Chat with us, powered by LiveChat Which theory of attention posits that selection occurs after all incoming stimuli have been identified? - EssayAbode

Which theory of attention posits that selection occurs after all incoming stimuli have been identified?

Which theory of attention posits that selection occurs after all incoming stimuli have been identified?

 

ention.

 

  attenuation theory

 

  late selection theory

 

  early selection theory

 

  All theories of attention make this assumption.

 

 Question 2The term ________ is typically associated with the physiological processes that underlie information intake, while the term ________ is typically associated with the interpretation and organization of incoming information.

 

  top-down processing; bottom-up processing

 

  bottom-up processing; top-down processing

 

  sensation; perception

 

  perception; sensation

 

 Question 3The higher cognitive processes, such as remembering, planning, and deciding are located in:

 

  the cerebral cortex.

 

  the midbrain.

 

  the hindbrain.

 

  none of the above.

 

 Question 4Metacognition refers to:

 

  the role that emotion plays in cognition.

 

  the fact that we have evolved particular cognitive tendencies and abilities.

 

  the role that the body plays in thinking.

 

  the knowledge we have about our own cognitive processes.

 

 Question 5The notion of an affordance – – that certain objects or structures offer particular “action possibilities” (i.e., sitting) — fits nicely with which theoretical approach?

 

  constructive view of perception

 

  direct view of perception

 

  Gestalt principles of organization

 

  top-down processing

 

Question 6You set out from your living room to go down to the basement to get something. When you get to the basement, you forget what you have walked down there to get. What kind of action slip is this?

 

  description error

 

  associative activation error

 

  capture error

 

  loss of activation error

 

 Question 7Our tendency to group elements that occur at the same time is called:

 

  common fate.

 

  similarity.

 

  closure.

 

  synchrony.

 

 Question 8Noam Chomsky:

 

  proposed that language can be accounted for solely based on S-R principles.

 

  sharply criticized Skinner’s view of language learning.

 

  proposed that language learning is dependent on automatic self-reinforcement.

 

  saw no need for the concept of mental representations in explaining language.

 

 Question 9Drifting toward the center line while trying to retrieve the cell phone you dropped on the car floor would be an example of a deficit in what level of task, as described by the Groeger (1999) framework?

 

  operational

 

  tactical

 

  strategic

 

  planning

 

 Question 10The identification of a stimulus with the help of context, previous knowledge, and/or expectations is called:

 

  top-down processing.

 

  bottom-up processing.

 

  materialism.

 

  phenomenal consciousness.

 

 Question 11The sense of subjective awareness of what our mind is currently doing is termed:

 

  access consciousness.

 

  phenomenal consciousness.

 

  metacognition.

 

  unconsciousness.

 

 Question 12A speech perception effect in which visual information conflicts with auditory signals, changing the perceived speech sound is called:

 

  the averaging effect.

 

  synesthesia.

 

  the ventriloquist effect.

 

  the McGurk effect.

 

 Question 13The behaviorists claimed that in order for learning to take place, you need to have________ and ________. It turns out ________ is (are) absolutely necessary.

 

  mental representations; motivation; neither

 

  mental representations; motivation; only mental representations

 

  response and reinforcement; neither

 

  response and reinforcement; only reinforcement

 

 Question 14Post-attentive processes:

 

  require little attention.

 

  occur before attention is focused.

 

  are effortful and conscious.

 

  would include the perceptual grouping processes proposed by Gestalt psychologists.

 

 Question 15Research on split-brain patients reveals that:

 

  the left hemisphere typically specializes in verbal processing, while the right hemisphere specializes in spatial tasks

 

  the left hemisphere typically specializes in spatial tasks, while the right hemisphere specializes in verbal processing

 

  people who have had their corpus callosum severed have a great deal of difficulty functioning in everyday life

 

  for normal people, there is no difference between the functioning of the left and right hemispheres

 

The answer can be found in Section 1.4 Psychology A.D.

 

 

 

PSY352 Cognitive Psychology

 

Week 2 Quiz   

 

Question 1The classic measure used to assess immediate memory capacity limits is termed:

 

  the Stroop task.

 

  memory span.

 

  the Brown-Peterson task.

 

  the juggling task.

 

 Question 2We tend to think in terms of and talk about:

 

  basic level categories.

 

  superordinate categories.

 

  subordinate categories.

 

  category hierarchies.

 

 Question 3In image-based approaches to object recognition:

 

  objects are recognized holistically through comparison with a stored analog representation.

 

  identification of the object is viewpoint independent.

 

  a rotated image can be recognized just as quickly as an image in its normal orientation.

 

  an object must first be broken down into components.     

 

 Question 4The olfactory-verbal gap is:

 

  the inability of people to label an odor given a choice of labels.

 

  the ability of people to name similar odors.

 

  the indirect connection of olfaction and verbal labels, through an emotional process.

 

  the difficulty people have in correctly identifying odors.

 

 Question 5The ________ approaches to object recognition might also be termed feature analysis, and propose that recognition ________ depend on the particular perspective we have on the object to be recognized.

 

  image-based; does

 

  image-based; does not

 

  parts-based; does

 

  parts-based; does not

 

 Question 6The case where later information interferes with the ability to retain information that occurred earlier is called:

 

  anterograde amnesia.

 

  retroactive interference.

 

  proactive interference.

 

  retrograde amnesia.

 

 Question 7Semantic memories:

 

  are generally retrieved in the absence of  a recollective experience.

 

  tend to be more vulnerable to forgetting than episodic memories.

 

  typically include an affective (i.e., emotional) component.

 

  aren’t all that important in day-to-day living.

 

 Question 8The most conservative estimate of the limits on immediate memory is:

 

  1 or 2.

 

  3 or 4.

 

  7.

 

  9.

 

 Question 9Deaf individuals:

 

  show effects of similarity, but not word length.

 

  have no articulatory loop at all.

 

  show effects of word length, but not similarity.

 

  show effects of word length and similarity, just like hearing individuals.

 

 Question 10A problem with the prototype approach that can be explained by the exemplar approach is:

 

  sensitivity to context.

 

  similarity to the standard example.

 

  typical examples are generated first when people are asking to name a category member.

 

  that the exemplar approach is more economical.

 

 Question 11Mind-wandering:

 

  requires no mental effort.

 

  is associated with increased awareness of the surrounding environment.

 

  rarely occurs in daily life.

 

  usually occurs without intention.

 

 Question 12Which of the following types of processing would result in the best memory?

 

  thinking about how many syllables are in the word you are trying to remember

 

  thinking of a rhyming word

 

  evaluating whether the word fits into a sentence

 

  thinking about how the word relates to you

 

 Question 13Categories that are formed “on the fly” in the service of some goal are termed:

 

  natural categories.

 

  artifact categories.

 

  ad hoc categories.

 

  metaphorical concept categories.

 

 Question 14A problem with an extreme version of the exemplar approach is that:

 

  people are not sensitive to the biasing effects of context.

 

  it is not based on the idea of similarity to an example.

 

  it uses only the average examples, not all of the examples in memory.

 

  it is not economical to store every single example in memory.

 

 Question 15If people are given unorganized information to process, they will attempt to:

 

  use distinctiveness processing to aid memory

 

  impose their own structure and use subjective, idiosyncratic categories

 

  use material-appropriate processing to aid memory

 

  remember it using maintenance rehearsal

 

 

 

PSY352 Cognitive Psychology

 

Week 3 Quiz   

 

Question 1Research in everyday memory issues is usually higher in _______ and lower in _______ than typical laboratory memory research.

 

  ecological validity; internal validity

 

  internal validity; ecological validity

 

  internal validity; external validity

 

  ecological validity; external validity

 

 Question 2The results of laboratory studies of illusory memory indicate that:

 

  participants often consciously recollect the theme words around which each list is constructed, even

 

though these words were never presented.

 

  participants don’t generally recollect that the theme word had been presented; they just KNOW that it was presented.

 

  participants often recognized that the theme words as having been in the lists but rarely recalled those theme

 

words.

 

  false memories can not be created in a list learning paradigm.

 

 

 

Question 3The Proust phenomenon is:

 

  the power of odors to elicit memories that are especially old and vivid

 

  the ability of odors to generate more detailed memories

 

  using olfactory odors to generate autobiographical facts

 

  the ability of odors to generate very early memories in life

 

 Question 4Which of these is an example of autobiographical memory?

 

  Dan remembers his first date.

 

  Susan plans for the two papers she has to write this week.

 

  Zoe recalls that her mom hates it when she bites her nails.

 

  Brant tells someone that he has season tickets to his college’s games.

 

 Question 5Wang (2006) compared the early recall of Taiwanese and U.S. adults in terms of the age of their early

 

childhood recollections and the degree of autonomy reflected in the memories. She found that U.S. participants

 

had ____ memories than Taiwanese participants, and that memories of U.S. participants were ____ likely to reflect autonomy.

 

  earlier; more

 

  earlier; less

 

  later; more

 

  later; less

 

 Question 6The phenomenon of imagination inflation:

 

  is an instance in which the less a memory is imagined, the more real it seems.

 

  is an instance in which the more a memory is imagined, the more real it seems

 

  is present only in young children.

 

  only works in a laboratory setting.

 

 Question 7Which of these autobiographical memory research techniques was introduced by the same individual who came up with the statistical technique of correlation?

 

  cue-word technique

 

  targeted event recall

 

  diary technique

 

  flashbulb memories

 

Question 8Nash, Wadem, and Brewer (2009) investigated what they termed the doctored evidence effect and propose all but one of these as a possible source of the effect. Which one did they not propose?

 

  imagination

 

  familiarity

 

  credibility

 

  elaboration

 

The answer can be found in Section 8.3 Illusory Memories.

 

Question 9Currently, flashbulb memories seem to be explained by:

 

  encoding specificity

 

  special memory mechanisms due to the emotion involved

 

  the Now Print! Theory

 

  the intensification of basic memory mechanisms by emotion

 

 Question 10All of these are typically a component of a flashbulb memory except for:

 

  what you were doing at the time

 

  what you were wearing that day

 

  what you did next

 

  how you felt when you heard

 

 Question 11Autobiographical memory helps us to organize, reflect on, and think through important life events.  This                                      assertion relates to which function of autobiographical memory?

 

  informational

 

  communicative

 

  directive

 

  emotional

 

 Question 12Relating details of personally experienced events makes us seem more believable and truthful, and tends to make us more persuasive. This assertion relates to which function of autobiographical memory?

 

  emotional

 

  informational

 

  communicative

 

  directive

 

 Question 13People often tout the power of smells as cues for autobiographical memories. How does empirical research

 

stack up on this issue?

 

  Olfactory cues produce more detailed memories than do non-olfactory cues.

 

  Olfactory cues produce more recent memories than do non-olfactory cues.

 

  Olfactory cues produce more vivid memories than do non-olfactory cues.

 

  Olfactory cues tend to produce flashbulb memories.

 

 Question 14Which of these autobiographical memory research techniques allows a researcher to plot the autobiographical                         retention function?

 

  cue-word technique

 

  targeted event recall

 

  diary technique

 

  flashbulb memories

 

 Question 15The “general events” level of representation in autobiographical memory bears a strong resemblance to:

 

  the subordinate level of category representation

 

  the superordinate level of category representation

 

  the basic level of category representation

 

  the notion of an exemplar in category representation

 

 

 

PSY352 Cognitive Psychology

 

Week 4 Quiz   

 

Question 1Inductive reasoning:

 

  involves reasoning from specific instances to a general rule.

 

  leads to a certain conclusion.

 

  involves using premises to justify a conclusion.

 

  is often associated with a bias to avoid confirming evidence.

 

 Question 2According to the mere effort

 

account of the stereotype threat effect, invoking a stereotype:

 

  disrupts cognitive performance in all circumstances.

 

  pushes people away from their prepotent response, disrupting performance.

 

  pushes people toward their prepotent response, which can enhance performance under some circumstances.

 

  pushes people toward their prepotent response when it’s inappropriate, and away from it it when it’s appropriate.

 

 Question 3 Using problems that have already been solved as aids for representing and solving the problem currently being

 

faced is termed:

 

  an algorithm.

 

  reasoning by analogy.

 

  means-end analysis.

 

  working backwards.

 

 Question 4“Correct specification of the problem space” would be the way in which the General Problem Solver framework describes:

 

  functional fixedness.

 

  creativity.

 

  problem representation.

 

  problem solution.

 

 Question 5Which of the following is NOT generally considered to be a component of a problem?

 

  a goal

 

  a reward

 

  a set of constraints

 

  a set of obstacles to overcome

 

 Question 6If you want someone to be willing to take a risk, you can make it more likely by:

 

  telling them what they stand to gain if they don’t take the risk.

 

  telling them what they stand to lose if they don’t take the risk.

 

  pitting the risk against a sure gain.

 

  doing nothing special; risk-taking is people’s “default mode.”

 

 Question 7The ________ view of inductive reasoning states that inductive reasoning involves updating the strengths of one’s beliefs based on the recall of specific instances.

 

  experience based

 

  rule-based

 

  categorization

 

  confirmatory

 

 Question 8According to the Gestalt psychologists, the sudden and successful restructuring of problem elements is termed:

 

  the law of effect.

 

  subgoal analysis.

 

  insight.

 

  problem space restructuring.

 

 Question 9According to the dual-process view of reasoning, judgment and decision making, which mode of thinking

 

operates relatively slowly, deliberately and in a controlled manner?

 

  heuristic mode

 

  rational mode

 

  bounded mode

 

  analytic mode

 

 Question 10“All toads are animals. All men are animals. Therefore, all men are toads.” Many would evaluate this as a valid syllogism, due to its ALL ALL ALL form. This is because:

 

  of belief bias.

 

  people have trouble reasoning about familiar objects.

 

  people have more trouble with universal quantifiers (e.g., ALL) than with particular ones (e.g., SOME).

 

  of an atmosphere effect.

 

 Question 11Which approach to problem solving attempts to minimize the “distance” between an initial state and a goal state by breaking the problem down into a series of subgoals?

 

  Gestalt approach

 

  Behaviorist approach

 

  GPS approach

 

  Structuralist approach

 

 Question 12Coincidences are extremely striking, and often lead people to believe in ________. The ease with which we think of coincidences makes them important players in the ______ heuristic.

 

  illusory correlations; availability

 

  illusory correlations; representativeness

 

  stereotypes; availability

 

  stereotypes; representativeness

 

 Question 13People tend to ignore the base rate of some occurrence in the population in making their judgments. For example, they assume anyone over 6’6” must have played a lot of basketball, even thought the majority of individuals have not played much basketball. This is a prime example of:

 

  regression to the mean.

 

  the availability heuristic.

 

  the representativeness heuristic.

 

  anchoring and adjustment.

 

 Question 14Reasoning from a stereotype is most closely related to this heuristic:

 

  the representativeness heuristic.

 

  simulation.

 

  the availability heuristic.

 

  anchoring and adjustment.

 

 Question 15Which of the following is NOT one the three sources of difficulty in solving insight problems according to Kershaw and Ohlsson?

 

  Perceptual factors

 

  Experience factors

 

  Process factors

 

  Knowledge factors

 

 

 

PSY352 Cognitive Psychology

 

Week 5 Quiz   

 

Question 1Which of these is a garden-path sentence?

 

  They are cooking rocks.

 

  The horse raced past the barn fell.

 

  John went to the grocery store and bought a car.

 

  Susan walked up the garden path.

 

Question 2The sentence, “Colorless green ideas sleep furiously” violates:

 

  the rules of both syntax and semantics.

 

  the rules of syntax but not semantics.

 

  neither the rules of syntax nor semantics.

 

  the rules of semantics, but not syntax.

 

 Question 3The story grammar approach basically applies which notion (from sentence comprehension) to the

 

comprehension of stories and larger units of discourse?

 

  case grammar

 

  parsing

 

  morphology

 

  constraint-based grammar

 

 Question 4Which of these describes the bottom-up processes in reading?

 

  Reading is aided by expectations.

 

  Reading is aided by context.

 

  Reading is aided by other words.

 

  Reading requires analysis of the printed symbols.

 

 Question 5The sentences, “John is easy to please,” and “It is easy to please John” are:

 

  identical in both surface and deep structure.

 

  identical in deep structure, but differ in surface structure.

 

  identical in surface structure, but differ in deep structure.

 

  different in both deep and surface structure.

 

 Question 6Chomsky’s approach to how we engage in language is termed:

 

  transformational grammar.

 

  constraint-based grammar.

 

  phonetic grammar.

 

  syntactic based grammar.

 

 Question 7Place of articulation is to manner of articulation as ________ is to ________.

 

  release; vibration

 

  vocal cords; air flow

 

  interrupt; stop

 

  where; how

 

 Question 8Anaphors are more likely to result in the successful retrieval of an appropriate antecedent when:

 

  the antecedent has occurred recently.

 

  the antecedent received first mention.

 

  both factors mentioned in a and b are important.

 

  neither factor mentioned in a and b are important.

 

 Question 9What is parsing?

 

  the process of accessing word meaning

 

  the process of converting syntax into semantics

 

  the process of identifying the component elements of a sentence

 

  the process of mapping the look of a word onto the sound of a word

 

 Question 10Misheard word boundaries, which often make understanding song lyrics difficult on the first few times you hear a song (and sometimes longer!) have been dubbed:

 

  Singing Bees.

 

  Mondegreens.

 

  Lyrical Errors.

 

  Earbugs.

 

 Question 11Recent research comparing the number of words used by male and female speakers:

 

  reveals that males use over three times as many words in their speech as females.

 

  reveals that females use over three times as many words in their speech as males.

 

  reveals little difference in the number of words used by males and females.

 

  The number of words in natural conversation has never been measured.

 

 Question 12About how many phonemes make up American English?

 

  10

 

  25

 

  45

 

  105

 

Question 13A ______ is the smallest unit of language that carries meaning.

 

  phone

 

  phoneme

 

  morpheme

 

  word

 

 Question 14Word fixations typically last around ____.

 

  2 seconds

 

  1 second

 

  ¾ second

 

  ¼ second

 

 Question 15This structure-building process involves using world knowledge and linguistic knowledge to relate new

 

information to information that’s already been encoded:

 

  laying a foundation

 

  mapping

 

  shifting

 

  suppression

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