Deck 29: Thinking

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Question
Hereditary Genius is the title of a book authored by

A) James Flynn.
B) David Wechsler.
C) Francis Galton.
D) Alfred Binet.
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Question
The test that provides separate verbal comprehension,perceptual organization,working memory,and processing speed scores,as well as an overall intelligence score,is the

A) WAIS.
B) Stanford-Binet.
C) SAT Reasoning Test.
D) Achievement Test.
Question
The final exam in a calculus course would be an example of a(n)________ test.

A) aptitude
B) achievement
C) standardized
D) general intelligence
Question
Binet used the term mental age to refer to

A) the average chronological age of children who completed a particular grade in school.
B) the years of formal education successfully completed by a child.
C) the total number of items correctly answered on an intelligence test divided by the child's chronological age.
D) the chronological age that most typically corresponds to a given level of intelligence test performance.
Question
Binet's recommendation of "mental orthopedics" highlighted the potential role of ________ in intellectual ability.Terman's sympathy with "eugenics" highlighted the potential role of ________ in intellectual ability.

A) brain size;neural processing speed
B) biological inheritance;educational training
C) nature;nurture
D) educational training;biological inheritance
Question
One of the 15 subtests included in the latest edition of the ________ involves remembering and correctly sequencing a series of numbers and letters.

A) SAT.
B) GRE.
C) WAIS.
D) Stanford-Binet.
Question
Aptitude tests are specifically designed to

A) predict ability to learn a new skill.
B) compare an individual's abilities with those of highly successful people.
C) assess learned knowledge or skills.
D) assess the ability to produce novel and valuable ideas.
Question
Terman's support for ________ was linked to his belief in the biological inheritance of intelligence.

A) factor analysis
B) test standardization
C) the eugenics movement
D) a 10-year rule
Question
An intelligence test is best described as a method designed to assess

A) academic achievement.
B) mental aptitudes.
C) inherited skills.
D) chromosomal abnormalities.
Question
Molly has just taken a test of her capacity to learn to be a computer programmer.This is an example of an ________ test.

A) IQ Test
B) achievement
C) interest
D) aptitude
Question
Intelligence tests were initially designed by Binet and Simon to assess

A) academic aptitude.
B) achievement.
C) general intelligence.
D) natural ability.
Question
Tests designed to assess what a person has learned are called ________ tests.

A) mental age
B) aptitude
C) standardized
D) achievement
Question
The French government commissioned Alfred Binet to develop an intelligence test that would

A) demonstrate the innate intellectual superiority of western European races.
B) effectively distinguish between reading and language disabilities.
C) provide an objective measure of teaching effectiveness in the public school system.
D) reduce the need to rely on teachers' biased judgments of students' learning potential.
Question
Cindra achieved an intelligence test score of 100 on a current version of the Stanford-Binet test.This indicates that relative to other adults her age her intellectual abilities

A) are above average.
B) are average.
C) are below average.
D) cannot be measured.
Question
The WAIS was designed for testing ________ intelligence,whereas the WISC was designed for testing ________ intelligence.

A) children's;adults'
B) analytical;natural
C) adults';children's
D) Europeans';North Americans'
Question
Encouraging those of high intellectual ability to mate with one another was of most interest to

A) Alfred Binet.
B) William Stern.
C) David Wechsler.
D) Francis Galton.
Question
The original IQ formula would be LEAST appropriate for representing the intelligence test performance of

A) kindergartners.
B) grade school students.
C) middle school students.
D) university students.
Question
Assessing current competence is to ________ tests as predicting future performance is to ________ tests.

A) intelligence;standardized
B) aptitude;achievement
C) standardized;intelligence
D) achievement;aptitude
Question
In developing a test of intellectual ability for Parisian schoolchildren,Binet and Simon assumed that

A) the test would measure inherited,unchangeable abilities.
B) the test would yield an intelligence quotient consisting of chronological age divided by mental age multiplied by 100.
C) a bright child would perform like a normal child of an older age.
D) measures of physical and sensory skills would be good predictors of school achievement.
Question
A survey of the history of intelligence testing reinforces the important lesson that

A) although science strives for objectivity,scientists can be influenced by their personal biases.
B) the experiment is the most powerful tool available for examining cause-effect relationships.
C) different theoretical perspectives on behavior may be complementary rather than competing.
D) scientists are more concerned with the development of theory than with its practical application.
Question
Raul has taken the GRE three times and his scores varied by only 10 points each time.Raul's test scores reflect the GRE's

A) standardization.
B) predictive validity.
C) reliability.
D) content validity.
Question
An increase in average intelligence test performance during the past decades would best illustrate why intelligence tests need

A) to be revised for predictive validity.
B) periodic restandardization.
C) reliability indices.
D) to be checked for content validity.
Question
The Flynn effect best illustrates that the process of intelligence testing requires up-to-date

A) content validity.
B) standardization samples.
C) reliability indices.
D) predictive validity.
Question
The distribution of body weights in the general adult human population forms a(n)

A) algorithm.
B) normal curve.
C) representative sample.
D) standardized group.
Question
Dr.Bronfman has administered her new 100-item test of abstract reasoning to a large sample of students.She is presently comparing their scores on the odd-numbered questions with those on the even-numbered questions in an effort to

A) determine the test's validity.
B) determine the test's reliability.
C) standardize the test.
D) provide a normal distribution of scores.
Question
A bell-shaped pattern that characterizes the distribution of a large sample of intelligence test scores is a graphic representation of

A) the intelligence quotient.
B) a normal curve.
C) the Flynn effect.
D) general intelligence.
Question
Researchers assess the correlation between scores obtained on alternate forms of the same test in order to measure the ________ of the test.

A) content validity
B) predictive validity
C) normal distribution
D) reliability
Question
Your score on the WAIS does not indicate how well you control your impulses or deal effectively with social conflict.This best illustrates that intelligence is

A) impossible to measure with any reliability.
B) unrelated to the speed of cognitive processing.
C) a collection of distinctly different abilities.
D) a joint function of nature and nurture.
Question
When a person's test performance can be compared with that of a representative and pretested sample of people,the test is said to be

A) reliable.
B) standardized.
C) valid.
D) normally distributed.
Question
Dr.Renk is testing the reliability of an assessment she developed for testing depression.She divided her participants in half and gave one section the odd-questions and the other section the even-questions of the test.Which type of reliability is she testing?

A) correlation
B) test-retest
C) split-half
D) criterion
Question
Professor Stott is examining the reliability of the final exam she gives to her class.She gives half of the students one version of the text and the other half a different version of the test.Which type of reliability is she testing?

A) correlation
B) test-retest
C) split-half
D) criterion
Question
Dr.Benthem reports that the scores of 100 male and 100 female students on his new test of mechanical reasoning form a normal curve.From his statement we may conclude that

A) the average male score was better than the average female score.
B) the students were simply guessing at the answers.
C) the average score on the test was 50 percent correct.
D) relatively few students' scores deviated extremely from the groups' average score.
Question
About ________ percent of WAIS scores fall between 70 and 130.

A) 30
B) 60
C) 70
D) 95
Question
The normal curve is often described as

A) circular.
B) bell-shaped.
C) standardized.
D) nonsymmetrical.
Question
Dr.Zimmer has designed a test to measure golfers' knowledge of their sport's history.To interpret scores on the test,he is presently administering it to a representative sample of all golfers.Dr.Zimmer is clearly in the process of

A) establishing the test's validity.
B) establishing the Flynn effect.
C) standardizing the test.
D) establishing the test's reliability.
Question
Andrea is conducting a study measuring the effectiveness of a new drug to treat obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).She has to select a scale that will consistently provide objective data about OCD symptoms on a weekly basis.Andrea needs the scale to provide consistent results that gradually change only in response to the positive effects of the drug.Andrea needs a scale with good

A) standardization.
B) predictive validity.
C) reliability.
D) content validity.
Question
Dr.Walsh has designed a test to measure eleventh-graders' knowledge of American history.To ensure that the test represents eleventh-graders in the United States,he is standardizing the test by

A) correlating their scores on two halves of the test.
B) measuring its Flynn effect.
C) giving it to a representative sample of eleventh-graders.
D) establishing a criterion behavior to test.
Question
Carlise's doctor suspects that she may have had a stroke.So,he has arranged for her to take a test that assesses her verbal comprehension.The test she is taking is the

A) WAIS.
B) Stanford-Binet.
C) WISC.
D) GRE.
Question
The widespread improvement in intelligence test performance during the past century is called

A) the bell curve.
B) the normal curve.
C) standardization.
D) the Flynn effect.
Question
A test is reliable if it

A) measures what it claims to measure or predicts what it is supposed to predict.
B) yields dependably consistent scores.
C) has been standardized on a representative sample of all those who are likely to take the test.
D) produces a normal distribution of scores.
Question
The widely used American revision of Alfred Binet's original intelligence test was developed by

A) James Flynn.
B) Francis Galton.
C) Lewis Terman.
D) David Wechsler.
Question
The correlation is likely to be lowest between the

A) Stanford-Binet IQ scores and grades of elementary-school children.
B) Wechsler intelligence scores and grades of high school students.
C) SAT scores and grades of first-year college students.
D) GRE scores and grades of graduate students.
Question
The success with which a test predicts the behavior it is designed to predict is called

A) content validity.
B) predictive validity.
C) split-half reliability.
D) test-retest reliability.
Question
A test has a high degree of validity if it

A) measures or predicts what it is supposed to measure or predict.
B) yields consistent results every time it is used.
C) produces a normal distribution of scores.
D) has been standardized on a representative sample of all those who are likely to take the test.
Question
A test designed to assess whether newly graduated medical students should be granted the legal right to practice medicine would most likely be considered a(n)________ test.

A) WAIS
B) aptitude
C) IQ
D) achievement
Question
The relatively narrow range of intelligence among the college seniors who take the Graduate Record Exam serves to ________ the ________ of the Graduate Record Exam.

A) increase;reliability
B) decrease;predictive validity
C) increase;normal distribution
D) decrease;standardization sample
Question
When retested on the WAIS,people's second scores generally match their first scores quite closely.This indicates that the test has a high degree of

A) reliability.
B) content validity.
C) eugenics.
D) predictive validity.
Question
The first modern test of intelligence was developed in

A) Germany.
B) Britain.
C) France.
D) Italy.
Question
University grades are used to assess the ________ of the SAT.

A) test-retest reliability
B) reliability
C) standardization
D) predictive validity
Question
Increasing years of schooling over the last half-century have most likely contributed to

A) stereotype threat.
B) the Flynn effect.
C) family-environment effect.
D) eugenics.
Question
Before publishing her test of musical aptitude,Professor Reed first administered the test to a representative sample of people.This was most clearly necessary for test

A) standardization.
B) reliability.
C) predictive validity.
D) validity.
Question
A high school counselor gave Amy a test designed to predict whether she could learn to become a successful architect.Amy most likely took a(n)________ test.

A) aptitude
B) eugenics
C) achievement
D) IQ
Question
Some hereditarians have been fearful that higher twentieth-century birth rates among those with lower intelligence scores would shove average intelligence scores progressively downward.This fear has been most directly alleviated by the discovery of

A) mental ages.
B) the g factor.
C) content validity.
D) the Flynn effect.
Question
Mary's bathroom scale always overstates people's actual weight by exactly six pounds.The scale has ________ reliability and ________ validity.

A) low;high
B) high;low
C) low;low
D) high;high
Question
A college administrator is trying to assess whether an admissions test accurately predicts how well applicants will perform at his school.The administrator is most obviously concerned that the test is

A) standardized.
B) valid.
C) reliable.
D) normally distributed.
Question
Who attempted to assess intellectual strengths by measuring reaction time,muscular power,sensory acuity,and body proportions?

A) Lewis Terman
B) Alfred Binet
C) Charles Spearman
D) Francis Galton
Question
If both depressed and nondepressed individuals receive similar scores on a diagnostic test for depression,it suggests that the test

A) has not been standardized.
B) is not valid.
C) is not reliable.
D) scores are correlated.
Question
Which test has been demonstrated to be a highly reliable measure?

A) Stanford-Binet
B) WAIS
C) WISC
D) All of these tests have proven to be highly reliable.
Question
After learning about his low score on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale,Gunter complained,"I don't believe that test is a measure of intelligence at all." Gunter's statement is equivalent to saying that the WAIS lacks

A) standardization.
B) reliability.
C) validity.
D) a normal distribution.
Question
The correlation between intelligence test scores and annual income will probably be highest if computed for a group having test scores ranging from

A) 135 to 160.
B) 70 to 95.
C) 110 to 135.
D) 80 to 120.
Question
Psychologists use ________ to assess individuals' mental aptitudes and compare them with those of others.

A) eugenics
B) reliability coefficients
C) intelligence tests
D) the g factor
Question
A test of your capacity to learn to be an automobile mechanic would be considered a(n)________ test.

A) reliability
B) achievement
C) aptitude
D) intelligence
Question
Binet and Simon designed a test of intellectual abilities in order to

A) provide a quantitative estimate of inherited intellectual potential.
B) distinguish between verbal comprehension and working memory.
C) identify children likely to have difficulty learning in regular school classes.
D) assess general capacity for goal-directed adaptive behavior.
Question
Achievement tests are designed to

A) measure the desire and potential capacity to successfully meet challenges.
B) assess ability to produce novel and valuable ideas.
C) compare an individual's personality with those of highly successful people.
D) assess learned knowledge or skills.
Question
Stephie has to take the SAT exam for her applications to graduate schools.Which of the following best describes the relationship between the SAT exam and general intelligence?

A) The SAT is a biased exam and is not indicative of general intelligence.
B) Scores on the SAT and general intelligence have been found to be negatively correlated.
C) Scores on the SAT and general intelligence are weakly correlated.
D) Scores on the SAT and general intelligence have a strong positive correlation.
Question
The nineteenth-century English scientist Sir Francis Galton believed that

A) mental abilities cannot be measured.
B) superior intelligence is biologically inherited.
C) academic aptitude measures chronological age rather than mental age.
D) intelligence test performance depends on motivation rather than ability.
Question
To determine whether a child's intellectual development was fast or slow,Binet and Simon assessed the child's

A) natural ability.
B) average score on an IQ test.
C) mental age.
D) cultural background.
Question
To assess mental age,Binet and Simon measured children's

A) head size.
B) reasoning and problem-solving skills.
C) muscular power.
D) neural processing speed.
Question
In the early twentieth century,the U.S.government developed intelligence tests to evaluate newly arriving immigrants.Poor test scores among immigrants who were not of Anglo-Saxon heritage were attributed by some psychologists of that day to

A) stereotype threat.
B) innate mental inferiority.
C) savant syndrome.
D) differences in cultural experiences.
Question
The Stanford-Binet,a revision of the original French intelligence test for use with English-speaking California schoolchildren,was first developed by

A) Francis Galton.
B) David Wechsler.
C) Lewis Terman.
D) James Flynn.
Question
The written exam for a driver's license would most likely be considered a(n)________ test.

A) achievement
B) reliability
C) aptitude
D) intelligence
Question
Binet and Terman would have been most likely to disagree about the

A) extent to which intelligence is determined by heredity.
B) need to standardize intelligence tests.
C) possibility of predicting people's academic success from intelligence test scores.
D) definition of mental age.
Question
Tests designed to predict the ability to learn new skills are called

A) interest inventories.
B) criterion tests.
C) standardized assessments.
D) aptitude tests.
Question
For the original version of the Stanford-Binet,IQ was defined as

A) mental age multiplied by 100.
B) chronological age subtracted from mental age and multiplied by 100.
C) chronological age divided by mental age and multiplied by 100.
D) mental age divided by chronological age and multiplied by 100.
Question
Although Francis Galton was not able to develop a simple measure of intelligence,he can be credited with providing psychological science with

A) achievement tests.
B) the concept of mental age.
C) the intelligence quotient.
D) the phrase of nature versus nurture.
Question
If course exams assess a student's mastery of a representative sample of course material,they are said to

A) be reliable.
B) have content validity.
C) be standardized.
D) have predictive validity.
Question
Aptitude tests are to ________ as achievement tests are to ________.

A) current interests;past competence
B) past competence;current interests
C) current competence;future performance
D) future performance;current competence
Question
Comparing the academic performance of those whose scores are extremely low on intelligence tests with those whose scores are extremely high is an effective way to highlight the tests'

A) standardization.
B) test-retest reliability.
C) reliability.
D) validity.
Question
Who would have been the LEAST enthusiastic about relying on eugenics for the improvement of human intellectual functioning?

A) Francis Galton
B) Alfred Binet
C) Lewis Terman
D) Charles Darwin
Question
The eugenics movement would have been most likely to encourage

A) selective breeding of highly intelligent people.
B) creation of special education programs for intellectually inferior children.
C) construction of tests to measure a variety of intelligences.
D) use of factor analysis for identification of various types of intelligence.
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Deck 29: Thinking
1
Hereditary Genius is the title of a book authored by

A) James Flynn.
B) David Wechsler.
C) Francis Galton.
D) Alfred Binet.
C
2
The test that provides separate verbal comprehension,perceptual organization,working memory,and processing speed scores,as well as an overall intelligence score,is the

A) WAIS.
B) Stanford-Binet.
C) SAT Reasoning Test.
D) Achievement Test.
A
3
The final exam in a calculus course would be an example of a(n)________ test.

A) aptitude
B) achievement
C) standardized
D) general intelligence
B
4
Binet used the term mental age to refer to

A) the average chronological age of children who completed a particular grade in school.
B) the years of formal education successfully completed by a child.
C) the total number of items correctly answered on an intelligence test divided by the child's chronological age.
D) the chronological age that most typically corresponds to a given level of intelligence test performance.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Binet's recommendation of "mental orthopedics" highlighted the potential role of ________ in intellectual ability.Terman's sympathy with "eugenics" highlighted the potential role of ________ in intellectual ability.

A) brain size;neural processing speed
B) biological inheritance;educational training
C) nature;nurture
D) educational training;biological inheritance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
One of the 15 subtests included in the latest edition of the ________ involves remembering and correctly sequencing a series of numbers and letters.

A) SAT.
B) GRE.
C) WAIS.
D) Stanford-Binet.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Aptitude tests are specifically designed to

A) predict ability to learn a new skill.
B) compare an individual's abilities with those of highly successful people.
C) assess learned knowledge or skills.
D) assess the ability to produce novel and valuable ideas.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Terman's support for ________ was linked to his belief in the biological inheritance of intelligence.

A) factor analysis
B) test standardization
C) the eugenics movement
D) a 10-year rule
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
An intelligence test is best described as a method designed to assess

A) academic achievement.
B) mental aptitudes.
C) inherited skills.
D) chromosomal abnormalities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Molly has just taken a test of her capacity to learn to be a computer programmer.This is an example of an ________ test.

A) IQ Test
B) achievement
C) interest
D) aptitude
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Intelligence tests were initially designed by Binet and Simon to assess

A) academic aptitude.
B) achievement.
C) general intelligence.
D) natural ability.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Tests designed to assess what a person has learned are called ________ tests.

A) mental age
B) aptitude
C) standardized
D) achievement
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The French government commissioned Alfred Binet to develop an intelligence test that would

A) demonstrate the innate intellectual superiority of western European races.
B) effectively distinguish between reading and language disabilities.
C) provide an objective measure of teaching effectiveness in the public school system.
D) reduce the need to rely on teachers' biased judgments of students' learning potential.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Cindra achieved an intelligence test score of 100 on a current version of the Stanford-Binet test.This indicates that relative to other adults her age her intellectual abilities

A) are above average.
B) are average.
C) are below average.
D) cannot be measured.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The WAIS was designed for testing ________ intelligence,whereas the WISC was designed for testing ________ intelligence.

A) children's;adults'
B) analytical;natural
C) adults';children's
D) Europeans';North Americans'
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Encouraging those of high intellectual ability to mate with one another was of most interest to

A) Alfred Binet.
B) William Stern.
C) David Wechsler.
D) Francis Galton.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The original IQ formula would be LEAST appropriate for representing the intelligence test performance of

A) kindergartners.
B) grade school students.
C) middle school students.
D) university students.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Assessing current competence is to ________ tests as predicting future performance is to ________ tests.

A) intelligence;standardized
B) aptitude;achievement
C) standardized;intelligence
D) achievement;aptitude
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
In developing a test of intellectual ability for Parisian schoolchildren,Binet and Simon assumed that

A) the test would measure inherited,unchangeable abilities.
B) the test would yield an intelligence quotient consisting of chronological age divided by mental age multiplied by 100.
C) a bright child would perform like a normal child of an older age.
D) measures of physical and sensory skills would be good predictors of school achievement.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
A survey of the history of intelligence testing reinforces the important lesson that

A) although science strives for objectivity,scientists can be influenced by their personal biases.
B) the experiment is the most powerful tool available for examining cause-effect relationships.
C) different theoretical perspectives on behavior may be complementary rather than competing.
D) scientists are more concerned with the development of theory than with its practical application.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Raul has taken the GRE three times and his scores varied by only 10 points each time.Raul's test scores reflect the GRE's

A) standardization.
B) predictive validity.
C) reliability.
D) content validity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
An increase in average intelligence test performance during the past decades would best illustrate why intelligence tests need

A) to be revised for predictive validity.
B) periodic restandardization.
C) reliability indices.
D) to be checked for content validity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The Flynn effect best illustrates that the process of intelligence testing requires up-to-date

A) content validity.
B) standardization samples.
C) reliability indices.
D) predictive validity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The distribution of body weights in the general adult human population forms a(n)

A) algorithm.
B) normal curve.
C) representative sample.
D) standardized group.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Dr.Bronfman has administered her new 100-item test of abstract reasoning to a large sample of students.She is presently comparing their scores on the odd-numbered questions with those on the even-numbered questions in an effort to

A) determine the test's validity.
B) determine the test's reliability.
C) standardize the test.
D) provide a normal distribution of scores.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
A bell-shaped pattern that characterizes the distribution of a large sample of intelligence test scores is a graphic representation of

A) the intelligence quotient.
B) a normal curve.
C) the Flynn effect.
D) general intelligence.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Researchers assess the correlation between scores obtained on alternate forms of the same test in order to measure the ________ of the test.

A) content validity
B) predictive validity
C) normal distribution
D) reliability
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Your score on the WAIS does not indicate how well you control your impulses or deal effectively with social conflict.This best illustrates that intelligence is

A) impossible to measure with any reliability.
B) unrelated to the speed of cognitive processing.
C) a collection of distinctly different abilities.
D) a joint function of nature and nurture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
When a person's test performance can be compared with that of a representative and pretested sample of people,the test is said to be

A) reliable.
B) standardized.
C) valid.
D) normally distributed.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Dr.Renk is testing the reliability of an assessment she developed for testing depression.She divided her participants in half and gave one section the odd-questions and the other section the even-questions of the test.Which type of reliability is she testing?

A) correlation
B) test-retest
C) split-half
D) criterion
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Professor Stott is examining the reliability of the final exam she gives to her class.She gives half of the students one version of the text and the other half a different version of the test.Which type of reliability is she testing?

A) correlation
B) test-retest
C) split-half
D) criterion
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Dr.Benthem reports that the scores of 100 male and 100 female students on his new test of mechanical reasoning form a normal curve.From his statement we may conclude that

A) the average male score was better than the average female score.
B) the students were simply guessing at the answers.
C) the average score on the test was 50 percent correct.
D) relatively few students' scores deviated extremely from the groups' average score.
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33
About ________ percent of WAIS scores fall between 70 and 130.

A) 30
B) 60
C) 70
D) 95
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34
The normal curve is often described as

A) circular.
B) bell-shaped.
C) standardized.
D) nonsymmetrical.
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35
Dr.Zimmer has designed a test to measure golfers' knowledge of their sport's history.To interpret scores on the test,he is presently administering it to a representative sample of all golfers.Dr.Zimmer is clearly in the process of

A) establishing the test's validity.
B) establishing the Flynn effect.
C) standardizing the test.
D) establishing the test's reliability.
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36
Andrea is conducting a study measuring the effectiveness of a new drug to treat obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).She has to select a scale that will consistently provide objective data about OCD symptoms on a weekly basis.Andrea needs the scale to provide consistent results that gradually change only in response to the positive effects of the drug.Andrea needs a scale with good

A) standardization.
B) predictive validity.
C) reliability.
D) content validity.
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k this deck
37
Dr.Walsh has designed a test to measure eleventh-graders' knowledge of American history.To ensure that the test represents eleventh-graders in the United States,he is standardizing the test by

A) correlating their scores on two halves of the test.
B) measuring its Flynn effect.
C) giving it to a representative sample of eleventh-graders.
D) establishing a criterion behavior to test.
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k this deck
38
Carlise's doctor suspects that she may have had a stroke.So,he has arranged for her to take a test that assesses her verbal comprehension.The test she is taking is the

A) WAIS.
B) Stanford-Binet.
C) WISC.
D) GRE.
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k this deck
39
The widespread improvement in intelligence test performance during the past century is called

A) the bell curve.
B) the normal curve.
C) standardization.
D) the Flynn effect.
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k this deck
40
A test is reliable if it

A) measures what it claims to measure or predicts what it is supposed to predict.
B) yields dependably consistent scores.
C) has been standardized on a representative sample of all those who are likely to take the test.
D) produces a normal distribution of scores.
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k this deck
41
The widely used American revision of Alfred Binet's original intelligence test was developed by

A) James Flynn.
B) Francis Galton.
C) Lewis Terman.
D) David Wechsler.
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k this deck
42
The correlation is likely to be lowest between the

A) Stanford-Binet IQ scores and grades of elementary-school children.
B) Wechsler intelligence scores and grades of high school students.
C) SAT scores and grades of first-year college students.
D) GRE scores and grades of graduate students.
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k this deck
43
The success with which a test predicts the behavior it is designed to predict is called

A) content validity.
B) predictive validity.
C) split-half reliability.
D) test-retest reliability.
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k this deck
44
A test has a high degree of validity if it

A) measures or predicts what it is supposed to measure or predict.
B) yields consistent results every time it is used.
C) produces a normal distribution of scores.
D) has been standardized on a representative sample of all those who are likely to take the test.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
45
A test designed to assess whether newly graduated medical students should be granted the legal right to practice medicine would most likely be considered a(n)________ test.

A) WAIS
B) aptitude
C) IQ
D) achievement
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k this deck
46
The relatively narrow range of intelligence among the college seniors who take the Graduate Record Exam serves to ________ the ________ of the Graduate Record Exam.

A) increase;reliability
B) decrease;predictive validity
C) increase;normal distribution
D) decrease;standardization sample
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k this deck
47
When retested on the WAIS,people's second scores generally match their first scores quite closely.This indicates that the test has a high degree of

A) reliability.
B) content validity.
C) eugenics.
D) predictive validity.
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k this deck
48
The first modern test of intelligence was developed in

A) Germany.
B) Britain.
C) France.
D) Italy.
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k this deck
49
University grades are used to assess the ________ of the SAT.

A) test-retest reliability
B) reliability
C) standardization
D) predictive validity
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50
Increasing years of schooling over the last half-century have most likely contributed to

A) stereotype threat.
B) the Flynn effect.
C) family-environment effect.
D) eugenics.
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k this deck
51
Before publishing her test of musical aptitude,Professor Reed first administered the test to a representative sample of people.This was most clearly necessary for test

A) standardization.
B) reliability.
C) predictive validity.
D) validity.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
52
A high school counselor gave Amy a test designed to predict whether she could learn to become a successful architect.Amy most likely took a(n)________ test.

A) aptitude
B) eugenics
C) achievement
D) IQ
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k this deck
53
Some hereditarians have been fearful that higher twentieth-century birth rates among those with lower intelligence scores would shove average intelligence scores progressively downward.This fear has been most directly alleviated by the discovery of

A) mental ages.
B) the g factor.
C) content validity.
D) the Flynn effect.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
54
Mary's bathroom scale always overstates people's actual weight by exactly six pounds.The scale has ________ reliability and ________ validity.

A) low;high
B) high;low
C) low;low
D) high;high
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
A college administrator is trying to assess whether an admissions test accurately predicts how well applicants will perform at his school.The administrator is most obviously concerned that the test is

A) standardized.
B) valid.
C) reliable.
D) normally distributed.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
Who attempted to assess intellectual strengths by measuring reaction time,muscular power,sensory acuity,and body proportions?

A) Lewis Terman
B) Alfred Binet
C) Charles Spearman
D) Francis Galton
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
If both depressed and nondepressed individuals receive similar scores on a diagnostic test for depression,it suggests that the test

A) has not been standardized.
B) is not valid.
C) is not reliable.
D) scores are correlated.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
Which test has been demonstrated to be a highly reliable measure?

A) Stanford-Binet
B) WAIS
C) WISC
D) All of these tests have proven to be highly reliable.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
After learning about his low score on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale,Gunter complained,"I don't believe that test is a measure of intelligence at all." Gunter's statement is equivalent to saying that the WAIS lacks

A) standardization.
B) reliability.
C) validity.
D) a normal distribution.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
The correlation between intelligence test scores and annual income will probably be highest if computed for a group having test scores ranging from

A) 135 to 160.
B) 70 to 95.
C) 110 to 135.
D) 80 to 120.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
Psychologists use ________ to assess individuals' mental aptitudes and compare them with those of others.

A) eugenics
B) reliability coefficients
C) intelligence tests
D) the g factor
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k this deck
62
A test of your capacity to learn to be an automobile mechanic would be considered a(n)________ test.

A) reliability
B) achievement
C) aptitude
D) intelligence
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k this deck
63
Binet and Simon designed a test of intellectual abilities in order to

A) provide a quantitative estimate of inherited intellectual potential.
B) distinguish between verbal comprehension and working memory.
C) identify children likely to have difficulty learning in regular school classes.
D) assess general capacity for goal-directed adaptive behavior.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
64
Achievement tests are designed to

A) measure the desire and potential capacity to successfully meet challenges.
B) assess ability to produce novel and valuable ideas.
C) compare an individual's personality with those of highly successful people.
D) assess learned knowledge or skills.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
65
Stephie has to take the SAT exam for her applications to graduate schools.Which of the following best describes the relationship between the SAT exam and general intelligence?

A) The SAT is a biased exam and is not indicative of general intelligence.
B) Scores on the SAT and general intelligence have been found to be negatively correlated.
C) Scores on the SAT and general intelligence are weakly correlated.
D) Scores on the SAT and general intelligence have a strong positive correlation.
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k this deck
66
The nineteenth-century English scientist Sir Francis Galton believed that

A) mental abilities cannot be measured.
B) superior intelligence is biologically inherited.
C) academic aptitude measures chronological age rather than mental age.
D) intelligence test performance depends on motivation rather than ability.
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k this deck
67
To determine whether a child's intellectual development was fast or slow,Binet and Simon assessed the child's

A) natural ability.
B) average score on an IQ test.
C) mental age.
D) cultural background.
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68
To assess mental age,Binet and Simon measured children's

A) head size.
B) reasoning and problem-solving skills.
C) muscular power.
D) neural processing speed.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
69
In the early twentieth century,the U.S.government developed intelligence tests to evaluate newly arriving immigrants.Poor test scores among immigrants who were not of Anglo-Saxon heritage were attributed by some psychologists of that day to

A) stereotype threat.
B) innate mental inferiority.
C) savant syndrome.
D) differences in cultural experiences.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
The Stanford-Binet,a revision of the original French intelligence test for use with English-speaking California schoolchildren,was first developed by

A) Francis Galton.
B) David Wechsler.
C) Lewis Terman.
D) James Flynn.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
The written exam for a driver's license would most likely be considered a(n)________ test.

A) achievement
B) reliability
C) aptitude
D) intelligence
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
72
Binet and Terman would have been most likely to disagree about the

A) extent to which intelligence is determined by heredity.
B) need to standardize intelligence tests.
C) possibility of predicting people's academic success from intelligence test scores.
D) definition of mental age.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
Tests designed to predict the ability to learn new skills are called

A) interest inventories.
B) criterion tests.
C) standardized assessments.
D) aptitude tests.
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k this deck
74
For the original version of the Stanford-Binet,IQ was defined as

A) mental age multiplied by 100.
B) chronological age subtracted from mental age and multiplied by 100.
C) chronological age divided by mental age and multiplied by 100.
D) mental age divided by chronological age and multiplied by 100.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
Although Francis Galton was not able to develop a simple measure of intelligence,he can be credited with providing psychological science with

A) achievement tests.
B) the concept of mental age.
C) the intelligence quotient.
D) the phrase of nature versus nurture.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
76
If course exams assess a student's mastery of a representative sample of course material,they are said to

A) be reliable.
B) have content validity.
C) be standardized.
D) have predictive validity.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
Aptitude tests are to ________ as achievement tests are to ________.

A) current interests;past competence
B) past competence;current interests
C) current competence;future performance
D) future performance;current competence
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78
Comparing the academic performance of those whose scores are extremely low on intelligence tests with those whose scores are extremely high is an effective way to highlight the tests'

A) standardization.
B) test-retest reliability.
C) reliability.
D) validity.
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Unlock for access to all 109 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
79
Who would have been the LEAST enthusiastic about relying on eugenics for the improvement of human intellectual functioning?

A) Francis Galton
B) Alfred Binet
C) Lewis Terman
D) Charles Darwin
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k this deck
80
The eugenics movement would have been most likely to encourage

A) selective breeding of highly intelligent people.
B) creation of special education programs for intellectually inferior children.
C) construction of tests to measure a variety of intelligences.
D) use of factor analysis for identification of various types of intelligence.
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Unlock Deck
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