Writing for Psychology International Edition 4th Edition by Mark L. Mitchell – Test Bank

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Chapter 5A—Development

TRUE/FALSE

1. Selective attrition is a greater problem with longitudinal research than with cross-sectional research.

ANS: T REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

2. A researcher wonders whether attachment style in infancy has any relationship to friendship formation

at age 6. To investigate this question, it is necessary to use a longitudinal design.

ANS: T REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

3. If a cross-sectional study shows a difference between people of different ages, the difference might be

due to a cohort effect.

ANS: T REF: cohort effects

OBJ: application and understanding

4. Infants start making muscle movements before their sense organs send any messages to the brain.

ANS: T REF: fetus/newborn OBJ: remembering

5. Even very young infants pay much attention to pictures of faces, but only if the pictures are highly

realistic.

ANS: F REF: infant vision OBJ: remembering

6. Even month-old infants notice the difference between the sounds ba and pa.

ANS: T REF: infant hearing OBJ: remembering

7. Infants less than 3 days old can recognize the sound of their mother’s voice.

ANS: T REF: infant learning OBJ: remembering

8. Jean Piaget argued that children’s thinking is just like that of adults, except that children’s thinking is

slower and less well-informed.

9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. ANS: F REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering

Infants may or may not seem to understand object permanence, depending on how we test them.

ANS: T REF: sensorimotor OBJ: remembering

Suppose we put a colored dot on a child’s face. Now the child looks in a mirror. A child who has a

“sense of self” will react by pointing to the dot in the mirror.

ANS: F REF: sensorimotor OBJ: application and understanding

Tommy tells his mom about an event at preschool in a way that assumes his mom knows what he is

talking about. Developmental psychologists would describe Tommy’s thinking as egocentric.

ANS: T REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering (definition)

A child sees someone hide a small toy in a tiny room. Now the task is to find the larger toy in the full-

sized room. Young children might or might not find it, depending on how someone words the

instructions.

ANS: T REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering

A child who fails one of Piaget’s conservation tasks will fail them all.

ANS: F REF: concrete operations OBJ: remembering

Piaget proposed that although most children go through his stages in the order he suggested, some

children go through the stages in different orders.

ANS: F REF: Stages distinct? OBJ: remembering

According to Erik Erikson, if someone has problems at one stage of development, the problems will

probably continue into later stages of development.

ANS: T REF: Erikson OBJ: remembering

17216. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. An apparent “anxious attachment” in the Strange Situation means the same thing for Japanese infants

as it does for American infants.

ANS: F REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: remembering

Most people experience intense “storm and stress” thoughout their adolescent years.

ANS: F REF: childhood/adolescence OBJ: remembering

The main reason for adolescent risk-taking behaviors is that the adolescents are not aware of the

dangers.

ANS: F REF: childhood/adolescence OBJ: remembering

The issues that middle-aged people face during a midlife transition are similar in many ways to an

adolescent identity crisis.

ANS: T REF: adulthood OBJ: application and understanding

Researchers have found that exercise programs designed to increase older people’s physical activity

levels also lead to improvements in their memory and cognition.

ANS: T REF: old age OBJ: remembering

People often react to reminders of death by reaffirming their religious and political beliefs.

ANS: T REF: facing death OBJ: remembering

On average, men and women are about equal at detecting facial expressions of emotion.

ANS: F REF: gender OBJ: remembering

Men have greater abilities to do well in math than women do.

ANS: F REF: gender OBJ: remembering

Expressions of anger tend to be more effective in the United States than in Asia.

ANS: T REF: culture/ethnic OBJ: remembering

Most racially-mixed people have serious difficulties in social and emotional adjustment.

ANS: F REF: culture/ethnic OBJ: remembering

Many of the apparent differences between first-born and later-born children are really due to

differences between small and large families.

ANS: T REF: birth order OBJ: application and understanding

The personalities of adopted children correlate highly with those of the adopting parents.

ANS: F REF: parenting OBJ: remembering

Most children reared by a single parent or by gay or lesbian couples develop about normally.

ANS: T REF: nontraditional OBJ: remembering

COMPLETION

1. An investigator who compares people of different ages all at the same time, is using a ____________

design.

ANS: cross-sectional

REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

2. An investigator who follows a single group of individuals year after year is using a

___________________ design.

ANS: longitudinal

REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

3. One problem in a longitudinal study is that certain types of people may be more likely than others to

drop out. This tendency is known as _____________ attrition.

ANS: selective REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

4. A research design that combines the advantages of both cross-sectional and longitudinal designs is

known as ____________________.

ANS: sequential.

1735. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

A group of people born at a particular time, or a group of people who enter an organization at a

particular time, is known as a ______

ANS: cohort

REF: cohort effects OBJ: remembering (definition)

If a mother drinks much alcohol during pregnancy, her child may have a set of physical and behavioral

abnormalities known as _________ _________ syndrome.

ANS: fetal alcohol

REF: fetus/newborn OBJ: remembering (definition)

When newborns hear a sound, they increase their sucking. After some repetitions of the sound, their

sucking decreases. If a change in the sound increases their sucking, we say that it produced

_________________.

ANS: dishabituation

REF: infant hearing OBJ: remembering (definition)

In Piaget’s terminology, applying an old schema to a new situation is called __________

ANS: assimilation

REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering (definition)

In Piaget’s terminology, modifying a schema to fit a new situation is called ___________.

ANS: accommodation

REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering (definition)

Piaget’s first stage, marked by simple responses to current stimuli, is known as the ____________

stage.

ANS: sensorimotor

REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering

According to Piaget, children lack the concept of object permanence during the ____________ stage.

ANS: sensorimotor REF: sensorimotor OBJ: remembering

The idea that some people know something that other people do not is called “theory of ______.”

ANS: mind

REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering (definition)

According to Piaget children in the preoperational stage do not understand that someone could

rearrange coins without changing their number, or pour a liquid without changing its volume. He

therefore said that these children lack the concept of _____________.

ANS: conservation

REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering

Children who understand object permanence, but who do not yet have the concept of conservation, are

in Piaget’s ______________ stage.

ANS: preoperational

REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering

Lev Vygotsky emphasized the idea that with appropriate help, children can advance a certain distance

beyond what they can do by themselves. He called this distance the zone of __________ development

ANS: proximal

REF: Stages distinct? OBJ: remembering (definition)

To measure an infant’s attachment to the mother, psychologists observe the infant’s reactions as the

child is with the mother and/or someone the child doesn’t know. This procedure is called the

___________ Situation.

ANS: Strange

REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: remembering (definition)

17417. 18. 19. According to Erik Erikson, an identity crisis is particularly likely for people during the age of

__________________.

ANS: adolescence

REF: identity OBJ: remembering

The idea that we cope with our fear of death by avoiding thoughts about death and by affirming our

worldview, including religious or political beliefs, is known as _________ management theory.

ANS: terror

REF: facing death OBJ: remembering (definition)

The different activities that a society expects of males and females are known as ___________ roles.

ANS: gender or sex

REF: gender OBJ: remembering (definition)

SHORT ANSWER

1. What is the difference between a cross-sectional design and a longitudinal design? Which would be

better for a researcher who wanted to avoid the influence of cohort effects?

ANS:

A cross-sectional study compares groups of individuals of different ages at the same time. A

longitudinal study follows a single group of individuals as they develop. A longitudinal study is better

for avoiding the influence of cohort effects because the investigator studies people of the same cohort

as they grow older.

REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

2. Can infants within the first days after birth recognize their own mother’s voice? What evidence

supports this conclusion?

ANS:

Yes, they can. Infants are given an opportunity to turn on a recording of a woman’s voice by sucking

harder on a nipple. On average, they suck harder to turn on a recording of their own mother’s voice

than that of another woman.

REF: infant hearing OBJ: facts and concepts

3. Infants a few months old either do or do not appear to understand object permanence, depending on

how we test them. Describe the two tests leading to different conclusions.

ANS:

In Piaget’s original observations, he found that infants would reach for a toy they saw, but not for a toy

blocked by an opaque barrier. In a later study, infants saw a block on a track. Then a curtain was

lowered so the infant could no longer see the block. A toy car came down a ramp and through the

place where the block had been. (It had been moved in the meantime.) Infants stared longer at this

“impossible” event than at “possible” events, suggesting that they were surprised. That surprise

implies an understanding that the block would still be present, even though they did not see it.

REF: Piaget OBJ: facts and concepts

4. Define theory of mind and give an example of a situation involving a child who has not yet developed

theory of mind.

ANS:

Theory of mind is an understanding that other people have a mind too, and that each person knows

some things that other people don’t know.

Example: A child watches as Maxi’s mother hides some chocolate. Then when Maxi is absent, the

mother moves the chocolate to a different place. Now Maxi returns and we ask the child where Maxi

will look for the chocolate. A child who doesn’t understand theory of mind will answer that Maxi

looks in the new location.

REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering

1755. 6. 7. 8. How would a psychologist determine whether a child understands Piaget’s concept of conservation?

ANS:

Show two rows of objects, equal in number. Spread out one row and ask which row has more. A child

who says they are the same understands conservation of number.

Show two containers of liquid, equal in size, shape, and amount of liquid. Pour liquid from one

container into a wider container. A child who says both containers contain the same amount of liquid

understands conservation of volume.

REF: Piaget OBJ: evaluating

Describe the Strange Situation and how psychologists use it to evaluate infant attachment.

ANS:

A mother and her infant (12-18 months old) enter a room with toys. A stranger enters. The mother

leaves and then returns. Then both leave. The stranger returns. Finally the mother returns.

Psychologists watch whether the infant relates to the mother by showing her toys and using her as a

base of exploration. They also observe whether the child shows undue distress at her leaving.

REF: infancy and childhood OBJ: facts and concepts

According to terror-management theory, how do people react to reminders that they will die?

ANS:

They avoid thoughts about death, reassure themselves that they still have long to live, and they

reaffirm their beliefs, values, and anything else that makes life seem worthwhile.

REF: psychology of facing death OBJ: facts and concepts

Many studies have reported differences between first-born and later-born children. What aspect of the

procedure makes it difficult for us to draw conclusions from these results?

ANS:

Many first-born children come from single-child families. For many reasons children in small families

differ from those in larger families. Unless the researchers examined only children in larger families.

we can’t know whether the difference between first-borns and later-borns relates to birth order or to

family size.

REF: cultural influences OBJ: application and understanding

176

 

Chapter 5—Nature, Nurture, and Human Development

MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. An investigator who uses a cross-sectional design

A. compares people from different cultures.

B. examines a single group of people at several times as they grow.

C. examines different groups of people at the same time.

D. compares humans to other animal species.

2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. ANS: C REF: research designs OBJ: remembering

What does an investigator examine in a cross-sectional design?

A. different people (of different ages) at one point in time

B. a single group of people at several points in time

C. different species of animal

D. people from different countries or cultures

ANS: A REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

What does a cross-sectional research study in developmental psychology examine?

A. B. C. D. a single group of people repeatedly as they grow older.

several groups of people, of different ages.

several groups of people, of the same age but different cultures.

several behaviors, for a single group of people at one time.

ANS: B REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

In which kind of study does an investigator study people of different ages at the same time?

A. cross-cultural

B. cross-sectional

C. longitudinal

D. factor analysis

ANS: B REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

An investigator gives a memory test to college students and then as soon as possible administers the

same test to those students’ parents and grandparents. This design is best described as

A. case-study.

B. double-blind.

C. longitudinal.

D. cross-sectional.

ANS: D REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

Yesterday Professor Eaton asked children aged 6 through 12 to list their favorite foods, and then

compared the results for different ages. This is an example of which kind of study?

A. double-blind

B. single-blind

C. longitudinal

D. cross-sectional

ANS: D REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

Dr. Publisher reports a study comparing 3-year-old, 5-year-old, and 7-year-old children, all tested at

the same time. Which kind of research design is this?

A. longitudinal

1798. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. B. retrospective

C. cross-sectional

D. sequential

ANS: C REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

An investigator compares the drawings of children ranging in age from 5 to 10 (measured the same

time) and reports trends as a function of age. What kind of study is this?

A. cross-sectional

B. cross-cultural

C. longitudinal

D. sequential

ANS: A REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

Suppose researchers want to compare the abilities of 60-year-olds to those of 80-year-olds, but they

worry about finding equivalent samples at the two ages. To minimize that problem, the best design

for this study would be

A. psychoanalytic.

B. double-blind.

C. longitudinal.

D. cross-sectional.

ANS: C REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

What does a researcher examine in a longitudinal design?

A. a single group of people at different times

B. different people (of different ages) at the same time

C. different species of animals

D. people from different countries or different cultures

ANS: A REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

In which kind of study does an investigator repeatedly study the same people as they get older?

A. cross-cultural

B. cross-sectional

C. longitudinal

D. factor analysis

ANS: C REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

A psychologist studies 21 children on their first day of school, and examines the same children again

on the last day. This is a __________ research design.

A. double-blind

B. cross-sequential

C. longitudinal

D. cross-sectional

ANS: C REF: research designs OBJ: application and understanding

An investigator who uses a longitudinal design

A. B. C. D. examines a single group of people at several times as they age.

compares humans to other animal species.

compares people from different cultures.

examines people of different ages at the same time.

18014. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. ANS: A REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

Dr. Patience studies a group of 3-year-olds, and then retests the same children when they reach ages

5 and 7. What kind of research design is this?

A. longitudinal

B. retrospective

C. cross-sectional

D. sequential

ANS: A REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

Infants with a “difficult” temperament are likely to grow up to be difficult children and eventually

troubled adults. That statement must be based on evidence from which kind of study?

A. single-blind

B. double-blind

C. longitudinal

D. cross-sectional

ANS: C REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

An investigator measures the moral reasoning of a group of 12-year-olds, and four years later

measures their moral reasoning again. This study follows which design?

A. factor analysis

B. double-blind

C. longitudinal

D. cross-sectional

ANS: C REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

A researcher demonstrates that most children display a temperament at age 7 that is similar to their

temperament at age 2. The study that led to this must have followed which kind of design?

A. cross-sectional study

B. longitudinal study

C. representative sampling

D. random sampling

ANS: B REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

A psychologist wishes to investigate whether the children who act most upset after parental divorce

remain highly upset later, or whether they in fact become better adjusted in the long run as a result

of “letting their feelings out” at first. This question calls for which kind of study?

A. a double-blind experiment

B. a cross-sectional study

C. a single-blind experiment

D. a longitudinal study

ANS: D REF: research designs OBJ: application and understanding

One disadvantage of longitudinal designs is that

A. B. C. the groups selected for comparison may differ in more regards than just age.

the results cannot be analyzed statistically.

it is hard to separate differences due to age from differences due to changes in society.

18120. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. D. the results must be inferred from memories reported long afterward.

ANS: C REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

An investigator tests the memory of children at age 4 and tests the same children again at ages 6, 8,

and 10. What type of research is this?

A. cross-sectional

B. longitudinal

C. cross-cultural

D. sequential

ANS: B REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

One advantage of a cross-sectional study over a longitudinal study is that a cross-sectional study

A. uses the same subjects at all ages.

B. is better suited to studying the effects of age on intelligence.

C. can be completed more quickly.

D. compares people from different backgrounds.

ANS: C REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

One advantage of a cross-sectional design for studying age differences is that it

A. ensures that the people studied at each age have the same abilities.

B. is not affected by differences among cohorts.

C. can be completed in a short period of time.

D. is automatically double blind.

ANS: C REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

Which of the following studies would be impossible to answer by a cross-sectional study?

A. At what age do most children understand conservation of number?

B. Do first-grade and sixth-grade children generally like different music?

C. Do the best 6-year-old artists remain outstanding as they grow older?

D. Do older children generally memorize facts more easily than younger children?

ANS: C REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

Suppose you wish to study personality development, but you worry that you might accidentally select

different kinds of people at different ages. Which experimental design should you use?

A. cross-sectional

B. longitudinal

C. psychoanalytic

D. anecdotal

ANS: B REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

Selective attrition (the problem that some of the subjects in a study may drop out before the study is

completed) is a complication in which kind(s) of study?

A. cross-sectional study

B. longitudinal study

C. both cross-sectional and longitudinal studies, but more so in a cross-sectional study

D. neither cross-sectional nor longitudinal studies

ANS: B REF: research designs

18226. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. OBJ: application and understanding

Selective attrition refers to the fact that some kinds of people may be more likely than others to

A. talk to other people during an experiment.

B. quit before the research study is finished.

C. respond to demand characteristics.

D. volunteer to be participants in a research study.

ANS: B REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

The problem of selective attrition is most likely to arise during

A. experiments with random assignment.

B. brief studies.

C. long-term studies.

D. animal studies.

ANS: C REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

On average, college seniors have a higher grade-point average than freshmen. Of the following,

which is the most likely explanation?

A. selective attrition

B. theory of mind

C. zone of proximal development

D. dishabituation

ANS: A REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

A research design that combines cross-sectional and longitudinal designs is known as

A. cross-longitudinal.

B. longitude-sectional.

C. sequential.

D. simultaneous.

ANS: C REF: research designs OBJ: remembering (definition)

A researcher studies children of several ages, and then studies the same children five and ten years

later. What research design is this?

A. cross-sectional

B. sequential

C. double-blind

D. retrospective

ANS: B REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

What is the major benefit to a sequential design?

A. It combines many of the strengths of cross-sectional and longitudinal designs.

B. It enables researchers to separate the contributions of heredity and environment.

C. It enables researchers to draw cause-and-effect conclusions.

D. It explores the relationship between brain development and language development.

ANS: A REF: research designs

OBJ: application and understanding

On average, young adults today know more about computers than do their parents, who know more

than the grandparents. This difference is probably an example of

A. demand characteristics.

B. experimenter bias.

183C. a cohort effect.

D. selective attrition.

ANS: C REF: cohort effects

OBJ: application and understanding

33. What is a cohort?

A. a group of people selected for a cross-sectional study

B. a group of people born at a particular time

C. a random sample of people in the entire population

D. a representative sample of people in the entire population

34. 35. 36. 37. 38. ANS: B REF: cohort effects OBJ: remembering (definition)

The people born in the 1990s have different interests and attitudes than the people born in the

1950s. This is due to a difference in

A. role diffusion.

B. syntax.

C. cohorts.

D. assimilation.

ANS: C REF: cohort effects

OBJ: application and understanding

Someone conducts a cross-sectional study and finds that most 50-year-olds prefer different music

than 20-year-olds. One interpretation is that people’s taste in music changes as they grow older.

Another interpretation is that the results depend on a difference in

A. accommodation.

B. identity foreclosure.

C. cohorts.

D. gender roles.

ANS: C REF: cohort effects

OBJ: application and understanding

You are in the same cohort as other people who

A. have the same interests that you do.

B. were born at about the same time you were.

C. have an IQ score within 10 points of yours.

D. live in the same part of the country where you do.

ANS: B REF: cohort effects OBJ: remembering

A “cohort effect” occurs when an investigator compares groups of people who

A. were born in different eras.

B. currently differ in their ages.

C. live in different cultures.

D. speak different languages.

ANS: A REF: cohort effects OBJ: remembering (definition)

Which of the following observations is probably due to a difference in cohorts?

A. B. C. D. Today’s 70-year-olds are in the stage of “ego integrity vs. despair.”

Today’s 70-year-olds know more than today’s 20-year-olds about the Vietnam War.

Today’s 70-year-olds know more about Social Security than they did 30 years ago.

Today’s 70-year-olds differ in their attitudes, depending on where they live.

ANS: B REF: cohort effects

OBJ: application and understanding

18439. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. Birth cohorts differ from one another because the older generation is in many ways similar to

A. B. C. people with a genetic mutation.

the best educated members of the younger generation.

immigrants to a new culture.

D. people with post-traumatic stress.

ANS: C REF: cohort effects OBJ: remembering

Comparing people from different birth cohorts at the same time is which kind of study?

A. cross-sectional

B. cross-cultural

C. longitudinal

D. introspective

ANS: A REF: cohort effects

OBJ: application and understanding

Which of the following is the clearest example of a cohort effect?

A. People with more practice at Sudoku puzzles solve them faster.

B. On average, Mexicans eat spicy foods more often than Americans do.

C. Old people play active sports less often now than when they were young.

D. Today’s young people know more about computers than their grandparents do.

ANS: D REF: cohort effects

OBJ: application and understanding

If young adults differ from older adults by a “cohort effect,” what caused the difference?

A. differences in brain activity

B. C. D. changes in people’s interests as they grow older

the way in which investigators measured a behavior

the historical era in which people grew up

ANS: D REF: cohort effects OBJ: application and understanding

Suppose you want to study the effect of age on clothing preferences. In which case(s) would cohort

effects have the greatest influence on the results?

A. B. C. D. They would have the greatest influence on a cross-sectional study.

They would have the greatest influence on a longitudinal study.

They would have equally strong influences in both cases.

They would have no effect in either case.

ANS: A REF: cohort effects OBJ: application and understanding

What causes the first muscle movements by a human fetus?

A. B. C. D. They are responses to sounds.

They are responses to visual stimulation.

They are responses to touch stimulation.

The brain produces them spontaneously before the senses mature.

ANS: B REF: fetus/newborn OBJ: remembering

Newborn babies weighing less than 4 pounds at birth have increased probability of later behavior

problems. Why should we NOT necessarily conclude that low birth weight caused the problems?

A. Prenatal development has nothing to do with brain development.

B. Hospitals give small babies less attention, on average, than larger babies.

C. Most small babies have Down syndrome or other medical disorders.

D. Malnourished or unhealthy mothers may provide poor care after the child is born.

18546. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. ANS: D REF: fetus/newborn

OBJ: application and understanding

Which of the following is often a cause of brain abnormalities in newborns?

A. The mother had “morning sickness” during pregnancy.

B. The mother gained weight during pregnancy.

C. The mother exercised frequently during pregnancy.

D. The mother drank much alcohol during pregnancy.

ANS: D REF: fetus/newborn OBJ: remembering

How does alcohol lead to the problems associated with fetal alcohol syndrome?

A. B. C. D. It decreases the excitation of neurons, so that they self-destruct.

It prevents developing neurons from getting enough oxygen and nutrition.

It stimulates the mother’s abdominal muscles, leading to premature birth.

It damages the liver of the developing fetus.

ANS: A REF: fetus/newborn OBJ: remembering

How does drinking too much alcohol harm the brain of a woman’s developing fetus?

A. by lengthening the pregnancy

B. by preventing nutrients from reaching the fetus’s brain

C. by increasing the fetus’s muscle activity

D. by decreasing excitation of neurons in the fetus’s brain

ANS: D REF: fetus/newborn OBJ: remembering

Which of these attracts the most attention by a 2-day-old human infant?

A. solid red picture.

B. solid white picture.

C. narrow diagonally striped pattern.

D. drawing of a human face.

ANS: D REF: infant vision OBJ: remembering

Does a newborn infant look longer at one type of display or another? If so, what?

A. B. C. D. No, a newborn looks equally at all types of displays.

An infant looks longest at the simplest displays, such as a straight line.

An infant looks longest at a drawing of a right-side-up face.

An infant looks longest at a black and white checkerboard pattern.

ANS: C REF: infant vision OBJ: remembering

When infants look at a picture of a face, does it matter how realistic the picture is?

A. To capture an infant’s attention, the face must be highly realistic.

B. The face must have the eyes on top. Otherwise, distortions don’t matter much.

C. The face must be smiling. Otherwise, distortions don’t matter much.

D. Anything remotely like a face captures attention equally well.

ANS: B REF: infant vision OBJ: remembering

Under which condition do infants most easily recognize a face?

A. They are best at recognizing faces they see in the morning.

B. They are best at recognizing faces they see in the afternoon.

C. They are best at recognizing the kinds of faces most familiar to them.

D. They are best at recognizing faces that lack any emotional expression.

ANS: C REF: infant vision OBJ: remembering

18653. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. If children less than one year old get earlier than normal experience of locomotion, such as by

crawling, what do they develop earlier than average?

A. fear of heights

B. conservation of mass

C. moral reasoning

D. language comprehension

ANS: A REF: infant vision OBJ: remembering

An infant who hears a novel sound increases its sucking rate. After several presentations of the same

sound, the sucking rate declines. This decrease in responding is called

A. habituation.

B. sensitization.

C. reactivity.

D. reflexive attenuation.

ANS: A REF: infant hearing OBJ: remembering (definition)

After several repetitions of a sound, it produces less arousal. A slightly changed sound may produce

more arousal. What do we call the original decrease and the later increase?

A. habituation…dishabituation

B. sensitization…desensitization

C. conditioning…extinction

D. assimilation…accommodation

ANS: A REF: infant hearing OBJ: remembering (definition)

After many repetitions of the sound “ba,” an infant habituates (that is, decreases responses). When

the experimenter substitutes the sound “pa,” the infant increases responses. What conclusion do

psychologists draw?

A. The infant will soon use these sounds in his/her own speaking.

B. The infant finds both sounds annoying.

C. The infant hears a difference between the two sounds.

D. The infant prefers “pa” to “ba.”

ANS: C REF: infant hearing

OBJ: application and understanding

What evidence, if any, shows that newborn infants hear a difference between “ba” and “pa”?

A. B. C. D. No evidence supports this conclusion.

Infants learn to copy the two sounds.

Infants learn to kick when they hear one sound and stop when they hear the other.

An infant who habituates to “ba” increases sucking rate after hearing “pa.”

ANS: D REF: infant hearing

OBJ: application and understanding

What evidence do we have that newborn infants can distinguish between the sounds “ba” and “pa”?

A. They make both sounds in their own babbling.

B. Their heart rate increases when they hear “pa” but not when they hear “ba.”

C. After habituating to “ba,” they increase their sucking rate when they hear “pa.”

D. They turn left when they hear “ba,” and they turn right when they hear “pa.”

ANS: C REF: infant hearing OBJ: remembering

An investigator repeatedly plays a recording of the sound “ba” while checking the rate that an infant

sucks on a nipple. After the infant’s rate of sucking decreases, the investigator switches to the sound

“pa.” What is the investigator probably trying to determine?

18760. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. A. B. C. D. Which of the two sounds does an infant like best?

Can the infant detect the difference between the two sounds?

Does the infant copy the sounds it hears?

What is the capacity of an infant’s short-term memory?

ANS: B REF: infant hearing

OBJ: application and understanding

What evidence says that newborn infants detect the difference between “ba” and “pa” sounds?

A. Infant learn to look left after hearing “ba” and right after hearing “pa.”

B. An infant smiles after hearing a “pa” sound but not after hearing a “ba” sound.

C. An infant sucks harder to turn on a “pa” sound than a “ba” sound.

D. After habituating to a “ba” sound, an infant sucks harder after hearing “pa.”

ANS: D REF: infant hearing OBJ: remembering

In one study, a researcher monitored newborns’ responses to the sound sequence “ba-ba-ba-ba-

ba…” until their response habituated, and then substituted the sound “pa.” What happened to the

infants’ responses, and what conclusion follows?

A. Their responses decreased. Conclusion: They interpret the change as threatening.

B. Their responses stayed the same. Conclusion: They cannot tell the difference.

C. Their responses increased. Conclusion: They hear a difference between the sounds.

D. Their responses increased. Conclusion: They prefer the sound “pa” to “ba.”

ANS: B REF: infant hearing

OBJ: application and understanding

An infant is sucking on a nipple. Meanwhile, an investigator plays the sound “ba” repeatedly until the

infant habituates to it. Then the investigator plays the sound “pa.” What does the infant do, and what

does that behavior indicate?

A. The infant sucks more rapidly, indicating that it prefers the sound “pa” to “ba.”

B. The infant sucks more rapidly, indicating that it hears a difference between the sounds.

C. The infant sucks at an unchanged rate, indicating that it does not detect a difference.

D. The infant sucks more slowly, indicating an increased rate of habituation.

ANS: B REF: infant hearing OBJ: application and understanding

Suppose an infant habituates to the sound “ba” and fails to change its sucking rate when we

substitute the sound “bla.” What interpretation would follow from this result?

A. B. C. D. The infant prefers the sound “ba.”

The infant prefers the sound “bla.”

The infant does not hear a difference between the sounds.

The infant cannot hear either sound.

ANS: C REF: infant hearing

OBJ: application and understanding

In certain studies, newborn infants (age 0-3 days) sucked on a nipple at some times to hear their own

mother’s voice and at other times to hear another woman’s voice. What did the infants do?

A. They sucked more when they could hear their own mother.

B. They sucked more when they could hear the other woman.

C. They sucked vigorously but equally for either voice.

D. They rarely sucked at all.

ANS: A REF: infant learning OBJ: remembering

What evidence (if any) do we have that newborn infants (less than 3 days old) can recognize the

sound of their own mother’s voice?

18866. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. A. They habituate more rapidly to the sound of their own mother’s voice than to another

B. C. D. woman’s voice.

They kick their legs to turn on a tape recording of their own mother’s voice, but not for

another woman’s voice.

They suck more vigorously when sucking turns on a recording of their own mother’s

voice.

We have no evidence that newborn infants can recognize the sound of their own mother’s

voice.

ANS: C REF: infant learning OBJ: remembering

What is the evidence that a newborn infant prefers the sound of his/her own mother’s voice to that

of other women?

A. B. C. D. The infant turns toward the mother’s voice, but not toward another woman’s voice.

Hearing another woman’s voice causes the baby to cry.

The infant sucks harder when sucking turns on the sound of the mother’s voice.

The infant smiles after hearing the mother’s voice, but not another woman’s voice.

ANS: C REF: infant learning OBJ: remembering

What can a newborn infant (less than 3 days old) learn to do, if anything?

A. B. C. D. It presses a button to turn the lights on or off.

It claps its hands when it hears a familiar sound.

It sucks on a nipple that turns on a recording of its mother’s voice

Infants younger than 3 days old show no evidence of learning.

ANS: C REF: infant learning OBJ: remembering

What evidence do we have that babies can hear, even in the first 3 days after birth?

A. B. C. D. They babble more loudly in order to hear themselves over the background noise.

They respond differently to their own mother’s voice than to that of other women.

They cry whenever they hear any sound, no matter how loud or soft.

Babies who are spoken to in the first 3 days develop language faster than average.

ANS: B REF: infant learning OBJ: application and understanding

What evidence, if any, shows that newborns recognize the sound of their mother’s voice?

A. B. C. D. They suck harder to turn on a recording of their mother than of another woman.

They imitate what their mother says, but not what another woman says.

They turn their head toward their mother’s voice but not toward another voice.

No evidence supports this conclusion.

ANS: A REF: infant learning OBJ: remembering

Experimenters played a melody for fetuses to hear in the weeks before birth. What was the result?

A. B. C. D. Even before birth, the fetuses kicked their feet in time with the tune.

After birth, the newborns kicked their feet in time with the tune.

After birth, they turned their head toward the familiar tune, and not to other tunes.

After birth, they showed a stronger heart rate response to the familiar tune.

ANS: D REF: infant learning OBJ: remembering

Suppose a newborn sucks to turn on a recording of its father’s voice. Eventually the response

habituates. Now the experimenters substitute the sound of a different man’s voice. What should we

conclude if the sucking rate increases?

A. The newborn prefers the sound of the father’s voice.

B. The newborn hears a difference between the voices.

C. The newborn does not hear a difference between the voices.

18972. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. D. The newborn prefers women’s voices to men’s voices.

ANS: B REF: infant learning

OBJ: application and understanding

Suppose a newborn sucks to turn on a recording of its father’s voice. Eventually the response

habituates. Now the experimenters substitute the sound of a different man’s voice. What should we

conclude if the sucking rate remains the same?

A. The newborn prefers the sound of the father’s voice.

B. The newborn hears a difference between the voices.

C. The newborn does not hear a difference between the voices.

D. The newborn prefers women’s voices to men’s voices.

ANS: C REF: infant learning

OBJ: application and understanding

Which of the following can a 2-month-old infant learn to do?

A. crawl toward a hidden toy

B. point toward a picture of the mother’s face

C. kick one leg to keep a mobile moving

D. make babbling sounds in time with a rhythmic tune

ANS: C REF: infant learning OBJ: remembering

What was Jean Piaget’s summary about children’s thinking?

A. B. C. D. It is like adults’, but less informed.

It is qualitatively different from adults’.

It is like adults’, but less decisive.

It is like adults’, but slower.

ANS: B REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering

Jean Piaget’s main emphasis was that

A. B. C. D. children in different stages think in different ways.

developmental processes differ substantially among cultures.

parenting style has a major influence on social development.

positive reinforcement is more effective than punishment.

ANS: A REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering

Which of these best describes Piaget’s view of children’s cognitive development?

A. B. C. D. Children’s thinking is qualitatively different from that of adults.

Children think like adults, except that they have less information.

Children’s learning should be based on the principles of operant conditioning.

Children’s learning should be based on the principles of classical conditioning.

ANS: A REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering

According to Piaget, a child’s intellectual growth occurs through

A. conservation and object permanence.

B. classical conditioning and operant conditioning.

C. habituation and dishabituation.

D. assimilation, accommodation, and equilibration.

ANS: D REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering

In Piaget’s terminology, what is it that sometimes gets assimilated and sometimes gets

accommodated?

A. the child

B. a cohort

19079. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. C. a schema

D. an identity

ANS: C REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering

According to Piaget, applying an old schema to a new object or problem is called

A. object permanence.

B. concrete operations.

C. accommodation.

D. assimilation.

ANS: D REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering (definition)

A child who is familiar with an iPad tries to control a television the same way. She is showing

A. a lack of conservation.

B. assimilation.

C. concrete operational thought.

D. object permanence.

ANS: B REF: Piaget OBJ: application and understanding

According to Piaget’s concept, what is accommodation?

A. B. C. D. combining classical conditioning with operant conditioning

fitting an old schema to a new object or problem

understanding that objects continue to exist, even when hidden

understanding that objects keep their number and volume after changing shape

ANS: B REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering (definition)

The order of stages in Piaget’s theory of development is:

A. sensorimotor–formal operations–concrete operations–postoperational

B. preoperational–concrete operations–formal operations–sensorimotor

C. concrete operations–sensorimotor–preoperational–formal operations

D. sensorimotor–preoperational–concrete operations–formal operations

ANS: D REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering

Which is the first of Piaget’s stages of cognitive development—the one characteristic of infants?

A. the preoperational stage

B. the sensorimotor stage

C. the formal-operations stage

D. the concrete-operations stage

ANS: B REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering

Which of Piaget’s stages of cognitive development do people reach last (at age 11 or later)?

A. formal operations

B. sensorimotor

C. concrete operations

D. preoperational

ANS: A REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering

What was Piaget’s view on stages of intellectual development?

A. B. C. D. Development is continuous, without any distinct stages.

The order of stages varies from one child to another.

All children go through four major stages in the same order.

Development goes through 1 to 12 stages, depending on culture.

ANS: C REF: Piaget OBJ: remembering

19186. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. According to Piaget, children in which stage of development respond only to what they see and hear

at the moment, rather than what they might remember?

A. preoperational

B. sensorimotor

C. formal-operations

D. concrete-operations

ANS: B REF: sensorimotor OBJ: remembering

Object permanence refers to the idea that

A. B. C. D. objects continue to exist even when we don’t see them.

objects we see continue to exist even when we aren’t talking about them.

objects permanently exist in one location.

the substance of an object remains constant even when its form changes.

ANS: A REF: sensorimotor OBJ: remembering (definition)

To test for the concept of object permanence, Piaget would watch whether the child can

A. B. C. D. play with a toy the same way the experimenter plays with it.

state that the amount of clay or water stays the same after a distortion of its shape.

answer abstract, hypothetical questions about the object.

reach around a barrier to get an object that the child no longer sees.

ANS: D REF: sensorimotor OBJ: application and understanding

An investigator covers a toy and watches whether a child removes the cover to retrieve the toy.

Which concept is the investigator apparently testing?

A. conservation.

B. identity achievement.

C. assimilation.

D. object permanence.

ANS: D REF: sensorimotor

OBJ: application and understanding

According to Piaget, how can we determine whether a child understands object permanence?

A. Watch the child’s eye movements when the object moves.

B. Place a toy behind a barrier and see whether the child retrieves it.

C. Squash some clay and see whether the child thinks it still is the same amount.

D. See whether the child consistently prefers one toy to another.

ANS: B REF: sensorimotor

OBJ: application and understanding

To test whether an infant has the concept of object permanence, what would Piaget examine?

A. whether the infant knows the name of the object

B. whether the infant knows that an object’s weight is the same after its shape changes

C. whether the infant has a schema for the object

D. whether the infant looks for the object after it has been covered up

ANS: D REF: Piaget OBJ: application and understanding

What observation persuaded Piaget that young children lack the concept of object permanence?

A. B. C. D. They say that some coins spread out are “more” than the same coins together.

They fail to reach around a barrier to retrieve a toy.

They say that a yellow ball behind a blue glass is “really” green.

The grasp reflex returns when activity in the cerebral cortex is suppressed.

ANS: B REF: sensorimotor OBJ: remembering

19293. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. When infants view an impossible event (for example, a toy car going down a ramp and going through

a place where it should have been blocked), what do the infants do?

A. B. C. D. They immediately begin to cry.

They stare longer at the scene.

They avert their gaze from the scene.

They give no indication that the event is impossible.

ANS: B REF: sensorimotor OBJ: remembering

Young infants do show evidence of object permanence if they are tested in a different way. What is

the evidence?

A. B. C. D. They manipulate objects with their feet differently than they do with their hands.

They remember what they see and describe it later after they learn to talk.

They make hand gestures that seem to describe objects they have seen.

They stare longer at “impossible” events, such as a toy car passing through where a block

had been.

ANS: D REF: sensorimotor OBJ: remembering

A 6-month-old watches a toy car go down a track, behind a curtain, and apparently through a block

that should stop it. How does the child react, and what conclusion do psychologists draw?

A. The child looks away. The child has lost interest.

B. The child stares longer than usual. The impossible result surprised the child.

C. The child reaches toward the toy car. The child lacks the concept of conservation.

D. The child does not react at all. The child lacks the concept of object permanence.

ANS: B REF: sensorimotor OBJ: remembering

Contrary to Piaget, later research found that infants do show object permanence, if they are tested in

a different way. What did the later research measure?

A. B. C. D. How infants respond to pouring a liquid from one container to another.

How well infants can describe something they remember.

How long infants stare at an “impossible” outcome.

How well children can look at the finger that doesn’t wiggle, when the other does.

ANS: C REF: sensorimotor OBJ: remembering

A young child watches a toy car go down a track and past a screen. If the child had previously seen a

block on the track right behind the screen, what does the child do?

A. stares longer than usual

B. Cries

C. turns away

D. Smiles

ANS: A REF: sensorimotor OBJ: remembering

The observation described in the previous question suggests, contrary to Piaget’s theory, that very

young children do have which concept?

A. object permanence

B. Conservation

C. formal operations

D. sense of self

ANS: A REF: sensorimotor

OBJ: application and understanding

An experimenter places a colored spot on a child’s nose, lets the child look in the mirror, and

observes whether the child touches his/her own nose. What concept is being tested?

A. Conservation

193100. 101. 102. 103. 104. 105. B. object permanence

C. sense of self

D. theory of mind

ANS: C REF: sensorimotor

OBJ: application and understanding

What evidence suggests that many 2 year old children have a “sense of self”?

A. When they see an “impossible” event, they stare in apparent surprise.

B. They follow the advice of an “informed” adult instead of an uninformed one.

C. If they see a spot on their face in the mirror, they touch their own face.

D. They stop doing something that leads to parental disapproval.

ANS: C REF: sensorimotor

OBJ: application and understanding

What did Piaget mean by an “operation” (as in “concrete operations”)?

A. a way of answering hypothetical questions

B. applying a schema to a new object

C. modifying a schema to fit a new object

D. a mental process that can be reversed

ANS: D REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering (definition)

A little boy in the preoperational stage would have trouble understanding that

A. B. C. D. his father and mother still exist even when the boy does not see them.

other little boys have sisters when he has only brothers.

some mothers are taller than some fathers.

his mother is also someone’s daughter.

ANS: D REF: preoperational

OBJ: application and understanding

What did Piaget mean by the term “egocentric”?

A. seeing the world only from your own perspective

B. selfish

C. having a well-defined, individually chosen identity

D. withdrawn, shy, and inhibited

ANS: A REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering (definition)

According to Piaget, how could we determine whether a child’s thinking is egocentric?

A. B. C. D. Show the child a pile of objects and ask how it would look from the back.

Give the child a bag of candies and ask him/her to share it with friends.

Ask the child “What do you want to be when you grow up, and why?”

Tell the child not to play with his or her favorite toy, and then watch.

ANS: A REF: preoperational

OBJ: application and understanding

Which of the following would Piaget consider evidence that a child is thinking “egocentrically”?

A. The child demands that other people attend to the child’s needs.

B. When asked “How would this look from where I’m standing?” the child describes how it

appears from where the child is standing.

C. The child speaks in relatively complex sentences when speaking to an adult but uses

shorter, simpler sentences when speaking to a younger child.

D. The child describes a set of plans and goals for the future that he or she thought out alone,

rather than borrowing from parents.

ANS: B REF: preoperational

194106. 107. 108. 109. 110. 111. OBJ: application and understanding

Which of the following would Piaget describe as an egocentric thought?

A. “I can sing better than anyone else in my class.”

B. “Birds sing so that I can hear them.”

C. “I want to have more candy than my friends.”

D. “I think, therefore I exist.”

ANS: B REF: preoperational

OBJ: application and understanding

A professor gives her introductory class an extremely complicated lecture, assuming that if she

understands it, they will also. This is an example of which of the Piaget’s concepts?

A. object permanence

B. egocentrism

C. concrete operations

D. equilibration

ANS: B REF: preoperational

OBJ: application and understanding

Which of the following is an example of egocentric thought, in Piaget’s sense of that term?

A. A basketball coach expresses great optimism for the team at the start of the season.

B. A writer uses someone else’s words without giving credit.

C. Josh blames other people for everything that goes wrong in his life.

D. Dr. Jones gives her intro class the same complex lecture she gave to professionals.

ANS: D REF: preoperational

OBJ: application and understanding

A child watches a scene in which a mother moves some chocolate while her little boy isn’t watching.

A psychologist asks the child who is watching, “Where will the little boy look for the chocolate?”

What concept is the psychologist testing?

A. egocentrism

B. concrete operations

C. theory of mind

D. equilibration

ANS: C REF: preoperational

OBJ: application and understanding

If a child lacks “theory of mind,” what does the child fail to understand?

A. A mother could be someone else’s daughter.

B. Appearances can be different from reality.

C. It is possible to perform operations and then reverse them.

D. Some people know things that other people don’t know.

ANS: D REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering (definition)

Studies on children’s understanding of object permanence and theory of mind support this

generalization:

A. B. C. D. A child who understands one concept will also understand the other one.

Whether a child appears to understand depends on how we test the concept.

Children do not understand either concept until an adult explains it to them.

Coming to understand either concept is a sudden, all-or-nothing matter.

ANS: B REF: preoperational

OBJ: application and understanding

195112. 113. 114. 115. 116. 117. 118. First Maxi saw chocolate in the blue cupboard. While he was absent, his mother moved it to the

green cupboard. What does it mean if a child says Maxi will return and look in the blue cupboard?

A. B. C. D. It means the child has “theory of mind.”

It means the child does not have “theory of mind.”

It means the child is in the stage of formal operations.

It means the child is in the sensorimotor stage.

ANS: A REF: preoperational OBJ: application and understanding

First Maxi saw chocolate in the blue cupboard. While he was absent, his mother moved it to the

green cupboard. What does it mean if a child says Maxi will return and look in the green cupboard?

A. B. C. D. It means the child has “theory of mind.”

It means the child does not have “theory of mind.”

It means the child is in the formal operations stage.

It means the child is in the sensorimotor stage.

ANS: B REF: preoperational

OBJ: application and understanding

During Piaget’s preoperational period, children apparently have trouble distinguishing between

A. reality and appearance.

B. assimilation and accommodation.

C. male and female.

D. liquids and solids.

ANS: A REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering

A child is shown a small scale model of a full-size room. A tiny toy is hidden behind the miniature

couch and the child is told, “A big toy just like this is hidden in the same place in the bigger room. Try

to find it.” What is the result?

A. B. C. D. Ability to find the toy develops gradually during the concrete-operations period.

Performance on this task is an excellent measure of the child’s language development.

Children age 2 1/2 fail completely, although children age 3 find the toy easily.

Younger children actually find the toy faster than older children.

ANS: C REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering

Children in the early part of Piaget’s preoperational stage, (about age 2 years)

A. B. C. D. can deal with hypothetical situations better than they deal with concrete situations.

perform well on the conservation of number and conservation of volume tasks.

fail to reach around a barrier to retrieve a hidden toy.

have trouble understanding how a small-scale room could represent a larger room.

ANS: D REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering

A 2 1/2-year old child sees a toy hidden in a tiny room, and then looks for a larger version of the toy

in a full-sized room. Under what circumstances can the child find the toy quickly?

A. B. C. Only if the child is told to treat the small room as a model of the larger room.

Only if the child had experience playing with doll houses.

Only if the child has been told that the experimenter expanded the room.

D. Under no conditions.

ANS: C REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering

Some 2 1/2-year-old children are shown a small toy hidden in a small room, and then asked to find a

larger toy in a larger room, using one room as a “map” of the other. Although they ordinarily fail, they

can perform correctly if

A. they are tested early in the morning.

196119. 120. 121. 122. 123. 124. B. C. D. they are tested by a familiar researcher, with at least one parent present.

the researcher repeats the instructions more slowly.

the question is worded or explained in a different way.

ANS: D REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering

A 2 1/2 year old child is asked, “Find the big toy in the same place in the big room where I hid the

little toy in the little room.” The child cannot find it, unless we change the instructions as follows:

A. Pretend you are the toy. Where would you hide in the big room?

B. I blew up the little room to a bigger room. Now find the toy.

C. Think of the little room as a map of the bigger room. Now find the toy.

D. Just relax, don’t think about it, and let your feet take you to the right place.

ANS: B REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering

A 2 1/2 year old child watches a psychologist hide a toy in a dollhouse room that is a scale model of a

full-size room. Then the psychologist asks the child to find the same toy hidden in the same place in

the full-size room. The child ordinarily fails, but succeeds if the psychologist says this:

A. I am sure you can find the toy if you try.

B. If you find it, I’ll let you keep it.

C. Be sure to look in the same place in the big room where I hid it in the little room.

D. It’s the same room, but I blew it up.

ANS: D REF: preoperational OBJ: remembering

An experimenter shows a child two equal glasses of water and then pours the water from one of

them into a glass of a different shape. Then the experimenter asks whether the new glass has more

or less water than the other one. What concept is the experimenter testing?

A. assimilation

B. object permanence

C. conservation

D. hypothetical reasoning

ANS: C REF: concrete operations OBJ: application and understanding

A psychologist shows a child two rows of coins and then spreads out one row and asks which row has

more. Which Piagetian concept is she probably testing?

A. conservation

B. assimilation

C. object permanence

D. formal operations

ANS: A REF: concrete operations OBJ: application and understanding

In one of Piaget’s tasks, he filled two glasses equally full, and then poured one of them into a tall thin

glass and asked a child which glass had more water. What skill was he testing?

A. formal operations

B. theory of mind

C. conservation

D. object permanence

ANS: C REF: concrete operations OBJ: application and understanding

An investigator who wishes to determine whether a child understands the concept of conservation

would be most likely to do which of the following?

A. B. Place a toy behind a barrier and see whether the child reaches around it to get the toy.

Ask a hypothetical question, such as “How could we move a mountain of whipped cream

197125. 126. 127. 128. 129. 130. C. D. from one part of the city to another?”

Show the child two equal rows of coins and then spread out one row and ask whether the

rows are still the same.

Demonstrate a way of playing with a toy, then give the child the toy and see whether he or

she plays with it the same way.

ANS: C REF: concrete operations OBJ: application and understanding

According to Piaget, a child who has the concept of conservation understands which of these?

A. B. C. D. The weight and mass of an object stays the same when the shape changes.

One should work out a strategy before starting on a complex task.

An object continues to exist even when one does not see it.

A group of people has to take turns talking to one another and then listening.

ANS: A REF: concrete operations OBJ: remembering

What do children in Piaget’s preoperational stage of development lack?

A. language

B. schemas

C. the concept of conservation

D. the concept of object permanence

ANS: C REF: concrete operations OBJ: remembering

An investigator shows a child two equally full beakers of water and pours one of them into a tall, thin

container. The child says that the thinner container has more water. Evidently the child lacks

A. schemas.

B. the concept of object permanence.

C. the concept of conservation.

D. ego integrity.

ANS: C REF: concrete operations OBJ: remembering

According to Piaget, children in the concrete-operations stage

A. have trouble with abstract and hypothetical questions.

B. no longer use schemas.

C. have only simple movements and do not use language.

D. lack the concept of conservation.

ANS: A REF: concrete operations OBJ: remembering

To determine whether or not a child has reached the stage of formal operations, a psychologist might

test whether the child can

A. understand that objects maintain certain properties despite changes in their shape.

B. speak in complete sentences.

C. understand that an object continues to exist even when it is out of sight.

D. answer hypothetical and abstract questions.

ANS: D REF: formal operations OBJ: remembering

What should a psychologist test to determine whether a given child is in the concrete-operations

stage or the formal-operations stage?

A. whether the child reaches around a barrier to retrieve a hidden toy

B. whether the child understands that a liquid maintains its volume after a shape change

C. whether the child can answer abstract and hypothetical questions

D. whether the child can distinguish between appearance and reality

ANS: C REF: formal operations OBJ: remembering

198131. 132. 133. 134. 135. 136. 137. What do children do in the formal-operations stage that they do not do in the concrete-operations

stage?

A. B. C. D. understand that an object maintains its weight and volume after a change in its shape

reach around a barrier to retrieve a hidden object

develop a systematic strategy for solving a problem

distinguish between appearance and reality

ANS: C REF: formal operations OBJ: remembering

What does a child in the formal operations stage do that a child in the concrete operations stage

does not do?

A. B. C. plan systematic approaches to hypothetical questions

correctly answer questions about object permanence

understand that some people have false beliefs

D. understand conservation of number

ANS: A REF: formal operations OBJ: remembering

A psychologist might evaluate a child’s ability to answer abstract and hypothetical questions to

determine whether the child is in the __________ or the __________ stage of cognitive

development.

A. concrete-operations…formal-operations

B. formal-operations…sensorimotor

C. concrete-operations…postoperational

D. sensorimotor…preoperational

ANS: A REF: formal operations OBJ: remembering

The thought processes of an adult are most like those of children in which of Piaget’s stages?

A. formal operations

B. concrete operations

C. sensorimotor

D. preoperational

ANS: A REF: formal operations OBJ: remembering

Olivia understands that objects maintain their weight and volume after changes in shape. But she has

trouble answering abstract or hypothetical questions. She is in which of Piaget’s stages?

A. formal operations

B. sensorimotor

C. concrete operations

D. preoperational

ANS: C REF: concrete operations

OBJ: application and understanding

According to Piaget, a child who has mastered the principle of conservation but who has limitations

on abstract thought is in which stage of cognitive development?

A. preoperational

B. concrete operations

C. sensorimotor

D. formal operations

ANS: B REF: concrete operations

OBJ: application and understanding

Below are descriptions of four children. Which one is in Piaget’s stage of formal operations?

A. performs well on tests of object permanence; still has trouble with conservation

B. systematically plans approaches to hypothetical questions

199138. 139. 140. 141. 142. 143. C. D. understands conservation but has trouble with abstract and hypothetical questions

does not speak in complete sentences; fails tests of object permanence

ANS: B REF: formal operations

OBJ: application and understanding

A child who fails tests of object permanence and cannot speak more than a few words would be in

which of Piaget’s stages?

A. concrete operations

B. sensorimotor

C. formal operations

D. preoperational

ANS: B REF: sensorimotor

OBJ: application and understanding

As a rule, a preoperational child who is asked which row of coins “has more” answers that the longer

one has more (even if the two rows both have seven coins). What kind of experience is most likely to

enable the child to give the correct answer?

A. Test the child on conservation of weight and conservation of volume tasks.

B. Ask the same question about rows of three coins each.

C. Let the child spend an hour playing with coins.

D. Give the child a lecture about the properties of the number system.

ANS: B REF: Stages distinct? OBJ: remembering

What did Vygotsky mean by the term “the zone of proximal development”?

A. B. C. D. The distance between what children know and what adults know.

The difference between what a child does alone and what the child does with help.

The time needed to make a transition from one of Piaget’s stages to another.

Impaired performance on one task as a child improves on another one.

ANS: B REF: Stages distinct? OBJ: remembering (definition)

In contrast to the views based on Piaget’s work, the Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky argued that

educators should consider a child’s

A. degree of conservation.

B. stage of cognitive development.

C. zone of proximal development.

D. position of birth order within the family structure.

ANS: C REF: Stages distinct? OBJ: remembering

What did Lev Vygotsky mean by a child’s zone of proximal development?

A. B. C. D. the difference between what the child sees and what the child hears

the difference between what the child knows and what the child says

the difference between what a child does alone and what the child can do with help

the difference between the child’s reactions to friends and reactions to strangers

ANS: C REF: Stages distinct? OBJ: remembering (definition)

Lev Vygotsky would most strongly disagree with which of these statements?

A. B. C. D. A child may or may not seem to understand a concept, depending on how we test it.

We have to wait for children to discover concepts on their own.

Children gradually advance through various stages of understanding.

Certain children are more ready to learn new concepts than others are.

ANS: B REF: Stages distinct?

OBJ: application and understanding

200144. 145. 146. 147. 148. 149. 150. Who believed that educators could help a child understand the concept of conservation?

A. Jean Piaget

B. Lev Vygotsky

C. both Piaget and Vygotsky

D. neither Piaget nor Vygotsky

ANS: B REF: Stages distinct? OBJ: remembering

How could you get someone to pour you a larger than average drink?

A. B. C. D. Ask for the drink in a brightly colored glass.

Ask for the drink in a dull colored glass.

Ask for the drink in a tall, thin glass.

Ask for the drink in a short, wide glass.

ANS: D REF: How grown up are we? OBJ: remembering

For both Piaget’s stages of cognitive development and Erik Erikson’s stages of emotional and social

development,

A. almost everyone reaches the final stage on schedule, at the same age.

B. children in two-parent families develop faster than those from single-parent families.

C. first-born children develop faster than their later-born brothers and sisters.

D. almost everyone goes through the stages in the same order.

ANS: D REF: Erikson OBJ: application and understanding

Erik Erikson’s eight stages of human development dealt with which aspect of behavior?

A. language skills

B. reactions to the prospect of dying

C. social and emotional conflicts

D. understanding the concept of right and wrong

ANS: C REF: Erikson OBJ: remembering

Trust vs. mistrust, intimacy vs. isolation, and generativity vs. stagnation are stages in

A. B. C. Freud’s stages of psychosexual development.

Erikson’s ages of social and emotional development.

Kohlberg’s stages of moral reasoning.

D. Maslow’s hierarchy of needs.

ANS: B REF: Erikson OBJ: remembering

What was a key point of Erik Erikson’s stages of development?

A. B. C. D. Emotional difficulties in one stage will impair development in the next.

Genetic differences influence the development of social behaviors.

The speed of progression through stages of development varies among cultures.

Those who go through the stages more slowly are better off in the long run.

ANS: A REF: Erikson OBJ: remembering

If someone has difficulty forming close attachments, Erik Erikson would seek an explanation in terms

of what?

A. genetic factors that altered brain development

B. experiences at earlier stages

C. challenges to the person’s self-esteem

D. rewards and punishments in the person’s work environment

ANS: B REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: application and understanding

201151. 152. 153. 154. 155. 156. 157. According to Erik Erikson, the main concern of a newborn infant is

A. early experiences of independence.

B. achievement and self-worth.

C. conflict with parental restrictions.

D. forming a trusting attachment.

ANS: D REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: remembering

Someone in Erikson’s age of basic trust vs. mistrust would be in which age group?

A. adolescent

B. preadolescent

C. toddler

D. infant

ANS: D REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: remembering

Mary Ainsworth devised a test of attachment in which the mother and an infant enter a room with

toys, a stranger enters, the mother and stranger leave, the stranger returns, and finally the mother

returns. What is this procedure called?

A. The Piagetian Task

B. Theory of Mind

C. Strange Situation

D. Child Abandonment

ANS: C REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: remembering (definition)

Which of these does the Strange Situation evaluate?

A. the ability of educators to help a child understand new concepts

B. which rewards are most effective for a given child

C. a child’s ability to follow directions

D. attachment between a child and mother or other adult

ANS: D REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: remembering

If an infant shows a secure attachment in the Strange Situation, what if anything can we predict

about later behavior?

A. B. C. D. In elementary school, this child will probably do better at language than math.

In adulthood, this person is likely to form good romantic relationships.

In adolescence, this person will have difficulties with self-esteem.

We cannot make any accurate predictions about later behavior.

ANS: B REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: remembering

Which of these general conclusions emerges from research on the Strange Situation?

A. B. C. D. Parents who practice the strictest discipline have the best-behaved children.

Children learn best if they are taught in small classes.

Children with a secure attachment continue forming such attachments later.

Those who don’t have emotional crises in childhood will probably have them later.

ANS: C REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: remembering

Which of the following is an important limitation on psychologists’ research concerning infant-

mother attachment?

A. B. C. D. Patterns of attachment often change drastically from one day to another.

Attachment patterns in infancy have little to do with behavior later in life.

The Strange Situation cannot be used for children less than two years old.

Tests that work in the United States may be misleading in other cultures.

ANS: D REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: remembering

202158. 159. 160. 161. 162. 163. 164. People differ greatly in their tendency to be active or inactive, outgoing or reserved. These

tendencies are known as

A. schemata.

B. mood.

C. attitude.

D. temperament.

ANS: D REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: remembering (definition)

If two people differ in their temperament, what can we expect to find?

A. B. C. D. They react differently to new situations.

They differ in their interests and academic abilities.

They prefer different types of foods.

They differ in their self-esteem.

ANS: A REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: remembering

If a child clings tightly to the mother and cries furiously when she leaves, which attachment style does

the child show?

A. Avoidant

B. Securely attached

C. Anxious

D. Disorganized

ANS: A REF: infancy/childhood OBJ: remembering

According to Erik Erikson, the identity crisis (the question “Who am I?”) is of greatest concern to

people of what age?

A. toddlers

B. preschool children

C. older adults

D. adolescents

ANS: D REF: childhood/adolescence OBJ: remembering

Which of these is true of young people today, compared to those of long ago?

A. B. C. D. They are less extraverted, on average.

They report, on average, lower levels of anxiety.

They have earlier puberty and later start of career.

They spend more time outdoors and are more familiar with local plants and animals.

ANS: C REF: childhood/adolescence OBJ: remembering

What is probably the main reason why adolescents make many risky choices?

A. ignorance of the dangers

B. lack of adequate intelligence

C. peer pressure

D. fear of failure

ANS: C REF: childhood/adolescence OBJ: remembering

At what stage of life are people most likely to experience “identity crisis”?

A. early childhood

B. adolescence

C. young adulthood

D. old age

ANS: B REF: identity OBJ: remembering

203165. 166. 167. 168. 169. 170. 171. What is meant by the term “identity moratorium”?

A. B. C. D. reaching firm decisions about one’s life without much thought

lack of any decisions about one’s life and lack of effort toward reaching them

considering decisions about one’s life without yet making any decisions

making decisions about one’s life after exploring several possibilities

ANS: C REF: identity OBJ: remembering (definition)

What is meant by the term “identity foreclosure”?

A. B. C. D. reaching firm decisions about one’s life without much thought

lack of any decisions about one’s life and lack of effort toward reaching them

considering decisions about one’s life without yet making any decisions

making decisions about one’s life after exploring several possibilities

ANS: A REF: identity OBJ: remembering (definition)

Adolescents who have not given serious thoughts to their future but have already made a decision

about their future are said to have

A. identity achievement.

B. identity foreclosure.

C. identity moratorium.

D. identity diffusion.

ANS: B REF: identity OBJ: remembering (definition)

Adolescents who have explored various identities and have made their own decisions about their

future are said to have

A. identity achievement.

B. identity foreclosure.

C. identity moratorium.

D. identity diffusion.

ANS: A REF: identity OBJ: remembering (definition)

Adolescents who have not explored their future and have not made any decisions are said to have

A. identity achievement.

B. identity foreclosure.

C. identity moratorium.

D. identity diffusion.

ANS: D REF: identity OBJ: remembering (definition)

Adolescents who have explored their future but have not made any decisions are said to have

A. identity achievement.

B. identity foreclosure.

C. identity moratorium.

D. identity diffusion.

ANS: C REF: identity OBJ: remembering (definition)

“Tragedy will never strike me….” “I will succeed in all my ambitions….” “Everyone notices how I look.”

According to David Elkind, these beliefs are part of the adolescent’s

A. identity crisis.

B. preoperational thinking.

C. personal fable.

D. moral dilemma.

ANS: C REF: personal fable OBJ: remembering (definition)

204172. 173. 174. 175. 176. 177. 178. Compared to other high school girls, high school girls who are having unprotected sex give lower

estimates of the chances of becoming pregnant through unprotected sex. This “it can’t happen to

me” attitude is a clear example of

A. an identity foreclosure.

B. a personal fable.

C. a cohort effect.

D. authoritarianism.

ANS: B REF: reliability and validity OBJ: application and understanding

According to David Elkind, the “personal fable” of adolescents is the belief that

A. B. C. D. “I am really a prince or princess in disguise.”

“Everything is always going wrong in my life.”

“How successful I will be depends entirely on how hard I try.”

“What is true for everyone else is not true for me.”

ANS: D REF: personal fable OBJ: remembering (definition)

The “Personal Fable” of adolescence is an example of which type of attitude?

A. optimism

B. pessimism

C. extraversion

D. introversion

ANS: A REF: personal fable OBJ: application and understanding

According to Erikson, during a midlife transition, what makes people dissatisfied?

A. awareness of physical deterioration of the body

B. lack of social activities

C. awareness of unachieved goals

D. increased work and responsibility

ANS: C REF: adulthood OBJ: remembering

Someone who sets high goals early in life but who does not start working toward them is likely to go

through which experience at about age 40?

A. moratorium

B. midlife transition

C. Kohlberg’s stages

D. identity achievement

ANS: B REF: adulthood OBJ: remembering

How does a midlife transition resemble an adolescent identity crisis?

A. B. C. D. Both take place at a specific, predictable age.

As a rule, both provoke extreme anxiety.

In both cases people blame their problems on their parents.

In both cases people examine their goals and future directions.

ANS: D REF: adulthood OBJ: application and understanding

Which of the following has been shown to improve older people’s memory and thinking?

A. as much sleep as possible

B. eating a high carbohydrate diet

C. watching television

D. physical exercise

205179. 180. 181. 182. 183. 184. 185. ANS: D REF: old age OBJ: remembering

At what age are people most likely to focus just on what seems important or pleasant, and forget the

other details?

A. early childhood

B. adolescence

C. young adulthood

D. old age

ANS: D REF: old age OBJ: remembering

What can a nursing home staff do to improve retired people’s health, alertness, and morale?

A. B. C. D. Take care of meals, laundry, and other chores for them.

Let them make some choices and perform some chores on their own.

Encourage them to set goals as high as possible, even if they are unrealistic.

Keep the routine the same from one day to the next.

ANS: B REF: old age OBJ: remembering

Terror Management Theory attributes much of our anxiety and neuroses to what?

A. our aggressive tendencies

B. our fear of loneliness

C. our fear of failure

D. our fear of death

ANS: D REF: facing death OBJ: remembering (definition)

According to Terror Management Theory, even a casual reference to death tends to

A. increase people’s aggressive tendencies.

B. increase people’s interest in new ideas.

C. increase people’s defenses of their beliefs.

D. decrease people’s energy levels.

ANS: C REF: facing death OBJ: remembering

According to Terror Management Theory, which of these increases people’s patriotism and defense

of their religious or other beliefs?

A. reminders of death

B. increased financial wealth

C. loneliness

D. cold weather

ANS: A REF: facing death OBJ: remembering

On average, women are better than men at doing what?

A. estimating distances and directions

B. imagining how a three-dimensional display would look from a different angle

C. learning the rules of a game

D. interpreting facial expressions of emotion

ANS: D REF: gender OBJ: remembering

In situations that might call for an apology, how do men and women differ on average (at least in the

United States)?

A. B. C. D. Women apologize more often, and expect apologies from others more often.

Women apologize more often, but expect apologies from others less often.

Men apologize more often, and expect apologies from others more often.

Men apologize more often, but expect apologies from others less often.

206186. 187. 188. 189. 190. 191. 192. ANS: A REF: gender OBJ: remembering

In situations that might call for an apology, how do men differ from women on average (at least in

the United States)?

A. Men apologize more often, and expect apologies more often than women do.

B. Men apologize less often, but expect apologies more often than women do.

C. Men apologize less often, but expect apologies as often as women do.

D. Men apologize less often, and expect apologies less often than women do.

ANS: D REF: gender OBJ: remembering

What is psychologists’ current view about male-female differences in math abilities?

A. B. C. D. Men do better at math because of differences in brain anatomy.

Men do better at math because of activation by testosterone.

Men do better at math because of genetic differences that control this ability.

When women have equal opportunities, they do as well at math as men do.

ANS: D REF: gender OBJ: remembering

In the United States, how does math ability differ between boys and girls, if at all?

A. B. C. D. Boys do better in math, on average, from the earliest ages onward.

Boys begin to do better in math, on average, after the start of puberty.

Boys do better at math, on average, only until the start of puberty.

On average, girls’ math grades are as good or better than boys’ in nearly all courses.

ANS: D REF: gender OBJ: remembering

Vastly more men than women become grand masters at chess. Why?

A. B. C. D. From the start, boys start off better than girls at chess.

Boys and girls start the same, but boys progress faster.

Boys and girls progress about equally, but girls forget their skills faster.

More boys try to become good chess players. Otherwise, no differences.

ANS: D REF: gender OBJ: remembering

Beginning in early childhood, boys and girls differ on average in what?

A. B. C. D. their ability to do mathematics

their ability to learn to play chess

their interests, such as toy preferences

their ability to learn and remember

ANS: C REF: gender OBJ: remembering

When girl fetuses are exposed to somewhat elevated testosterone levels during prenatal

development, what is an effect on their later development?

A. B. C. D. These girls are more likely than average to get high grades in math courses.

These girls are more likely than average to pay close attention to facial expressions.

These girls are more likely than average to enjoy typical boys’ toys.

These girls are more likely than average to be right-handed.

ANS: C REF: gender OBJ: remembering

What evidence suggests a biological influence on what toys a child chooses to play with?

A. B. C. D. Boys with larger than average brains tend to play with girls’ toys.

Boys with elevated brain levels of serotonin tend to play with girls’ toys.

Girls exposed to extra testosterone before birth tend to play with boys’ toys.

Girls who ate a high-protein diet in early childhood tend to play with boys’ toys.

207193. 194. 195. 196. 197. 198. 199. 200. ANS: C REF: gender OBJ: application and understanding

What evidence suggests a cultural influence on children’s choices of toys to play with?

A. B. C. D. In many cultures, boys play mostly with dolls and girls play mostly with toy trucks.

On average, boys’ toys and girls’ toys are about equally expensive.

Male monkeys tend to play with balls and trucks, and girl monkeys play with dolls.

Children who watch boys play with a toy in a TV ad assume it is a boys’ toy.

ANS: D REF: gender OBJ: application and understanding

If you choose a job because you consider it “man’s work” or “woman’s work,” you have been

influenced by what?

A. pheromones

B. ethnocentrism

C. sex roles

D. sex hormones

ANS: C REF: sex roles OBJ: application and understanding

Which of the following apparently does NOT differ between one culture and another?

A. B. C. D. the average length of non-romantic hugs

how likely children are to play mostly with other children their own age

the effectiveness of showing anger, when trying to influence others

how much people value independence and individual achievement

ANS: A REF: culture/ethnic OBJ: remembering

According to a popular generalization, Chinese culture is more ______ than the United States.

A. experimental

B. individualistic

C. competitive

D. collectivist

ANS: D REF: culture/ethnic OBJ: remembering

An immigrant who can alternate between the native culture and the new culture is showing

A. biculturalism.

B. assimilation.

C. schizophrenia.

D. narcissism.

ANS: A REF: acculturation OBJ: remembering

Other things being equal, which immigrants are most likely to fit in with the new culture?

A. children

B. working-age adults

C. older adults

D. all ages equally

ANS: A REF: acculturation OBJ: remembering

Which of these statements which psychologists used to reject, do they now endorse?

A. B. C. D. Most biracial children are happy and well-adjusted.

U. S. culture is more collectivist than that of China.

Parenting style is the main factor controlling children’s personality.

Immigrant children do best if they identify fully with one culture or the other.

ANS: A REF: acculturation OBJ: remembering

Many studies report personality differences between first-born and later born children. However,

many of the studies can be faulted for confusing birth order effects with the effects of

208201. 202. 203. 204. 205. 206. A. recent vs. earlier cohorts.

B. large vs. small family size.

C. longitudinal vs. cross-sectional studies.

D. male vs. female.

ANS: B REF: birth order OBJ: application and understanding

A researcher tests all the students in one college and finds that the first-borns have higher GPAs than

later-born children, on average. One possible explanation is that the results reflect the influence of

birth order. The other explanation is that the results depend on differences between

A. motivated students and unmotivated students.

B. one-child families and larger families.

C. longitudinal studies and cross-sectional studies.

D. left-handers and right-handers.

ANS: B REF: birth order OBJ: application and understanding

To do research on the effects of birth order on personality or behavior, it is important to use

A. B. C. D. people chosen because of their unusual personality traits.

people who are similar to one another in as many regards as possible.

people from a wide variety of family sizes.

only people from families that had at least two children.

ANS: D REF: birth order OBJ: application and understanding

Suppose researchers test all the sophomores at a particular college, comparing all the first-borns to

later born students. The results may be ambiguous, because many of the first-borns in the class differ

from later-borns in this regard:

A. They tend to be older.

B. Many of them come from smaller families.

C. They tend to be more male than female.

D. They tend to be more female than male.

ANS: B REF: birth order OBJ: application and understanding

When attempting to compare first-born to later-born children, which of these is most important for

researchers to consider?

A. B. C. D. First-born children are more likely to be girls than boys.

Children in one-child families differ from those in larger families.

Birth-order effects become apparent only after children leave home.

Birth-order effects are more significant for girls than for boys.

ANS: B REF: birth order OBJ: application and understanding

Why is it improper to compare all first-borns in your class to all later-borns?

A. B. C. D. The first-borns are probably older than the later-borns.

First-borns are more likely to be male than later-borns are.

First-borns tend to be taller than later-borns.

Many first-borns come from one-child families.

ANS: D REF: birth order OBJ: application and understanding

“Authoritative” parents who set high standards and communicate sympathetically tend to have well-

behaved children. What conclusion, if any, can we draw from these data?

A. That style of parenting brings out the best in the children.

B. Well-behaved children influence their parents to behave sympathetically.

C. Parents and children share genes that promote cooperative, understanding behavior.

D. We can draw no cause-and-effect conclusion from these correlational data.

ANS: D REF: parenting OBJ: application and understanding

209207. 208. 209. 210. 211. 212. 213. Parents who set firm rules for their children, without explaining why those rules are good, and who

tend to be cold and distant to their children, are known as __________ parents.

A. indifferent

B. authoritarian

C. permissive

D. uninvolved

ANS: B REF: parenting OBJ: remembering (definition)

Research on parenting style and children’s behavior

A. B. C. D. shows that parenting style controls children’s behavior.

shows that children’s behavior controls the parents’ behavior.

is correlational, so does not allow us to draw cause-effect conclusions.

has produced results that are too inconsistent to allow for conclusions.

ANS: C REF: parenting OBJ: remembering

What result emerges from research on the personality of adopted children and their parents?

A. B. C. D. The children’s personality has little similarity to that of the parents.

Adopted children adjust best if the parents use an authoritarian style.

Adopted children resemble their adopting parents’ personality from the start.

Adopted children begin to resemble the adopting parents after about age 12.

ANS: A REF: parenting OBJ: remembering

At least in the U.S., parents using an “authoritative” style of parenting tend to have well-behaved,

well-adjusted children. Which conclusion, if any, follows from this result?

A. This style of parenting leads to positive social and emotional development.

B. Parents with well-behaved children become sympathetic and supportive.

C. Children resemble their parents in many ways for genetic reasons.

D. None of these conclusions follows from the result.

ANS: D REF: parenting OBJ: application and understanding

Many psychologists now argue that parents’ actions have little effect on their children’s personality.

What is the main evidence for this conclusion?

A. B. C. D. Adopted children’s personality correlates poorly with that of the adopting parents.

Researchers located a gene that controls most personality variations.

On average, personality does not vary among cultures or generations.

First-born children differ substantially from later-born children.

ANS: A REF: parenting OBJ: application and understanding

Many studies reported a relationship between parenting style and children’s behavior, implying that

parents cause changes in their children. An alternative explanation is that the parents’ and children’s

behavior are related because the parents and children share the same

A. cohort.

B. schema.

C. amniote.

D. genetics.

ANS: D REF: parenting OBJ: application and understanding

Many psychologists have drawn cause-and-effect conclusions from relationships seen between

parents’ behavior and their children’s behavior. The conclusion that parents influence their children

would be more justifiable if the results were the same for

A. boys as they are for girls.

210214. 215. 216. 217. 218. 219. B. C. D. adopted children as they are for children living with their biological parents.

seven-year-olds as they are for ten-year-olds.

children living in rural areas as they are for children living in large cities.

ANS: B REF: parenting OBJ: application and understanding

A psychologist finds that parents using an understanding, sympathetic, “authoritative” style of

parenting tend to have well-behaved children. Which of these conclusions, if any, can we draw?

A. B. C. D. This style of parenting leads to well-behaved children.

Well-behaved children influence their parents to be calm and understanding.

Parents and children often have similar behaviors for genetic reasons.

We cannot draw an of these conclusions from the data.

ANS: D REF: parenting OBJ: application and understanding

A psychologist reports that authoritative parents tend to have well-behaved children, and suggests

that the parenting style influenced the children’s personality development. Before we accept this

conclusion, it would be most important to check whether the same results also occur in

A. adopted children.

B. other parts of the country.

C. children of other ages.

D. parents with less education.

ANS: A REF: parenting OBJ: application and understanding

A longitudinal study of 2,402 low-income families examined the behavior of children (preschoolers as

well as older children) before the mother started working and after they had been placed in day care.

The results showed

A. B. C. D. no behavioral changes in the preschoolers, and slight benefits for the older kids.

negative effects on the preschoolers, and no changes for the older kids.

positive effects on the preschoolers, and negative changes for the older kids.

negative effects for both the preschoolers as well as the older kids.

ANS: A REF: child care OBJ: remembering

What major personality difference, if any, is consistently found between children raised in traditional

families and children raised in nontraditional families?

A. B. C. D. Children raised in nontraditional families are more out-going and uninhibited.

Children raised in nontraditional families have lower self-esteem.

Children raised in traditional families are less fearful in new situations.

No major personality differences have been demonstrated between children raised in

traditional and nontraditional families.

ANS: D REF: nontraditional OBJ: remembering

According to current evidence, under which of these conditions, if any, do children suffer a significant

disadvantage in their social and emotional development?

A. if they were reared by a single parent

B. if they started going to day care before age 2

C. if they are reared by gay or lesbian couples

D. under none of these conditions

ANS: D REF: nontraditional OBJ: remembering

According to current evidence, what is likely for the psychological development of children reared by

a single parent or by a gay or lesbian couple?

A. Most have a difficult adjustment in childhood, but seem normal as adults.

211B. C. D. Most seem normal in childhood, but are likely to develop problems as adults.

Most have serious emotional problems in both childhood and adulthood.

Most develop about normally in both childhood and adulthood.

ANS: D REF: nontraditional OBJ: remembering

212

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