Deck 4: Social Cognition: Thinking About

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Question
Which of the following examples best shows how expectations (i.e.,schemas)can be self-fulfilling prophecies?

A) Participants primed to think of the elderly actually walk slower down a hallway.
B) Teachers who expect that some children will do well in school actually enable those children to perform better.
C) People are more likely to apply the trait of dependence to a female character in a novel than to a male character.
D) A schema that is frequently activated will be more likely to be applied to a new stimulus than one that is seldom activated.
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Question
Construal level theory predicts that we think about events distant in time or space in ________ terms,and that we think about events nearer in time or space in ________ terms.

A) abstract; concrete
B) concrete; abstract
C) negative; positive
D) positive; negative
Question
When judgments or decisions are influenced by the way in which information is presented,this is called a

A) pluralistic-ignorance effect.
B) biased-information effect.
C) framing effect.
D) processing failure.
Question
Liam,the photography editor of a national magazine,is looking through a series of pictures to find a model who seems strong and competent.Given research findings on physical appearance and snap judgments,Liam should select a model whose face has

A) large eyes.
B) high eyebrows.
C) an angular chin.
D) a high forehead.
Question
According to the textbook,all the following factors can decrease the accuracy of secondhand information EXCEPT

A) the desire to entertain.
B) ideological distortions.
C) distortion in the media.
D) base-rate information.
Question
According to the textbook's description of positive and negative framing,which of the following statements would be most likely to influence someone NOT to undergo a risky surgery?

A) Ninety out of a hundred people who have this surgery survive.
B) Ten out of a hundred people who have this surgery die.
C) The odds are very high that you will survive this surgery.
D) Of 100 people who have had this surgery, 68 were still alive after a year.
Question
Which of the following news headlines would be most likely to make a lasting impression on readers?

A) Baby Elephant Takes First Steps!
B) Stocks Plummet on Release of Dire Economic Forecast!
C) The Prince Marries!
D) Navy Helps Giant Sea Turtles!
Question
Janet means well when she tells her daughter,"Please don't ever date a boy with a tattoo.People with tattoos are dangerous.A girl down the street dated a boy with a huge tattoo and he beat her up." If Janet knows other people with tattoos who are not dangerous but she holds these beliefs strongly and tells this particular story anyway,she may be engaging in

A) secondhand extremism.
B) ideological distortion.
C) the embellishment fallacy.
D) heuristic processing.
Question
Under what circumstances is someone more likely to fear victimization as a result of watching a lot of television?

A) if he or she has children
B) if he or she tends to be alone when watching television
C) if he or she lives in a high-crime area
D) if he or she lives in a low-crime area
Question
________ is the study of how people think about the social world and arrive at judgments that help them interpret the past,understand the present,and predict the future.

A) Social cognition
B) Social psychology
C) Cognitive psychology
D) Sociology
Question
The textbook describes research by Todorov and colleagues in which participants rated a large number of faces along different personality dimensions.Which two dimensions stood out as the main dimensions used in these ratings?

A) happiness or sadness and fear
B) trustworthiness and physical attractiveness
C) trustworthiness and dominance
D) happiness and physical attractiveness
Question
What are two essential components of a self-fulfilling prophesy?

A) expectations about what a person is like and remembering the person in ways consistent with the expectations
B) expectations about what a person is like and behaving toward the person in ways consistent with the expectations
C) expectations about what you are like and remembering other people in ways consistent with how you see yourself
D) expectations about what you are like and behaving toward other people in ways consistent with how you treat yourself
Question
In one study,elementary school teachers were told that aptitude tests indicated that certain students would "bloom" intellectually in the coming year,though in reality these students' names were chosen randomly.At the end of the year,the selected students indeed performed better on aptitude tests compared to other students.This phenomenon is called ________ and is likely driven by ________.

A) a self-fulfilling prophecy; teacher behavior
B) pluralistic ignorance; student ability
C) a self-fulfilling prophecy; student ability
D) pluralistic ignorance; teacher behavior
Question
Many members of a street gang believe privately that their initiation process is too harsh and dangerous.However,they do not express these beliefs because they assume that everyone else thinks the initiation process is just fine.This scenario exemplifies

A) pluralistic ignorance.
B) group rationalization.
C) counterfactual conformity.
D) the framing effect.
Question
The phenomenon of ________ occurs when people are reluctant to express their misgivings about a perceived group norm.Unfortunately,their reluctance reinforces a false norm.

A) group apprehension
B) normative consensus
C) pluralistic ignorance
D) the nonrepresentativeness heuristic
Question
Which of the following is the best example of a positively framed statement?

A) How much would you pay to replace all the trees that have been lost?
B) Just 10 percent of people who take this medication will show side effects.
C) This meat is only 25 percent fat.
D) This brand of condom has an overall 75 percent success rate.
Question
Primacy effects often result from

A) a tendency for information presented early on to strongly influence a final decision.
B) strong emotions that disrupt the memory of information presented early on.
C) the belief that information encountered early on is particularly accurate.
D) a failure to engage in schematic processing.
Question
One of the most pervasive sources of distortion in secondhand accounts is

A) schematic vigilance.
B) recovered memories.
C) the desire to entertain.
D) a shortage of accurate information.
Question
Lauren is an attractive woman.She has large round eyes; a large forehead,high eyebrows,and a small,rounded chin.When other people first meet Lauren,what are they likely to think about her?

A) that she is naive
B) that she is competent
C) that she is dominant
D) that she is artistic
Question
According to construal level theory,if you are imagining working on your thesis in graduate school in several years,you are most likely to be thinking about

A) the specific details of how you will conduct the research.
B) how you will block out your time each day to get the work done.
C) the overall goal of how your thesis will help you to finish graduate school.
D) the type of computer you will use to write your thesis.
Question
The research in which participants who were primed with the words "gamble" or "wager" were more likely to place a bet best shows

A) the influence of schemas on memory.
B) that bottom-up processing can have a strong influence on our behaviors.
C) that schemas lead us to notice more information in our environment.
D) the influence of schemas on behavior.
Question
Barbara mostly chooses to watch news programs that support her political beliefs while avoiding news programs that may disagree with her views.This is an example of the

A) information bias.
B) hindsight bias.
C) misinformation effect.
D) motivated confirmation bias.
Question
Top-down processing is most useful

A) in clearly defined situations with very little ambiguity.
B) in situations where we have very little prior knowledge.
C) in ambiguous situations where we have at least some prior knowledge.
D) Top-down processing is rarely useful.
Question
When information that is ________ has the most influence on people,the primacy effect has occurred.When information that is ________ has the most influence on people,the recency effect has occurred.

A) experienced secondhand; experienced firsthand
B) experience firsthand; experienced secondhand
C) presented last; presented first
D) presented first; presented last
Question
Which of the following is true of schemas?

A) Schemas can be primed outside of conscious awareness.
B) Preexisting expectations are unrelated to schema activation.
C) Only stimuli that we are aware of can activate schemas.
D) Schemas influence thoughts and memories but not behavior.
Question
The confirmation bias makes what prediction about human behavior?

A) People will seek out supporting evidence for their beliefs.
B) People judge the probability of an event by how it is framed.
C) People will prefer sure wins over gambles.
D) People will prefer gambles over sure losses.
Question
When people form judgments about everyday events,the feature-matching process usually

A) leads to inaccurate perceptions of a given event.
B) leads people to select the right schema to encode a given event.
C) creates a mismatch between the features of a schema and a given event.
D) ensures that irrelevant similarities or superficial features of a given event will not influence a person's schema.
Question
According to construal level theory,________ framing impacts the ways we make judgments.

A) negative
B) positive
C) spin
D) temporal
Question
Ahmed went to the Museum of Modern Art during his vacation to New York City.Afterward,he remembers that he liked many pieces,but he can really only recall the details of the Andy Warhol painting he saw at the very end,as he was walking out the door.Ahmed is displaying

A) the primacy effect.
B) the recency effect.
C) spin framing.
D) positive framing.
Question
In her economics class,Nancy has been assigned to do a group project with Mario,whom she does not know well.Nancy's friend Tia knows Mario from another class and tells Nancy about him.According to the primacy effect,Nancy will form the best impression of Mario if Tia describes him in which way?

A) impulsive, critical, stubborn, intelligent, industrious, warm
B) critical, impulsive, stubborn, warm, industrious, intelligent
C) intelligent, industrious, warm, impulsive, critical, stubborn
D) stubborn, intelligent, critical, industrious, impulsive, warm
Question
In which situation would someone be more likely to perform well on a test?

A) when a professor schema is activated
B) when a soccer hooligan schema is activated
C) when a specific example of a supermodel is activated
D) when a specific example of a genius is activated
Question
In 1992,Ross Perot asked voters,"Should the president have the line-item veto to eliminate waste?" Ninety-seven percent said yes.When the question was asked in more neutral terms ("Should the president have the line-item veto or not?")only 57 percent agreed.This example best illustrates

A) the availability heuristic.
B) spin framing.
C) an order effect.
D) feature matching.
Question
Because schemas have been shown to influence ________,participants who are told to watch a video of a basketball game and count the number of times people in white shirts pass the ball might completely miss seeing a person in a black gorilla suit walk through the game.

A) behaviors
B) attention
C) bottom-up processes
D) priming
Question
Psychologists have discovered that people store information in coherent configurations called

A) information nodes.
B) schemas.
C) primes.
D) flashbulb memories.
Question
Procedures that momentarily activate a particular schema are referred to as

A) bottom-up procedures.
B) encoding.
C) top-down procedures.
D) priming.
Question
Jim watched a videotape of a woman talking about her life.Throughout the tape,the woman said many things that are stereotypical of a professor.She also said many things that are stereotypical of an engineer.Before watching the video,Jim was told that the woman was employed as an engineer.According to schema research,Jim will probably remember

A) an equal amount of engineer-consistent and professor-consistent information.
B) little information about the woman due to her gender.
C) more engineer-consistent information than professor-consistent information.
D) more professor-consistent utterances than engineer-consistent utterances.
Question
According to the textbook,which of the following is NOT directly associated with schema activation?

A) subliminal stimuli
B) recent activation of a schema
C) expectations
D) novel information
Question
The textbook describes a study in which one group of participants was asked to determine whether working out a day before a tennis match made the player more likely to win,and another group of participants was asked to determine whether working out a day before a tennis match made a player more likely to lose.Consistent with the confirmation bias,participants in the group examining a connection between working out and winning were most likely to search for information about how many players________ and then ________ their matches.

A) did not work out; lost
B) did not work out; won
C) worked out; lost
D) worked out; won
Question
You think of Jan as a very introverted person.The confirmation bias predicts that you will

A) look for examples of introverted behaviors in Jan.
B) look for examples of extroverted behaviors in Jan.
C) be likely to form a strong relationship with her.
D) be unlikely to form a strong relationship with her.
Question
Right before Jenny meets a new boyfriend for a dinner date,she finishes reading a novel about a husband who mistreats his wife.According to research on schemas,Jenny is likely to

A) break up with her boyfriend.
B) view her boyfriend's actions in a more negative light.
C) tell her boyfriend how much she loves him.
D) talk about how they should get married.
Question
People use the ________ heuristic when they try to categorize something by judging how similar the object is to their conception of the typical member of the relevant category.

A) representativeness
B) anchoring
C) availability
D) correspondence
Question
People sometimes have to assess whether someone is a member of a particular group.In assessing whether someone is gay or a Republican,for example,we often rely on the ________ heuristic,which entails figuring out the degree to which ________.

A) availability; someone resembles a category prototype
B) availability; someone can be categorized quickly
C) representativeness; someone resembles a category prototype
D) representativeness; someone can be categorized quickly
Question
Recall that Chapman and Chapman (1967)studied how experienced clinical psychologists and college students would interpret individuals' responses to the Draw-a-Person test,which often is used to diagnose psychiatric disorders.Results showed that ________ perceived illusory correlations between individuals' mental disorders and their drawings.

A) only the students
B) only the clinicians
C) both the students and the clinicians
D) neither the students nor the clinicians
Question
Having prior knowledge about a situation can influence how we construe ambiguous situations.This is a result of a heavy reliance on

A) bottom-up processing.
B) top-down processing.
C) pluralistic ignorance.
D) the recency effect.
Question
________ are mental shortcuts that provide serviceable but often inexact answers to common judgmental problems.

A) Pluralistic judgments
B) Base rates
C) Mental deliberations
D) Heuristics
Question
People rely on the ________ heuristic when they judge the frequency or probability of some event by the readiness with which similar events come to mind.

A) encoding
B) representativeness
C) accessibility
D) availability
Question
When forming judgments about others,people often rely on the representativeness heuristic.Unfortunately,this can lead people to

A) ignore how much a person resembles a prototypical group member.
B) use information that is causally relevant.
C) rely too heavily on base-rate frequency information.
D) ignore base-rate information.
Question
________ processes consist of observing and remembering relevant stimuli from the outside world,and ________ processes filter and interpret stimuli in light of preexisting knowledge and expectations.

A) Deductive; inductive
B) Attentive; elaborative
C) Bottom-up; top-down
D) Perceptual; constructive
Question
Responses to stimuli in the environment are guided by two different systems of thinking.The intuitive system performs many operations ________,while the rational system is more likely to perform operations ________.

A) slowly; quickly
B) effortfully; automatically
C) in parallel; one at a time
D) consciously; unconsciously
Question
Because of the availability heuristic,people can be more likely to

A) underestimate the frequency of dramatic natural disasters.
B) overestimate the frequency of dramatic natural disasters.
C) overestimate the frequency of common illnesses that can become fatal, such as diabetes or asthma.
D) underestimate the frequency of dramatic accidents that lead to death.
Question
According to Tversky and Kahneman (1974),when an initial intuitive assessment of a situation is not modified or overridden by a more deliberative analysis,

A) the intuitive system always produces inaccurate judgments.
B) important factors may be ignored and our judgments may be systematically biased.
C) more efficient and accurate information processing occurs.
D) the rational system takes over to produce accurate judgments.
Question
Base-rate information includes information about the

A) degree of resemblance between members of a category and a base prototype.
B) relative frequency of members of different categories in a population.
C) rate of basing estimates on similarity between a member and the population.
D) relative frequency of utilizing the representative heuristic in a population.
Question
Luis has negative schemas about his looks and his intelligence.He believes he is unattractive and doubts his intellectual abilities.At school on Friday,Luis interacted with a few different people.Which of these interactions is Luis likely to remember the following week?

A) Luis's track coach said he needs to practice more.
B) Luis's friend told him she did poorly on the SATs.
C) Luis's classmate told him his new haircut looks good.
D) Luis's history teacher said his paper was not clear.
Question
Hedwig just met her friend's new boyfriend,and her initial impression wasn't positive.He was so reserved; he barely talked at all.Hedwig then spends some time and energy thinking about all of the good things her friend has told her about him,and considers the fact that sometimes it takes a little while to feel comfortable around new people.She decides he is probably cool after all.In forming this new,positive impression of the boyfriend,Hedwig relied on

A) the rational system.
B) the intuitive system.
C) top-down processing.
D) schema-driven processing.
Question
________ is the feeling of ease (or difficulty)associated with processing information.

A) Fluency
B) Accessibility
C) Representativeness
D) Applicability
Question
Kahneman and Tversky (1973)found that a majority of participants mistakenly believed there were more words in the English language that start with the letter r than words that have r in the third position.These results demonstrate the functioning of

A) the availability heuristic.
B) the regression fallacy.
C) the representativeness heuristic.
D) an illusory correlation.
Question
Which of the following instances of what we call common sense may be due to the representativeness heuristic?

A) Handwriting analysis cannot reveal certain things about your personality.
B) Eating turtle meat makes you a worse swimmer.
C) You should avoid potato chips if you suffer from greasy skin and acne.
D) You should drink milk when you have a cold.
Question
People sometimes work together on a project and later decide who should get the most credit.According to research by Ross and colleagues (1979),this decision often entails ________ one's own contributions to joint projects.Moreover,this tendency arises from ________.

A) overestimating; self-enhancement motives
B) overestimating; the availability heuristic
C) underestimating; self-enhancement motives
D) underestimating; the availability heuristic
Question
Lola visits Trish in Weston,CT.At some point,Lola asks Trish whether there is a lot of crime in Weston.Although crime rarely occurs there,Trish recalls a recent news story about a Weston drug store robbery.On the basis of this memory,she then tells Lola that there is a lot of crime in Weston.This scenario illustrates reliance on the ________ heuristic.

A) representativeness
B) recollection
C) availability
D) anchoring
Question
The availability and representativeness heuristics sometimes can operate in tandem.The joint effect of these two heuristics can create a(n)

A) unmemorable association.
B) co-occurrence fallacy.
C) statistical association.
D) illusory correlation.
Question
An illusory correlation occurs when

A) a difference across conditions is the true cause of the relationship between two variables.
B) an unmeasured variable is causing the correlation between two variables.
C) two variables are believed to be correlated when in fact they are not.
D) two variables appear correlated but have not met the threshold for statistical significance.
Question
Describe top-down processing and bottom-up processing.
Question
Imagine that you have just finished a joint project for your psychology class.According to research on heuristics,will other people take more credit for the project than you think they deserve? Why or why not? Use research to justify your answer.
Question
Explain how schemas can influence: (a)attention; (b)inferences about other people; and (c)behavior.
Question
________ and ________ are similar in that both derive from the ease of thinking about a target.

A) Self-fulfilling prophesies; pluralistic ignorance
B) Illusory correlations; the regression fallacy
C) Base-rates; the representativeness heuristic
D) Fluency; the availability heuristic
Question
The media (television news programs,newspaper articles,news websites)tend to emphasize dangerous and criminal events.How does this so-called bad-news bias influence people's judgments about danger and crime? In addition,discuss how the availability heuristic is relevant to these judgments.
Question
Give two examples of variables that influence the accuracy of secondhand information.Then,for each,describe a situation in everyday life where it could occur.
Question
Imagine you are part of a marketing team designing an ad campaign for an expensive new sneaker.Define spin framing and then design an ad for the sneaker using this approach.
Question
Describe the factors that determine whether a schema is accessible (activated)and whether it is applied.
Question
Describe two examples of how a person could apply the wrong schemas to situations.In your examples,clearly explain the processes that led to the use of the wrong schema.
Question
What is the intuitive system? What are the advantages of relying on this system? What are the disadvantages?
Question
Explain illusory correlation and show how the availability and representativeness heuristics are relevant to this phenomenon.
Question
Describe the confirmation bias and explain how it can affect people's decision making.Make sure to indicate when people will make good decisions.
Question
How accurate are snap judgments? Take a position one way or the other and support it with two pieces of evidence.
Question
Define pluralistic ignorance and explain how it can undermine learning in the classroom or the development of friendship across ethnic groups.
Question
Give two examples of how order and framing effects influence specific types of judgments.
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Deck 4: Social Cognition: Thinking About
1
Which of the following examples best shows how expectations (i.e.,schemas)can be self-fulfilling prophecies?

A) Participants primed to think of the elderly actually walk slower down a hallway.
B) Teachers who expect that some children will do well in school actually enable those children to perform better.
C) People are more likely to apply the trait of dependence to a female character in a novel than to a male character.
D) A schema that is frequently activated will be more likely to be applied to a new stimulus than one that is seldom activated.
Teachers who expect that some children will do well in school actually enable those children to perform better.
2
Construal level theory predicts that we think about events distant in time or space in ________ terms,and that we think about events nearer in time or space in ________ terms.

A) abstract; concrete
B) concrete; abstract
C) negative; positive
D) positive; negative
abstract; concrete
3
When judgments or decisions are influenced by the way in which information is presented,this is called a

A) pluralistic-ignorance effect.
B) biased-information effect.
C) framing effect.
D) processing failure.
framing effect.
4
Liam,the photography editor of a national magazine,is looking through a series of pictures to find a model who seems strong and competent.Given research findings on physical appearance and snap judgments,Liam should select a model whose face has

A) large eyes.
B) high eyebrows.
C) an angular chin.
D) a high forehead.
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k this deck
5
According to the textbook,all the following factors can decrease the accuracy of secondhand information EXCEPT

A) the desire to entertain.
B) ideological distortions.
C) distortion in the media.
D) base-rate information.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
According to the textbook's description of positive and negative framing,which of the following statements would be most likely to influence someone NOT to undergo a risky surgery?

A) Ninety out of a hundred people who have this surgery survive.
B) Ten out of a hundred people who have this surgery die.
C) The odds are very high that you will survive this surgery.
D) Of 100 people who have had this surgery, 68 were still alive after a year.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which of the following news headlines would be most likely to make a lasting impression on readers?

A) Baby Elephant Takes First Steps!
B) Stocks Plummet on Release of Dire Economic Forecast!
C) The Prince Marries!
D) Navy Helps Giant Sea Turtles!
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8
Janet means well when she tells her daughter,"Please don't ever date a boy with a tattoo.People with tattoos are dangerous.A girl down the street dated a boy with a huge tattoo and he beat her up." If Janet knows other people with tattoos who are not dangerous but she holds these beliefs strongly and tells this particular story anyway,she may be engaging in

A) secondhand extremism.
B) ideological distortion.
C) the embellishment fallacy.
D) heuristic processing.
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9
Under what circumstances is someone more likely to fear victimization as a result of watching a lot of television?

A) if he or she has children
B) if he or she tends to be alone when watching television
C) if he or she lives in a high-crime area
D) if he or she lives in a low-crime area
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Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
________ is the study of how people think about the social world and arrive at judgments that help them interpret the past,understand the present,and predict the future.

A) Social cognition
B) Social psychology
C) Cognitive psychology
D) Sociology
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Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The textbook describes research by Todorov and colleagues in which participants rated a large number of faces along different personality dimensions.Which two dimensions stood out as the main dimensions used in these ratings?

A) happiness or sadness and fear
B) trustworthiness and physical attractiveness
C) trustworthiness and dominance
D) happiness and physical attractiveness
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k this deck
12
What are two essential components of a self-fulfilling prophesy?

A) expectations about what a person is like and remembering the person in ways consistent with the expectations
B) expectations about what a person is like and behaving toward the person in ways consistent with the expectations
C) expectations about what you are like and remembering other people in ways consistent with how you see yourself
D) expectations about what you are like and behaving toward other people in ways consistent with how you treat yourself
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k this deck
13
In one study,elementary school teachers were told that aptitude tests indicated that certain students would "bloom" intellectually in the coming year,though in reality these students' names were chosen randomly.At the end of the year,the selected students indeed performed better on aptitude tests compared to other students.This phenomenon is called ________ and is likely driven by ________.

A) a self-fulfilling prophecy; teacher behavior
B) pluralistic ignorance; student ability
C) a self-fulfilling prophecy; student ability
D) pluralistic ignorance; teacher behavior
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Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Many members of a street gang believe privately that their initiation process is too harsh and dangerous.However,they do not express these beliefs because they assume that everyone else thinks the initiation process is just fine.This scenario exemplifies

A) pluralistic ignorance.
B) group rationalization.
C) counterfactual conformity.
D) the framing effect.
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Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The phenomenon of ________ occurs when people are reluctant to express their misgivings about a perceived group norm.Unfortunately,their reluctance reinforces a false norm.

A) group apprehension
B) normative consensus
C) pluralistic ignorance
D) the nonrepresentativeness heuristic
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Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Which of the following is the best example of a positively framed statement?

A) How much would you pay to replace all the trees that have been lost?
B) Just 10 percent of people who take this medication will show side effects.
C) This meat is only 25 percent fat.
D) This brand of condom has an overall 75 percent success rate.
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Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Primacy effects often result from

A) a tendency for information presented early on to strongly influence a final decision.
B) strong emotions that disrupt the memory of information presented early on.
C) the belief that information encountered early on is particularly accurate.
D) a failure to engage in schematic processing.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
One of the most pervasive sources of distortion in secondhand accounts is

A) schematic vigilance.
B) recovered memories.
C) the desire to entertain.
D) a shortage of accurate information.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Lauren is an attractive woman.She has large round eyes; a large forehead,high eyebrows,and a small,rounded chin.When other people first meet Lauren,what are they likely to think about her?

A) that she is naive
B) that she is competent
C) that she is dominant
D) that she is artistic
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Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
According to construal level theory,if you are imagining working on your thesis in graduate school in several years,you are most likely to be thinking about

A) the specific details of how you will conduct the research.
B) how you will block out your time each day to get the work done.
C) the overall goal of how your thesis will help you to finish graduate school.
D) the type of computer you will use to write your thesis.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
The research in which participants who were primed with the words "gamble" or "wager" were more likely to place a bet best shows

A) the influence of schemas on memory.
B) that bottom-up processing can have a strong influence on our behaviors.
C) that schemas lead us to notice more information in our environment.
D) the influence of schemas on behavior.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Barbara mostly chooses to watch news programs that support her political beliefs while avoiding news programs that may disagree with her views.This is an example of the

A) information bias.
B) hindsight bias.
C) misinformation effect.
D) motivated confirmation bias.
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23
Top-down processing is most useful

A) in clearly defined situations with very little ambiguity.
B) in situations where we have very little prior knowledge.
C) in ambiguous situations where we have at least some prior knowledge.
D) Top-down processing is rarely useful.
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24
When information that is ________ has the most influence on people,the primacy effect has occurred.When information that is ________ has the most influence on people,the recency effect has occurred.

A) experienced secondhand; experienced firsthand
B) experience firsthand; experienced secondhand
C) presented last; presented first
D) presented first; presented last
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25
Which of the following is true of schemas?

A) Schemas can be primed outside of conscious awareness.
B) Preexisting expectations are unrelated to schema activation.
C) Only stimuli that we are aware of can activate schemas.
D) Schemas influence thoughts and memories but not behavior.
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26
The confirmation bias makes what prediction about human behavior?

A) People will seek out supporting evidence for their beliefs.
B) People judge the probability of an event by how it is framed.
C) People will prefer sure wins over gambles.
D) People will prefer gambles over sure losses.
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27
When people form judgments about everyday events,the feature-matching process usually

A) leads to inaccurate perceptions of a given event.
B) leads people to select the right schema to encode a given event.
C) creates a mismatch between the features of a schema and a given event.
D) ensures that irrelevant similarities or superficial features of a given event will not influence a person's schema.
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28
According to construal level theory,________ framing impacts the ways we make judgments.

A) negative
B) positive
C) spin
D) temporal
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29
Ahmed went to the Museum of Modern Art during his vacation to New York City.Afterward,he remembers that he liked many pieces,but he can really only recall the details of the Andy Warhol painting he saw at the very end,as he was walking out the door.Ahmed is displaying

A) the primacy effect.
B) the recency effect.
C) spin framing.
D) positive framing.
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30
In her economics class,Nancy has been assigned to do a group project with Mario,whom she does not know well.Nancy's friend Tia knows Mario from another class and tells Nancy about him.According to the primacy effect,Nancy will form the best impression of Mario if Tia describes him in which way?

A) impulsive, critical, stubborn, intelligent, industrious, warm
B) critical, impulsive, stubborn, warm, industrious, intelligent
C) intelligent, industrious, warm, impulsive, critical, stubborn
D) stubborn, intelligent, critical, industrious, impulsive, warm
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31
In which situation would someone be more likely to perform well on a test?

A) when a professor schema is activated
B) when a soccer hooligan schema is activated
C) when a specific example of a supermodel is activated
D) when a specific example of a genius is activated
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32
In 1992,Ross Perot asked voters,"Should the president have the line-item veto to eliminate waste?" Ninety-seven percent said yes.When the question was asked in more neutral terms ("Should the president have the line-item veto or not?")only 57 percent agreed.This example best illustrates

A) the availability heuristic.
B) spin framing.
C) an order effect.
D) feature matching.
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33
Because schemas have been shown to influence ________,participants who are told to watch a video of a basketball game and count the number of times people in white shirts pass the ball might completely miss seeing a person in a black gorilla suit walk through the game.

A) behaviors
B) attention
C) bottom-up processes
D) priming
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34
Psychologists have discovered that people store information in coherent configurations called

A) information nodes.
B) schemas.
C) primes.
D) flashbulb memories.
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35
Procedures that momentarily activate a particular schema are referred to as

A) bottom-up procedures.
B) encoding.
C) top-down procedures.
D) priming.
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36
Jim watched a videotape of a woman talking about her life.Throughout the tape,the woman said many things that are stereotypical of a professor.She also said many things that are stereotypical of an engineer.Before watching the video,Jim was told that the woman was employed as an engineer.According to schema research,Jim will probably remember

A) an equal amount of engineer-consistent and professor-consistent information.
B) little information about the woman due to her gender.
C) more engineer-consistent information than professor-consistent information.
D) more professor-consistent utterances than engineer-consistent utterances.
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37
According to the textbook,which of the following is NOT directly associated with schema activation?

A) subliminal stimuli
B) recent activation of a schema
C) expectations
D) novel information
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38
The textbook describes a study in which one group of participants was asked to determine whether working out a day before a tennis match made the player more likely to win,and another group of participants was asked to determine whether working out a day before a tennis match made a player more likely to lose.Consistent with the confirmation bias,participants in the group examining a connection between working out and winning were most likely to search for information about how many players________ and then ________ their matches.

A) did not work out; lost
B) did not work out; won
C) worked out; lost
D) worked out; won
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39
You think of Jan as a very introverted person.The confirmation bias predicts that you will

A) look for examples of introverted behaviors in Jan.
B) look for examples of extroverted behaviors in Jan.
C) be likely to form a strong relationship with her.
D) be unlikely to form a strong relationship with her.
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40
Right before Jenny meets a new boyfriend for a dinner date,she finishes reading a novel about a husband who mistreats his wife.According to research on schemas,Jenny is likely to

A) break up with her boyfriend.
B) view her boyfriend's actions in a more negative light.
C) tell her boyfriend how much she loves him.
D) talk about how they should get married.
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41
People use the ________ heuristic when they try to categorize something by judging how similar the object is to their conception of the typical member of the relevant category.

A) representativeness
B) anchoring
C) availability
D) correspondence
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42
People sometimes have to assess whether someone is a member of a particular group.In assessing whether someone is gay or a Republican,for example,we often rely on the ________ heuristic,which entails figuring out the degree to which ________.

A) availability; someone resembles a category prototype
B) availability; someone can be categorized quickly
C) representativeness; someone resembles a category prototype
D) representativeness; someone can be categorized quickly
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43
Recall that Chapman and Chapman (1967)studied how experienced clinical psychologists and college students would interpret individuals' responses to the Draw-a-Person test,which often is used to diagnose psychiatric disorders.Results showed that ________ perceived illusory correlations between individuals' mental disorders and their drawings.

A) only the students
B) only the clinicians
C) both the students and the clinicians
D) neither the students nor the clinicians
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44
Having prior knowledge about a situation can influence how we construe ambiguous situations.This is a result of a heavy reliance on

A) bottom-up processing.
B) top-down processing.
C) pluralistic ignorance.
D) the recency effect.
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45
________ are mental shortcuts that provide serviceable but often inexact answers to common judgmental problems.

A) Pluralistic judgments
B) Base rates
C) Mental deliberations
D) Heuristics
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46
People rely on the ________ heuristic when they judge the frequency or probability of some event by the readiness with which similar events come to mind.

A) encoding
B) representativeness
C) accessibility
D) availability
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47
When forming judgments about others,people often rely on the representativeness heuristic.Unfortunately,this can lead people to

A) ignore how much a person resembles a prototypical group member.
B) use information that is causally relevant.
C) rely too heavily on base-rate frequency information.
D) ignore base-rate information.
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48
________ processes consist of observing and remembering relevant stimuli from the outside world,and ________ processes filter and interpret stimuli in light of preexisting knowledge and expectations.

A) Deductive; inductive
B) Attentive; elaborative
C) Bottom-up; top-down
D) Perceptual; constructive
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49
Responses to stimuli in the environment are guided by two different systems of thinking.The intuitive system performs many operations ________,while the rational system is more likely to perform operations ________.

A) slowly; quickly
B) effortfully; automatically
C) in parallel; one at a time
D) consciously; unconsciously
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50
Because of the availability heuristic,people can be more likely to

A) underestimate the frequency of dramatic natural disasters.
B) overestimate the frequency of dramatic natural disasters.
C) overestimate the frequency of common illnesses that can become fatal, such as diabetes or asthma.
D) underestimate the frequency of dramatic accidents that lead to death.
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51
According to Tversky and Kahneman (1974),when an initial intuitive assessment of a situation is not modified or overridden by a more deliberative analysis,

A) the intuitive system always produces inaccurate judgments.
B) important factors may be ignored and our judgments may be systematically biased.
C) more efficient and accurate information processing occurs.
D) the rational system takes over to produce accurate judgments.
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52
Base-rate information includes information about the

A) degree of resemblance between members of a category and a base prototype.
B) relative frequency of members of different categories in a population.
C) rate of basing estimates on similarity between a member and the population.
D) relative frequency of utilizing the representative heuristic in a population.
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53
Luis has negative schemas about his looks and his intelligence.He believes he is unattractive and doubts his intellectual abilities.At school on Friday,Luis interacted with a few different people.Which of these interactions is Luis likely to remember the following week?

A) Luis's track coach said he needs to practice more.
B) Luis's friend told him she did poorly on the SATs.
C) Luis's classmate told him his new haircut looks good.
D) Luis's history teacher said his paper was not clear.
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54
Hedwig just met her friend's new boyfriend,and her initial impression wasn't positive.He was so reserved; he barely talked at all.Hedwig then spends some time and energy thinking about all of the good things her friend has told her about him,and considers the fact that sometimes it takes a little while to feel comfortable around new people.She decides he is probably cool after all.In forming this new,positive impression of the boyfriend,Hedwig relied on

A) the rational system.
B) the intuitive system.
C) top-down processing.
D) schema-driven processing.
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55
________ is the feeling of ease (or difficulty)associated with processing information.

A) Fluency
B) Accessibility
C) Representativeness
D) Applicability
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56
Kahneman and Tversky (1973)found that a majority of participants mistakenly believed there were more words in the English language that start with the letter r than words that have r in the third position.These results demonstrate the functioning of

A) the availability heuristic.
B) the regression fallacy.
C) the representativeness heuristic.
D) an illusory correlation.
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57
Which of the following instances of what we call common sense may be due to the representativeness heuristic?

A) Handwriting analysis cannot reveal certain things about your personality.
B) Eating turtle meat makes you a worse swimmer.
C) You should avoid potato chips if you suffer from greasy skin and acne.
D) You should drink milk when you have a cold.
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58
People sometimes work together on a project and later decide who should get the most credit.According to research by Ross and colleagues (1979),this decision often entails ________ one's own contributions to joint projects.Moreover,this tendency arises from ________.

A) overestimating; self-enhancement motives
B) overestimating; the availability heuristic
C) underestimating; self-enhancement motives
D) underestimating; the availability heuristic
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59
Lola visits Trish in Weston,CT.At some point,Lola asks Trish whether there is a lot of crime in Weston.Although crime rarely occurs there,Trish recalls a recent news story about a Weston drug store robbery.On the basis of this memory,she then tells Lola that there is a lot of crime in Weston.This scenario illustrates reliance on the ________ heuristic.

A) representativeness
B) recollection
C) availability
D) anchoring
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60
The availability and representativeness heuristics sometimes can operate in tandem.The joint effect of these two heuristics can create a(n)

A) unmemorable association.
B) co-occurrence fallacy.
C) statistical association.
D) illusory correlation.
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61
An illusory correlation occurs when

A) a difference across conditions is the true cause of the relationship between two variables.
B) an unmeasured variable is causing the correlation between two variables.
C) two variables are believed to be correlated when in fact they are not.
D) two variables appear correlated but have not met the threshold for statistical significance.
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62
Describe top-down processing and bottom-up processing.
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63
Imagine that you have just finished a joint project for your psychology class.According to research on heuristics,will other people take more credit for the project than you think they deserve? Why or why not? Use research to justify your answer.
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64
Explain how schemas can influence: (a)attention; (b)inferences about other people; and (c)behavior.
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65
________ and ________ are similar in that both derive from the ease of thinking about a target.

A) Self-fulfilling prophesies; pluralistic ignorance
B) Illusory correlations; the regression fallacy
C) Base-rates; the representativeness heuristic
D) Fluency; the availability heuristic
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66
The media (television news programs,newspaper articles,news websites)tend to emphasize dangerous and criminal events.How does this so-called bad-news bias influence people's judgments about danger and crime? In addition,discuss how the availability heuristic is relevant to these judgments.
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67
Give two examples of variables that influence the accuracy of secondhand information.Then,for each,describe a situation in everyday life where it could occur.
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68
Imagine you are part of a marketing team designing an ad campaign for an expensive new sneaker.Define spin framing and then design an ad for the sneaker using this approach.
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69
Describe the factors that determine whether a schema is accessible (activated)and whether it is applied.
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70
Describe two examples of how a person could apply the wrong schemas to situations.In your examples,clearly explain the processes that led to the use of the wrong schema.
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71
What is the intuitive system? What are the advantages of relying on this system? What are the disadvantages?
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72
Explain illusory correlation and show how the availability and representativeness heuristics are relevant to this phenomenon.
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73
Describe the confirmation bias and explain how it can affect people's decision making.Make sure to indicate when people will make good decisions.
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74
How accurate are snap judgments? Take a position one way or the other and support it with two pieces of evidence.
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75
Define pluralistic ignorance and explain how it can undermine learning in the classroom or the development of friendship across ethnic groups.
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76
Give two examples of how order and framing effects influence specific types of judgments.
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