Deck 7: The Contemporary Scene in the Age of Wundt

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Brentano's act psychology held that physical events have immanent objectivity while mental ones display intrinsic completeness.
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Stumpf's Berlin psychology laboratory studied space perception, audition, and the psychology of music.
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G. E. Müller, a systematic experimental psychologist, invented the memory drum.
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Rubin's distinction between figure and ground proposed that an attended item becomes the field of consciousness and the non-extended context becomes the focus.
Question
The physicist Ernst Mach argued that the data of all sciences are percepts.
Question
Ebbinghaus's epoch-making experiments on memory were inspired by Fechner's Elements of Psychophysics.
Question
Retroactive inhibition is a process of massed and distributed practice.
Question
Calkins's experiments with paired associates established the phenomena of reminiscence and eugenics.
Question
Ward's tripartite psychology proposed that the basic psychological processes are cognition, feeling, and conation.
Question
Brentano's act psychology argued that

A) crucial experiments are preferred over systematic experiments
B) mental events have intrinsic completeness
C) physical events display immanent objectivity
D) none of these
Question
Stumpf's Berlin psychology laboratory

A) undertook phenomenological studies
B) made extensive use of Müller's memory drum
C) concentrated its research primarily on color theory
D) all of these
Question
Which of the following was NOT a product of

A) behavioral genetics
B) the effects of massed and distributed practice
C) experimental work on eidetic imagery
D) experiments using memory drums E. Müller's laboratory?
Question
Ewald Hering contributed

A) all of these
B) a nativistic account of space perception
C) a three-cone theory of color vision
D) a standardized series of papers graded from white to black
Question
Hermann Ebbinghaus was a pioneer in

A) both c and d
B) neither c nor d
C) the testing of intelligence
D) the experimental study of memory
Question
The doctrine of imageless thought that emerged from Külpe's Würzburg school

A) challenged Wundt's claim that experimental methods cannot be used to study higher mental processes
B) established that word associations can generate a determining tendency
C) showed that Einstellung or set is controlled by levels of consciousness
D) proposed that questionnaires are a method of choice for studying imagery
Question
Galton's work in behavioral genetics

A) used the family pedigree method
B) led him to the invention of fingerprinting
C) generated the mathematical tool of the coefficient of correlation
D) none of these
Question
Ward's tripartite psychology proposed that the basic psychological processes are

A) cognition, feeling, and conation
B) similarity, contrast, and contiguity in space and time
C) memory, imagination, and intelligence
D) reminiscence, assimilation, and dissimilation
Question
McDougall's "hormic" psychology

A) all of these
B) proposed that all psychological acts are purposive
C) considered psychology the science of behavior
D) included instincts as major concepts
Question
The "new" psychology of the late nineteenth century

A) all of these
B) concentrated on introspection about conscious content
C) was experimental and evolutionary
D) was elementistic and associationistic
Question
What was Brentano's distinction between crucial and systematic experiments?
Question
What did Brentano mean with his contrast between intrinsic completeness and immanent objectivity?
Question
Describe what Stumpf meant by phenomenology.
Question
What did the Würzburgers mean by "determining tendency" or set?
Question
How did Hering propose that inorganic matter can exhibit memory?
Question
For what purpose did Ebbinghaus invent nonsense syllables?
Question
What were Ebbinghaus's main methods for the experimental study of memory?
Question
Describe Ebbinghaus's forgetting curve.
Question
What was the most significant finding of the experiments performed by the Würzburg school?
Question
To what extent did the "new" psychology of the late nineteenth century display Muenzinger's eight trends?
Question
Why did McDougall call his psychology hormic or purposive?
Viewable by instructor only
Answers to short answer questions for Chapter 7: The Contemporary Scene in the Age of Wundt
Question
Contrast Brentano's act psychology with Wundt's system.
Question
What were Jost's contributions to the psychology of memory?
Question
How is Hering's opponent-process theory consistent with the all-or-none law?
Question
What do the following terms mean: remote associations, overlearning, retroactive inhibition, and reminiscence?
Question
What is the coefficient of correlation, and what role has it played in psychology?
Question
What did Brentano and McDougall mean by "act psychology?"
Question
What were the contributions of E. Müller's students: Jost, Katz, Ach, Jaensch, and Rubin?
Question
Summarize Hering's color theory.
Question
What were the main contributions of Ebbinghaus's experiments on memory?
Question
List some of the important findings of students at the Würzburg school.
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Deck 7: The Contemporary Scene in the Age of Wundt
1
Brentano's act psychology held that physical events have immanent objectivity while mental ones display intrinsic completeness.
False
2
Stumpf's Berlin psychology laboratory studied space perception, audition, and the psychology of music.
True
3
G. E. Müller, a systematic experimental psychologist, invented the memory drum.
True
4
Rubin's distinction between figure and ground proposed that an attended item becomes the field of consciousness and the non-extended context becomes the focus.
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k this deck
5
The physicist Ernst Mach argued that the data of all sciences are percepts.
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6
Ebbinghaus's epoch-making experiments on memory were inspired by Fechner's Elements of Psychophysics.
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k this deck
7
Retroactive inhibition is a process of massed and distributed practice.
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8
Calkins's experiments with paired associates established the phenomena of reminiscence and eugenics.
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k this deck
9
Ward's tripartite psychology proposed that the basic psychological processes are cognition, feeling, and conation.
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k this deck
10
Brentano's act psychology argued that

A) crucial experiments are preferred over systematic experiments
B) mental events have intrinsic completeness
C) physical events display immanent objectivity
D) none of these
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
11
Stumpf's Berlin psychology laboratory

A) undertook phenomenological studies
B) made extensive use of Müller's memory drum
C) concentrated its research primarily on color theory
D) all of these
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k this deck
12
Which of the following was NOT a product of

A) behavioral genetics
B) the effects of massed and distributed practice
C) experimental work on eidetic imagery
D) experiments using memory drums E. Müller's laboratory?
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k this deck
13
Ewald Hering contributed

A) all of these
B) a nativistic account of space perception
C) a three-cone theory of color vision
D) a standardized series of papers graded from white to black
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Unlock for access to all 40 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Hermann Ebbinghaus was a pioneer in

A) both c and d
B) neither c nor d
C) the testing of intelligence
D) the experimental study of memory
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Unlock for access to all 40 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The doctrine of imageless thought that emerged from Külpe's Würzburg school

A) challenged Wundt's claim that experimental methods cannot be used to study higher mental processes
B) established that word associations can generate a determining tendency
C) showed that Einstellung or set is controlled by levels of consciousness
D) proposed that questionnaires are a method of choice for studying imagery
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 40 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Galton's work in behavioral genetics

A) used the family pedigree method
B) led him to the invention of fingerprinting
C) generated the mathematical tool of the coefficient of correlation
D) none of these
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Unlock for access to all 40 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Ward's tripartite psychology proposed that the basic psychological processes are

A) cognition, feeling, and conation
B) similarity, contrast, and contiguity in space and time
C) memory, imagination, and intelligence
D) reminiscence, assimilation, and dissimilation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 40 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
McDougall's "hormic" psychology

A) all of these
B) proposed that all psychological acts are purposive
C) considered psychology the science of behavior
D) included instincts as major concepts
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The "new" psychology of the late nineteenth century

A) all of these
B) concentrated on introspection about conscious content
C) was experimental and evolutionary
D) was elementistic and associationistic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 40 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
What was Brentano's distinction between crucial and systematic experiments?
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k this deck
21
What did Brentano mean with his contrast between intrinsic completeness and immanent objectivity?
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22
Describe what Stumpf meant by phenomenology.
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23
What did the Würzburgers mean by "determining tendency" or set?
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24
How did Hering propose that inorganic matter can exhibit memory?
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25
For what purpose did Ebbinghaus invent nonsense syllables?
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26
What were Ebbinghaus's main methods for the experimental study of memory?
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k this deck
27
Describe Ebbinghaus's forgetting curve.
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28
What was the most significant finding of the experiments performed by the Würzburg school?
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k this deck
29
To what extent did the "new" psychology of the late nineteenth century display Muenzinger's eight trends?
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k this deck
30
Why did McDougall call his psychology hormic or purposive?
Viewable by instructor only
Answers to short answer questions for Chapter 7: The Contemporary Scene in the Age of Wundt
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Unlock for access to all 40 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Contrast Brentano's act psychology with Wundt's system.
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k this deck
32
What were Jost's contributions to the psychology of memory?
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k this deck
33
How is Hering's opponent-process theory consistent with the all-or-none law?
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k this deck
34
What do the following terms mean: remote associations, overlearning, retroactive inhibition, and reminiscence?
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
What is the coefficient of correlation, and what role has it played in psychology?
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k this deck
36
What did Brentano and McDougall mean by "act psychology?"
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37
What were the contributions of E. Müller's students: Jost, Katz, Ach, Jaensch, and Rubin?
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38
Summarize Hering's color theory.
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39
What were the main contributions of Ebbinghaus's experiments on memory?
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40
List some of the important findings of students at the Würzburg school.
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