Deck 5: Cognitive Development During the First Three Years

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Question
Lucy has no memories about her early life.Her first memories are of preschool when she was 3 years old.This inability to recall early events may be due to

A)repression according to Freud.
B)lack of brain development according to the neurological perspective.
C)lack of language.
D)all of the above
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Question
Classically conditioned learning will fade or become extinct if it is not

A)punished.
B)reinforced.
C)ignored.
D)dishabituated.
Question
Which of the following is NOT a concern of the HOME items assessment?

A)It may be less culturally relevant in non-Western homes.
B)It is correlational data and may not have a direct effect on intelligence.
C)There may be a genetic influence at work in the highly rated homes.
D)Examiners may bias the results by the way they ask the questions.
Question
HOME scores demonstrated that all of the following were positively related to high intelligence in children EXCEPT

A)mother's ability to create an environment that fostered learning.
B)responsiveness of parents to children.
C)access to stimulating play materials.
D)number of children in the family.
Question
Which approach looks at the quality of cognitive functioning at different stages of life?

A)Psychometric
B)Piagetian
C)Information-processing
D)Behaviorist
Question
Which approach attempts to measure intelligence quantitatively?

A)Psychometric
B)Piagetian
C)Information-processing
D)Cognitive
Question
A systematic process of providing therapeutic and educational services to families that need help in meeting young children's developmental needs is called

A)natural child-rearing.
B)infant support.
C)early intervention.
D)developmental priming.
Question
The Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development produce a(n)

A)IQ score.
B)report of mental,motor,and behavioral development.
C)developmental assessment that correlates with adult abilities.
D)measure of reflex development.
Question
Which of the following children would be MOST likely to be assessed with the Bayley III Scales of Infant and Toddler Development?

A)A newborn who suffered anoxia during delivery
B)A 4 1/2-year-old who shows high intelligence
C)A 2-year-old who has not yet spoken any words
D)A 3-year-old who developed language at an early age
Question
HOME examiners rate parents on all of the following EXCEPT

A)expressions of affection.
B)number of books in the home.
C)parent's involvement in children's play.
D)feeding methods.
Question
When an infant is classically conditioned,he or she learns

A)a relationship between two stimulus events.
B)to stop responding to an unimportant,repetitive stimulus.
C)to associate a certain behavior with a reward.
D)to avoid punishment by crying.
Question
Which of the following is NOT one of the Bayley III test scales of infant and toddler development?

A)Alertness
B)Motor
C)Mental
D)Behavior rating
Question
Developmental tests measure mostly sensory and motor abilities,whereas intelligence tests used for older children also measure __________ abilities.

A)behavioral
B)emotional
C)verbal
D)arousal
Question
When a child learns to behave in a specific way in order to obtain a specific result,what is occurring?

A)Habituation
B)Classical conditioning
C)Operant conditioning
D)Social learning
Question
Susie learned to sit on the floor and cry until she is given a piece of candy.This is an example of

A)habituation.
B)classical conditioning.
C)operant conditioning.
D)social learning.
Question
Developmental test scores obtained during infancy are

A)very reliable and should be administered to all infants when they visit their pediatrician.
B)strong predictors of adult IQ.
C)good predictors of childhood IQ.
D)useful to detect early sensory and neurological deficits.
Question
HOME is an instrument for evaluating the impact of a child's home environment for

A)socioeconomic status.
B)emotional health.
C)intellectual development.
D)future career success.
Question
Little Mark plays with a balloon that pops in his face and frightens him.The next time he sees a balloon,he starts to cry.The type of learning illustrated in this example is called

A)habituation.
B)operant conditioning.
C)classical conditioning.
D)latent learning.
Question
At Tiny Tots day care,the caregivers have found that if the infants in their care repeat an action over and over again they will

A)not repeat the action in several weeks.
B)always repeat the action several weeks later.
C)often repeat the action several weeks later.
D)repeat the action if it was practiced with their mother.
Question
Young infants' memory is specifically linked to a particular cue.At what age will children repeat a learned behavior without the original cue being available?

A)3 to 4 months
B)4 to 6 months
C)9 to 12 months
D)After the first year
Question
Meredith watches her mother pour water out of a glass into the sink.The next day,at the beach,Meredith pours water from a cup into a pail.Meredith is engaging in

A)invisible imitation.
B)visible imitation.
C)deferred imitation.
D)conservation.
Question
When Piaget's daughter,Lucienne,figured out how to remove a watch chain from a box by widening the opening and opened and closed her mouth to signify this,she had reached what substage?

A)Substage 2-primary circular
B)Substage 4-coordination of secondary schemes
C)Substage 5-tertiary circular
D)Substage 6-mental combinations
Question
The Piagetian approach focuses on

A)qualitative changes in cognition.
B)quantitative differences in intelligence.
C)establishing norms for intelligence tests.
D)the relationship of brain development to speed and function.
Question
Piaget called organized patterns of behavior

A)operations.
B)schemes.
C)gestalts.
D)circular reactions.
Question
At 21 months of age,Pierre has acquired a symbolic thinking system.Which substage of the sensorimotor stage is he in?

A)Substage 3-secondary circular
B)Substage 4-coordination of secondary schemes
C)Substage 5-tertiary circular
D)Substage 6-mental combinations
Question
The first stage in Piaget's cognitive theory is

A)sensorimotor.
B)preoperational .
C)concrete operational.
D)formal operational.
Question
Which of the following do infants NOT do during the first month of life according to Piaget?

A)Behave reflexively
B)Begin to initiate activity
C)Develop primary circular reactions
D)Make acquired adaptations with mental representations
Question
Which of the following defines Piaget's concept of circular reactions?

A)They are primitive reflexes in infants.
B)Circular reactions set up continuous cycles of waking and sleeping.
C)They are processes that an infant reproduces after learning by chance.
D)Circular reactions are another form of habituation.
Question
Tertiary circular reactions involve

A)doing three things at once.
B)varying an action to see what will happen.
C)repeating a behavior at least three times.
D)manipulating symbols,including words.
Question
Diane loves to play peek-a-boo.Peek-a-boo is played in many diverse cultures using similar routines.Which of the following is NOT an important purpose of the game?

A)It helps babies master anxiety when their mothers are not around.
B)The game helps babies develop object permanence.
C)It creates anxiety that makes babies stronger.
D)It provides a social skill-the ability to take turns.
Question
According to Piaget,infants who repeat actions in order to get results outside their own bodies are engaging in

A)primary circular reactions.
B)secondary circular reactions.
C)deferred imitation.
D)sensorimotor conditioning.
Question
Marla finds that rubbing her face against the satin edge of her blanket feels good.She learns to repeat this action to get a pleasurable sensation.According to Piaget,she has acquired a(n)

A)adaptation.
B)circular reaction.
C)unconditioned response.
D)symbolic representation.
Question
Cody is 3 months old and has been given a pacifier to suck on for the first time.Since he finds sucking on the pacifier to be pleasurable,Cody repeats this activity whenever possible.According to Piaget,Cody is in the __________ substage of the sensorimotor period.

A)first
B)second
C)third
D)tertiary
Question
Erica,who is 10 months old,is trying to solve the problem of obtaining a toy on a high shelf.According to Piaget,if she has reached the fourth substage of the sensorimotor stage,which of the following is most likely to occur?

A)She will quickly lose interest in the problem and forget the toy.
B)She will choose a strategy to attempt to get the toy and persist with that strategy even if it fails repeatedly.
C)She will become frustrated and simply cry until she falls asleep.
D)She will attempt a strategy that was successful in obtaining a book on a high shelf in the past.
Question
According to some research,a newborn who smiles at a smiling adult is engaging in

A)invisible imitation.
B)visible imitation.
C)deferred imitation.
D)circular reaction.
Question
Jake has developed the ability to put his actions into memory.This ability is called

A)permanence.
B)representational ability.
C)maturity.
D)imitation.
Question
According to research cited in the text,children become capable of deferred imitation

A) at an older age than Piaget suggested.
B)at a much younger age than Piaget suggested.
C)at the age Piaget suggested.
D)minutes after birth.
Question
A child hits a drum with different kinds of objects in order to make different sounds.According to Piaget,this child is exhibiting

A)a variability scheme.
B)classical conditioning.
C)a tertiary circular reaction.
D)object permanence.
Question
The ability to mentally represent and remember objects and events is

A)object permanence.
B)representational ability.
C)developed early in infancy.
D)not developed until Piaget's concrete operations stage.
Question
Sensorimotor Substage 6 is noted for the acquisition of

A)adaptations.
B)causality.
C)symbols.
D)schemes.
Question
Babies who habituate rapidly are

A)highly distractible.
B)likely to be more intelligent.
C)stronger in nonverbal than verbal abilities.
D)perceptually differentiated.
Question
Which of the following is NOT mentioned in your textbook as one of the indicators of an infant's ability to process information?

A)Habituation/dishabituation
B)Visual preference
C)Cross-modal transfer
D)Auditory preferences
Question
An important function of habituation seems to be

A)to increase attention to repetitive stimuli.
B)the conservation of energy.
C)to prevent important stimuli from overstimulating a baby.
D)to increase the rate of sucking responses.
Question
Research on visual-tasks memory demonstrates that very young infants

A)pay more attention to familiar patterns than to new ones.
B)pay more attention to new patterns than to familiar ones.
C)cannot discriminate new patterns from familiar patterns.
D)show no consistency in the attention they give to new and familiar patterns.
Question
Lukas was shown two toys at the same time.He looked for a short time at one and then turned to look at the other.This quick shift in attention shows that Lucas has good

A)habituation.
B)visual-recognition memory.
C)cross-modal transfer.
D)attention recovery.
Question
The realization that a person or object continues to exist even when out of sight is called

A)representational ability.
B)primary circular reaction.
C)coordination of secondary schemes.
D)object permanence.
Question
Michelle is shown a new mobile,and the amount of time she spends studying it is measured.This is a technique of which approach to intellectual development?

A)Behaviorist
B)Information processing
C)Piagetian
D)Psychometric
Question
Which of the following describes the correct status of Piaget's theory?

A)It has continued to be accepted with modifications.
B)Later research has revealed this theory to be deeply flawed.
C)Piaget's theory has stimulated little research.
D)Piaget's theory was influential only in the early 1950s.
Question
Infants and toddlers seem to be __________ cognitively competent and to show signs of conceptual thought earlier than Piaget thought.

A)less
B)more
C)far more
D)far less
Question
Lenny searches for a toy that he saw his mother hide,first behind her back and then under a pillow.Lenny has acquired

A)object permanence.
B)sharp vision.
C)persistence.
D)symbolic thought.
Question
Which of the following is NOT one of the newer approaches to studying cognitive development?

A)Information-processing approach
B)Psychometric approach
C)Cognitive neuroscience approach
D)Social-contextual approach
Question
Habituation studies provide information on all of the following EXCEPT

A)intelligence.
B)preference for complexity.
C)sophisticated play.
D)strength of sucking reflex.
Question
A child is asked to reach into a box while blindfolded and hold a small rubber duck.Later,the child is shown several pictures of different toys,including the duck,and asked to choose the one that was handled earlier.If the duck picture is chosen,this would suggest that the child is capable of

A)polymodal attention.
B)habituation.
C)cross-model transference.
D)novelty avoidance.
Question
Researchers study infants' information processing by considering all of the following EXCEPT

A)visual preferences.
B)habituation time.
C)cross-modal transference.
D)language development.
Question
A baby stops sucking to listen to a tone.Later,after the tone has been repeated frequently,the infant ignores it.This is an example of

A)operant conditioning.
B)classical conditioning.
C)habituation.
D)boredom.
Question
The amount of time a baby spends looking at different sights is a measure of visual preference that is based on the ability to

A)make visual distinctions.
B)have vision loss.
C)visually habituate.
D)have visual distortions.
Question
In an experiment,an infant hears a particular sound.The next day,the infant is less likely to respond to that sound than is another infant who has never heard it before.The results of this experiment suggest that infants possess the capacity for

A)cross-modal transference.
B)tertiary circular reactions.
C)representational ability.
D)habituation.
Question
Length of time spent looking at a circular pattern,as compared with a square pattern,is called

A)habituation.
B)visual-recognition memory.
C)visual preference.
D)attention recovery.
Question
Which cognitive characteristic in infants seems to be generally associated with high intelligence in middle childhood?

A)Low polymodal attention levels
B)The ability to devote more attention to familiar stimuli
C)Early appearance of the sensorimotor stage
D)Rapid processing of perceptual information
Question
A baby,who has been given 100 presentations of a high-pitched tone,no longer reacts to the sound by stopping the sucking response.When a low-pitched tone is presented,the baby does stop sucking.This cessation of sucking caused by the new tone is called

A)dishabituation.
B)disinhibition.
C)nonadaptation.
D)a conditioned response.
Question
Infants first communicate their emotions by ______.

A) crying
B) babbling
C) imitating sounds
D) using words
Question
Symbolic gestures,such as blowing to mean hot,or sniffing to mean flower,emerge __________ babies say their first words.

A)before
B)about the same time
C)after
D)when
Question
A baby who says "da-da-da-da" is

A)babbling.
B)using telegraphic speech.
C)using a holophrase.
D)using a language acquisition device.
Question
The basic sounds of an infant's native language are called

A)graphemes.
B)phonemes.
C)phonetics.
D)morphemes.
Question
Implicit memory seems to develop ________ explicit memory.

A)later than
B)earlier than
C)about the same time as
D)None of these
Question
The concept of guided participation was inspired by the theory of the zone of proximal development,which was postulated by

A)Jean Piaget.
B)Lev Vygotsky.
C)Urie Bronfenbrenner.
D)Noam Chomsky.
Question
Prelinguistic speech communicates

A)ideas.
B)emotions.
C)symbols.
D)words.
Question
Rachel hears her father say "ouch!" when he accidentally hits his hand with a hammer.For the next several hours,Rachel deliberately tries to imitate the sound of the word ouch.According to the text,approximately how old is Rachel?

A)At least 24 to 28 months old
B)At least 16 to17 months old
C)At least 9 to10 months old
D)At least 4 to 6 months old
Question
Many aspects of cognition are believed to be under the control of or located in which area of the brain?

A)Cerebellum
B)Prefrontal cortex
C)Medial temporal lobe
D)Striatum
Question
Which of the following is NOT a long-term memory system mentioned in the textbook?

A)Episodic memory
B)Implicit memory
C)Explicit memory
D)None of these
Question
According to research cited in the text,when do babies become able to distinguish different speech sounds such as mother speaking two langauges?

A)Before birth
B)3 weeks after birth
C)6 weeks after birth
D)12 weeks after birth
Question
Predictions about an infant's intelligence appear to be related to how infants process information but this information does not take into account the

A)physical health of the infant.
B)parents' genetic background.
C)education of the infant's parents.
D)All of these
Question
Ten-month-old Nathan has just been told goodbye by his grandparents who are now leaving in their car.Nathan waves bye-bye to them with his left arm.Nathan's attempt to communicate with his grandparents is called a

A)conventional social gesture.
B)representational gesture.
C)symbolic gesture.
D)telegraphic gesture.
Question
Some researchers propose that infants may be born with or acquire very early reasoning abilities that help them make sense of the information they encounter.These abilities are called

A)innate learning mechanisms.
B)at-birth learning abilities.
C)preprogrammed learning skills.
D)information-processing abilities.
Question
Babbling,cooing,and crying are known as

A)motherese.
B)prelinguistic speech.
C)linguistic speech.
D)nonsymbolic speech.
Question
__________ is the principle "that allows people to predict and control their world."

A)Innate learning
B)Violation of expectations
C)Causality
D)Information-processing ability
Question
A communication system based on words and grammar is called

A)syntax.
B)linguistics.
C)language.
D)social referencing.
Question
Steven is 8 months old and has begun to produce repetitive strings of vowel and consonant sounds such as "pa-pa-pa-pa." According to the text,this stage of prespeech language development is called

A)cooing.
B)babbling.
C)intonation expression.
D)protolanguage.
Question
At about 3 months of age,infants

A)"try out" sounds from all human languages.
B)produce sounds that match the ones they hear.
C)babble strings of consonants.
D)deliberately imitate sounds with linguistic meaning.
Question
The study of the brain structures that govern thinking and memory is called

A)assessment of brain stimulus.
B)cognitive neuroscience.
C)mental stimulus evaluation.
D)neurological assessment.
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Deck 5: Cognitive Development During the First Three Years
1
Lucy has no memories about her early life.Her first memories are of preschool when she was 3 years old.This inability to recall early events may be due to

A)repression according to Freud.
B)lack of brain development according to the neurological perspective.
C)lack of language.
D)all of the above
D
2
Classically conditioned learning will fade or become extinct if it is not

A)punished.
B)reinforced.
C)ignored.
D)dishabituated.
B
3
Which of the following is NOT a concern of the HOME items assessment?

A)It may be less culturally relevant in non-Western homes.
B)It is correlational data and may not have a direct effect on intelligence.
C)There may be a genetic influence at work in the highly rated homes.
D)Examiners may bias the results by the way they ask the questions.
D
4
HOME scores demonstrated that all of the following were positively related to high intelligence in children EXCEPT

A)mother's ability to create an environment that fostered learning.
B)responsiveness of parents to children.
C)access to stimulating play materials.
D)number of children in the family.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Which approach looks at the quality of cognitive functioning at different stages of life?

A)Psychometric
B)Piagetian
C)Information-processing
D)Behaviorist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Which approach attempts to measure intelligence quantitatively?

A)Psychometric
B)Piagetian
C)Information-processing
D)Cognitive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
A systematic process of providing therapeutic and educational services to families that need help in meeting young children's developmental needs is called

A)natural child-rearing.
B)infant support.
C)early intervention.
D)developmental priming.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development produce a(n)

A)IQ score.
B)report of mental,motor,and behavioral development.
C)developmental assessment that correlates with adult abilities.
D)measure of reflex development.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Which of the following children would be MOST likely to be assessed with the Bayley III Scales of Infant and Toddler Development?

A)A newborn who suffered anoxia during delivery
B)A 4 1/2-year-old who shows high intelligence
C)A 2-year-old who has not yet spoken any words
D)A 3-year-old who developed language at an early age
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
HOME examiners rate parents on all of the following EXCEPT

A)expressions of affection.
B)number of books in the home.
C)parent's involvement in children's play.
D)feeding methods.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
When an infant is classically conditioned,he or she learns

A)a relationship between two stimulus events.
B)to stop responding to an unimportant,repetitive stimulus.
C)to associate a certain behavior with a reward.
D)to avoid punishment by crying.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which of the following is NOT one of the Bayley III test scales of infant and toddler development?

A)Alertness
B)Motor
C)Mental
D)Behavior rating
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Developmental tests measure mostly sensory and motor abilities,whereas intelligence tests used for older children also measure __________ abilities.

A)behavioral
B)emotional
C)verbal
D)arousal
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
When a child learns to behave in a specific way in order to obtain a specific result,what is occurring?

A)Habituation
B)Classical conditioning
C)Operant conditioning
D)Social learning
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Susie learned to sit on the floor and cry until she is given a piece of candy.This is an example of

A)habituation.
B)classical conditioning.
C)operant conditioning.
D)social learning.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Developmental test scores obtained during infancy are

A)very reliable and should be administered to all infants when they visit their pediatrician.
B)strong predictors of adult IQ.
C)good predictors of childhood IQ.
D)useful to detect early sensory and neurological deficits.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
HOME is an instrument for evaluating the impact of a child's home environment for

A)socioeconomic status.
B)emotional health.
C)intellectual development.
D)future career success.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Little Mark plays with a balloon that pops in his face and frightens him.The next time he sees a balloon,he starts to cry.The type of learning illustrated in this example is called

A)habituation.
B)operant conditioning.
C)classical conditioning.
D)latent learning.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
At Tiny Tots day care,the caregivers have found that if the infants in their care repeat an action over and over again they will

A)not repeat the action in several weeks.
B)always repeat the action several weeks later.
C)often repeat the action several weeks later.
D)repeat the action if it was practiced with their mother.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Young infants' memory is specifically linked to a particular cue.At what age will children repeat a learned behavior without the original cue being available?

A)3 to 4 months
B)4 to 6 months
C)9 to 12 months
D)After the first year
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Meredith watches her mother pour water out of a glass into the sink.The next day,at the beach,Meredith pours water from a cup into a pail.Meredith is engaging in

A)invisible imitation.
B)visible imitation.
C)deferred imitation.
D)conservation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
When Piaget's daughter,Lucienne,figured out how to remove a watch chain from a box by widening the opening and opened and closed her mouth to signify this,she had reached what substage?

A)Substage 2-primary circular
B)Substage 4-coordination of secondary schemes
C)Substage 5-tertiary circular
D)Substage 6-mental combinations
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The Piagetian approach focuses on

A)qualitative changes in cognition.
B)quantitative differences in intelligence.
C)establishing norms for intelligence tests.
D)the relationship of brain development to speed and function.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Piaget called organized patterns of behavior

A)operations.
B)schemes.
C)gestalts.
D)circular reactions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
At 21 months of age,Pierre has acquired a symbolic thinking system.Which substage of the sensorimotor stage is he in?

A)Substage 3-secondary circular
B)Substage 4-coordination of secondary schemes
C)Substage 5-tertiary circular
D)Substage 6-mental combinations
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
The first stage in Piaget's cognitive theory is

A)sensorimotor.
B)preoperational .
C)concrete operational.
D)formal operational.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Which of the following do infants NOT do during the first month of life according to Piaget?

A)Behave reflexively
B)Begin to initiate activity
C)Develop primary circular reactions
D)Make acquired adaptations with mental representations
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which of the following defines Piaget's concept of circular reactions?

A)They are primitive reflexes in infants.
B)Circular reactions set up continuous cycles of waking and sleeping.
C)They are processes that an infant reproduces after learning by chance.
D)Circular reactions are another form of habituation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Tertiary circular reactions involve

A)doing three things at once.
B)varying an action to see what will happen.
C)repeating a behavior at least three times.
D)manipulating symbols,including words.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Diane loves to play peek-a-boo.Peek-a-boo is played in many diverse cultures using similar routines.Which of the following is NOT an important purpose of the game?

A)It helps babies master anxiety when their mothers are not around.
B)The game helps babies develop object permanence.
C)It creates anxiety that makes babies stronger.
D)It provides a social skill-the ability to take turns.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
According to Piaget,infants who repeat actions in order to get results outside their own bodies are engaging in

A)primary circular reactions.
B)secondary circular reactions.
C)deferred imitation.
D)sensorimotor conditioning.
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32
Marla finds that rubbing her face against the satin edge of her blanket feels good.She learns to repeat this action to get a pleasurable sensation.According to Piaget,she has acquired a(n)

A)adaptation.
B)circular reaction.
C)unconditioned response.
D)symbolic representation.
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33
Cody is 3 months old and has been given a pacifier to suck on for the first time.Since he finds sucking on the pacifier to be pleasurable,Cody repeats this activity whenever possible.According to Piaget,Cody is in the __________ substage of the sensorimotor period.

A)first
B)second
C)third
D)tertiary
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34
Erica,who is 10 months old,is trying to solve the problem of obtaining a toy on a high shelf.According to Piaget,if she has reached the fourth substage of the sensorimotor stage,which of the following is most likely to occur?

A)She will quickly lose interest in the problem and forget the toy.
B)She will choose a strategy to attempt to get the toy and persist with that strategy even if it fails repeatedly.
C)She will become frustrated and simply cry until she falls asleep.
D)She will attempt a strategy that was successful in obtaining a book on a high shelf in the past.
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35
According to some research,a newborn who smiles at a smiling adult is engaging in

A)invisible imitation.
B)visible imitation.
C)deferred imitation.
D)circular reaction.
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36
Jake has developed the ability to put his actions into memory.This ability is called

A)permanence.
B)representational ability.
C)maturity.
D)imitation.
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37
According to research cited in the text,children become capable of deferred imitation

A) at an older age than Piaget suggested.
B)at a much younger age than Piaget suggested.
C)at the age Piaget suggested.
D)minutes after birth.
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38
A child hits a drum with different kinds of objects in order to make different sounds.According to Piaget,this child is exhibiting

A)a variability scheme.
B)classical conditioning.
C)a tertiary circular reaction.
D)object permanence.
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39
The ability to mentally represent and remember objects and events is

A)object permanence.
B)representational ability.
C)developed early in infancy.
D)not developed until Piaget's concrete operations stage.
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40
Sensorimotor Substage 6 is noted for the acquisition of

A)adaptations.
B)causality.
C)symbols.
D)schemes.
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41
Babies who habituate rapidly are

A)highly distractible.
B)likely to be more intelligent.
C)stronger in nonverbal than verbal abilities.
D)perceptually differentiated.
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42
Which of the following is NOT mentioned in your textbook as one of the indicators of an infant's ability to process information?

A)Habituation/dishabituation
B)Visual preference
C)Cross-modal transfer
D)Auditory preferences
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43
An important function of habituation seems to be

A)to increase attention to repetitive stimuli.
B)the conservation of energy.
C)to prevent important stimuli from overstimulating a baby.
D)to increase the rate of sucking responses.
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44
Research on visual-tasks memory demonstrates that very young infants

A)pay more attention to familiar patterns than to new ones.
B)pay more attention to new patterns than to familiar ones.
C)cannot discriminate new patterns from familiar patterns.
D)show no consistency in the attention they give to new and familiar patterns.
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45
Lukas was shown two toys at the same time.He looked for a short time at one and then turned to look at the other.This quick shift in attention shows that Lucas has good

A)habituation.
B)visual-recognition memory.
C)cross-modal transfer.
D)attention recovery.
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46
The realization that a person or object continues to exist even when out of sight is called

A)representational ability.
B)primary circular reaction.
C)coordination of secondary schemes.
D)object permanence.
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47
Michelle is shown a new mobile,and the amount of time she spends studying it is measured.This is a technique of which approach to intellectual development?

A)Behaviorist
B)Information processing
C)Piagetian
D)Psychometric
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48
Which of the following describes the correct status of Piaget's theory?

A)It has continued to be accepted with modifications.
B)Later research has revealed this theory to be deeply flawed.
C)Piaget's theory has stimulated little research.
D)Piaget's theory was influential only in the early 1950s.
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49
Infants and toddlers seem to be __________ cognitively competent and to show signs of conceptual thought earlier than Piaget thought.

A)less
B)more
C)far more
D)far less
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50
Lenny searches for a toy that he saw his mother hide,first behind her back and then under a pillow.Lenny has acquired

A)object permanence.
B)sharp vision.
C)persistence.
D)symbolic thought.
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51
Which of the following is NOT one of the newer approaches to studying cognitive development?

A)Information-processing approach
B)Psychometric approach
C)Cognitive neuroscience approach
D)Social-contextual approach
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52
Habituation studies provide information on all of the following EXCEPT

A)intelligence.
B)preference for complexity.
C)sophisticated play.
D)strength of sucking reflex.
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53
A child is asked to reach into a box while blindfolded and hold a small rubber duck.Later,the child is shown several pictures of different toys,including the duck,and asked to choose the one that was handled earlier.If the duck picture is chosen,this would suggest that the child is capable of

A)polymodal attention.
B)habituation.
C)cross-model transference.
D)novelty avoidance.
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54
Researchers study infants' information processing by considering all of the following EXCEPT

A)visual preferences.
B)habituation time.
C)cross-modal transference.
D)language development.
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55
A baby stops sucking to listen to a tone.Later,after the tone has been repeated frequently,the infant ignores it.This is an example of

A)operant conditioning.
B)classical conditioning.
C)habituation.
D)boredom.
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56
The amount of time a baby spends looking at different sights is a measure of visual preference that is based on the ability to

A)make visual distinctions.
B)have vision loss.
C)visually habituate.
D)have visual distortions.
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57
In an experiment,an infant hears a particular sound.The next day,the infant is less likely to respond to that sound than is another infant who has never heard it before.The results of this experiment suggest that infants possess the capacity for

A)cross-modal transference.
B)tertiary circular reactions.
C)representational ability.
D)habituation.
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58
Length of time spent looking at a circular pattern,as compared with a square pattern,is called

A)habituation.
B)visual-recognition memory.
C)visual preference.
D)attention recovery.
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59
Which cognitive characteristic in infants seems to be generally associated with high intelligence in middle childhood?

A)Low polymodal attention levels
B)The ability to devote more attention to familiar stimuli
C)Early appearance of the sensorimotor stage
D)Rapid processing of perceptual information
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60
A baby,who has been given 100 presentations of a high-pitched tone,no longer reacts to the sound by stopping the sucking response.When a low-pitched tone is presented,the baby does stop sucking.This cessation of sucking caused by the new tone is called

A)dishabituation.
B)disinhibition.
C)nonadaptation.
D)a conditioned response.
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61
Infants first communicate their emotions by ______.

A) crying
B) babbling
C) imitating sounds
D) using words
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62
Symbolic gestures,such as blowing to mean hot,or sniffing to mean flower,emerge __________ babies say their first words.

A)before
B)about the same time
C)after
D)when
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63
A baby who says "da-da-da-da" is

A)babbling.
B)using telegraphic speech.
C)using a holophrase.
D)using a language acquisition device.
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64
The basic sounds of an infant's native language are called

A)graphemes.
B)phonemes.
C)phonetics.
D)morphemes.
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65
Implicit memory seems to develop ________ explicit memory.

A)later than
B)earlier than
C)about the same time as
D)None of these
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66
The concept of guided participation was inspired by the theory of the zone of proximal development,which was postulated by

A)Jean Piaget.
B)Lev Vygotsky.
C)Urie Bronfenbrenner.
D)Noam Chomsky.
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67
Prelinguistic speech communicates

A)ideas.
B)emotions.
C)symbols.
D)words.
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68
Rachel hears her father say "ouch!" when he accidentally hits his hand with a hammer.For the next several hours,Rachel deliberately tries to imitate the sound of the word ouch.According to the text,approximately how old is Rachel?

A)At least 24 to 28 months old
B)At least 16 to17 months old
C)At least 9 to10 months old
D)At least 4 to 6 months old
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69
Many aspects of cognition are believed to be under the control of or located in which area of the brain?

A)Cerebellum
B)Prefrontal cortex
C)Medial temporal lobe
D)Striatum
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70
Which of the following is NOT a long-term memory system mentioned in the textbook?

A)Episodic memory
B)Implicit memory
C)Explicit memory
D)None of these
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71
According to research cited in the text,when do babies become able to distinguish different speech sounds such as mother speaking two langauges?

A)Before birth
B)3 weeks after birth
C)6 weeks after birth
D)12 weeks after birth
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72
Predictions about an infant's intelligence appear to be related to how infants process information but this information does not take into account the

A)physical health of the infant.
B)parents' genetic background.
C)education of the infant's parents.
D)All of these
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73
Ten-month-old Nathan has just been told goodbye by his grandparents who are now leaving in their car.Nathan waves bye-bye to them with his left arm.Nathan's attempt to communicate with his grandparents is called a

A)conventional social gesture.
B)representational gesture.
C)symbolic gesture.
D)telegraphic gesture.
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74
Some researchers propose that infants may be born with or acquire very early reasoning abilities that help them make sense of the information they encounter.These abilities are called

A)innate learning mechanisms.
B)at-birth learning abilities.
C)preprogrammed learning skills.
D)information-processing abilities.
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75
Babbling,cooing,and crying are known as

A)motherese.
B)prelinguistic speech.
C)linguistic speech.
D)nonsymbolic speech.
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76
__________ is the principle "that allows people to predict and control their world."

A)Innate learning
B)Violation of expectations
C)Causality
D)Information-processing ability
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77
A communication system based on words and grammar is called

A)syntax.
B)linguistics.
C)language.
D)social referencing.
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78
Steven is 8 months old and has begun to produce repetitive strings of vowel and consonant sounds such as "pa-pa-pa-pa." According to the text,this stage of prespeech language development is called

A)cooing.
B)babbling.
C)intonation expression.
D)protolanguage.
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79
At about 3 months of age,infants

A)"try out" sounds from all human languages.
B)produce sounds that match the ones they hear.
C)babble strings of consonants.
D)deliberately imitate sounds with linguistic meaning.
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80
The study of the brain structures that govern thinking and memory is called

A)assessment of brain stimulus.
B)cognitive neuroscience.
C)mental stimulus evaluation.
D)neurological assessment.
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