Test Questions & Answers Learning Chapter.7 - Psychology (Euro Ed.) | Test Bank by Jarvis by Jarvis, Okami. DOCX document preview.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 1
1) When psychologists refer to learning as the acquisition of knowledge of a new fact, they are talking about this type of knowledge.
a. Behaviourist
b. Explicit
c. Implicit
d. Procedural
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 2
2) Knowing how to do something, like ride a bicycle or drive a car, is referred to as
a. Explicit knowledge
b. Behavioural knowledge
c. Procedural knowledge
d. Implicit knowledge
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 3
3) Which of the following is NOT one of the three general statements about learning emphasized in the text?
a. In learning, one acquires some new knowledge or behaviour as a result of specific experiences.
b. Learning can only be inferred—it cannot be observed.
c. Most of the behaviours that we learn are actually innate.
d. The changes in behaviour or knowledge that occur as a result of learning are relatively enduring
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 4
4) When psychologists speak of prepared learning in humans and other animals, they are referring to
a. The innate capacity to learn from experience
b. The faculties of mind inherited through learning
c. The innate ability to see and hear
d. The ability to think about oneself and one’s environment
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 5
5) Because of this mechanism of learning, you are able to work on your schoolwork without paying attention to the sounds of your noisy neighbours.
a. Sensitization
b. Conditioning
c. Habituation
d. Latent learning
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 6
6) When learning involves relating a response to more than one event or stimulus, it is called
a. Conditioning
b. Associate learning
c. Priming
d. Latent learning
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 7
7) In classical conditioning, the organism learns to associate a neutral stimulus with another stimulus if
a. the neutral stimulus prepares the organism for the other stimulus
b. the neutral stimulus is sufficiently intense
c. the other stimulus produces an intense response
d. the other stimulus is particularly noxious
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 8
8) In Pavlov’s classic experiment, the sound of a bell or tone prior to the association with food is referred to as a
a. Conditioned stimulus
b. Unconditioned stimulus
c. Neutral stimulus
d. Learned stimulus
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 9
9) When a dog has food places in its mouth, the dog begins to salivate. In classical conditioning, the salivation is referred to as the
a. Unconditioned stimulus
b. Conditioned stimulus
c. Unconditioned response
d. Conditioned response
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 10
10) Which of the following criteria must be met to assure that acquisition of a conditioned response takes place?
a. The neutral stimulus must always come before the conditioned response.
b. The conditioned stimulus must immediately follow the unconditioned stimulus.
c. The unconditioned stimulus must immediately follow the conditioned stimulus.
d. The response to the neutral stimulus must be relatively strong at the outset.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 11
11) With repeated presentation of the conditioned stimulus without the unconditioned stimulus, the conditioned response becomes weaker until it disappears entirely, a process known as
a. Acquisition
b. Entrainment
c. Discrimination
d. Extinction
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 12
12) Thanks to this component of classical conditioning, you automatically learn to avoid all dogs that might attack you if you have been attacked by a dog in the past.
a. Discrimination
b. Generalization
c. Spontaneous recovery
d. Renewal
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 13
13) All of the following statements about Watson and Rayner’s (1920) “Little Albert” experiment are true, EXCEPT:
a. After about seven pairings of a loud sound with a rat, Albert began to show fear in the presence of the rat alone.
b. The methods used in the experiment were unethical, casual, and haphazard
c. Watson and Rayner planned to recondition Albert away from the conditioned fear of rats.
d. The study was never successfully replicated with another infant.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 14
14) Which of the following best describes how classical conditioning might be used to treat a fear of heights?
a. A therapist explains to her patients that her fear of heights is irrational
b. A therapist allows her patient access to a video game only if he can relax himself
c. A therapist shows her patient a video of a person standing on the observation deck of a skyscraper while helping him relax
d. A therapist lightly pinches her patient’s hand when he starts to become anxious
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 15
15) This concept, violated by findings of cross-species conditioning experiments, states that any neutral stimulus can be associated just as easily with one unconditioned stimulus as with any other
a. Equipotentiality
b. Generalization
c. Instinctive drift
d. Latent learning
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 16
16) According to the functionalist perspective, when an organism learns a conditioned response to natural stimuli compared to laboratory stimuli, the conditioning
a. proceeds more slowly and produces weaker effects
b. is less dependent upon a very small time interval between the presentation of the conditioning stimulus and the UCS
c. is less resistant to various sorts of interference in the conditioning process
d. lasts for a shorter period of time
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 17
17) As a result of his studies with cats in “puzzle boxes,” Thorndike proposed the “law of effect,” which states that
a. the presence of reward strengthens actions that prove to be successful while actions that prove unsuccessful become less likely to occur
b. the presence of an aversive stimulus increases the arousal of an organism’s response
c. the effect of behaviour is to cause reward
d. the likelihood of a behaviour is strengthened by all consequences, negative or positive
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 18
18) In Thorndike’s studies using the puzzle box, he found that a cat was likely to pull a string to escape the box if the consequence of that behaviour was food. This is an example of
a. Classical conditioning
b. Weber’s law
c. The law of effect
d. The law of reinforcement
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 19
19) Based on Thorndike’s law of effect, B. F. Skinner formulated a description of this type of learning, in which the consequences of a behaviour affect the probability that the behaviour will be repeated in the future.
a. Classical conditioning
b. Operant conditioning
c. Latent learning
d. Cognitive behaviourism
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 20
20) When the consequence of a behaviour increases the likelihood that the behaviour will be repeated—for example, when a food pellet rolls down the chute after a rat pushes the correct lever—the behaviour is said to have been
a. Conditioned
b. Punished
c. Reinforced
d. Extinguished
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 21
21) The “positive” and “negative” terms applied to reinforcement and punishment refer to
a. Whether a consequence is good or bad
b. Whether something is added or removed as a consequence
c. Whether a consequence adds or subtracts from the behaviour
d. Whether a consequence is concrete or abstract
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 22
22) When the frequency or probability of a behaviour is increased as a result of the addition or presentation of something following the performance of the behaviour, it is called
a. Positive reinforcement
b. Positive punishment
c. Negative reinforcement
d. Negative punishment
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 23
23) When the frequency or probability of a behaviour is increased as a result of the removal of something following the performance of the behaviour, it is called
a. Positive reinforcement
b. Positive punishment
c. Negative reinforcement
d. Negative punishment
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 24
24) In an attempt to get his class to quiet down more quickly, Dr. Johnson continuously sounds a very loud bullhorn until the class stops talking. This is an example o
a. Positive reinforcement
b. Positive punishment
c. Negative reinforcement
d. Negative punishment
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 25
25) According to this principle of operant conditioning, strong reinforcers can be used to reinforce weak reinforcers.
a. Skinner’s law
b. Law of effect
c. Equipotentiality
d. Premack principle
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 26
26) In order for something to be a secondary reinforcer it must be
a. Automatically related to survival or reproductive success
b. Something with no intrinsic value as a refinforcer
c. Just as powerful as primary reinforce
d. Reliably associated with access to primary reinforcers
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 27
27) If a behaviour, like playing a slot machine, is continuously reinforced, the behaviour is initially strong but
a. stays strong long after playing ceases to become rewarding
b. is extinguished soon after the slot machine ceases delivering rewards
c. is more likely to occur in a different context from the casino
d. lingers longer than a partially reinforced behaviour
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 28
28) All of the following statements about partial reinforcement are true, EXCEPT:
a. Partial reinforcement generally leads to a stronger, more enduring conditioning.
b. Partial reinforcement rarely occurs in the natural world.
c. Schedules of reinforcement result in various levels of the partial reinforcement effect.
d. Acquiring a behaviour takes more time when the behaviour is only partially reinforced.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 29
29) Jason generally works hard at the law firm and is on a salary there. The firm pays Jason every 2 weeks to ensure that Jason’s work is relatively equally distributed across days in the office. This is an example of which reinforcement schedule?
a. Fixed-interval
b. Fixed-ratio
c. Variable-interval
d. Variable-ratio
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 30
30) This schedule of reinforcement, sometimes reinforcing hunting strategies in animals, and shopping strategies in humans, generally produces the lowest rate of responding because reinforcement is delivered at unpredictable time intervals.
a. Fixed-interval
b. Fixed-ratio
c. Variable-interval
d. Variable-ratio
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 2, Question 31
31) This reinforcement schedule is the logic behind factory piecework, where workers are paid by the number of items produced rather than the number of hours worked
a. Fixed-interval
b. Fixed-ratio
c. Variable-interval
d. Variable-ratio
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 32
32) Slot-machine players do not typically pause for rest following reinforcement, but rather, they continue to respond at high rates to reach the next pay-off. The schedule of reinforcement in effect here is
a. Fixed-interval
b. Fixed-ratio
c. Variable-interval
d. Variable-ratio
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 33
33) Which of the following was NOT a condition in the Tolman and Honzik (1930) study of latent learning in rats?
a. One group of rats was given food as a reinforcer at the end of the maze.
b. One group of rats was given a small electric shock to start the maze
c. One group of rats was given no reinforcement at any point in the maze
d. One group of rats received reinforcement after 10 days of no reinforcement.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 34
34) The discussion of a cognitive map would not be appealing to radical behaviourists like Skinner because
a. radical behaviourism rejects scientific notions of mental representations
b. the cognitive map would be evident in behaviour
c. Skinner’s approach was one of continued reinforcement
d. radical behaviourists are not interested in navigation
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 35
35) Unlike radical behaviourism, this brand of behaviourism acknowledges the possibility of mental representations in learning.
a. Performance studies
b. Cognitive behaviourism
c. Classical behaviourism
d. Psychometrics
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 36
36) There are behaviours that individuals of a given species cannot learn, or have great difficulty learning, because of a conflict with innate patterns of behaviour, a concept known as
a. Equipotentiality
b. Instinctive drift
c. Distinctive drift
d. Evolutionary drive
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 37
37) This type of learning refers to the ways in which an organism might learn by observing the experiences of others, rather than through his or her own experience.
a. Operant conditioning
b. Cognitive learning
c. Social facilitation
d. Observational learning
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 38
38) Albert Bandura and his associates carried out the best-known series of studies based on the work of Dollard and Miller on this phenomenon.
a. Aggression
b. Modelling
c. Empathy
d. Attachment
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 39
39) In the original version of Bandura’s experiment, preschoolers were left in the company of an adult model who would either punch and kick an inflatable clown doll (“Bobo”)—the kind with a rounded, weighted base that springs back up when knocked down—or, in the control conditions, the adult would
a. Insult the doll
b. Do nothing to the doll
c. Physically throw the doll
d. Play a violent TV programme for the doll
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 40
40) All of the following were results of the original aggression-modelling experiments performed by Bandura and his colleagues, EXCEPT:
a. The boys were much more likely to behave aggressively than the girls
b. The male adult models were more likely to elicit a violent imitative response than were the female adult models
c. The children reliably imitated the aggressive gestures of the adult models
d. The children were more likely to imitate other children than the adult models
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 41
41) In subsequent experiments by Bandura and his team, using films of adults acting violently, the children were able to watch the adults
a. experience either rewarding or punishing consequences for their behaviour
b. engaging in non-violent acts of aggression
c. perform the violence for as long as they chose to do so
d. upset other children while being aggressive
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 42
42) Observing and imitating the behaviour of others is an important part of the way human beings interact, perhaps because imitation facilitates an understanding and caring about how other people feel, called
a. Empathy
b. Engagement
c. Modelling
d. mindfulness
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 43
43) This learning phenomenon, which involves observation of rewarding or punishing consequences experienced by others, serves much the same function as being rewarded or punished oneself.
a. Passive conditioning
b. Vicarious conditioning
c. Second-order conditioning
d. Classical conditioning
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 44
44) Research by Anderson and colleagues (2003) demonstrated that boys and men seem to be more vulnerable to media effects on direct physical aggression, whereas girls seem more vulnerable to effects on
a. Indirect and verbal aggression
b. Social exclusionism
c. Nonverbal and physical aggression
d. Emotional abuse
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 45
45) A clear answer to the debate over the connection between media violence and aggression has been difficult to obtain because
a. movie and video game violence substantially increases the risk of aggressive and violent behaviour in the real world
b. only the correlation between cigarette smoking and lung cancer is stronger than the correlation between media violence and aggression
c. aggression and violence are almost never used as interchangeable concepts
d. aggression is an abstract concept with widely varying definitions
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 46
46) One problem in generalizing about real-world violence from laboratory studies is that
a. aggression as measured in laboratory research studies is quite often of the relatively mild variety
b. the effects of media violence cannot be adequately demonstrated in the laboratory
c. violence as measured in real-world research is usually very rare
d. researchers often construct elaborate conditions in the laboratory to simulate media influence
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 47
47) In the premotor cortex of the monkey brain there is a network of these neurons, which fire either when a monkey performs a particular action or when the monkey merely observes another monkey or a human performing that action.
a. Motor neurons
b. Mirror neurons
c. Interneurons
d. Cranial neurons
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 48
48) Researchers hypothesize that mirror neurons aid learning by allowing the brain to create
a. physical images of the world
b. mental representations of behaviours
c. goal-directed response trees
d. distributed patterns of thought
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 49
49) In one study of mirror neurons in primates, the neurons fired strongly when the monkeys observed the experimenter’s hand moving to grasp an object, but not when
a. the hand moved in similar way but with no apparent intention or goal
b. the hand moved toward the monkeys
c. the experimenter first primed the monkey’s prefrontal cortex
d. the monkeys had already grasped the object
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Part 3, Chapter 7, Question 50
50) Which of the following does NOT describe one of the four stages in the process of vicarious conditioning?
a. One must first direct one’s attention to a model’s behaviour and to the rewards or punishments that follow from the behaviour
b. One must retain a memory of the observed behaviour
c. One must be motivated to perform the observed behaviour
d. One must have been previously conditioned to seek rewarding consequences for acting aggressive
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 51
51) Three examples of associative learning through personal experience are classical conditioning, operant conditioning, and observational learning
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 52
52) The conditioning (neutral) stimulus in almost all cases must be presented after rather than before the unconditioned stimulus (e.g., the bell must come after the food)
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 53
53) Pavlov found that if he allowed his animals to rest for several hours following the extinction of a behaviour, the conditioned response would spontaneously appear again upon re-presentation of the conditioned stimulus.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 54
54) The law of effect states that for any organism, those behaviours that lead to a satisfying state of affairs are “stamped in” while those behaviours that lead to an unsatisfying or annoying state of affairs are “stamped out.”
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 55
55) Thorndike’s puzzle box was designed so that the pellets would automatically be delivered to the animal when it pressed down on a lever located near the food tray.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 56
56) In reinforcement, the term positive refers to the addition or presentation of something following a behaviour, and the term negative refers to the removal of something.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 57
57) Taking advantage of the law of effect, Jessica’s mother announced: “You can watch TV, but only after you’ve cleaned your room!” Suddenly, the low-probability behaviour becomes a high-probability behaviour.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 58
58) According to the partial reinforcement effect, in most cases it is better for learning that reinforcement does not occur on a continuous basis.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 59
59) Tolman suggested that during the non-reinforcement period in his experiment, the rats had been forming a cognitive map—a mental representation of the reinforcer
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 60
60) Bandura’s research team noted that the boys were much more likely to behave aggressively than the girls and that the females were more likely to behave aggressively if they had seen a male model.
a. True
b. False
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 61
61) The __ must follow immediately after the conditioning (neutral) stimulus begins to be presented—no more than a second or two at the very most—or the association between the stimuli will be weakened
a. unconditioned stimulus
b. Type second 'blank' here if more than one possible answer e.g. two different spellings.
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 62
62) Pavlov found that if he allowed his animals to rest for several hours following the _ of a behaviour, the conditioned response would spontaneously appear again upon re-presentation of the conditioned stimulus
a. extinction
b. Type second 'blank' here if more than one possible answer e.g. two different spellings.
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 63
63) The next time you see a dog after being attacked by one, your capacity for ______________ tells you, “Hmmm … maybe I’d better cross to the other side of the street” instead of, “No problem, this is a different breed.”
a. generalization
b. Type second 'blank' here if more than one possible answer e.g. two different spellings.
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 64
64) Contrary to the principle of _, foods are rarely associated with physically painful consequences in the real world, making it more difficult to condition mammals to avoid food paired with shocks.
a. equipotentiality
b. Type second 'blank' here if more than one possible answer e.g. two different spellings.
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 65
65) Skinner’s brand of behaviourism, based in operant conditioning, became known as __ because of Skinner’s insistence that psychology could never be a science of mind, but only a science of behaviour
a. radical behaviourism
b. Type second 'blank' here if more than one possible answer e.g. two different spellings.
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 66
66) For behaviours reinforced on a __ schedule, there is an increase in the behaviour (bar presses) just before the time that reinforcement (food pellet) is scheduled to occur once again.
a. fixed-interval
b. Type second 'blank' here if more than one possible answer e.g. two different spellings.
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 67
67) Tolman used the term __ to describe learning that takes place without reinforcement and which is not necessarily apparent in actual behaviour
a. latent learning
b. Type second 'blank' here if more than one possible answer e.g. two different spellings.
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 68
68) Observing and _ the behaviour of others is an important part of the way human beings interact, perhaps because it facilitates empath
a. modelling
b. Type second 'blank' here if more than one possible answer e.g. two different spellings.
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 69
69) _ conditioning involves learning through observing the consequences of others’ behaviour.
a. Vicarious
b. Type second 'blank' here if more than one possible answer e.g. two different spellings.
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 7 - Question 70
70) __ takes place when an instinctive pattern of behaviour interferes with the operant conditioning of a behaviour
a. Instinctive drift
b. Type second 'blank' here if more than one possible answer e.g. two different spellings.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 7, Question 71
71) Describe the four components of Pavlov’s original classical conditioning experiment: the two stimuli and two responses. In your answer, describe how a conditioned response is acquired, how it might generalize to other stimuli, and how it might be discriminant. Also, discuss real examples of spontaneous recovery and renewal
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 7, Question 72
72) Describe some limitations of classical conditioning experiments, specifically the arguments that make up the functionalist perspective. Also describe at least one problem with the famous “Little Albert” study by Watson and Raynor (1920)
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 7, Question 73
73) The partial reinforcement effect is an important component of B. F. Skinner’s operant conditioning. Discuss this effect by giving two real-world examples of applications of the schedules of reinforcement. Also, contrast the partial reinforcement effect with the evidence for latent learning
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 7, Question 74
74) Violence and aggression can be serious threats to a stable society. Explain how psychologists came to understand how humans learn to model the behaviour of others. In your answer, make sure to reference behavioural evidence.