Ch16 Test Bank Docx Consciousness - Cognitive Psychology 8e Test Bank with Answers by Michael W. Eysenck. DOCX document preview.

Ch16 Test Bank Docx Consciousness

TestBank - Chapter 16

  1. Who conducted elaborate EEG work that indicates free will is an illusion by showing brain activity in the motor cortex occurs before the intention to move?
    1. George Sperling
    2. Adrian Owen
    3. Benjamin Libet
    4. Daniel Wegner
    5. Victor Lamme
  2. Who stated we have only the illusion of conscious or free will?
    1. George Sperling
    2. Adrian Owen
    3. Carl Jung
    4. Daniel Wegner
    5. Victor Lamme
  3. Who proposed the global workspace theory?
    1. Dehaene and Changeux (2011)
    2. Baars (1988)
    3. Pinker (1997)
    4. Webb and Graziano (2015)
    5. Lamme (2018)
  4. Sperling’s (1960) research evidence indicated conscious experience is often:
    1. Under-report conscious experience
    2. Over-report conscious experience
    3. Our conscious experience is controlled by current experiences
    4. Conscious experience is short-lived
    5. Conscious experience is dictated by performance time
  5. The key finding of Libet et al. (1983) on consciousness and intention was that:
    1. Participants were unaware of their conscious intentions
    2. No readiness potentials were detected in the brain
    3. Readiness potentials in the brain occurred before conscious awareness of an intention
    4. Readiness potentials in the brain occurred during conscious awareness of an intention
    5. Readiness potentials in the brain occurred after conscious awareness of an intention
  6. A primary function of consciousness is:
    1. To plan
    2. Social communication
    3. To access information
    4. To exercise global coordination
    5. To control
  7. Block (2012) distinguised between how many forms of consciousness?
    1. One
    2. Two
    3. Three
    4. Four
    5. Five
  8. The question of how physical processes in the brain can give rise to subjective experience was referred to by Chalmers (2007) as:
    1. The easy problem
    2. The hard problem
    3. The binding problem
    4. The integration problem
    5. The self-problem
  9. “I cannot only feel pain and see red, but think to myself, ‘Hey, here I am, Steve Pinker, feeling pain and seeing red!’” This is an example of:
    1. Higher form of consciousness
    2. Lower form of consciousness
    3. Conscious attitudes
    4. Phenomenal consciousness
    5. Self-monitoring
  10. The vegetative state is defined, behaviourally, by all of the following criteria EXCEPT:
    1. No evidence of wakefulness
    2. No response to external stimuli that suggests volition
    3. No evidence of language comprehension
    4. No external evidence of awareness
    5. No evidence of language expression
  11. Which of the following involves feedback from higher to lower areas and has been linked to conscious awareness?
    1. Feedforward sweep
    2. Feedback sweep
    3. Recalcitrant propagation
    4. Cascaded processing
    5. Recurrent processing
  12. Which of the following statements describes one of the assumptions of global workspace theory?
    1. All information processing occurs unconsciously
    2. Conscious awareness is associated with synchronised brain activity
    3. Attention plays no part in conscious awareness
    4. All information processing occurs consciously
    5. The global workspace has an unlimited capacity
  13. Which three brain areas were identified by Dehaene and Changeux (2011) as being particularly important in the conscious experience?
    1. Prefrontal cortex, parietal cortex and cingulate
    2. Cerebellum, pons and nucleus accumbens
    3. Fusiform face area, putamen and medulla
    4. Superior colliculus, reticular formation and occipital cortex
    5. Hippocampus, pons and reticular formation
  14. Split-brain patients typically have severance of the:
    1. Frontal cortex
    2. Superior temporal sulcus
    3. Corpus callosum
    4. Pons
    5. Anterior cingulate
  15. Who regarded the left hemisphere as dominant because language processing is typically centered there, and took the view that split-brain patients have two minds, each with its own consciousness?
    1. George Sperling
    2. Michael Gazzaniga
    3. Benjamin Libet
    4. Roger Sperry
    5. Victor Lamme
  16. According to Gazzaniga, the interpreter system of consciousness is based in which area of the brain?
    1. Hippocampus
    2. Broca’s area
    3. Left hemisphere
    4. Temporal lobes
    5. Cerebellum
  17. Baynes and Gazzaniga (2000) offered evidence that patient VJ was different from all other split-brain patients that they had studied, in that she:
    1. Had no damage to the connective tissue across hemispheres
    2. Had been split-brained since birth
    3. Had right-lateralised language
    4. Displayed signs of limited dual consciousness
    5. None of these
  18. The study of the conscious abilities in the right hemisphere of split-brain patients is hampered by:
    1. The fact that there is usually extensive damage to this hemisphere
    2. The lack of memory abilities in this hemisphere
    3. The lack of language abilities in this hemisphere
    4. The impossibility of presenting experimental stimuli exclusively to this hemisphere
    5. All of the above
  19. Access consciousness is:
    1. Refers to the actions associated with consciousness
    2. Refers to the feelings associated with consciousness
    3. Refers to the experiential characteristics of consciousness
    4. Refers to the immediate conscious experience
    5. Refers to the functions that can be associated with consciousness
  20. Phenomenal consciousness is:
    1. Refers to the actions associated with consciousness
    2. Refers to the feelings associated with consciousness
    3. Refers to the experiential characteristics of consciousness
    4. Refers to the immediate conscious experience
    5. Refers to the functions that can be associated with consciousness
  21. According to Bor and Seth (2012), there is an important distinction between:
    1. Conscious awareness and conscious being
    2. Conscious awareness and conscious behaviour
    3. Conscious content and conscious level
    4. Conscious perception and conscious emotion
    5. Conscious experience and conscious awareness
  22. What are the main functions of consciousness?
    1. Perceiving the environment
    2. Social communication
    3. Control
    4. Think about events and issues far removed
    5. All of the above
  23. In a study by Wegner and Wheatley (1999), two participants were instructed to stop a cursor every 30 s or so and to indicate whether they had consciously intended the cursor to stop where it did. This is an example of a study of:
    1. Free will
    2. Conscious attention
    3. Attentional control
    4. Action selection
    5. Social perception
  24. Studying neural correlates of consciousness has many problems. Which statement does NOT reflect these issues:
    1. It is hard to disentagle which neural activity is associated with conscious awareness and task-related processes
    2. Neuroimaging measures may access consciousness more directly than behavioural measures alone
    3. It is hard to establish the relationship between a given pattern of neural activity and consciousness
    4. Research is limited to neural correlates of visual conscious awareness
    5. Little is known about neural processess associated with conscious awareness of past or future events

Document Information

Document Type:
DOCX
Chapter Number:
16
Created Date:
Aug 21, 2025
Chapter Name:
Chapter 16 Consciousness
Author:
Michael W. Eysenck

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