Attention and performance Test Questions & Answers Chapter 5 - Cognitive Psychology 8e Test Bank with Answers by Michael W. Eysenck. DOCX document preview.
TestBank - Chapter 5
- According to James (1890), passive attentional processes are controlled by:
- An individual’s goals
- An individual’s expectations
- Bottom-up processes
- Top-down processes
- All of the above
- Cherry’s research on the “cocktail party” problem involves the study of:
- Focused auditory attention
- Focused visual attention
- Divided auditory attention
- Divided visual attention
- Change blindness
- The method whereby participants have to repeat an auditory message back out loud while a second auditory message is played to the other ear is called:
- Monitoring
- Shadowing
- Tagging
- Breakthrough
- Following
- Cherry’s research on the “cocktail party” problem suggests that we use which type of information to enable us to follow just one conversation, when several people are talking at once?
- Message characteristics
- Language
- Syntactical information
- Physical characteristics
- None of these
- Which theory of attention was developed by Treisman and Gelade (1980)?
- Filter theory
- Perceptual load theory
- Bottleneck theory
- Decision integration theory
- Feature integration theory
- In which of the following attention theories does the processing “bottleneck” occur much later in the processing system?
- Deutsch and Deutsch theory
- Filter theory
- Attenuation theory
- Perceptual load theory
- Feature integration theory
- According to Lavie (e.g., 2005), if all other factors held constant, susceptibility to distraction is greater when the task involves what?
- More items in the visual field
- Low perceptual load
- Low demand on executive control functions
- Pop-outs
- Only auditory stimuli
- According to Corbetta and Shulman (2002), the goal-directed system of visual attention consists of a:
- Right-hemisphere ventral fronto-parietal network
- Left-hemisphere ventral fronto-parietal network
- Ventral attention network
- Dorsal attention network
- Left-hemisphere ventral occipital network
- Which brain areas did Corbetta and Shulman (2002) find to be involved in the stimulus-driven system of visual attention?
- Inferior frontal junction
- Inferior frontal gyrus
- Supramarginal gyrus
- Superior temporal gyrus and insula
- All of the above
- The model of visual attention proposed by Eriksen and St James (1986) is the:
- Object-based theory
- Filter theory
- Colour wheel theory
- Autofocus theory
- Zoom lens model
- Posner (1980) suggested that the attentional spotlight can shift to a different visual location in the absence of eye movements. This is termed:
- Divided attention
- Split attention
- Overt attention
- Covert attention
- Attentional bias
- Inhibition of perceptual/attentional processes and inhibition of motor processes have both been proposed as possible mechanisms for which phenomenon?
- Mnemonic inhibition
- Inhibitory paralysis
- Apraxia
- Inhibition of return
- All of the above
- The condition in which there is a lack of awareness for stimuli presented to the contralesional side of space is called:
- Neglect
- Balint’s syndrome
- Visual agnosia
- Optic ataxia
- Anosognosia
- Feature integration theory predicts that, in the absence of focused attention, features from different objects will be randomly combined to produce:
- Conjunctive features
- Illusory conjunctions
- Non-targets
- Visual illusions
- Feature displays
- The study by Treisman and Davies (1973) found that interference in a divided-attention task was greatest when:
- The tasks used the same modality
- Required responses were similar
- Participants were practised at the task
- Both tasks were difficult
- None of these
- The study by Spelke et al. (1976) investigated the effect of what on dual-task performance?
- Task difficulty
- Task similarity
- Response similarity
- Practice
- Reward
- According to Shiffrin and Schneider's (1977) theory, which of the following statements applies to controlled processes?
- They can be used flexibly in changing circumstances
- They have no capacity limitations
- They are hard to modify once learned
- They do not require attention
- None of these
- Evidence from many studies of the psychological refractory period has offered support for the predictions of:
- Capacity theory
- Instance theory
- Feature integration theory
- Cognitive bottleneck theory
- Visual search theory
- The cognitive neuroscience approach was used to test:
- Processes underlying parallel performance
- Theoretical models alone
- Theoretical models and to enhance our understanding of processes underlying dual-task performance
- Theoretical models and to enhance our understanding of processing underlying single-task performance
- To enhance our understanding of processes underlying covert performance
- Dual-task performance is often associated with (Schweizer et al., 2013):
- Underadditivity
- Overadditivity
- Enhanced cognitive control
- Reduced spatial and visual processing
- Increased attentional processing
- What does the term “bottleneck” mean?
- Filter
- Processor
- Buffer
- Output
- Input
- What component of working memory is involved in attentional control?
- Visuospatial sketchpad
- Episodic buffer
- Phonological loop
- Central executive
- Long-term memory
- What did Chica et al. (2011) find when applying TMS to the right intraparietal sulcus?
- Impaired functioning of both attention systems
- Impaired functioning of the goal-directed system
- Hightened functioning of both attention systems
- Heightened function of the stimulus-driven attentional system
- Equal functioning of both systems
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