Liberty
University PSYC 101 quiz 3 solutions answers right
How
many versions: 6 different versions
Chapter 3
Question 1
Difference thresholds are determined by a
constant fraction of the magnitude of the original stimulus. This is the
premise of
Question 2
The process by which we receive, transform,
and process stimuli is
Question 3
Which of the following is the best definition
of precognition?
Question 4
Sound from which of the following should
produce the most danger to hearing upon brief exposure?
Question 5
In a research experiment, participants are
shown a series of drawings before seeing an ambiguous picture that could be
perceived as a rat or a man. Group 1 sees drawings of animals, while Group 2
sees drawings of humans. Perceptual set suggests which of the following results
when participants are shown the ambiguous picture?
Question 6
Jonathan practices focused attention to
induce a relaxed mental and physical state to help cope with stress. This
practice represents
Question 7
Regarding figureground perception, which of
the following statements is TRUE?
Question 8
Grouping disconnected pieces of information into a
meaningful whole describes the Gestalt principle of
Question 9
Which theory of pitch best accounts for the perception of
sounds between 1,000 and 4,000 cycles per second?
Question 10
The perception of stimuli that are presented
below the threshold of conscious awareness is called
Question 11
Receptors for which of the following are
located deepest in the skin?
Question 12
The basis of the place theory of pitch
detection is that pitch is determined by the place along the _______ that
vibrates the most.
Question 13
The study of events that cannot be explained
by known psychological, physical, or biological mechanisms is referred to as
Question 14
Which of the following absolute thresholds
for taste is correct?
Question 15
Neurons that respond to specific
characteristics of the visual stimulus are called
Question 16
Which of the following best describes the
organ of Corti?
Question 17
People who only see in black and white are
called
Question 18
All but which of the following are examples
of monocular cues for depth perception?
Question 19
Cathy takes three treatments of chemotherapy
a week. At each session, she brings along novels on tape to listen to during
her treatment. Cathy is using which method of pain management?
Question 20
According to signal detection theory, the
threshold for detecting a signal depends on
Question 1
Dr. Barrington is a crosscultural researcher
in the field of perception. She tests two groups of people to determine their
susceptibility to the MüllerLyer illusion. Group 1 consists of Americans, while
Group 2 consists of members of the African tribe of Zulus. Generalizing from
previous research, what will Barrington find?
Question 2
Who won the Nobel Prize for discovering that
the visual cortex contains nerve cells that respond only to lines of particular
orientations?
Question 3
Austin experiences motion sickness on his
first cruise vacation. From which two senses has Austin received conflicting
information?
Question 4
Regarding the scientific evidence on the
existence of extrasensory perception (ESP), which of the following statements
is TRUE?
Question 5
Grouping disconnected pieces of information
into a meaningful whole describes the Gestalt principle of
Question 6
All but which of the following are suggested
by opponentprocess theory?
Question 7
Repeated exposure to the same stimulus ______
leads to _____ sensitivity in our sensory systems.
Question 8
Which theory of pitch best accounts for the
perception of sounds between 1,000 and 4,000 cycles per second?
Question 9
In human hearing, the auditory receptors are
_____ and approximately ______ are in each ear.
Question 10
Weber’s law suggests that
Question 11
Which of the following is an example of the
depth cue of relative clarity?
Question 12
Pain receptors are located in all but which
of the following?
Question 13
Which of the following is FALSE regarding
sensory receptors?
Question 14
When Harold first enters his swimming pool,
the water feels uncomfortably cold. Five minutes later, it feels comfortable to
Harold. This is an example of
Question 15
The ratio of rods to cones is approximately
Question 16
The minimal difference between two stimuli
that people can reliably detect is the
Question 17
Some birds must return to roost as darkness approaches.
This is because their eyes contain
Question 18
Regarding pheromones, which of the following
statements is FALSE?
Question 19
The part of the eye that changes shape to
adjust for an object’s distance is the
Question 20
Hearing loss can occur after prolonged
exposure to noise as low as _____ decibels, while hearing loss can result from
brief exposure to sounds as low as ______ decibels.
Question 1 Pheromones play a role in which
of the following animal behaviors?
Question 2 If you hold a round plate in
your hand and turn it from side to side, the image it casts on your retina
changes. Yet you still perceive the plate to be round. This phenomenon can be
explained by the principle of
Question 3 Which of the following is an
example of the depth cue of relative clarity?
Question 4 Among pitch theories, place
theory best explains _______ frequency sounds, frequency theory best explains
______ frequency sounds, and volley principle best explains ______ frequency
sounds.
Question 5 Dr. Rhoden conducts animal
experiments on visual perception. Rhoden wants to stop the animal’s pupil from
changing size, so he paralyzes the
Question 6 All of the following are basic
tastes EXCEPT
Question 7 Rico is shown the following
stimulus: X. When asked what he sees, Rico reports that he sees two
intersecting lines rather than saying he sees four separate lines. Rico’s
response demonstrates which Gestalt principle?
Question 8 People who only see in black and
white are called
Question 9 Regarding the sense of smell, which
of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 10 Regarding figureground
perception, which of the following statements is TRUE?
Question 11 Jack has the most common form
of color blindness. What type of color blindness does he have?
Question 12 Regarding vision, which of the
following statements is FALSE?
Question 13 In human audition, the
vibration of the ossicles is triggered by vibration of the _____ and
transmitted directly to the ______.
Question 14 To see a dimly lit object at
night, the image must fall on your
Question 15 Dr. Dawson’s research program
is concerned with how a person’s experience changes as the intensity of a sound
is increased. Dawson is studying
Question 16 In human hearing, the auditory
receptors are _____ and approximately ______ are in each ear.
Question 17 Which sense is especially
effective at stimulating emotional memories?
Question 18 The perception of stimuli that
are presented below the threshold of conscious awareness is called
Question 19 Salvador is a stage magician.
As part of his act, Salvador identifies the written contents of a sealed
envelope. This aspect of Salvador’s performance is called
Question 20 Which of the following is FALSE
regarding sensory receptors?
Question 1 Regarding color blindness, which
of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 2 The basis of the place theory of
pitch detection is that pitch is determined by the place along the _______ that
vibrates the most.
Question 3 Difference thresholds are
determined by a constant fraction of the magnitude of the original stimulus.
This is the premise of
Question 4 Humans can hear frequencies
between about ______ cycles per second.
Question 5 Joseph has been assisting the
team doctor in his treatment of relatively minor but painful injuries for his
football team. The doctor has carefully instructed Joseph to alternate between
applying hot compresses and cold packs to the injured area. This treatment may
be effective because both heat and cold send competing messages through the
spinal cord that may temporarily block pain messages. This technique is known
as
Question 6 Regarding vision, which of the
following statements is FALSE?
Question 7 Which sense is especially
effective at stimulating emotional memories?
Question 8 Limiting attention to certain
stimuli and filtering out other stimuli is called
Question 9 Compared to people with average
taste sensitivity, people who are “supertasters” have
Question 10 Red, green, and blueviolet
light can be combined to create any color of the spectrum. This has been
interpreted as supporting
Question 11 When you are presented with the
following visual information, “A,” your brain sees a series of lines and angles
in a particular format and interprets this visual information as the letter
“A.” This is an example of which concept from perception?
Question 12 In human audition, the
vibration of the ossicles is triggered by vibration of the _____ and
transmitted directly to the ______.
Question 13 Signal detection theory
predicts all but which of the following?
Question 14 Felicia is nearly hit by a car
while crossing the street. Even though it is nearly dark and the colors of the
cars appear faded, she tells the police officer it was definitely a blue car.
Felicia’s experience is an example of ______.
Question 15 Depth cues that require the use
of both eyes are called
Question 16 The process of sensation
enables us to _________, where the process of perception enables us to
_________.
Question 17 All of the following are basic
tastes EXCEPT
Question 18 Evelyn walks past the cafe,
which is emitting odors of freshbrewed coffee. Evelyn smells the odors, and
her brain tells her she wants a cup of the delicious brew. Which of the
following is responsible for carrying impulses from odor receptors in Evelyn’s
nose to her brain?
Question 19 Regarding the sensation of
sound, which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 20 The existence of afterimages
provides support for the ________ theory of color vision.
Question 1 Rico is shown the following
stimulus: X. When asked what he sees, Rico reports that he sees two
intersecting lines rather than saying he sees four separate lines. Rico’s
response demonstrates which Gestalt principle?
Question 2 The text discusses ______ types
of perceptual constancy and they are ______.
Question 3 Salvador is a stage magician. As
part of his act, Salvador identifies the written contents of a sealed envelope.
This aspect of Salvador’s performance is called
Question 4 Trichromatic theory suggests
that
Question 5 Which of the following absolute
thresholds for taste is correct?
Question 6 The idea that the threshold for
sensing a stimulus depends not only on the properties of the stimulus itself
but on the level of background stimulation, as well as characteristics of the
perceiver, is explained by
Question 7 Depth cues that require the use
of both eyes are called
Question 8 Neurons that respond to specific
characteristics of the visual stimulus are called
Question 9 Dustin suffers from chronic back
pain as the result of an old injury. Any time he is required to sit for long
periods, he makes sure to bring a music player into the treatment room with
him, because he has found that listening to his favorite music helps him cope
with the pain. Dustin is using the pain control technique of
Question 10 The tendency to perceive
properties of an object as remaining the same despite changes in its retinal
image is called
Question 11 Regarding light and vision,
which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 12 The minimal difference between
two stimuli that people can reliably detect is the
Question 13 Sebastian’s eyeball is shorter
than normal. Light from nearby objects is focused behind his retina instead of
on his retina. What condition does Sebastian have?
Question 14 Receptor cells for which sense
regenerate within a week to 10 days?
Question 15 Dr. Halpern tells his graduate
student, Dwight, that he’ll need to deliver the lecture in Halpern’s psychology
class today. When Halpern tells him that the lecture is on olfaction, Dwight
knows he’ll be talking about which sense?
Question 16 When sensory systems become
less sensitive to unchanging stimuli, it is called
Question 17 Regarding the skin senses,
which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 18 Regarding crosscultural
research on visual perception, which of the following has been found?
Question 19 In a research experiment,
participants are shown a series of drawings before seeing an ambiguous picture
that could be perceived as a rat or a man. Group 1 sees drawings of animals,
while Group 2 sees drawings of humans. Perceptual set suggests which of the
following results when participants are shown the ambiguous picture?
Question 20 When you are watching a movie,
what type of apparent movement gives you the perception of a “moving picture”?
Question 1 Depth cues that require the use
of both eyes are called
Question 2 When you are presented with the
following visual information, “A,” your brain sees a series of lines and angles
in a particular format and interprets this visual information as the letter
“A.” This is an example of which concept from perception?
Question 3 Regarding the sensation of
sound, which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 4 Dr. Barrington is a crosscultural
researcher in the field of perception. She tests two groups of people to
determine their susceptibility to the MüllerLyer illusion. Group 1 consists of
Americans, while Group 2 consists of members of the African tribe of Zulus.
Generalizing from previous research, what will Barrington find?
Question 5 An object that reflects
primarily long wavelength light would most stimulate which category of cone?
Question 6 Joseph has been assisting the
team doctor in his treatment of relatively minor but painful injuries for his
football team. The doctor has carefully instructed Joseph to alternate between
applying hot compresses and cold packs to the injured area. This treatment may
be effective because both heat and cold send competing messages through the
spinal cord that may temporarily block pain messages. This technique is known
as
Question 7 Even though two lines are of
equal length, the one with outward pointing wings looks longer than the one
with inward pointing wings. This is an example of the
Question 8 According to Weber’s Law, a
person would be most sensitive to changes in which sensation?
Question 9 In the process of perception,
the brain
Question 10 Graduate student Shalanda
Huffman studies how physical sources of stimulation relate to the physical
experience of these stimuli. Huffman’s field of study is called
Question 11 Regarding pheromones, which of
the following statements is FALSE?
Question 12 Regarding light and vision,
which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 13 Humans can hear frequencies
between about ______ cycles per second.
Question 14 Regarding the absolute and
difference thresholds, which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 15 All of the following senses go
through the thalamus on the way to the cortex EXCEPT
Question 16 For the sharpest vision, the
image of an object should be focused on the
Question 17 In the process of sensation,
the sensory receptors
Question 18 Dustin suffers from chronic
back pain as the result of an old injury. Any time he is required to sit for
long periods, he makes sure to bring a music player into the treatment room
with him, because he has found that listening to his favorite music helps him
cope with the pain. Dustin is using the pain control technique of
Question 19 Grouping disconnected pieces of
information into a meaningful whole describes the Gestalt principle of
Question 20 Receptors for which of the
following are located deepest in the skin?
Question 1 The smallest amount of a
stimulus that a person can reliably detect is called
Question 2 Which of the following describes
the pupil?
Question 3 A foreign object has entered
Kiara’s eye, leaving a scratch. The part of Kiara’s eye that is affected is her
Question 4 Jack has the most common form of
color blindness. What type of color blindness does he have?
Question 5 In a research experiment,
participants are shown a series of drawings before seeing an ambiguous picture
that could be perceived as a rat or a man. Group 1 sees drawings of animals,
while Group 2 sees drawings of humans. Perceptual set suggests which of the
following results when participants are shown the ambiguous picture?
Question 6 Red, green, and blueviolet
light can be combined to create any color of the spectrum. This has been
interpreted as supporting
Question 7 Joseph has been assisting the
team doctor in his treatment of relatively minor but painful injuries for his
football team. The doctor has carefully instructed Joseph to alternate between
applying hot compresses and cold packs to the injured area. This treatment may
be effective because both heat and cold send competing messages through the
spinal cord that may temporarily block pain messages. This technique is known
as
Question 8 The vestibular sensory system
includes
Question 9 Rico is shown the following
stimulus: X. When asked what he sees, Rico reports that he sees two
intersecting lines rather than saying he sees four separate lines. Rico’s
response demonstrates which Gestalt principle?
Question 10 Which of the following suggests
that pitch detection is coded by combining frequencies of neurons firing in
alternate succession?
Question 11 Receptor cells for which sense
regenerate within a week to 10 days?
Question 12 About what percentage of people
are “supertasters”?
Question 13 All but which of the following
are suggested by opponent-process theory?
Question 14 When Harold first enters his
swimming pool, the water feels uncomfortably cold. Five minutes later, it feels
comfortable to Harold. This is an example of
Question 15 A psychologist Dr. Shonda
Romblay is conducting an experiment to determine how different intensities of
light affect the sensations these stimuli produce. The field of study she is
exploring is called
Question 16 Salvador is a stage magician.
As part of his act, Salvador identifies the written contents of a sealed
envelope. This aspect of Salvador’s performance is called
Question 17 A recipe requires 10 grams of
salt. According to Weber’s constant for saltiness, which is 1/5, how much more
salt must a chef add to make the recipe noticeably saltier?
Question 18 Other factors being equal,
which sensory stimulus is least likely to lead to sensory adaptation?
Question 19 Difference thresholds are
determined by a constant fraction of the magnitude of the original stimulus.
This is the premise of
Question 20 Some birds must return to roost
as darkness approaches. This is because their eyes contain
If you hold a round plate in your hand and turn
it from side to side, the image it casts on your retina changes. Yet you still
perceive the plate to be round. This phenomenon can be explained by the
principle of
Jack has the most common form of color
blindness. What type of color blindness does he have?
Jonathan practices focused attention to induce a
relaxed mental and physical state to help cope with stress. This practice
represents
The process by which we receive, transform, and
process stimuli is
Dr. Dawson’s research program is concerned with
how a person’s experience changes as the intensity of a sound is increased.
Dawson is studying
In a research experiment, participants are shown
a series of drawings before seeing an ambiguous picture that could be perceived
as a rat or a man. Group 1 sees drawings of animals, while Group 2 sees
drawings of humans. Perceptual set suggests which of the following results when
participants are shown the ambiguous picture?
A psychologist Dr. Shonda Romblay is conducting
an experiment to determine how different intensities of light affect the
sensations these stimuli produce. The field of study she is exploring is called
Graduate student Shalanda Huffman studies how
physical sources of stimulation relate to the physical experience of these
stimuli. Huffman’s field of study is called
Marlee’s right eardrum was punctured in an
accident when she was three years old. She is deaf in her right ear, but is
helped with a hearing aid that amplifies sound waves. What type of deafness
does Marlee have?
Regarding the absolute and difference
thresholds, which of the following statements is FALSE?
1. The process by
which we receive, transform, and process stimuli is
a) sensation.
b) perception.
c) transduction.
d) reduction.
e) psychophysics.
2. The study of how physical sources of stimulation are
related to our experience of these stimuli is termed
a) sensation.
b) perception.
c) biophysics.
d) psychophysics.
e) sensory adaptation.
3. Which German scientist is credited with initiating the
scientific approach to psychology with his book Elements of Psychophysics?
a) Ernst Weber
b) Torsten Wiesel
c) Gustav Fechner
d) Max Wertheimer
e) Wilhelm Wundt
4. Dr. Dawson's research program is concerned with how a
person's experience changes as the intensity of a sound is increased. Dr.
Dawson is studying
a) psychophysics.
b) sensation.
c) perception.
d) transformation.
e) biophysics.
5. The smallest amount of a stimulus that a person can
reliably detect is called the
a) absolute threshold.
b) difference threshold.
c) just-noticeable difference.
d) just-noticeable threshold.
e) constant threshold.
6. When the house was quiet, Rhonda, lying in bed, was
able to hear the babysitter's watch ticking in the living room, from a distance
of 15 feet away, about 50 percent of the time. But when the babysitter moved
from the chair to the couch, another foot away, Rhonda was no longer able to
hear the watch. The fact that Rhonda can hear the detect the ticking of the
watch from that distance signals a(n)
a) difference threshold.
b) just-noticeable difference.
c) perceptual set.
d) absolute threshold.
e) subliminal threshold.
7. Which of the following is a test for an absolute
threshold for taste?
a) Detecting a bitter taste in broccoli because one is a
supertaster
b) Detecting a difference in tastes between two spots on
the tongue that are one-eighth of an inch apart
c) Detecting one teaspoon of sugar dissolved in two
gallons of water
d) Detecting the number and type of lemons that were used
to make a pitcher of lemonade
e) Detecting the sweetness of a fruit while blindfolded
8. The absolute threshold for vision involves being able
to see the flame of a candle flickering on a dark, clear night from a distance
of about
a) 30 feet.
b) 300 feet.
c) 3 miles.
d) 30 miles.
e) 300 miles.
9. The ability to feel the wing of a bee falling on one's
cheek from about 1 centimeter away is a(n)
a) difference threshold
b) example of subliminal perception.
c) just-noticeable difference.
d) absolute threshold for touch.
e) example of sensory adaptation.
10. The minimal difference between two stimuli that
people can reliably detect is
a) the absolute threshold.
b) the difference threshold.
c) the perceptual threshold.
d) the sensitivity threshold.
e) Weber's constant.
11. Weber's constant for the volume of sound is 1/10. A
car alarm is sounding off at 60 decibels. After 5 minutes, it is programmed to
get louder. How loud does it have to be for people to perceive it as louder?
a) At least 61 decibels
b) At least 62 decibels
c) At least 65 decibels
d) At least 66 decibels
e) At least 70 decibels
12. "Make the TV louder," said Paula. "I
did," said Jack, pointing at the remote. "Doesn't sound louder to
me," said Paula. "Does to me," said Jack. Jack is failing to
consider the discrepancy between his ______ and Paula's.
a) Weber's constant
b) subliminal difference
c) difference threshold
d) absolute threshold
e) absolute difference
13. Weber's law suggests that
a) absolute threshold measurements underestimate true
perceptual sensitivity.
b) difference thresholds are a constant proportion of the
original stimulus.
c) difference thresholds are a constant quantity.
d) difference thresholds decrease as stimuli increase.
e) difference thresholds increase as stimuli decrease.
14. With reference to Weber's constants, people are LEAST
sensitive to changes in which of the following?
a) Pitch of sounds
b) Saltiness of food
c) Heaviness of weights
d) Brightness of lights
e) Odor
15. A recipe requires 10 grams of salt. Since Weber's
constant for saltiness is 1/5, how much more salt must a chef add to make the
recipe noticeably saltier?
a) 0.2 gram
b) 2 grams
c) 5 grams
d) 10.2 grams
e) 10.5 grams
16. According to Weber's law, people are most sensitive
to changes in which sensation?
a) The loudness of sounds
b) The heaviness of weight
c) The saltiness of food
d) The brightness of lights
e) The pitch of sounds
17. The idea that the threshold for sensing a stimulus
depends not only on the properties of the stimulus itself but also on the level
of background stimulation is explained by
a) Weber's law.
b) dual-process theory.
c) opponent-process theory.
d) signal-detection theory.
e) sensory adaptation.
18. Which of the following is a psychological factor that
influences a person's threshold for determining a visual signal?
a) The sensitivity of her visual system
b) Her level of fatigue
c) Her physical health
d) Her level of alertness
e) Her level of motivation
19. If you are expecting a telephone call, you may be
more likely to notice the telephone ringing while you are in the shower than if
you were not expecting a call. This example is an illustration of
a) signal-detection theory.
b) Weber's law.
c) sensory adaptation.
d) opponent-process theory.
e) dual-process theory.
20. Roger was studying psychology in his quiet bedroom
when there was a loud "pop" in the apartment next door. Later, when
the police asked him whether he heard a gunshot, he said, "No, I guess I
was concentrating too hard on my studies." According to Roger, the fact
that he did not detect the signal is due mostly to
a) the properties of the stimulus.
b) the level of background stimulation.
c) his physical condition.
d) psychological factors
e) the sensitivity of his hearing.
21. The phenomenon whereby sensory systems become less
sensitive to unchanging stimuli is called
a) discrimination threshold shift.
b) sensory adaptation.
c) signal-detection.
d) threshold degradation.
e) psychophysics.
22. Other factors being equal, which sensory stimulus is
LEAST likely to lead to sensory adaptation?
a) The wail of a loud car alarm
b) The sound of a grandfather clock ticking
c) The offensive odors of a cattle farm
d) The pressure of wearing a new bracelet on one's wrist
e) The temperature of water when one enters a pool
23. When Harold first enters his swimming pool, the water
feels uncomfortably cold. Five minutes later, the water feels comfortable to
Harold. This is an example of
a) transduction.
b) sensory adaptation.
c) Weber's law.
d) signal-detection theory.
e) just-noticeable difference.
24. Differentiate between absolute and difference
thresholds.
25. Visible light consists of wavelengths of
approximately
a) 100-550 nanometers.
b) 200-650 nanometers.
c) 300-750 nanometers.
d) 400-850 nanometers.
e) 500-950 nanometers.
26. Which color of the spectrum has the shortest
wavelength?
a) Violet
b) Red
c) Yellow
d) Indigo
e) Green
27. When you scratch your eye, the part that is actually
scratched is the
a) pupil.
b) iris.
c) lens.
d) fovea.
e) cornea.
28. The muscle that regulates the amount of light
entering the eye is the
a) lens.
b) cornea.
c) pupil.
d) iris.
e) fovea.
29. Dr. Rhoden conducts animal experiments on visual
perception. Rhoden wants to stop the animal's pupil from changing size, so he
paralyzes the
a) cornea.
b) iris.
c) lens.
d) retina.
e) pupil.
30. Which part of your eye gives your eye its color?
a) The cornea
b) The iris
c) The pupil
d) The fovea
e) The retina
31. Which of the following describes the pupil?
a) An opening through which light enters the eye
b) A part of the eye that adjusts its shape to view
objects at varying distances
c) A transparent covering at the front of the eye
d) A part of the eye that contains the photoreceptors
e) A structure responsible for peripheral vision
32. The part of the eye that changes shape to adjust for
an object's distance is the
a) lens.
b) pupil.
c) cornea.
d) retina.
e) iris.
33. The photoreceptors, or sensory cells, of the human
eye are located in the
a) iris.
b) lens.
c) cornea.
d) pupil.
e) retina.
34. Only rods allow us to see
a) in dim light.
b) colors.
c) fine detail.
d) under bright illumination.
e) moving objects.
Type: conceptual
35. In vision, the sensory receptors are called
a) ganglion cells.
b) hair-cell receptors.
c) bipolar cells.
d) optic nerves.
e) rods and cones.
36. The ratio of rods to cones is approximately
a) 10 to 1.
b) 1 to 10.
c) 20 to 1.
d) 1 to 20.
e) 1 to 1.
37. Which of the following is true of cones?
a) They are responsible for peripheral vision.
b) They are more sensitive to light than are rods.
c) They provide detailed vision.
d) They function in dim light.
e) They allow some animals, such as bats, to see at
night.
Type: conceptual
38. Since they can see only during the daylight, some
birds must return to roost as darkness approaches. This is because their eyes
contain
a) cones, but no rods.
b) rods, but no cones.
c) inefficient cones.
d) inefficient rods.
e) no rods or cones
39. To see a dimly lit object at night, the image must
fall on your
a) fovea.
b) blind spot.
c) cones.
d) rods.
e) optic nerve.
40. The nerve cells in the back of the eye that transmit
neural impulses in response to chemical changes in the rods and cones are
a) bipolar cells.
b) optic cells.
c) foveal cells.
d) retinal cells.
e) ganglion cells.
41. The optic nerve is made up of the ________ of the
________ cells.
a) axons; bipolar
b) dendrites; bipolar
c) axons; ganglion
d) dendrites; ganglion
e) dendrites; optic
42. The optic nerve transmits information to the visual
cortex in the brain via the
a) basal ganglia.
b) thalamus.
c) hypothalamus.
d) hippocampus.
e) amygdala.
43. What is true about the blind spot?
a) It contains rods but not cones.
b) It contains cones but not rods.
c) It contains both rods and cones.
d) It's the part of the retina where the optic nerve
leaves the eye.
e) It's the part of the retina where light is converted
into neural signals.
44. For the sharpest vision, the image of an object
should be focused on the
a) fovea.
b) blind spot.
c) optic chiasm.
d) optic nerve.
e) retina.
45. Who won the Nobel Prize for discovering that the
visual cortex contains nerve cells that respond only when an animal is shown a
line with a particular orientation?
a) Ewald Hering
b) Hermann von Helmholtz and Thomas Young
c) Ernst Weber
d) Gustav Theodor Fechner
e) David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel
46. Neurons that respond to specific characteristics of
the visual stimulus are called
a) photoreceptors.
b) ganglion cells.
c) bipolar cells.
d) optic neurons.
e) feature detectors.
47. The role of feature detectors is to
a) respond to specific objects such as a house.
b) detect color stimuli.
c) detect black and white stimuli.
d) respond to very simple stimuli such as a horizontal
line.
e) regulate the size of the pupil.
48. Trichromatic theory suggests that
a) the retina has one type of color receptor that
responds differently to each color.
b) the retina has two types of color receptors that
respond in a different manner for each color.
c) the retina has three types of color receptors—red,
green, and blue-violet.
d) color results from opposing processes involving three
sets of color receptors, red-green, blue-yellow, and black-white.
e) color vision is a function of brain activity.
49. Red, green, and blue-violet light can be combined to
create any color of the spectrum. This has been interpreted as supporting
a) trichromatic theory of color vision.
b) opponent-process theory of color vision.
c) feature detection theory of color vision.
d) color constancy theory of color vision.
e) the existence of afterimages.
50. In color vision, blue-violet cones are most sensitive
to ________ wavelengths, red cones to ________ wavelengths, and green cones to
________ wavelengths.
a) short; middle; long
b) short; long; middle
c) long; short; middle
d) long; middle; short
e) middle; short; long
51. An object that reflects primarily long-wavelength
light would most stimulate which category of cone?
a) blue-violet
b) green
c) red
d) yellow
e) black-white
52. Regarding the theories of color vision, which of the
following is true?
a) Trichromatic theory is supported by the behavior of
cells lying between the cones and the occipital lobe of the cerebral cortex.
b) Opponent-process theory is supported at the receptor
level.
c) Most authorities today suggest that color vision
includes elements of both trichromatic and opponentprocess theories.
d) Trichromatic theory is based on Hering's work with
afterimages.
e) Opponent-process theory suggests that the eyes have
four types of color receptors.
53. Alice has the job of lighting director for the school
play. She wants the Cowardly Lion to be bathed in yellow light. In front of her
is a console with three buttons: red, blue, and green. Which ones would give
her yellow light?
a) Blue and red
b) Blue and green
c) Red, blue, and green
d) Red and green
e) No combination of any of the three
54. Negative afterimages provide support for which theory
of color vision?
a) Trichromatic theory
b) Feature detection theory
c) Color constancy theory
d) D. Young-Helmholtz theory
e) Opponent-process theory
55. Regarding colorblindness, which of the following
statements is true?
a) More women than men suffer from red-green
color-blindness.
b) Blue-yellow colorblindness is more common than
red-green colorblindness.
c) People who are dichromats can perceive the world only
in shades of gray.
d) About one in every forty thousand people is completely
colorblind.
e) Red-green colorblindness appears to be carried on the
Y chromosome.
56. What is the most common form of colorblindness?
a) Blue-green
b) Red-yellow
c) Red-green
d) Blue-yellow
e) Blue-red
57. People who see only in black and white are called
a) monochromats.
b) dichromats.
c) trichromats.
d) unichromats.
e) partially colorblind.
58. Describe how the eyes process light.
59. Summarize the two major theories of color vision.
60. Kim wrote a term paper about the sense of hearing.
She might have titled her paper
a) All About Audition
b) Knowing Everything There Is to Know About Kinesthesis
c) Valuing the Vestibular Sense
d) Facts of Olfaction.
e) Thinking About Telepathy
61. Which physical property of a sound wave is
represented by its height?
a) Pitch
b) Frequency
c) Timbre
d) Audition
e) Amplitude
62. Rebecca tells Tom that he is singing "off
pitch." Rebecca is referring to which physical property of sound?
a) Amplitude
b) Frequency
c) Loudness
d) Speed
e) Decibel
63. Humans can hear frequencies between
a) 100,000 and 200,000 cycles per second.
b) 50,000 and 100,000 cycles per second.
c) 20,000 and 50,000 cycles per second.
d) 20 and 20,000 cycles per second.
e) 1 and 20 cycles per second.
64. Which of the following statements is true about sound
waves?
a) Sound waves travel faster than light waves.
b) The frequency of sound waves determines their
perceived loudness.
c) Humans hear by sensing sound waves that result from
changes in the pressure of air or water.
d) Pitch, the perception of how high or low a sound
seems, corresponds to the amplitude of the sound wave.
e) Sound waves can travel through the empty reaches of
outer space.
65. In sound waves, height of the wave is to ________ as
number of complete waves is to ________.
a) pitch; frequency
b) frequency; pitch
c) amplitude; decibel
d) decibel; amplitude
e) amplitude; frequency
66. Women's voices are generally higher than men's voices
because their vocal cords tend to be ________ and to vibrate ________.
a) shorter; more slowly.
b) longer; faster.
c) longer; more slowly.
d) shorter; faster.
e) thinner; more slowly.
67. In what order do the ossicles vibrate during hearing?
a) Anvil, hammer, stirrup
b) Stirrup, hammer, anvil
c) Stirrup, anvil, hammer
d) Hammer, stirrup, anvil
e) Hammer, anvil, stirrup
68. Which of the following best describes the organ of
Corti?
a) An auditory receptor that transforms vibration of sound
waves into neural impulses
b) A gelatinous structure in the cochlea that contains
the auditory receptors
c) A sheet of connective tissue separating the outer ear
from the middle ear
d) A shell-shaped organ in the inner ear that contains
sensory receptors for hearing
e) A collection of tiny bones in the middle ear that
vibrate in response to vibrations from the eardrum
69. The brain can detect differences in arrival times to
the ears of as little as
a) 1 second.
b) 1/10 of a second.
c) 1/100 of a second.
d) 1/1,000 of a second.
e) 1/10,000 of a second.
70. The belief that the experience of pitch is related to
alternate firing of groups of neurons along the basilar membrane is known as
a) the volley principle.
b) place theory.
c) gate-control theory.
d) frequency theory.
e) the succession principle.
71. The basis of the place theory of pitch detection is
that pitch is determined by the place that vibrates the most along the
a) eardrum.
b) basilar membrane.
c) oval window.
d) auditory nerve.
e) ossicles.
72. High-frequency sounds cause the greatest vibration of
a) hair cells in the middle of the basilar membrane.
b) hair cells nearest the oval window.
c) hair cells nearest the auditory nerve.
d) hair cells farthest down the basilar membrane from the
oval window.
e) the membrane of the eardrum.
73. Which theory of pitch is used to account for the
perception of sounds between 1,000 and 4,000 cycles per second?
a) Place theory
b) Trichromatic theory
c) Frequency theory
d) Opponent-process theory
e) Volley principle
74. Place theory and frequency theory explain how we
detect ________ pitches, and volley principle explains how we detect ________
pitches.
a) mid-range; high and low
b) high and low; mid-range
c) mid-range and high; low
d) mid-range and low; high
e) low; mid-range and high
75. Approximately ________ Americans have hearing
problems, and approximately ________ are deaf.
a) 2 million; 100,000
b) 5 million; 200,000
c) 10 million; 1 million
d) 30 million; 2 million
e) 50 million; 5 million
76. Sound from which of the following should produce the
most danger to hearing upon brief exposure?
a) A ringing telephone
b) A jet airplane
c) A lawn mower
d) A jack hammer
e) Headphones
77. The loudness of normal conversation is about how many
decibels?
a) 25
b) 50
c) 75
d) 100
e) 125
78. Marlee's right eardrum was punctured in an accident
when she was three years old. She is deaf in her right eardrum but is helped
with a hearing aid that amplifies sound waves. What type of deafness does
Marlee have?
a) Nerve
b) Continuity
c) Closure
d) Subliminal
e) Conduction
79. Conduction deafness is to ________ as nerve deafness
is to ________.
a) outer ear; inner ear
b) inner ear; outer ear
c) middle ear; inner ear
d) inner ear; middle ear
e) middle ear; outer ear
80. Regarding hearing loss, which of the following is
true?
a) Cochlear implants can help correct damage to the
auditory nerve.
b) Permanent hearing loss results from prolonged exposure
to sounds of at least 60 decibels.
c) People with conduction deafness cannot benefit from
hearing aids.
d) Hearing loss in later life is inevitable.
e) Most hearing loss in later life is the result of years
of abuse from loud music and noise.
81. Summarize the three major theories of pitch
perception.
82. Which of the following are the chemical senses?
a) Touch and smell
b) Touch and taste
c) Touch, taste, and kinesthesis
d) Taste, smell, and kinesthesis
e) Taste and smell
83. Olfaction refers to the sense of
a) taste.
b) touch.
c) seeing.
d) hearing.
e) smell.
84. Which of the following statements is true about
olfaction?
a) Human nasal passageways contain about 1,000 odor
receptors.
b) Human odor receptors are capable of sensing about
1,000,000 different substances.
c) All odor molecules have the same shape.
d) Smell is the only sense in which sensory information
does not go through the thalamus on its way to the cerebral cortex.
e) The intensity of an odor depends on the size of a
substance's odor molecules.
85. All of the following senses go through the thalamus
on the way to the cortex EXCEPT
a) vision.
b) smell.
c) hearing.
d) taste.
e) touch.
86. Which sense has connections with several structures
in the limbic system and is especially effective at stimulating emotional
memories?
a) Smell
b) Taste
c) Hearing
d) Vision
e) Touch
87. Which of the following is(are) responsible for
carrying impulses from the odor receptors in the nose to the brain?
a) Olfactory bulb
b) Olfactory nerve
c) Taste buds
d) Pheromones
e) Vestibular organ
88. Renee is smelling a rose. Its odor's chemical molecules
lock into the odor receptors in Renee's nose. The resulting neural impulses
then follow which path?
a) Olfactory bulb to olfactory nerve to olfactory cortex
in the parietal lobe
b) Olfactory nerve to olfactory bulb to olfactory cortex
in the temporal lobe
c) Olfactory nerve to thalamus to olfactory cortex in the
temporal lobe
d) Olfactory nerve to olfactory bulb to olfactory cortex
in the occipital lobe
e) Olfactory nerve to olfactory cortex to olfactory bulb
in the occipital lobe
89. Various species emit chemical substances that play
important roles in many behaviors. These substances are called
a) hormones.
b) pheromones.
c) neurotransmitters.
d) perfumes.
e) olfactions.
90. Which of the following is true about pheromones?
a) Pheromones are human sexual hormones.
b) Humans lack the receptors needed to sense pheromones.
c) Pheromones are not associated with sexual behavior in
animals.
d) Scientists have found that pheromones influence sexual
attraction in humans.
e) The role of pheromones in human sexual behavior
remains unclear.
91. In studies cited in the text, when women were exposed
to male sweat, what were the findings?
a) Some complained of nausea; others became sexually
aroused.
b) Some felt relaxed; others complained of nausea.
c) Some felt relaxed; others became sexually aroused.
d) All became nauseated.
e) All became sexually aroused.
92. All of the following are basic tastes EXCEPT
a) sweet.
b) salty.
c) sour.
d) savory.
e) bitter.
93. The taste receptors are called
a) taste cells.
b) taste buds.
c) gustatory nerves.
d) taste nodes.
e) gustatory nodes.
94. Receptor cells for which sense regenerate within a
week to ten days?
a) Vision
b) Audition
c) Taste
d) Touch
e) Olfaction
95. Regarding the sense of taste, which of the following
statements is true?
a) People without tongues are unable to sense taste.
b) The receptors for taste are located mostly on the
tongue.
c) When taste receptors are "killed off" by hot
foods, they remain inactive.
d) Genetic factors do not play a large role in either
taste sensitivity or taste preferences.
e) Pigs are unable to taste sweetness, whereas cats are
able to do so.
96. Compared to people with average taste sensitivity,
people who are "supertasters" have
a) different types of taste buds.
b) more sensitive taste buds.
c) a very dense network of taste buds.
d) bigger taste buds.
e) fewer specialized taste buds.
97. Approximately what percent of people are
"supertasters"?
a) 5 percent
b) 10 percent
c) 25 percent
d) 40 percent
e) 50 percent
98. Other factors being equal, which person is most
likely to be a "supertaster"?
a) Yuan, an Asian man
b) Yuna, an Asian woman
c) Lenny, a European-American man
d) Betty, a European-American woman
e) Gaspar, a Hispanic-American man
99. Which of the following statements is true about the
skin senses?
a) Sensations for hotness are produced by stimulation of
specialized receptors for heat.
b) All skin receptors can respond to more than one type
of stimulation.
c) There are about ten thousand receptors for touch and
pressure distributed throughout the body.
d) Sensory information is transmitted from the spinal
cord to the somatosensory cortex.
e) All receptors for pain are located in the skin.
100. Receptors for which of the following are located
deepest in the skin?
a) Hot
b) Cold
c) Pain
d) Light touch
e) Pressure
101. Sensations of hotness result from
a) stimulation of hot receptors.
b) stimulation of warm receptors.
c) stimulation of cold receptors.
d) simultaneous stimulation of warm and cold receptors.
e) stimulation of pain receptors.
102. How are the nerve fibers that carry pain signals
different from those that carry signals for warmth, cold, and touch?
a) The pain nerve fibers are longer and faster.
b) The pain nerve fibers are thinner and faster.
c) The pain nerve fibers are thicker and slower.
d) The pain nerve fibers are thinner and slower.
e) The pain nerve fibers are shorter and faster.
103. Which of the following is true about acupuncture?
a) It is a traditional Japanese healing art.
b) It has been shown by research to be an effective way
to relieve migraine headaches.
c) It appears to be no more effective than fake
acupuncture, in which needles are inserted superficially in random places in
the body.
d) Researchers theorize that acupuncture works through
the release of dopamine, caused by the stimulation of acupuncture points.
e) The practice of acupuncture began approximately 80
years ago.
104. Compared to pain fibers, fibers that carry signals
about temperature and touch are
a) thinner and faster.
b) thicker and faster.
c) thinner and slower.
d) thicker and slower.
e) small and reach the brain faster.
105. In response to pain, the brain signals the release
of
a) dopamine.
b) acetylcholine.
c) endorphins.
d) norepinephrine.
e) serotonin.
106. What is kinesthesis?
a) The sense that allows you to maintain your balance
b) The sense that lets you know where your body parts are
c) The sense that informs you about the movement of your
head in relation to the external world
d) The sense that transmits messages of pain to your brain
e) The sense that monitors the position of your head in
space
107. Receptors for kinesthesis are located in
a) joints, ligaments, and muscles.
b) the skin and hair.
c) the inner and middle ear.
d) the eyes.
e) the mouth and nose.
108. Charlene is fastening the clasp of her necklace at
the back of her neck. She is aware of exactly where her fingers are without
seeing them because of which sense?
a) Vestibular
b) Olfaction
c) Audition
d) Kinesthesis
e) Touch
109. Austin experiences motion sickness. From which two
senses has Austin received conflicting information?
a) Kinesthesis and visual
b) Kinesthesis and olfactory
c) Vestibular and visual
d) Vestibular and olfactory
e) Audition and olfactory
110. Which sense monitors the position of your body in
space and helps maintain balance?
a) Vestibular
b) Kinesthesis
c) Proprioception
d) Audition
e) Olfaction
111. Which of your senses takes in information from the
movement of fluid in the semicircular canals?
a) Audition
b) Olfaction
c) Kinesthesis
d) Taste
e) Vestibular
112. Summarize the principles of the gate-control theory
of pain.
113. The process by which the brain interprets stimuli
and turns them into meaningful representations of the external world is
a) sensation.
b) perception.
c) attention.
d) memory.
e) audition.
114. Which of the following statements about perception
is true?
a) Perception represents the brain's attempt to make
sense of the information coming in through the senses.
b) Perception is a reactive process.
c) Perceptions accurately reflect reality.
d) The area of perception that has captured the most
research attention is auditory perception.
e) Perception is independent of expectations.
115. When you perceive something, what is the first step
you take?
a) Sensing
b) Learning
c) Memorizing
d) Attending
e) Thinking
116. ______ consists of limiting attention to certain
stimuli and filtering out other stimuli.
a) Sensation
b) Perception
c) Selective attention
d) Perceptual set
e) Habituation
117. Which of the following infants is demonstrating habituation?
a) Pedro, who is intently concentrating on the red circle
on the bumper of his crib and ignoring the other colors
b) Robin, who was intently focused on the sound of the
car alarm outside until she tuned it out and fell asleep
c) Harry, who keeps crying at the top of his lungs until
he is offered a bottle
d) Neely, who smiles at the sight of her big brother's
face but not at the sight of other children
e) Seth, who is so used to sleeping on his stomach that
he cries when placed in the crib on his back
118. Who conducted a classic study demonstrating
perceptual set?
a) Hubel and Wiesel
b) Hering
c) Young and von Helmholtz
d) Bruner and Minturn
e) Müller and Lyer
119. The tendency for our perceptions to be influenced by
our expectations or preconceptions is called
a) perceptual set.
b) selective attention.
c) divided attention.
d) perceptual constancy.
e) habituation.
120. In a research experiment, participants are shown a
series of drawings before seeing an ambiguous picture that could be perceived
as a rat or a man. Group 1 sees drawings of animals, and group 2 sees drawings
of humans. Perceptual set suggests which of the following results when
participants are shown the ambiguous picture?
a) Both groups will report seeing a man.
b) Both groups will report seeing a rat.
c) Group 1 will report seeing a rat, and group 2 will
report seeing a man.
d) Group 1 will report seeing a man, and group 2 will
report seeing a rat.
e) Neither group will see a rat or a man, since the
picture is ambiguous.
121. Five friends were hiking in the woods. After a
couple of hours, when they reached a high spot, they could barely make out the
details of a small town below. Which one of them demonstrated a perceptual set?
a) Alex, who was tired and who said, "Looking at the
number of trees from here to there, I would say it's a distance of about
another five miles."
b) Bob, who was hot and sweaty and who said, "I hope
there's a place to get something cold to drink."
c) Chad, who was hungry and who said, "I think I see
a Pizza sign."
d) Doug, whose shoes got soaked in a puddle and who said,
"It'll be great if there's a store where I can buy a cheap pair of
sneakers."
e) Edward, who was anxious and who said, "Who cares
what's down there. I think it's time we turned around and started to walk
home."
122. Which method of processing visual information
involves assembling specific features of shapes to form patterns?
a) Bottom-up processing
b) Bottom-down processing
c) Top-down processing
d) Bottom-top processing
e) Up-down processing
123. When you are presented with the following visual
information, "A," your brain sees a series of lines and angles in a
particular format and interprets this visual information as the letter A. This
is an example of which concept from perception?
a) Perceptual set
b) Bottom-up processing
c) Top-down processing
d) Selective attention
e) Habituation
124. Which term best captures the meaning of Gestalt?
a) Figure
b) Ground
c) Whole
d) Perception
e) Parts
125. The Gestalt laws of perceptual organization refer to
a) bottom-up processing.
b) top-down processing.
c) bottom-up and top-down processing.
d) figure-ground and grouping.
e) perceptual constancies.
126. Which of the following is true about figure and
ground?
a) It's always easy to tell which is the figure and which
is the ground.
b) The ground usually has a distinctive shape, whereas
the figure does not.
c) An outline clearly defines where the figure ends and
the ground begins.
d) What one sees in an ambiguous figure depends on how
one organizes one’s perceptual experiences.
e) Once one focuses on one part of an ambiguous figure,
it becomes impossible to switch back and forth.
127. The Gestalt principle of similarity was at work in
which of the following?
a) At the playground, Edna saw many children at play. She
perceived them as three groups according to their location: one group of
children were near and on the slides, one was by the swings, and a third was by
the sandbox.
b) Frank the lifeguard was watching a group of 7-year-old
boy and girl campers swim in the lake. Because all the girls wore white bathing
caps, Frank perceived them all as one group, even though they were not in the
same place.
c) Even though there were 24 dominos laid down on the
table end-to-end, Gregory perceived them to be one group because they appeared
to represent an uninterrupted series.
d) In spite of the fact that the car parked in front was
obstructing part of the house, Irena still perceived the whole shape of the
house, just as though the car were not there.
e) Jared looked up and saw six birds flying above in the
sky. He perceived them as two distinct groups because three birds were moving
in one direction and three birds were moving together in another direction.
128. Rico is shown the following stimulus: X. When asked
what he sees, Rico reports that he sees two intersecting lines, rather than
saying that he sees four separate lines. Rico's response demonstrates which
Gestalt principle?
a) Closure
b) Proximity
c) Similarity
d) Connectedness
e) Continuity
129. Which Gestalt principle describes the tendency to
perceive objects as belonging together when they are close to one another?
a) Connectedness
b) Continuity
c) Proximity
d) Similarity
e) Closure
130. Grouping disconnected pieces of information into a
meaningful whole describes the Gestalt principle of
a) similarity.
b) closure.
c) connectedness.
d) proximity.
e) continuity.
131. The tendency to perceive properties of an object as
remaining the same despite changes in its retinal image is called
a) Gestalt organization.
b) perceptual constancy.
c) perceptual congruity.
d) perceptual stability.
e) closure.
132. Tony observes an oval bowl on a table from several
different perspectives. Although the image on his retina changes, he continues
to perceive the bowl as oval. Tony's experience is an example of which
constancy?
a) Brightness
b) Textural
c) Size
d) Interpositional
e) Shape
133. The blackbird in the sunlight reflected more light
than the white duck in the shade, yet Brenda perceived the duck to be lighter
than the blackbird because of which of the following?
a) The Ponzo illusion
b) Brightness constancy
c) Relative clarity
d) Retinal disparity
e) Texture gradient
134. Depth cues that require the use of both eyes are
called
a) monocular cues.
b) binocular cues.
c) stereoscopic cues.
d) double vision.
e) convergence cues.
135. Brenda has only one eye. Which of the following
depth cues is she unable to use?
a) Relative size
b) Retinal disparity
c) Interposition
d) Texture gradient
e) Continuity
136. Muscular tension caused by your eyes turning inward
provides the depth cue of
a) retinal disparity.
b) binocularity disparity.
c) convergence.
d) divergence.
e) interposition.
137. Which of the following is an example of the depth
cue of relative clarity?
a) From a distance, tall buildings appear farther away
when viewed on a smoggy day than on a fair day.
b) The texture of sand beneath your feet is more detailed
than the texture of sand 30 feet in front of you.
c) Lines on the sides of the road appear to come together
in the distance.
d) Two buildings are known to be the same size, but the
one that is closer appears larger.
e) In a photograph, patterns of light and dark create the
appearance of three-dimensional objects, even though the photo is flat.
138. Which of the following is a monocular cue for depth
perception?
a) Retinal disparity
b) Convergence
c) Clairvoyance
d) Linear perspective
e) Stroboscopic movement
139. At the museum, Leonard stared at a painting of a
forest, where the artist used detail to create a sense of depth. The trees that
were "closer" appeared rough, with greatly detailed leaves and bark,
whereas the ones that were "farther away" appeared smooth and with
few details. Which depth cue did the painter use?
a) Retinal disparity
b) Interposition
c) Relative clarity
d) Shadowing
e) Texture gradient
140. Which of the following leads to the perception of
movement?
a) A dog suddenly looming much larger
b) One person partially blocking another
c) A car appearing larger than another car
d) An object that is lighter on top and darker on the
bottom
e) A "haze" cast over distant objects
141. Even though two lines are of equal length, the one
with outward-pointing wings looks longer than the one with inward-pointing
wings. This is an example of the
a) Ponzo illusion.
b) interposition illusion.
c) Müller-Lyer illusion.
d) texture gradient illusion.
e) phi phenomenon.
142. When you are watching a movie, what type of apparent
movement gives you the perception of a "moving picture"?
a) Converging movement
b) Opponent-process movement
c) Stroboscopic movement
d) Subliminal movement
e) Changing size movement
143. Dr. Barrington is a cross-cultural researcher in the
field of perception. She tests three groups of people to determine their
susceptibility to the Müller-Lyer illusion. Group 1 consists of Americans,
group 2 consists of members of the African tribe of Zulus, who live in rounded
structures in southern Africa, and group 3 consists of Zulus who have relocated
to American cities. Generalizing from previous research, what will Barrington
find?
a) None of the groups will be susceptible to the
illusion.
b) All three groups will be equally susceptible to the
illusion.
c) Only the Americans will be susceptible to the
illusion.
d) Both Zulu groups will be more susceptible to the
illusion than the Americans.
e) The Americans and the Zulus who have moved to American
cities will be more susceptible to the illusion than the African Zulu group.
144. The carpentered-world hypothesis helps explain the
a) phenomenon of psychokinesis.
b) cultural differences in the experience of the
Müller-Lyer illusion.
c) effects of stroboscopic movement.
d) Gestalt laws of perceptual organization.
e) moon illusion.
145. Which of the following statements is true about
subliminal perception?
a) People can perceive stimuli below the threshold of
awareness.
b) The effects of subliminal perception are strong.
c) Subliminal messages can be used to influence consumer
behavior.
d) Subliminal messages can help people become more
successful in life.
e) The brain does not respond to subliminal messages.
146. The perception of stimuli that are presented below
the threshold of conscious awareness is called
a) supraliminal perception.
b) extrasensory perception.
c) telepathy.
d) subliminal perception.
e) psychokinesis.
147. Which of the following is true about ESP?
a) College seniors are more staunch believers in ESP than
are first-year students.
b) ESP, or extrasensory perception, is also known as the
"seventh sense."
c) Although there is no scientific proof that
clairvoyance or psychokinesis exists, there is such
proof for telepathy and precognition.
d) There is no reliable scientific evidence that any form
of ESP exists.
e) Belief in ESP is not widespread in this country.
148. The study of events that cannot be explained by
known psychological, physical, or biological mechanisms is referred to as
a) extrasensory perception.
b) clairvoyance.
c) telepathy.
d) parapsychology.
e) subliminal perception.
149. Salvador does business as a mind reader. Salvador
believes he is capable of
a) psychokinesis.
b) telepathy.
c) subliminal perception.
d) clairvoyance.
e) precognition.
150. A magician makes it appear that a scarf moves by
itself from around his neck to the neck of a woman in the audience. The people
in the audience who think that the magician has the ability to move things
without touching them believe in
a) clairvoyance.
b) psychophysics.
c) precognition.
d) psychokinesis.
e) telepathy.
151. The sheriff's department of a small town has
enlisted the aid of a psychic who claims to have knowledge of where a kidnapper
is holding a child, even though she has not physically seen or heard anything
regarding the case. The psychic is claiming to have what kind of ability?
a) Precognition
b) Clairvoyance
c) Telepathy
d) Psychokinesis
e) Subliminal perception
152. The ability to foretell the future is called
a) precognition.
b) parapsychology.
c) clairvoyance.
d) telepathy.
e) psychokinesis.
153. Which of the following is the best definition of
clairvoyance?
a) The ability to foretell the future
b) The ability to move objects without touching them
c) The ability to read other people's minds
d) The perception of events not available to the senses
e) The ability to project your thoughts into other
people's minds
154. Explain the Gestalt approach to perception.
155. Define parapsychology and describe four forms of
ESP.
156. Just this morning, Brad studied the gate-control
theory of pain in psychology class. Therefore, after tripping and scraping his
knee on the way back to the dorm, he tried to apply the theory by
a) keeping his mind focused on his upcoming date with a
new girlfriend.
b) lightly rubbing the injured area.
c) going to the pharmacy and purchasing an antibacterial
ointment.
d) borrowing biofeedback equipment from the school
clinic.
e) narrowing his attentive focus through continuous
repetition of the phrase "I'm feeling just fine."
157. Electromyographic (EMG) biofeedback is to thermal
biofeedback as ________ is to ________.
a) migraine; tension headache
b) finger; forehead
c) muscle tension; temperature
d) increased blood flow; increased muscle relaxation
e) vibration; tone
158. In an attempt to reduce his high blood pressure,
Raoul is attached to monitoring equipment that provides him with information
about his physiological responses. This information gives him cues to help him
learn strategies to control his disorder. Which technique is Raoul using?
a) Biofeedback
b) Psychokinesis
c) Gate-control pain management
d) Acupuncture
e) Telepathy
159. Which technique has proved particularly effective in
treating migraine headaches?
a) Meditation
b) Acupuncture
c) Thermal biofeedback
d) Gate-control pain management
e) Electromyographic biofeedback
160. What is the process of focused attention that
induces a relaxed mental and physical state?
a) Biofeedback
b) Meditation
c) Bottlenecking
d) Telepathy
e) Distraction
161. Cathy takes three treatments of chemotherapy a week.
At each session she brings along pleasant music to listen to during her
treatment. Cathy is using which method of pain management?
a) Meditation
b) Biofeedback
c) Creating a bottleneck at the "gate"
d) Obtaining accurate information
e) Distraction
162. Based on your reading of the text, describe some
psychological approaches to managing pain.
1.
|
The process by which we receive, transform, and
process stimuli is
|
|
A)
|
sensation.
|
|
B)
|
perception.
|
|
C)
|
telepathy.
|
|
D)
|
habituation.
|
|
E)
|
psychophysics.
|
|
2.
|
The specialized cells in sense organs that detect
external stimuli are called
|
|
A)
|
dichromats.
|
|
B)
|
sensory neurons.
|
|
C)
|
bipolar cells.
|
|
D)
|
ganglion cells.
|
|
E)
|
sensory receptors.
|
|
3.
|
Regarding the absolute and difference thresholds,
which of the following statements is FALSE?
|
|
A)
|
The amount a stimulus must change to detect a
difference is given by a constant proportion of the original stimulus.
|
|
B)
|
Just-noticeable difference is another term for
difference threshold.
|
|
C)
|
People differ in their absolute thresholds.
|
|
D)
|
People are more sensitive to changes in pitch than to
changes in volume.
|
|
E)
|
The difference threshold is the same for each of the
senses.
|
|
4.
|
Which of the following absolute thresholds for taste
is CORRECT?
|
|
A)
|
Detecting a gram of salt dissolved in five gallons of
water
|
|
B)
|
Detecting a difference in tastes between two spots on
the tongue, one-eighth of an inch apart
|
|
C)
|
Detecting one teaspoon of sugar dissolved in two
gallons of water
|
|
D)
|
Detecting a teaspoon of vinegar mixed in with two
gallons of water
|
|
E)
|
Detecting the sweetness of a fruit while blindfolded
|
|
5.
|
In the study of sensory system functioning, ______ is
to absolute threshold as ______ is to difference threshold.
|
|
A)
|
Gustav Fechner; Ernst Weber
|
|
B)
|
Ernst Weber; Gustav Fechner
|
|
C)
|
Wilhelm Wundt; Ernst Weber
|
|
D)
|
Max Wertheimer; Thomas Young
|
|
E)
|
Gustav Fechner; Wilhelm Wundt
|
|
6.
|
Difference thresholds are determined by a constant
fraction of the magnitude of the original stimulus. This is the premise of
|
|
A)
|
Weber's law.
|
|
B)
|
selective attention theory.
|
|
C)
|
Gestalt laws of perceptual organization.
|
|
D)
|
signal-detection theory.
|
|
E)
|
the volley principle.
|
|
7.
|
Weber's constant for brightness of lights is
|
|
A)
|
one-seventh.
|
|
B)
|
one-tenth.
|
|
C)
|
one-sixtieth.
|
|
D)
|
one-fiftieth.
|
|
E)
|
one-twentieth.
|
|
8.
|
Other factors being equal, which sensory stimulus is
least likely to lead to sensory adaptation?
|
|
A)
|
The wail of a loud car alarm
|
|
B)
|
The pressure of wearing a new ring on one's finger
|
|
C)
|
The intense odors of a cattle farm
|
|
D)
|
The pressure of wearing a new bracelet on one's wrist
|
|
E)
|
The temperature of water when entering a pool
|
|
9.
|
When sensory systems become less sensitive to
unchanging stimuli, it is called
|
|
A)
|
accommodation.
|
|
B)
|
sensory adaptation.
|
|
C)
|
precognition.
|
|
D)
|
threshold degradation.
|
|
E)
|
subliminal perception.
|
|
10.
|
Differentiate between absolute and difference
thresholds.
|
|
11.
|
When Harold first enters his swimming pool, the water
feels uncomfortably cold. Five minutes later, it feels comfortable to Harold.
This is an example of
|
|
A)
|
convergence.
|
|
B)
|
sensory adaptation.
|
|
C)
|
selective attention.
|
|
D)
|
accommodation.
|
|
E)
|
just-noticeable difference.
|
|
12.
|
______ is the visual process by which the lens changes
its shape to focus images more clearly on the retina.
|
|
A)
|
Convergence
|
|
B)
|
Retinal disparity
|
|
C)
|
Habituation
|
|
D)
|
Accommodation
|
|
E)
|
Closure
|
|
13.
|
The part of the eye that changes shape to adjust for
an object's distance is the
|
|
A)
|
lens.
|
|
B)
|
pupil.
|
|
C)
|
cornea.
|
|
D)
|
retina.
|
|
E)
|
iris.
|
|
14.
|
In vision, the photoreceptors are called
|
|
A)
|
retina, lens, and pupil.
|
|
B)
|
olfactory bulbs.
|
|
C)
|
semicircular canals and vestibular sacs.
|
|
D)
|
pheromones.
|
|
E)
|
rods and cones.
|
|
15.
|
______ cells are nerve cells in the back of the eye
that transmit neural impulses in response to light stimulation.
|
|
A)
|
Bipolar
|
|
B)
|
Optic
|
|
C)
|
Foveal
|
|
D)
|
Retinal
|
|
E)
|
Ganglion
|
|
16.
|
For the sharpest vision, the image of an object should
be focused on the
|
|
A)
|
fovea.
|
|
B)
|
blind spot.
|
|
C)
|
olfactory bulb.
|
|
D)
|
optic nerve.
|
|
E)
|
retina.
|
|
17.
|
The role of feature detectors is to
|
|
A)
|
compensate for retinal disparity in nearsightedness
and farsightedness.
|
|
B)
|
detect color stimuli.
|
|
C)
|
detect black and white stimuli.
|
|
D)
|
respond to particular features of visual stimuli.
|
|
E)
|
regulate the size of the pupil.
|
|
18.
|
Trichromatic theory suggests that
|
|
A)
|
the retina has one type of color receptor that
responds differently to each color.
|
|
B)
|
the retina has two types of color receptors that
respond in a different manner for each color.
|
|
C)
|
the retina has three types of color receptors—red,
green, and blue-violet.
|
|
D)
|
color results from opposing processes involving three
sets of color receptors: red-green, blue-yellow, and black-white.
|
|
E)
|
the process of color vision differs in men and women
because of sex-linked genetic defects on the Y chromosome.
|
|
19.
|
Red, green, and blue-violet light can be combined to
create any color of the spectrum. This has been interpreted as supporting
|
|
A)
|
trichromatic theory of color vision.
|
|
B)
|
opponent-process theory of color vision.
|
|
C)
|
feature detection theory of color vision.
|
|
D)
|
color constancy theory of color vision.
|
|
E)
|
the existence of afterimages.
|
|
20.
|
Negative afterimages provide support for which theory
of color vision?
|
|
A)
|
Trichromatic theory
|
|
B)
|
Feature detection theory
|
|
C)
|
Color constancy theory
|
|
D)
|
Threshold detection
theory
|
|
E)
|
Opponent-process theory
|
|
21.
|
Regarding color-blindness, which of the following
statements is FALSE?
|
|
A)
|
More men suffer from red-green color-blindness than do
women.
|
|
B)
|
Red-green color blindness is more common than
blue-yellow color blindness.
|
|
C)
|
People who are monochromats can only perceive the
world in shades of gray.
|
|
D)
|
About one in forty thousand people is completely
color-blind.
|
|
E)
|
Red-green color blindness appears to be carried on the
Y chromosome.
|
|
22.
|
Jack has the most common form of color blindness. What
type of color blindness does he have?
|
|
A)
|
Blue-green
|
|
B)
|
Red-yellow
|
|
C)
|
Red-green
|
|
D)
|
Blue-yellow
|
|
E)
|
Blue-red
|
|
23.
|
People who only see in black and white are called
|
|
A)
|
monochromats.
|
|
B)
|
dichromats.
|
|
C)
|
trichromats.
|
|
D)
|
gray-tones.
|
|
E)
|
partially color-blind.
|
|
24.
|
Humans can hear frequencies between about ______
cycles per second.
|
|
A)
|
100,000 and 200,000.
|
|
B)
|
50,000 and 100,000.
|
|
C)
|
20,000 and 50,000
|
|
D)
|
20 and 20,000
|
|
E)
|
1 and 20
|
|
25.
|
In human hearing, the auditory receptors are _____ and
approximately ______ are in each ear.
|
|
A)
|
hair cells; 15,000
|
|
B)
|
hair cells; 5,000
|
|
C)
|
follicles; 5,000
|
|
D)
|
follicles; 15,000
|
|
E)
|
hair cells; 150,000
|
|
26.
|
In human audition, the vibration of the ossicles is
triggered by vibration of the _____ and transmitted directly to the ______.
|
|
A)
|
eardrum; oval window
|
|
B)
|
tympanic membrane; round window
|
|
C)
|
oval window; auditory nerve
|
|
D)
|
eardrum; tympanic membrane
|
|
E)
|
auditory nerve; tympanic membrane
|
|
27.
|
In what order do the ossicles vibrate during hearing?
|
|
A)
|
Anvil, hammer, stirrup
|
|
B)
|
Stirrup, hammer, anvil
|
|
C)
|
Stirrup, anvil, hammer
|
|
D)
|
Hammer, stirrup, anvil
|
|
E)
|
Hammer, anvil, stirrup
|
|
28.
|
The basis of the place theory of pitch detection is
that pitch is determined by the place along the _______ that vibrates the
most.
|
|
A)
|
ear drum
|
|
B)
|
basilar membrane
|
|
C)
|
oval window
|
|
D)
|
auditory nerve
|
|
E)
|
ossicles
|
|
29.
|
Which theory of pitch best accounts for the perception
of sounds between 1,000 and 4,000 cycles per second?
|
|
A)
|
Place theory
|
|
B)
|
Gate-control theory
|
|
C)
|
Frequency theory
|
|
D)
|
Opponent-process theory
|
|
E)
|
Volley principle
|
|
30.
|
Which of the following suggests that pitch detection
is coded by combining frequencies of neurons firing in alternate succession?
|
|
A)
|
Volley principle
|
|
B)
|
Place theory
|
|
C)
|
Opponent-process theory
|
|
D)
|
Frequency theory
|
|
E)
|
Gate-control theory
|
|
31.
|
High-frequency sounds cause the greatest vibration of
|
|
A)
|
hair cells in the middle of the basilar membrane.
|
|
B)
|
hair cells nearest the oval window.
|
|
C)
|
hair cells nearest the auditory nerve.
|
|
D)
|
hair cells farthest down the basilar membrane from the
oval window.
|
|
E)
|
the membrane of the eardrum.
|
|
32.
|
Hearing loss can occur after prolonged exposure to
noise as low as _____ decibels, while
hearing loss can result from brief exposure to sounds as low as ______
decibels.
|
|
A)
|
55; 85
|
|
B)
|
65; 100
|
|
C)
|
75; 115
|
|
D)
|
85; 120
|
|
E)
|
120; 160
|
|
33.
|
In deafness, conduction deafness is to _____ as nerve
deafness is to _____.
|
|
A)
|
outer ear; inner ear
|
|
B)
|
inner ear; outer ear
|
|
C)
|
middle ear; inner ear
|
|
D)
|
inner ear; middle ear
|
|
E)
|
middle ear; outer ear
|
|
34.
|
Chemical senses include
|
|
A)
|
touch only.
|
|
B)
|
taste only.
|
|
C)
|
smell only.
|
|
D)
|
both touch and taste.
|
|
E)
|
both taste and smell.
|
|
35.
|
Dr. Halpern tells his graduate student, Dwight, that
he'll need to deliver the lecture in Halpern's psychology class today. When
Halpern tells him that the lecture is on olfaction, Dwight knows he'll be
talking about which sense?
|
|
A)
|
Taste
|
|
B)
|
Touch
|
|
C)
|
Vision
|
|
D)
|
Hearing
|
|
E)
|
Smell
|
|
36.
|
Which sense is especially effective at stimulating
emotional memories?
|
|
A)
|
Smell
|
|
B)
|
Taste
|
|
C)
|
Hearing
|
|
D)
|
Vision
|
|
E)
|
Touch
|
|
37.
|
Various species emit chemical substances called ______
that play important roles in many behaviors.
|
|
A)
|
hormones
|
|
B)
|
pheromones
|
|
C)
|
neurotransmitters
|
|
D)
|
perfumes
|
|
E)
|
olfactions
|
|
38.
|
Regarding pheromones, which of the following
statements is FALSE?
|
|
A)
|
Evidence suggests that pheromones play a large role in
influencing sexual attraction among humans.
|
|
B)
|
Among humans, researchers have shown that exposure to
male sweat may lead women to feel more relaxed.
|
|
C)
|
Pheromones are found in bodily secretions, and they
allow animals to mark their territories and establish dominance.
|
|
D)
|
Humans have receptors in the nose that may allow them
to sense pheromones.
|
|
E)
|
Pheromones are detected through the sense of smell or
taste.
|
|
39.
|
For the sense
of taste, sense receptors are called
|
|
A)
|
taste cells.
|
|
B)
|
taste buds.
|
|
C)
|
gustatory nerves.
|
|
D)
|
taste nodes.
|
|
E)
|
gustatory nodes.
|
|
40.
|
Receptor cells for which sense regenerate within a
week to ten days?
|
|
A)
|
Vision
|
|
B)
|
Audition
|
|
C)
|
Taste
|
|
D)
|
Touch
|
|
E)
|
Olfaction
|
|
41.
|
Regarding the skin senses, which of the following
statements is FALSE?
|
|
A)
|
The skin is the body's largest sensory organ.
|
|
B)
|
All skin receptors respond to more than one type of
stimulation.
|
|
C)
|
There are close to one-half million receptors for
touch and pressure distributed throughout the body.
|
|
D)
|
The part of the cerebral cortex that processes
information from the skin receptors is called the somatosensory cortex.
|
|
E)
|
There are specific receptors in the skin for warmth
and cold.
|
|
42.
|
Receptors for which of the following are located
deepest in the skin?
|
|
A)
|
Hot
|
|
B)
|
Cold
|
|
C)
|
Pain
|
|
D)
|
Light touch
|
|
E)
|
Pressure
|
|
43.
|
Sensations of hotness result from
|
|
A)
|
stimulation of hot receptors.
|
|
B)
|
stimulation of warm receptors.
|
|
C)
|
stimulation of cold receptors.
|
|
D)
|
simultaneous stimulation of warm and cold receptors.
|
|
E)
|
stimulation of pain receptors.
|
|
44.
|
Austin experiences motion sickness on his first cruise
vacation. From which two senses has Austin received conflicting information?
|
|
A)
|
Kinesthesis and visual
|
|
B)
|
Kinesthesis and olfactory
|
|
C)
|
Vestibular and visual
|
|
D)
|
Vestibular and olfactory
|
|
E)
|
Audition and olfactory
|
|
45.
|
The vestibular sensory system includes
|
|
A)
|
the semicircular canals only.
|
|
B)
|
the vestibular sacs only.
|
|
C)
|
the olfactory receptors only.
|
|
D)
|
both the semicircular canals and the vestibular sacs.
|
|
E)
|
both the olfactory receptors and the vestibular sacs.
|
|
46.
|
All but which of the following people are using their
kinesthetic sense?
|
|
A)
|
While taking a sobriety test, Apollonia touches her
index finger to her nose with her eyes closed.
|
|
B)
|
Eleven-year-old Bobbie Sue rides her bike without
paying any attention to the movements of her legs.
|
|
C)
|
In the shower, Chip is able to wash the back of his
neck and his back without looking in a mirror.
|
|
D)
|
Donovan maintains his balance during the spins of his
ballroom dancing routine.
|
|
E)
|
Earl types 100 words per minute without looking at the
keyboard.
|
|
47.
|
Summarize the principles of the gate-control theory of
pain.
|
|
48.
|
Regarding perception, which of the following
statements is TRUE?
|
|
A)
|
Perception represents the brain's attempt to make
sense of the information coming in through the senses.
|
|
B)
|
Perception is a reactive process.
|
|
C)
|
Perceptions accurately reflects external reality.
|
|
D)
|
The area of perception that has captured the most
research attention is auditory perception.
|
|
E)
|
Attention is the second step in perception.
|
|
49.
|
In a research experiment, participants are shown a
series of drawings before seeing an ambiguous picture that could be perceived
as a rat or a man. Group 1 sees drawings of animals, while group 2 sees
drawings of humans. Perceptual set suggests which of the following results
when participants are shown the ambiguous picture?
|
|
A)
|
Both groups will report seeing a man.
|
|
B)
|
Both groups will report seeing a rat.
|
|
C)
|
Group 1 will report seeing a rat, while group 2 will
report seeing a man.
|
|
D)
|
Group 1 will report seeing a man, while group 2 will
report seeing a rat.
|
|
E)
|
Neither group will see a rat or a man, since the
picture is ambiguous.
|
|
50.
|
In terms of where visual processing begins, ______
processing is to parts as _____ processing is to whole.
|
|
A)
|
bottom-up; top-down
|
|
B)
|
bottom-down; top-up
|
|
C)
|
top-down; bottom-up
|
|
D)
|
top-up; bottom-down
|
|
E)
|
up-down; bottom-top
|
|
51.
|
Which of the following describes the Gestalt law of
connectedness?
|
|
A)
|
A series of stimuli will be perceived as representing
a unified form.
|
|
B)
|
Objects near each other will be perceived as belonging
to a common set.
|
|
C)
|
Humans tend to piece together disconnected bits of
information to perceive whole forms.
|
|
D)
|
Objects positioned together or moving together will be
perceived as belonging to the same group.
|
|
E)
|
Objects that are similar will be perceived as
belonging to the same group.
|
|
52.
|
All but which of the following are part of the
perceptual laws of grouping?
|
|
A)
|
Similarity
|
|
B)
|
Proximity
|
|
C)
|
Closure
|
|
D)
|
Connectedness
|
|
E)
|
Figure-ground
|
|
53.
|
Rico is shown the following stimulus: X. When asked what he sees, Rico reports that
he sees two intersecting lines rather than saying he sees four separate
lines. Rico's response demonstrates which Gestalt principle?
|
|
A)
|
Closure
|
|
B)
|
Proximity
|
|
C)
|
Similarity
|
|
D)
|
Connectedness
|
|
E)
|
Continuity
|
|
54.
|
Tony observes an oval bowl on a table from several
different perspectives. Although the image on his retina changes, he
continues to perceive the bowl as oval. Tony's experience is an example of
______.
|
|
A)
|
brightness constancy
|
|
B)
|
retinal disparity
|
|
C)
|
size constancy
|
|
D)
|
linear perspective
|
|
E)
|
shape constancy
|
|
55.
|
The text discusses
______ types of perceptual constancy and they are ______.
|
|
A)
|
2; bottom-up and top-down
|
|
B)
|
2; figure-ground and grouping
|
|
C)
|
6; relative size, interposition, relative clarity,
texture gradient, linear perspective, and shadowing
|
|
D)
|
4; shape, size, brightness, and color
|
|
E)
|
5; proximity, continuity, closure, connectedness, and
similarity
|
|
56.
|
Regarding figure-ground perception, which of the
following statements is TRUE?
|
|
A)
|
Figures have shape, while ground does not.
|
|
B)
|
In the old lady/young lady figure, people most often
see the old woman.
|
|
C)
|
In the vase/profile figure, the vase always represents
the figure.
|
|
D)
|
Outlines always allow us to distinguish between ground
and figure.
|
|
E)
|
Humans tend to perceive objects as ground when they
have distinctive coloring.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment