Deck 9: Voluntarism,Structuralism,and Other Early Approaches to Psychology
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Deck 9: Voluntarism,Structuralism,and Other Early Approaches to Psychology
1
By shifting one's attention,elements of thought can be arranged and rearranged at will,a process Wundt referred to as:
A)perception
B)the law of forward conduction
C)creative synthesis
D)unconscious inference
A)perception
B)the law of forward conduction
C)creative synthesis
D)unconscious inference
creative synthesis
2
Wundt believed that schizophrenia might be explained as a breakdown of the:
A)emotional makeup of the individual
B)sensory apparatus
C)attentional processes
D)perceptual processes
A)emotional makeup of the individual
B)sensory apparatus
C)attentional processes
D)perceptual processes
attentional processes
3
To study the higher mental processes,Wundt believed that we must use ____.
A)rationalistic introspection
B)immediate analysis
C)naturalistic observation of various forms
D)controlled experimentation
A)rationalistic introspection
B)immediate analysis
C)naturalistic observation of various forms
D)controlled experimentation
naturalistic observation of various forms
4
The central concept on Wundt's voluntarism was:
A)association
B)involuntary behavior
C)will
D)apperceptive mass
A)association
B)involuntary behavior
C)will
D)apperceptive mass
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5
Describing a stimulus as visual or auditory defines the ____ of the stimulus,while describing the stimulus in terms of how loud or bright it is describes its ____.
A)intensity;modality
B)modality;intensity
C)saturation;vividness
D)energy;clearness
A)intensity;modality
B)modality;intensity
C)saturation;vividness
D)energy;clearness
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6
Which of the following did Wundt believe about experimental psychology:
A)it was useless in understanding higher mental processes
B)it represented the only worthwhile type of psychology
C)it was impossible
D)it could be used only to investigate the higher mental processes
A)it was useless in understanding higher mental processes
B)it represented the only worthwhile type of psychology
C)it was impossible
D)it could be used only to investigate the higher mental processes
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7
Which of the following philosophies most influenced Wundt:
A)materialism
B)rationalism
C)empiricism
D)sensationalism
A)materialism
B)rationalism
C)empiricism
D)sensationalism
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8
From the experiment with the pendulum clock (thought meter)Wundt concluded:
A)that experimental psychology was not feasible
B)that attention cannot be studied
C)that time is a dimension to be studied
D)that experimental psychology must stress selective attention or volition
A)that experimental psychology was not feasible
B)that attention cannot be studied
C)that time is a dimension to be studied
D)that experimental psychology must stress selective attention or volition
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9
Which of the following was one of Wundt's major goals for experimental psychology?
A)to discover the basic elements of thought
B)to discover the laws by which mental elements combine into more complex mental experiences
C)to develop a new type of introspection
D)both to discover the basic elements of thought and to discover the laws by which mental elements combine into more complex mental experiences
A)to discover the basic elements of thought
B)to discover the laws by which mental elements combine into more complex mental experiences
C)to develop a new type of introspection
D)both to discover the basic elements of thought and to discover the laws by which mental elements combine into more complex mental experiences
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10
According to Wundt,a(n)____ occurred whenever a sense organ was stimulated and the resulting impulse reached the brain.
A)perception
B)unconscious inference
C)sensation
D)complex idea
A)perception
B)unconscious inference
C)sensation
D)complex idea
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11
According to Wundt,empiricism lacked an appreciation of:
A)innate ideas
B)the laws of association
C)volitional processes
D)secondary qualities
A)innate ideas
B)the laws of association
C)volitional processes
D)secondary qualities
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12
Wundt's use of introspection most closely resembled that of:
A)St.Augustine
B)the British empiricists
C)Descartes
D)Helmholtzian physiologists
A)St.Augustine
B)the British empiricists
C)Descartes
D)Helmholtzian physiologists
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13
The part of the perceptual field that the individual attends to is:
A)perceived
B)apperceived
C)tri-dimensional
D)where the mental chemistry occurs
A)perceived
B)apperceived
C)tri-dimensional
D)where the mental chemistry occurs
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14
Wundt began the first journal devoted to experimental psychology originally called:
A)Psychological Studies
B)Philosophical Studies
C)Philological Studies
D)Journal of Experimental Psychology
A)Psychological Studies
B)Philosophical Studies
C)Philological Studies
D)Journal of Experimental Psychology
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15
Unlike ____,which is passive and automatic,____ is active and voluntary.
A)apperception;perception
B)perception;apperception
C)attention;creative synthesis
D)creative synthesis;attention
A)apperception;perception
B)perception;apperception
C)attention;creative synthesis
D)creative synthesis;attention
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16
Which of the following is not one of the influences that interact and determine the perceptual field?
A)physical stimulation present
B)the anatomical makeup of the individual
C)the individual's past experience
D)the emotions of the individual
A)physical stimulation present
B)the anatomical makeup of the individual
C)the individual's past experience
D)the emotions of the individual
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17
Because Wundt believed that individuals could direct their attention anywhere they wished,he referred to his brand of psychology as:
A)functionalism
B)voluntarism
C)structuralism
D)bold and creative
A)functionalism
B)voluntarism
C)structuralism
D)bold and creative
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18
According to Wundt,sciences like physics were based on ____ experience,whereas psychology should be based on ____ experience.
A)immediate;mediate
B)mediate;immediate
C)sensory;emotional
D)sensory;physiological
A)immediate;mediate
B)mediate;immediate
C)sensory;emotional
D)sensory;physiological
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19
According to Donders,the time it took to perform the mental act of discrimination was determined by:
A)subtracting simple reaction time from the reaction time that involved discrimination
B)computing the choice reaction time
C)computing the mental chronometry
D)presenting several different stimuli to subjects,but allowing them to only respond to one,and timing their response
A)subtracting simple reaction time from the reaction time that involved discrimination
B)computing the choice reaction time
C)computing the mental chronometry
D)presenting several different stimuli to subjects,but allowing them to only respond to one,and timing their response
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20
Wundt believed that feelings were:
A)related to survival
B)remnants of an earlier evolutionary period and were nonfunctional in modern society
C)various combinations of three attributes
D)unitary experiences that could not be reduced to anything more basic
A)related to survival
B)remnants of an earlier evolutionary period and were nonfunctional in modern society
C)various combinations of three attributes
D)unitary experiences that could not be reduced to anything more basic
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21
Titchener concluded that there were about ____ identifiable sensations,most of which were related to the sense of ____.
A)1,200;audition
B)40,000;audition
C)400;vision
D)40,000;vision
A)1,200;audition
B)40,000;audition
C)400;vision
D)40,000;vision
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22
Titchener formed "The Experimentalists" because:
A)he believed the APA was too friendly towards applied topics
B)the APA disagreed with him on what should be included in experimental psychology
C)the APA wanted to allow women to join
D)the APA would not allow him to be president of the organization
A)he believed the APA was too friendly towards applied topics
B)the APA disagreed with him on what should be included in experimental psychology
C)the APA wanted to allow women to join
D)the APA would not allow him to be president of the organization
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23
Concerning verbal communication,Wundt referred to the unified idea that one wishes to convey as a(n):
A)general impression
B)unconscious inference
C)Völkerpsychologie
D)creative synthesis
A)general impression
B)unconscious inference
C)Völkerpsychologie
D)creative synthesis
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24
In explaining how the elements of thought combined,Titchener emphasized:
A)apperception
B)creative synthesis
C)traditional associationism
D)an active mind
A)apperception
B)creative synthesis
C)traditional associationism
D)an active mind
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25
Wundt's principle of ____ stated that prolonged experiences of one type cause one to seek the opposite type of experience.
A)contrasts
B)the development of opposites
C)creative resultants
D)the heterogony of ends
A)contrasts
B)the development of opposites
C)creative resultants
D)the heterogony of ends
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26
Wundt's concept of mental chronometry is:
A)the amount of time it takes to respond to a stimulus
B)the addition of sensations into one perception
C)the time it takes to apperceive an object
D)an accurate cataloging of the time it took to perform various mental acts
A)the amount of time it takes to respond to a stimulus
B)the addition of sensations into one perception
C)the time it takes to apperceive an object
D)an accurate cataloging of the time it took to perform various mental acts
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27
For Titchener,the ____ of psychology involved a search for the neurological correlates of mental events.
A)what
B)how
C)why
D)for
A)what
B)how
C)why
D)for
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28
For Titchener,attention was:
A)clearness of sensation
B)the result of apperception
C)explained by the faculties,functions,and powers of the mind
D)nonexistent
A)clearness of sensation
B)the result of apperception
C)explained by the faculties,functions,and powers of the mind
D)nonexistent
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29
As evidence for his views on verbal communication,Wundt pointed out that we remember ____ and not ____.
A)specific words;meanings
B)meanings;specific words
C)verbal labels;images
D)images;verbal labels
A)specific words;meanings
B)meanings;specific words
C)verbal labels;images
D)images;verbal labels
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30
Titchener defined ____ as the accumulated experiences of a lifetime.
A)the mind
B)the consciousness
C)general impression
D)the apperceptive mass
A)the mind
B)the consciousness
C)general impression
D)the apperceptive mass
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31
Which of the following is true?
A)Wundt's voluntarism was within the tradition of British empiricism
B)Titchener was a good representative of Wundt's ideas in America
C)Wundt's voluntarism followed in the rationalistic tradition
D)Wundt's voluntarism followed in the empiricistic/positivistic tradition
A)Wundt's voluntarism was within the tradition of British empiricism
B)Titchener was a good representative of Wundt's ideas in America
C)Wundt's voluntarism followed in the rationalistic tradition
D)Wundt's voluntarism followed in the empiricistic/positivistic tradition
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32
Titchener defined ____ as the sum total of mental experience at any given moment.
A)the mind
B)the consciousness
C)the apperceptive mass
D)general impression
A)the mind
B)the consciousness
C)the apperceptive mass
D)general impression
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33
Wundt believed that for effective verbal communication to occur all of the following must occur except:
A)the speaker must apperceive his or her own general impression
B)both the speaker and the listener must use the same words and sentence structures
C)the listener must apperceive the speaker's general impression
D)the speaker must choose words that will effectively express his or her general impression
A)the speaker must apperceive his or her own general impression
B)both the speaker and the listener must use the same words and sentence structures
C)the listener must apperceive the speaker's general impression
D)the speaker must choose words that will effectively express his or her general impression
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34
Wundt believed that topics such as religion,social customs,and language could be studied:
A)using historical analysis
B)experimentally
C)using naturalistic observation
D)both using historical analysis and using naturalistic observation
A)using historical analysis
B)experimentally
C)using naturalistic observation
D)both using historical analysis and using naturalistic observation
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35
Wundt believed that physical and psychological causality were:
A)the same thing
B)experienced only in the mind
C)polar opposites
D)not causal at all
A)the same thing
B)experienced only in the mind
C)polar opposites
D)not causal at all
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36
For Titchener,a stimulus error consisted of:
A)allowing the meaning of an object to influence one's introspective analysis of that object
B)seeing something that was not physically present
C)failing to see something that was physically present
D)not allowing an object's meaning to influence one's introspective analysis of that object
A)allowing the meaning of an object to influence one's introspective analysis of that object
B)seeing something that was not physically present
C)failing to see something that was physically present
D)not allowing an object's meaning to influence one's introspective analysis of that object
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37
According to Wundt's principle of ____,something almost always occurred during goal-directed behavior that changed the entire motivational pattern.
A)the heterogony of ends
B)creative resultants
C)contrasts
D)development of opposites
A)the heterogony of ends
B)creative resultants
C)contrasts
D)development of opposites
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38
Titchener:
A)excluded women from membership in his organization,"The Experimentalists"
B)supervised the research of the first woman to receive a Ph.D.in psychology
C)supervised the research of more female Ph.D.s than any psychologist of his generation
D)all of these choices
A)excluded women from membership in his organization,"The Experimentalists"
B)supervised the research of the first woman to receive a Ph.D.in psychology
C)supervised the research of more female Ph.D.s than any psychologist of his generation
D)all of these choices
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39
According to Titchener,all feelings could be explained employing the dimension of:
A)tension-relaxation
B)excitement-clam
C)pleasantness-unpleasantness
D)more than one of the choices
A)tension-relaxation
B)excitement-clam
C)pleasantness-unpleasantness
D)more than one of the choices
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40
Wundt was:
A)a vitalist
B)a determinist
C)against the study of culture
D)the first to use introspection
A)a vitalist
B)a determinist
C)against the study of culture
D)the first to use introspection
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41
By plotting savings as a function of time,Ebbinghaus created psychology's first:
A)learning curve
B)psychological law
C)retention curve
D)study of meaningfulness
A)learning curve
B)psychological law
C)retention curve
D)study of meaningfulness
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42
According to Vaihinger,the fiction of ____ is at the heart of concepts of morality and jurisprudence.
A)causality
B)freedom
C)God
D)Compassion
A)causality
B)freedom
C)God
D)Compassion
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43
The term that Brentano used to describe the fact that every mental act refers to something outside itself was:
A)act psychology
B)intentionality
C)phenomenology
D)functionalism
A)act psychology
B)intentionality
C)phenomenology
D)functionalism
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44
Ebbinghaus invented nonsense material to:
A)confuse his research subjects
B)free his research material from the influence of prior learning
C)make experimental psychology more compatible with the natural sciences
D)investigate imageless thought
A)confuse his research subjects
B)free his research material from the influence of prior learning
C)make experimental psychology more compatible with the natural sciences
D)investigate imageless thought
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45
The fact that a person can drive a car for a long distance and not be aware of the fact that he or she is driving exemplifies:
A)mental set
B)unconscious inference
C)a determining tendency
D)both mental set and a determining tendency
A)mental set
B)unconscious inference
C)a determining tendency
D)both mental set and a determining tendency
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46
Külpe's technique of ____ involved giving subjects problems to solve and then asking them to report the mental operations they engaged in to solve them.
A)subtractive reaction time
B)intentionality
C)systematic experimental introspection
D)pure phenomenology
A)subtractive reaction time
B)intentionality
C)systematic experimental introspection
D)pure phenomenology
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47
According to Husserl,experimental psychology:
A)was impossible
B)the only valid type of psychology
C)must precede a search for the essence of consciousness
D)must be preceded by a careful,rigorous phenomenological analysis
A)was impossible
B)the only valid type of psychology
C)must precede a search for the essence of consciousness
D)must be preceded by a careful,rigorous phenomenological analysis
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48
Regarding the mind-body issue,Titchener referred to himself as a(n):
A)interactionist
B)epiphenomemolist
C)occasionalist
D)psychophysical parallelist
A)interactionist
B)epiphenomemolist
C)occasionalist
D)psychophysical parallelist
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49
Who believed that if an idea was useful it was therefore true?
A)Vaihinger
B)the pragmatists
C)both Vaihinger and the pragmatists
D)neither Vaihinger nor the pragmatists
A)Vaihinger
B)the pragmatists
C)both Vaihinger and the pragmatists
D)neither Vaihinger nor the pragmatists
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50
According to the author of this text,the most important reason for the demise of structuralism was its failure to:
A)study normal people
B)seek pure rather than practical knowledge
C)teach lower animals how to introspect
D)assimilate the doctrine of evolution
A)study normal people
B)seek pure rather than practical knowledge
C)teach lower animals how to introspect
D)assimilate the doctrine of evolution
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51
According to Titchener's context theory of meaning,what gives a present sensation its meaning?
A)the rational powers of the mind
B)the image of prior experiences
C)the total present environmental circumstances
D)creative synthesis
A)the rational powers of the mind
B)the image of prior experiences
C)the total present environmental circumstances
D)creative synthesis
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52
To study mental acts and intentionality,Brentano used:
A)experimentation
B)pure phenomenology
C)phenomenological introspection
D)Clever Hans
A)experimentation
B)pure phenomenology
C)phenomenological introspection
D)Clever Hans
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53
Which of the following phenomena did Ebbinghaus not address in his research on memory?
A)overlearning
B)meaningfulness
C)distributed in contrast to massed practice
D)fatigue
A)overlearning
B)meaningfulness
C)distributed in contrast to massed practice
D)fatigue
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54
Which of the following best describes Vaihinger's attitude toward "fictions"?
A)they are acceptable in religion but not in science
B)they are the greatest cause of human distress
C)without them societal living would be impossible
D)they make better reading than "nonfictions"
A)they are acceptable in religion but not in science
B)they are the greatest cause of human distress
C)without them societal living would be impossible
D)they make better reading than "nonfictions"
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55
Which of the following questions raised by the Würzburg school contributed to the downfall of structuralism?
A)Was there imageless thought or not?
B)Could introspection be used to study the dynamics of the mind?
C)Is it possible that some individuals have imageless thoughts and other individuals do not?
D)all of these choices
A)Was there imageless thought or not?
B)Could introspection be used to study the dynamics of the mind?
C)Is it possible that some individuals have imageless thoughts and other individuals do not?
D)all of these choices
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56
It is often found that the supposed intelligent behavior of a nonhuman animal is nothing more than the animal's responses to subtle cues (consciously or unconsciously)provided by its trainer.This observation is called the:
A)self-fulfilling prophecy
B)Clever Hans phenomenon
C)Stumpf phenomenon
D)Würzburg phenomenon
A)self-fulfilling prophecy
B)Clever Hans phenomenon
C)Stumpf phenomenon
D)Würzburg phenomenon
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57
Those studying the processes of the mind rather than its contents were called:
A)behaviorists
B)structuralists
C)act psychologists
D)physical monists
A)behaviorists
B)structuralists
C)act psychologists
D)physical monists
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58
Unlike Wundt,Külpe believed that some thoughts were:
A)of sensations
B)of images
C)imageless
D)of feelings
A)of sensations
B)of images
C)imageless
D)of feelings
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59
For Stumpf,the proper objects of study for psychology were:
A)the elements of thought
B)elemental feelings
C)mental phenomena
D)physiological mechanisms
A)the elements of thought
B)elemental feelings
C)mental phenomena
D)physiological mechanisms
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60
Ebbinghaus was the first to study:
A)cognitive processes experimentally
B)learning and memory as associative processes
C)learning and memory as they occurred
D)intentionality
A)cognitive processes experimentally
B)learning and memory as associative processes
C)learning and memory as they occurred
D)intentionality
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61
Discuss the ideas of imageless thought and mental set that came out of the research of the Würzburg school.
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62
Titchener wanted his subjects to report perceptions,not just sensations.
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63
Külpe argued that there were thoughts that were imageless.
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64
Briefly discuss some of the results of Ebbinghaus's work on memory.
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65
For Brentano and Stumpf,mental events should be broken down into basic elements for study.
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66
Describe the similarities and differences in the phenomenologies of Brentano and Stumpf.
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67
Brentano's views came to be called act psychology.
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68
Discuss what Titchener saw as the set of goals for psychology.
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69
Wundt,as a result of his experiment with the "thought meter," concluded that experimental psychology must stress selective attention.
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70
The first woman to receive a Ph.D.in psychology was Titchener's first doctoral candidate.
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71
Husserl's goal was to create a taxonomy of the mind.
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72
Ebbinghaus,like others,studied learning and memory after they had occurred.
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73
The first psychology lab was created by Wundt in 1879.
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74
Wundt believed that experimental psychology could be used to study both basic processes and higher mental processes.
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75
Structuralism was essentially an attempt to study scientifically what had been the philosophical concerns of the past.
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76
Discuss Wundt's analysis of psychological and physical causation.
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77
For Titchener,the goals of psychology were the what,how,and why of mental life.
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78
To study memory,Ebbinghaus developed a measure called savings.
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79
For Wundt,elements of thought that are attended to can be arranged and rearranged as the person wills,which he called apperception.
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80
Wundt believed psychological and physical causation were polar opposites.
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