned response?

A) a dog's salivating when presented with food
B) a baby's startle response when a loud sound is sounded
C) a cat's hissing when confronted with a dog
D) a baby's crying responses followed by the appearance of a parent with food in hand
Question
Rate of responding

A) when it is stable, indicates that conditioning has been completed and a new response acquired
B) when it is variable, indicates that conditioning has been completed and a new response acquired
C) is a index of extinction: the more variable the rate the greater the extinction
D) is an index of magnitude of conditioning; magnitude is high when the response rate is variable
Question
During extinction procedures

A) there are no responses
B) a response is not followed by a reinforcer
C) a response is followed by a reinforcer
D) the animal is sacrificed for neurological examination
Question
Shaping is

A) a process by which natural variability in behavior is exploited so that a new behavior is acquired by reinforcing successive approximation to it
B) a process by which the environment of an animal is resculptured to fit the genetic propensities of the animal (e.g., panel is presented to a pigeon rather than a lever)
C) restructuring a stimulus until it is a useful reinforcer
D) restructuring the experimental set-up until the conditions for successful conditioning prevail
Question
All except one of the following are instances of positive reinforcement in the life of a student. Which is NOT an instance of positive reinforcement?

A) presenting an id card at a cafeteria followed by food presentation
B) the observation of an attractive person is followed by an increase in heart rate
C) class attendance is reinforced by a stimulating lecture
D) activities in the library are followed by "the joy of learning"
Question
In negative reinforcement, a response increases in likelihood when it is followed by

A) presentation of a stimulus
B) the termination of a stimulus
C) the intermittent presence of a stimulus
D) the increase in strength of a stimulus
Question
Avoidance refers to

A) jumping away from shock after it has been delivered
B) waiting until the shock is terminated and then jumping away from the area where the shock occurred
C) jumping away from the shock-area in reaction to a warning light just as the shock is being delivered
D) jumping away from the shock-area in reaction to a warning light just before the shock is delivered
Question
In punishment, responses that are followed by the presentation of a stimulus

A) increase in likelihood
B) maintain the same likelihood
C) increase or decrease in likelihood, depending on the species of subjects
D) decrease in likelihood
Question
Which of the following is an example of negative reinforcement?

A) A child watches her bratty little brother, so she will not have to do her boring homework.
B) A child is given praise for having been gentle instead of aggressive with his little sister.
C) A man is presented with an award for outstanding service.
D) A women is shocked each time she lights up a cigarette.
Question
About punishment, Skinner believed

A) it is the most effective way to control behavior
B) while it is the most effective way to control behavior, its use is unethical
C) it only has temporary effects
D) it is counterproductive: resistance to coercion causes organisms to respond at higher rates in the presence of punishment
Question
All except one of the following are unfortunate side effects of punishment. Which is NOT such an effects?

A) loss of self-esteem
B) fear that others might attack oneself
C) failure to respond aggressively to an attack
D) failure to perform beneficial responses
Question
As a fairly typical parent, how does Aliza respond to her son hitting her?

A) She reasons with him.
B) She tries to ignore his attack.
C) She scolds him.
D) She hits him back.
Question
As a fairly typical mother, how does Aliza respond to Rudy's attacks on his sister?

A) She tells him, "Now Rudy, you know that is naughty."
B) She hits him.
C) She says, "Wait 'til your father gets home!"
D) She spanks the sister for provoking Rudy.
Question
Carlsmith's et al. (2002) mock jury study supported what reason for jury decisions on punishment?

A) deterrence
B) just disserts
C) God's will
D) the belief that punishment of crimes is insufficiently severe under our present judicial system
Question
Which of the following was NOT one of Gershoff's (2002) finding regarding the use of physical punishment on children?

A) low internalization of morality
B) physically punished children tends to be a perpetrator of abuse as an adult
C) physically punished child is resilience as an adult
D) poor parent child relationships
Question
If one is angry because someone has aggressed against him or her, how will one's subsequent aggression against a third party affect future aggressiveness?

A) It will have no effect on future aggression.
B) It will "blow off some steam" making future aggression less likely.
C) It will suppress future aggression because of fear of retaliation.
D) It will follows the adage "aggression begets aggression": aggression gives rise to more aggression.
Question
When Aliza hits Rudy in retaliation for his attack on her, what has she become?

A) a "bad mother"
B) A fool: she should have hit him BEFORE he hit her.
C) a model who teaches aggressiveness to Rudy
D) a hostile/aggressive personality type
Question
What subtle lesson does Rudy learn when his mother hits him back harder when he hits her?

A) Parents are basically mean.
B) There is no justice.
C) He should be in a position to escape if he is planning to hit his mother.
D) One can get away with aggression if one is big and strong enough.
Question
What did Kazdin and Benjet (2003) report regarding the affects of mild physical punishment administered to children?

A) Research has failed to reveal any deleterious or beneficial effects of it.
B) It also has mostly deleterious effects.
C) It has mostly beneficial effects.
D) It has both beneficial and deleterious effects.
Question
Which is chief among the conditions that must hold if punishment is to effectively control behavior?

A) It must not be too severe.
B) It must be very severe.
C) The target of punishment must not know when it is coming.
D) It must be administered by an authority figure.
Question
Which of the following must be true of the threat of punishment if it is to deter future aggression?

A) It must not be too severe.
B) Punishment must occur immediately after aggression.
C) The target of punishment must not know when it is coming.
D) It must be administered by an authority figure.
Question
Which of the following must be true of the threat of punishment if it is to deter future aggression?

A) The occurrence of the punishment must be of uncertain likelihood.
B) The threatened potential aggressor must be very angry.
C) The potential aggressor who is threatened must have much to gain from future aggression.
D) The person who is threatened must have little to gain from aggression.
Question
In Rudy's case, which of the following represents the degree to which the conditions that must hold if threat of punishment is to effectively deter future aggression are actually in force?

A) In Rudy's case, all the conditions that must be met to deter future aggression are in force.
B) In Rudy's case, none of the conditions that must be met to deter future aggression are in force.
C) In Rudy's case, only the condition "punishment must be severe" is in force.
D) In Rudy's case, only the condition "the potential aggressor must not be very angry" is in force.
Question
Given that the conditions for threat of punishment to reliably deter criminal assault are met, what then becomes the problem?

A) No problem: our judicial system can now meet these conditions.
B) It is never possible to meet any of these conditions.
C) These conditions have actually been met by our system and we now know that they do not work to deter aggression.
D) Meeting these conditions would threaten our democratic system.
Question
What is Skinner's attitude toward the notion of "personality"?

A) He rejected it.
B) He thought it was harmless but useless.
C) He embraced it.
D) He ignored it.
Question
What happened when Skinner declared that "the verbal community" reinforces correct speech and that is how children learn to speak?

A) Linguistic scientists readily agreed.
B) The entire linguistic community rose up against him declaring that "parental training" plays no significant role in language development.
C) Linguist Noam Chomsky rejected Skinner's account of language development in favor of his innate "language faculty."
D) For the first time, linguists began to debate about the degree to which lessons from adults influence language development.
Question
Skinner reared his daughter in a

A) typical nursery by atypical procedures
B) in a box featuring temperature and humidity control
C) in an apparatus not unlike a Skinner box in terms of reinforcement delivery
D) in a special, contingency controlled, outdoor area
Question
In her special environment, Skinner's daughter was

A) lonely
B) unhappy
C) the center of attention
D) able to roam over a wide area
Question
What were some of the advantages of the special environment Skinner arranged for his daughter?

A) She was isolated so she would not be a bother to her parents.
B) Lack of exposure to other children prevented quarreling.
C) Several health problems were prevented.
D) She learned not to cry, because it did no good.
Question
Calling Debs "aircrib" a "box" stirred controversy because

A) It is too impersonal.
B) It was actually a bed.
C) It was a kind of play pen.
D) "Bbox" meant coffin at the time the aircrib was used.
Question
Which happened to Skinner after Deb's "aircrib" was written up in Ladies Home Journal?

A) It was suggested that his own university sue him.
B) He was granted Psychology's highest award.
C) He was fired by Indiana University.
D) Child and Family Services threatened to take Debs away.
Question
In Skinner's Walden Two Fraizer, the leader, describes himself

A) only at others' insistence
B) with reference to traits
C) by analogy
D) with a long string of trait labels
Question
When Skinner "revisits" Walden II years later, Burris and Frazier appear to be their same old selves. What are the implications of their remaining much the same?

A) Skinner was not very creative as a writer.
B) Reinforcement should have made them different after a time.
C) This stability is not surprising due to the "protected" and invariable circumstances at Walden II.
D) In this show of invariance over time, Skinner provides testimony to the stability of personality.
Question
According to Skinner, what kind of objects predominate in paintings?

A) uninterpretable images
B) abstractions
C) food
D) nonhuman forms
Question
Regarding original ideas, research shows that

A) we fail to copy even from their own experience
B) almost all of our ideas are original
C) we consciously copy others' ideas and call them our own
D) we may non-consciously plagiarize other's ideas
Question
Which did Skinner NOT regularly do with his children?

A) take them on long walks
B) read to them
C) stop his work to interact with them
D) show that he cared for them
Question
Which was NOT among Skinner's ideas used in education and in industry?

A) teaching machines
B) computer programmed instruction
C) the production of evidence that animals cannot perform as well as robots
D) positive reinforcement methods used during college testing
Question
In Walden Two people

A) chose a job or profession and stuck with it
B) tried a wide variety of pursuits, but eventually migrated to what they were genetically disposed to perform well
C) tried a wide variety of pursuits, but eventually ended up doing whatever provided the greatest range of reinforcers for the greatest number people
D) rotated from job to job continually
Question
Skinner thought that cultures develop according to

A) S-R principles
B) principles of classical conditioning (respondent conditioning)
C) principles of operant conditioning
D) principles of observational learning
Question
Africans brought to the United States carried certain cultural traditions with them that survived because the environment here selected the traditions. Which may represent one of those traditions?

A) preferences for certain African sports
B) African hunting traditions
C) African burial traditions
D) African communication via drums
Question
Which describes the constitution of the Board of Governors at Walden Two?

A) half were women
B) two-thirds were professors
C) 80% were white males
D) half were people of color
Question
In Gromly's (1982) study of genetic endowment and reinforcement

A) fraternity men were isolated in a cave for a month
B) fraternity men kept a log of experiences
C) instances of aggression were recorded by an observer
D) anti-social behaviors were investigated
Question
In Gromly's (1982) study involving fraternity men, what supposedly genetic characteristic was under investigation?

A) sociable-extraverted
B) conscientiousness
C) sexual behavior
D) trustworthiness
Question
The Skinnerian point to Gromly's (1982) study was

A) environment determines energetic behavior regardless of the genes
B) environment selected energetic behaviors for those people who were genetically inclined to be energetic
C) an interaction of environment and the genes determines energetic behavior, with the strongest winning out
D) in this case, the genes are solely responsible of determining energetic behavior; the environment played no role
Question
Behavior therapy

A) is, ironically, a form of psychotherapy that relies on ignoring behavior rather than reinforcing it
B) was a term introduced by Wolpe
C) was a late-in-the-life interest of Skinner
D) is psychological therapy employing behavioral techniques
Question
In the example of behavior modification involving a shy child

A) a stranger talked to the child
B) the child's behavior, talking to a stranger, was reinforced
C) the child's behavior, approaching a stranger, was reinforced
D) the child's refusal to talk was punished
Question
According to J. Jung (1978) the behavior-emotion sequence that Skinner endorses

A) is not amenable to testing via experiments and has been subjected to severe criticism
B) is undoubtedly the most sound point of view
C) may be the best point of view, but, while readily testable, has yet to be tested
D) is certainly the inferior point of view, according to much experimental work
Question
What will save the Skinnerian position in the future?

A) sticking with Skinnerian principles, no matter what
B) uniting with the cognitive movement
C) leaning a little in the "mentalistic" direction
D) paying more attention to classical (respondent) conditioning
Question
What is the point of the 60 Minutes-Laurence Olivier episode involving Shakespeare's Othello?

A) Olivier was outstanding because his genetic disposition was properly exploited by his environment.
B) Olivier's purely private suffering was enormously important to him, even though it had no external manifestations.
C) Olivier was shown reinforcing a young actor playing Othello, thus, he demonstrated positive reinforcement.
D) Olivier was shown screaming at a younger actor who was playing Othello badly, thus, he demonstrated negative reinforcement.
Question
With a little flexibility, what area might Skinnerians begin to consider that would improve their position?

A) behavior therapy
B) expectations
C) language
D) eliminating undesirable behaviors
Question
After this death, commentators on Skinner indicated which of the following have much in common with Skinnerianism?

A) quantum physics
B) metaphysics
C) existentialism
D) psychoanalysis
Question
Which of the following support the claim that Skinner is now more important that Freud?

A) citations in the psychological literature
B) the all-time list of contributors compiled by historians of psychology
C) a survey by Time magazine
D) the Hagbloom et al. (2002) survey of journals, texts, and psychologists
Question
For which of the following productive ideas is Skinner responsible?

A) deprogramming of people just out of cults
B) sounding the alarm about international relations, pointing out the need to emphasize positive rather than negative reinforcement
C) time out
D) backward conditioning
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Deck 14: Its All a Matter of Consequences: B.F Skinner
1
Behaviorism is

A) a school of thought that is centered around the affective implications of behavior
B) concerned with the cognitive implications of behavior
C) school of thought founded by William James
D) a school of psychology for which the basic subject matter is overt behavior
D
2
Radical behaviorism

A) is a new name for behaviorism, Skinner being dissatisfied with the old one
B) a form of behaviorism that eliminates classical conditioning from consideration
C) considers currently observable events and also potential, future events that can be observed and measured
D) considers only present events that have behavioral manifestations detectable either by the senses or by modern electronics
C
3
Walden II (1948) described

A) a laboratory of the future in which people were the subjects of experiments and animals are the experimenters
B) a story of the demise of mentalism
C) a autobiographical novel by Skinner, disclosing his contempt for non-behaviorists
D) a book about a utopian society in which punishment is shunned and rewards guide people to full exploitation of their skills
D
4
Skinner first became intrigued with psychology

A) at age 40
B) at an early age
C) during graduate training
D) during his mid-twenties
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5
All except one of the following were among the famous people who influenced Skinner early in his life. Which was NOT one of those famous people?

A) Bertrand Russell
B) Robert Frost
C) Hermann Von Helmholtz
D) H. G. Wells
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6
Among Skinner's adventures during early adult-hood was

A) living with a woman in Greenwich village
B) sky diving
C) underwater exploration
D) exploring the jungles of South America
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Regarding Skinner's personality, as it can be understood from his own descriptions,

A) it is difficult to pin down
B) it is definitely on the fringe of normalcy
C) it is rather uninteresting
D) it evidences cognitive simplicity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Throughout his career Skinner liked to

A) praise his critics: it confused them
B) tweak the nose of the psychological establishment
C) experience the adventures that characterized his youth
D) avoid controversy
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Which of the following is true of Skinner?

A) He cursed the leukemia that killed him.
B) He may have rejected the "mental life" after his failure as a novelist.
C) He lamented that "Beyond Freedom and Dignity" failed to sell.
D) He actually had no mental life.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
According to Skinner, a consequence is

A) the same thing as a response
B) anything that happens after something else has occurred
C) an event that is initiated by the organism but is maintained by the experimenter
D) an event that occurs after a response and changes its probability
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Which of the following is an example of "natural selection"?

A) humming birds with beaks that, through mutation, happen to be ideal for dipping into the flowers found in their habitat
B) coyotes rummaging among the ruins of ghost towns for items useful in lair building
C) the birds that live on the rhinos
D) the fishes that take up residence in the depths of the ocean in natural caves, relative to their cousins that attempt to survive in the open at shallow levels
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
According to Skinner, genetic endowment

A) has nothing to do with behavior
B) absolutely explains behavior at a reductionistic level
C) explains behavior for some individuals, but not others
D) pre-disposes people to certain behaviors rather than others
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
According to Skinner, by "freedom" we mean

A) that we can choose from various behaviors rather than having our actions controlled by environment
B) that we are free to choose behaviors, except that we cannot arrange reinforcement contingencies
C) that we are not naturally prone to accepting dictatorships
D) that we naturally reject control by other people
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
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14
Malignant environmental circumstances may continue to control people, because

A) people are inherently masochists
B) they may bring immediate positive consequences
C) there is no way to arrange environmental circumstances to produce desired consequences
D) malignant consequences are more powerful than positive ones
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Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
When we demand freedom, what do we really mean, according to Skinner?

A) freedom from institutional oppression
B) freedom to ward off the influences of others
C) freedom from negative or aversive consequences
D) freedom to do what we will to others
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16
Skinner was wrongly charged with

A) being an environmentalist
B) believing in the importance of consequences
C) advocating coercive control of behavior
D) proposing a utopian society based on operant principles
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
According to Skinner, by "dignity" we mean

A) self-respect
B) growing old gracefully
C) giving people credit for what they do
D) making sure that everyone is respected
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Skinner credited one of his speeches to

A) himself
B) his genetic endowment and his particular environment
C) his speech writer
D) to happenstance: he thought it impossible to cite the multiple factors that contributed to his speech
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Mentalism is (Skinner)

A) the ancient notion "mind over matter"
B) the belief that thought and feelings determine behavior, not external consequences
C) the belief that, through the will, one can ultimately and absolutely control behavior
D) Jung's idea that something like archetypes ultimately determine behavior
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Skinner believed that mentalistic terms of today

A) were contrived purposefully by past linguists to promote mentalism
B) have evolved from those of the early language users
C) originally referred to behavior
D) are fading in use by ordinary people
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
According to Skinner, the observation that feelings and thoughts occur at about the same time as behaviors indicates

A) absolutely nothing to anyone: it is happenstance
B) that they cause behavior
C) that they are caused by the forces that also cause behavior
D) why they are mistaken for causes of behavior
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 105 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
All except one of the following are words that Skinner has identified as one-time references to behavior. Which is NOT a word that was at one time identified with behavior?

A) congratulate
B) experience
C) intention
D) image
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Operant conditioning is

A) an automatic reaction to a stimulus
B) conditioning responses such as salivation
C) operating on the environment with consequences that influence repetition
D) acting without regard to consequences
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
According to Skinner, contingent means

A) independence of events
B) whether events are separated in time or occur together
C) inhibition of one event by another
D) dependence of an event on the prior occurrence of another event
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25
Reinforcement occurs when

A) two events occur simultaneously, one a stimulus event and the other a response event
B) some event is contingent on the prior performance of some response
C) three or more events occur in synchrony
D) a consumable objects such as food, water, etc. is present
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26
Positive reinforcement refers to

A) any event having a "+" valence
B) an event that increases the likelihood of a response upon which the event is contingent
C) an event that decreases the likelihood of a response upon which the event is contingent
D) a response contingent on a previous stimulus
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27
The Skinner Box

A) is what Skinner facetiously called his office
B) is where Skinner raised his daughter
C) is where Skinner keep notes on his experiments
D) is a cage for conditioning animal's responses
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28
Which of the following is an operantly conditioned response?

A) a dog's salivating when presented with food
B) a baby's startle response when a loud sound is sounded
C) a cat's hissing when confronted with a dog
D) a baby's crying responses followed by the appearance of a parent with food in hand
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29
Rate of responding

A) when it is stable, indicates that conditioning has been completed and a new response acquired
B) when it is variable, indicates that conditioning has been completed and a new response acquired
C) is a index of extinction: the more variable the rate the greater the extinction
D) is an index of magnitude of conditioning; magnitude is high when the response rate is variable
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30
During extinction procedures

A) there are no responses
B) a response is not followed by a reinforcer
C) a response is followed by a reinforcer
D) the animal is sacrificed for neurological examination
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31
Shaping is

A) a process by which natural variability in behavior is exploited so that a new behavior is acquired by reinforcing successive approximation to it
B) a process by which the environment of an animal is resculptured to fit the genetic propensities of the animal (e.g., panel is presented to a pigeon rather than a lever)
C) restructuring a stimulus until it is a useful reinforcer
D) restructuring the experimental set-up until the conditions for successful conditioning prevail
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32
All except one of the following are instances of positive reinforcement in the life of a student. Which is NOT an instance of positive reinforcement?

A) presenting an id card at a cafeteria followed by food presentation
B) the observation of an attractive person is followed by an increase in heart rate
C) class attendance is reinforced by a stimulating lecture
D) activities in the library are followed by "the joy of learning"
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33
In negative reinforcement, a response increases in likelihood when it is followed by

A) presentation of a stimulus
B) the termination of a stimulus
C) the intermittent presence of a stimulus
D) the increase in strength of a stimulus
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34
Avoidance refers to

A) jumping away from shock after it has been delivered
B) waiting until the shock is terminated and then jumping away from the area where the shock occurred
C) jumping away from the shock-area in reaction to a warning light just as the shock is being delivered
D) jumping away from the shock-area in reaction to a warning light just before the shock is delivered
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35
In punishment, responses that are followed by the presentation of a stimulus

A) increase in likelihood
B) maintain the same likelihood
C) increase or decrease in likelihood, depending on the species of subjects
D) decrease in likelihood
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36
Which of the following is an example of negative reinforcement?

A) A child watches her bratty little brother, so she will not have to do her boring homework.
B) A child is given praise for having been gentle instead of aggressive with his little sister.
C) A man is presented with an award for outstanding service.
D) A women is shocked each time she lights up a cigarette.
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37
About punishment, Skinner believed

A) it is the most effective way to control behavior
B) while it is the most effective way to control behavior, its use is unethical
C) it only has temporary effects
D) it is counterproductive: resistance to coercion causes organisms to respond at higher rates in the presence of punishment
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38
All except one of the following are unfortunate side effects of punishment. Which is NOT such an effects?

A) loss of self-esteem
B) fear that others might attack oneself
C) failure to respond aggressively to an attack
D) failure to perform beneficial responses
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39
As a fairly typical parent, how does Aliza respond to her son hitting her?

A) She reasons with him.
B) She tries to ignore his attack.
C) She scolds him.
D) She hits him back.
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40
As a fairly typical mother, how does Aliza respond to Rudy's attacks on his sister?

A) She tells him, "Now Rudy, you know that is naughty."
B) She hits him.
C) She says, "Wait 'til your father gets home!"
D) She spanks the sister for provoking Rudy.
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41
Carlsmith's et al. (2002) mock jury study supported what reason for jury decisions on punishment?

A) deterrence
B) just disserts
C) God's will
D) the belief that punishment of crimes is insufficiently severe under our present judicial system
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42
Which of the following was NOT one of Gershoff's (2002) finding regarding the use of physical punishment on children?

A) low internalization of morality
B) physically punished children tends to be a perpetrator of abuse as an adult
C) physically punished child is resilience as an adult
D) poor parent child relationships
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43
If one is angry because someone has aggressed against him or her, how will one's subsequent aggression against a third party affect future aggressiveness?

A) It will have no effect on future aggression.
B) It will "blow off some steam" making future aggression less likely.
C) It will suppress future aggression because of fear of retaliation.
D) It will follows the adage "aggression begets aggression": aggression gives rise to more aggression.
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44
When Aliza hits Rudy in retaliation for his attack on her, what has she become?

A) a "bad mother"
B) A fool: she should have hit him BEFORE he hit her.
C) a model who teaches aggressiveness to Rudy
D) a hostile/aggressive personality type
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45
What subtle lesson does Rudy learn when his mother hits him back harder when he hits her?

A) Parents are basically mean.
B) There is no justice.
C) He should be in a position to escape if he is planning to hit his mother.
D) One can get away with aggression if one is big and strong enough.
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46
What did Kazdin and Benjet (2003) report regarding the affects of mild physical punishment administered to children?

A) Research has failed to reveal any deleterious or beneficial effects of it.
B) It also has mostly deleterious effects.
C) It has mostly beneficial effects.
D) It has both beneficial and deleterious effects.
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47
Which is chief among the conditions that must hold if punishment is to effectively control behavior?

A) It must not be too severe.
B) It must be very severe.
C) The target of punishment must not know when it is coming.
D) It must be administered by an authority figure.
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48
Which of the following must be true of the threat of punishment if it is to deter future aggression?

A) It must not be too severe.
B) Punishment must occur immediately after aggression.
C) The target of punishment must not know when it is coming.
D) It must be administered by an authority figure.
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49
Which of the following must be true of the threat of punishment if it is to deter future aggression?

A) The occurrence of the punishment must be of uncertain likelihood.
B) The threatened potential aggressor must be very angry.
C) The potential aggressor who is threatened must have much to gain from future aggression.
D) The person who is threatened must have little to gain from aggression.
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50
In Rudy's case, which of the following represents the degree to which the conditions that must hold if threat of punishment is to effectively deter future aggression are actually in force?

A) In Rudy's case, all the conditions that must be met to deter future aggression are in force.
B) In Rudy's case, none of the conditions that must be met to deter future aggression are in force.
C) In Rudy's case, only the condition "punishment must be severe" is in force.
D) In Rudy's case, only the condition "the potential aggressor must not be very angry" is in force.
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51
Given that the conditions for threat of punishment to reliably deter criminal assault are met, what then becomes the problem?

A) No problem: our judicial system can now meet these conditions.
B) It is never possible to meet any of these conditions.
C) These conditions have actually been met by our system and we now know that they do not work to deter aggression.
D) Meeting these conditions would threaten our democratic system.
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52
What is Skinner's attitude toward the notion of "personality"?

A) He rejected it.
B) He thought it was harmless but useless.
C) He embraced it.
D) He ignored it.
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53
What happened when Skinner declared that "the verbal community" reinforces correct speech and that is how children learn to speak?

A) Linguistic scientists readily agreed.
B) The entire linguistic community rose up against him declaring that "parental training" plays no significant role in language development.
C) Linguist Noam Chomsky rejected Skinner's account of language development in favor of his innate "language faculty."
D) For the first time, linguists began to debate about the degree to which lessons from adults influence language development.
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54
Skinner reared his daughter in a

A) typical nursery by atypical procedures
B) in a box featuring temperature and humidity control
C) in an apparatus not unlike a Skinner box in terms of reinforcement delivery
D) in a special, contingency controlled, outdoor area
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55
In her special environment, Skinner's daughter was

A) lonely
B) unhappy
C) the center of attention
D) able to roam over a wide area
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56
What were some of the advantages of the special environment Skinner arranged for his daughter?

A) She was isolated so she would not be a bother to her parents.
B) Lack of exposure to other children prevented quarreling.
C) Several health problems were prevented.
D) She learned not to cry, because it did no good.
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57
Calling Debs "aircrib" a "box" stirred controversy because

A) It is too impersonal.
B) It was actually a bed.
C) It was a kind of play pen.
D) "Bbox" meant coffin at the time the aircrib was used.
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58
Which happened to Skinner after Deb's "aircrib" was written up in Ladies Home Journal?

A) It was suggested that his own university sue him.
B) He was granted Psychology's highest award.
C) He was fired by Indiana University.
D) Child and Family Services threatened to take Debs away.
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59
In Skinner's Walden Two Fraizer, the leader, describes himself

A) only at others' insistence
B) with reference to traits
C) by analogy
D) with a long string of trait labels
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60
When Skinner "revisits" Walden II years later, Burris and Frazier appear to be their same old selves. What are the implications of their remaining much the same?

A) Skinner was not very creative as a writer.
B) Reinforcement should have made them different after a time.
C) This stability is not surprising due to the "protected" and invariable circumstances at Walden II.
D) In this show of invariance over time, Skinner provides testimony to the stability of personality.
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61
According to Skinner, what kind of objects predominate in paintings?

A) uninterpretable images
B) abstractions
C) food
D) nonhuman forms
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62
Regarding original ideas, research shows that

A) we fail to copy even from their own experience
B) almost all of our ideas are original
C) we consciously copy others' ideas and call them our own
D) we may non-consciously plagiarize other's ideas
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63
Which did Skinner NOT regularly do with his children?

A) take them on long walks
B) read to them
C) stop his work to interact with them
D) show that he cared for them
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64
Which was NOT among Skinner's ideas used in education and in industry?

A) teaching machines
B) computer programmed instruction
C) the production of evidence that animals cannot perform as well as robots
D) positive reinforcement methods used during college testing
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65
In Walden Two people

A) chose a job or profession and stuck with it
B) tried a wide variety of pursuits, but eventually migrated to what they were genetically disposed to perform well
C) tried a wide variety of pursuits, but eventually ended up doing whatever provided the greatest range of reinforcers for the greatest number people
D) rotated from job to job continually
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66
Skinner thought that cultures develop according to

A) S-R principles
B) principles of classical conditioning (respondent conditioning)
C) principles of operant conditioning
D) principles of observational learning
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67
Africans brought to the United States carried certain cultural traditions with them that survived because the environment here selected the traditions. Which may represent one of those traditions?

A) preferences for certain African sports
B) African hunting traditions
C) African burial traditions
D) African communication via drums
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68
Which describes the constitution of the Board of Governors at Walden Two?

A) half were women
B) two-thirds were professors
C) 80% were white males
D) half were people of color
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69
In Gromly's (1982) study of genetic endowment and reinforcement

A) fraternity men were isolated in a cave for a month
B) fraternity men kept a log of experiences
C) instances of aggression were recorded by an observer
D) anti-social behaviors were investigated
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70
In Gromly's (1982) study involving fraternity men, what supposedly genetic characteristic was under investigation?

A) sociable-extraverted
B) conscientiousness
C) sexual behavior
D) trustworthiness
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71
The Skinnerian point to Gromly's (1982) study was

A) environment determines energetic behavior regardless of the genes
B) environment selected energetic behaviors for those people who were genetically inclined to be energetic
C) an interaction of environment and the genes determines energetic behavior, with the strongest winning out
D) in this case, the genes are solely responsible of determining energetic behavior; the environment played no role
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72
Behavior therapy

A) is, ironically, a form of psychotherapy that relies on ignoring behavior rather than reinforcing it
B) was a term introduced by Wolpe
C) was a late-in-the-life interest of Skinner
D) is psychological therapy employing behavioral techniques
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73
In the example of behavior modification involving a shy child

A) a stranger talked to the child
B) the child's behavior, talking to a stranger, was reinforced
C) the child's behavior, approaching a stranger, was reinforced
D) the child's refusal to talk was punished
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74
According to J. Jung (1978) the behavior-emotion sequence that Skinner endorses

A) is not amenable to testing via experiments and has been subjected to severe criticism
B) is undoubtedly the most sound point of view
C) may be the best point of view, but, while readily testable, has yet to be tested
D) is certainly the inferior point of view, according to much experimental work
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75
What will save the Skinnerian position in the future?

A) sticking with Skinnerian principles, no matter what
B) uniting with the cognitive movement
C) leaning a little in the "mentalistic" direction
D) paying more attention to classical (respondent) conditioning
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76
What is the point of the 60 Minutes-Laurence Olivier episode involving Shakespeare's Othello?

A) Olivier was outstanding because his genetic disposition was properly exploited by his environment.
B) Olivier's purely private suffering was enormously important to him, even though it had no external manifestations.
C) Olivier was shown reinforcing a young actor playing Othello, thus, he demonstrated positive reinforcement.
D) Olivier was shown screaming at a younger actor who was playing Othello badly, thus, he demonstrated negative reinforcement.
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77
With a little flexibility, what area might Skinnerians begin to consider that would improve their position?

A) behavior therapy
B) expectations
C) language
D) eliminating undesirable behaviors
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78
After this death, commentators on Skinner indicated which of the following have much in common with Skinnerianism?

A) quantum physics
B) metaphysics
C) existentialism
D) psychoanalysis
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79
Which of the following support the claim that Skinner is now more important that Freud?

A) citations in the psychological literature
B) the all-time list of contributors compiled by historians of psychology
C) a survey by Time magazine
D) the Hagbloom et al. (2002) survey of journals, texts, and psychologists
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80
For which of the following productive ideas is Skinner responsible?

A) deprogramming of people just out of cults
B) sounding the alarm about international relations, pointing out the need to emphasize positive rather than negative reinforcement
C) time out
D) backward conditioning
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