Psychology MCQ Questions

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Transcript Psychology MCQ Questions

Psychology MCQs
~Memory~
1.
To prevent information in short-term store from decaying, one can use
________ .
a. rehearsal
b. elaboration
c. explication
d. memory
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------2.
Information that is in short-term store can be processed or
transformed before being stored in long-term store. This processing is
called ________ .
a. elaboration
b. memory
c. explication
d. rehearsal
3.
Your memories concerning what you talked about at dinner last night is part of
your ________ memory.
a. implicit
b. explicit
c. sensory
d. short-term
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------4.
Your memories concerning how to hit a backhand shot in tennis is part of your
________ memory.
a. explicit
b. implicit
c. short-term
d. sensory
5.
Eidetic imagery
a. is impaired by the presence of auditory cues.
b. begins to fade immediately after the stimulus is removed.
c. provides a permanent and accurate record of images the individual has paid
attention to.
d. is found more often in children than adults.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------6.
Why might rehearsal prevent the loss of an item from working memory?
a. Any or all of these choices may be involved.
b. It prevents the memory from decaying.
c. It focuses attention on the item rather than on new items.
d. It protects the item from displacement.
7.
If you repeat a phone number to keep it in working memory, you are keeping it
in a high state of activation. If a new phone number is presented what will
happen to the original phone number?
a. It will be remembered along with the new number.
b. Both numbers will be lost.
c. It may fall below the level of activation necessary for retrieval.
d. The numbers will be combined into one long string of numbers.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------8.
Which statement is true about retrieval of items from working memory?
a. It depends upon the number of items in consciousness.
b. It takes longer if the material is presented in a chunked form.
c. It doesn't require a search process.
d. It requires no time since access is immediate.
9.
When we engage in problem solving, information from ________ memory is
transferred to ________ for conscious processing.
a. working; long-term
b. long-term; working
c. semantic; episodic
d. episodic; semantic
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------10.
While counting a patient's pulse, Katy tried to remember that patient's blood
pressure but could not. Why?
a. Two activities were competing for the same space in working memory.
b. Blood pressure requires a semantic code; pulse requires an acoustic code.
c. Long-term memory held the blood pressure data but Katy was using
working memory to count.
d. Two activities were competing for the same space in long-term memory.
11.
If you received damage to your hippocampus in an accident, you would show
deficits in your ________ memory but not your ________ memory.
a. long-term; working
b. sensory; working
c. working; sensory
d. working; sensory
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------12.
Research evidence shows that the ________ is essential for short-term
memory, while the ________ is essential for long-term memory.
a. hippocampus; hypothalamus
b. frontal lobes; parietal lobes
c. preforntal lobes; hippocampus
d. temporal lobes; parietal lobes
13.
The dominant means of long-term storage of verbal material is
a. All of these choices are true.
b. acoustic.
c. visual.
d. meaning.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------14.
The word "dawn" appears in a list of words you try to memorize. Thirty
minutes later, you are asked to recall the list, but your recall is wrong.
Which word would you be most likely to recall instead of "dawn"?
a. sun
b. morning
c. fawn
d. down
15.
You are in a grocery store in your home town and encounter a woman who you
recognize as having been a substitute teacher in your sophomore history
class. You know her name is something like Ms. Lawson, or Larson, or some
other similar name which begins with the letter L. You are experiencing the
a. context-dependent effect.
b. tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon.
c. state-dependent effect.
d. flashbulb memory effect.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------16.
Poor long-term memory is typically a problem with ________ rather than
________ .
a. retrieval; storage
b. memory span; context-dependent effect
c. serial position; tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon
d. elaboration; chunking
17.
Information stored in long-term memory
a. is retained longer when auditory codes are used.
b. may be forgotten if items are not properly chunked.
c. may be permanently erased by repression.
d. may be forgotten due to loss of access to the information.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------18.
Interference can be accounted for by the _________ model(s) of memory.
a. connectionist
b. search process
c. All of these choices are true.
d. spreading activation
19.
Long-term stress may destroy cells in the hippocampus. What effect would this
have on one's memory?
a. No major effects on memory would be noted.
b. Consolidation of memories into long-term memory might be noted.
c. There would be an improvement of working memory functioning.
d. Working memory would be disrupted.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------20.
Internal and external contexts serve as powerful cues for recall. Internal cues
are often responsible for
a. semantic coding.
b. flashbulb memory.
c. implicit memory.
d. state-dependent learning.
21.
If you can show an improvement in a motor or cognitive ask without conscious
recollection of the experiences that led to the improvement, you are using
your ________ memory system.
a. covert
b. implicit
c. explicit
d. subjective
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------22.
A woman with anterograde amnesia would be least likely to recall
a. how to ride a bicycle.
b. the name of the new car she just saw advertised in a magazine.
c. her name.
d. the name of her childhood hometown.
23.
Recent research has shown that even mild head trauma (that which doesn't
result in a loss of consciousness) can result in a memory loss for events that
occurred immediately prior to the trauma. This is an example of
a. retrograde amnesia.
b. anterograde amnesia.
c. repression.
d. IQ deficits associated with the head injury.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------24.
Which of the following seems to be the best explanation of childhood amnesia?
a. Children encode and organize memories differently from adults.
b. Sexual and aggressive feelings of the child are repressed later, when we are
socialized.
c. Memories are lost because recent memories displace them.
d. Just like other memories, they fade with time.
25.
One explanation for the occurrence of childhood amnesia is that there is
continued neural development of the ________ through the first few years
of life.
a. cortex
b. brain systems that mediate repression
c. hypothalamus
d. hippocampus
Model Answers
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Q1:a
Q2:a
Q3:b
Q4:b
Q5:d
Q6:a
Q7:c
Q8:a
Q9:c
Q10:a
Q11:a
Q12:c
Q13:d
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Q14:b
Q15:b
Q16:a
Q17:d
Q18:c
Q19:b
Q20:d
Q21:b
Q22:b
Q23:a
Q24:a
Q25:d
 Good Luck 