TB1 Chapter 5 - Multiple Choice
TB1 Chapter 5 - Multiple Choice
TB1 Chapter 5 - Multiple Choice
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
2.Dr. Birkin's major research interest is the development of motor skills in children. It is
most likely that Dr. Birkin is a ________ psychologist.
cognitive
developmental
biological
psychodynamic
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
4.Distinguishing between very gradual and very abrupt developmental changes over the life
span is most central to the major issue of
object permanence and stranger anxiety.
generativity and stagnation.
continuity and stages.
nature and nurture.
A)
B)
C)
D)
5.Mary believes that cognitive development is a matter of gradual and almost imperceptible
changes over time. Her viewpoint is most directly relevant to the issue of
nature and nurture.
primary and secondary sex characteristics.
continuity and stages.
conventional and postconventional morality.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
overemphasizing
discrete age-linked stages.
the interaction of nature and nurture.
maturation during adolescent development.
cognitive changes during adulthood development.
A)
B)
C)
D)
8.A belief that adult personality is completely determined in early childhood would be most
relevant to the issue of
stability and change.
objective permanence and stranger anxiety.
conventional and postconventional morality.
concrete and formal operations.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
10.Questions about whether anxious children will grow up to be either fearful or relaxed
adults most directly highlight the issue of
continuity and stages.
stability and change.
identity and role confusion.
nature and nurture.
A)
B)
C)
D)
11.The fact that many happy and well-adjusted adults were once rebellious and unhappy as
adolescents is most relevant to the issue of
continuity and stages.
object permanence and stranger anxiety.
stability and change.
primary and secondary sex characteristics.
A)
B)
C)
D)
12.As compared with the production of egg cells, sperm cell production
begins later in life.
involves a jellylike outer covering.
begins earlier in life.
involves differentiation prior to fusion with the egg.
13.Human sperm cells ________ than egg cells.
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A)
B)
C)
D)
are larger
contain more genes
are smaller
contain fewer genes
A)
B)
C)
D)
14.During the course of successful prenatal development, a human organism begins as a(n)
zygote and finally develops into an embryo.
embryo and finally develops into a fetus.
zygote and finally develops into a fetus.
fetus and finally develops into an embryo.
A)
B)
C)
D)
15.When a placenta is first developed, it transfers nutrients and oxygen from mother to
egg cell.
fetus.
embryo.
zygote.
A)
B)
C)
D)
16.The heart begins to beat during the ________ period of prenatal development.
embryonic
fetal
zygotic
ovular
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
18.Genetically identical twins first begin their separate paths of prenatal development during
________ development.
embryonic
fetal
zygotic
ovular
19.A preference for our mother's voice over our father's voice has been detected as early as
A)
during embryonic development.
B)
the day after birth.
C)
one week after birth.
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D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
21.Four months after having been exposed to a vibrating, honking device placed on its
mother's abdomen, a fetus demonstrates
habituation.
stranger anxiety.
conservation.
an insecure attachment.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
23.If research suggested that a pregnant mother's use of an artificial sweetener caused harm
to the fetus, the artificial sweetener would be considered a(n)
telomere.
stress hormone.
critical period.
teratogen.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
25.When pregnant rats drink alcohol, their young offspring later display a(n)
immunity to fetal alcohol syndrome.
aversion to the taste of alcohol.
unusually rapid development of bladder control.
liking for the taste and odor of alcohol.
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A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
27.Alcohol may cause fetal damage by leaving chemical marks on DNA that switch genes
abnormally on or off. This best illustrates
imprinting.
object permanence.
an epigenetic effect.
an insecure attachment.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
29.Babies are born with several reflexes for getting food. One of these is to
withdraw a limb to escape pain.
turn the head away from a cloth placed over the face.
open the mouth in search of a nipple when touched on the cheek.
look longer at facelike images.
A)
B)
C)
D)
30.Mr. Hersch triggered a rooting reflex in his infant son by touching him on the
foot.
knee.
arm.
cheek.
A)
B)
C)
D)
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A)
B)
C)
D)
egocentrism.
infantile amnesia.
habituation.
object permanence.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
35.When placed between a gauze breast pad from their nursing mother's bra, week-old
nursing babies are likely to
move their eyes in a visual search for their mother.
turn their head toward the smell of their mother's pad.
open their mouth in a vigorous search for a nipple.
demonstrate signs of stranger anxiety.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
37.Maturation refers to
the acquisition of socially acceptable behaviors.
biological growth processes that are relatively uninfluenced by experience.
any learned behavior patterns that accompany personal growth and development.
the physical and sexual development of early adolescence.
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D)
environment; learning
A)
B)
C)
D)
39.From ages 3 to 6, the brain's neural networks are sprouting most rapidly in the
frontal lobes.
hypothalamus.
cerebellum.
brainstem.
A)
B)
C)
D)
40.The association areas are the last cortical areas to fully develop their
schemas.
teratogens.
neural networks.
primary sex characteristics.
A)
B)
C)
D)
41.A failure to practice important motor skills can result in a loss of agility because unused
neural connections
habituate.
assimilate.
imprint.
are pruned.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
43.Horace, the youngest child of a high school athletic director, was able to roll over at 3
months, crawl at 6 months, and walk at 12 months. This ordered sequence of motor
development was largely due to
habituation.
maturation.
responsive parenting.
imprinting.
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D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
45.Mr. and Mrs. Batson can't wait to begin toilet training their year-old daughter. The
Batsons most clearly need to be informed about the importance of
imprinting.
habituation.
maturation.
object permanence.
A)
B)
C)
D)
46.Our earliest conscious memories seldom predate our third birthday. This best illustrates
egocentrism.
role confusion.
habituation.
infantile amnesia.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
48.Four-year-old Karen can't remember anything of the first few months of her life. This is
best explained by the fact that
the trauma of birth interferes with the early formation of memories.
most brain cells do not yet exist at the time of birth.
experiences shortly after birth are a meaningless blur of darkness and light.
the hippocampus and frontal lobes are immature during early infancy.
A)
B)
C)
D)
49.One study found that English-speaking adults could relearn subtle sound contrasts in the
Hindu or Zulu they had spoken as children even though they had no ________ the Hindu
or Zulu language they had once spoken.
personal curiosity about
conscious memory of
basic trust regarding
role confusion associated with
50.Cognition refers to
A)
an emotional tie linking one person with another.
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B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
55.The first time that 4-year-old Sarah saw her older brother play a flute, she thought it was
simply a large whistle. Sarah's initial understanding of the flute best illustrates the process
of
assimilation.
conservation.
accommodation.
maturation.
56.Incorporating new information into existing theories is to ________ as modifying
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A)
B)
C)
D)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
58.Nageeb thought all nurses were young females until a middle-aged male nurse took care
of him. Nageeb's altered conception of a nurse illustrates the process of
habituation.
assimilation.
accommodation.
attachment.
A)
B)
C)
D)
59.Which of the following represents the correct order of Piaget's stages of cognitive
development?
preoperational, concrete operational, formal operational, sensorimotor
sensorimotor, preoperational, formal operational, concrete operational
sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational, formal operational
preoperational, sensorimotor, concrete operational, formal operational
A)
B)
C)
D)
60.Olivia understands her world primarily by grasping and sucking easily available objects.
Olivia is clearly in Piaget's ________ stage.
preoperational
concrete operational
sensorimotor
formal operational
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
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A)
B)
C)
D)
62.During which of Piaget's stages does a person develop an awareness that things continue
to exist even when they are not perceived?
sensorimotor
preoperational
concrete operational
formal operational
A)
B)
C)
D)
63.When Tommy's mother hides his favorite toy under a blanket, he acts as though it no
longer exists and makes no attempt to retrieve it. Tommy is clearly near the beginning of
Piaget's ________ stage.
sensorimotor
formal operational
concrete operational
preoperational
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
65.Infants accustomed to a puppet jumping three times on stage show surprise if the puppet
jumps only twice. This suggests that Piaget
overestimated the continuity of cognitive development.
underestimated the cognitive capacities of infants.
overestimated the impact of culture on infant intelligence.
underestimated the impact of object permanence on infant attachment.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
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A)
B)
C)
D)
68.Four-year-old Jennifer mistakenly believes that her mother would like to receive a toy
doll as a Christmas present. This best illustrates Piaget's concept of
accommodation.
object permanence.
conservation.
egocentrism.
A)
B)
C)
D)
69.Incorrectly assuming that something that is clearly understood by us will also be clearly
understood by others illustrates
postconventional morality.
the curse of knowledge.
object permanence.
habituation.
A)
B)
C)
D)
70.According to Piaget, a child can represent things with words and images but cannot
reason with logic during the ________ stage.
concrete operational
sensorimotor
formal operational
preoperational
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
72.If children cannot grasp the principle of conservation, they are unable to
deal with the discipline of toilet training.
see things from the point of view of another person.
recognize that the quantity of a substance remains the same despite changes in its
shape.
retain earlier schemas when confronted by new experiences.
73.Mrs. Pearson cut Judy's hot dog into eight pieces and Sylvia's into six pieces. Sylvia cried
because she felt she wasn't getting as much hot dog as Judy. Piaget would say that Sylvia
doesn't understand the principle of
A)
object permanence.
B)
conservation.
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C)
D)
egocentrism.
accommodation.
A)
B)
C)
D)
74.Three-year-olds were shown a model of a room with a miniature stuffed dog placed
behind a miniature couch. By using the model to locate an actual stuffed dog behind a
couch in a real room, the children demonstrated their capacity for
habituation.
symbolic thinking.
cross-sectional study.
concrete operational reasoning.
A)
B)
C)
D)
75.Psychologists David Premack and Guy Woodruff described chimpanzees' seeming ability
to read intentions as indicative of
imprinting.
a theory of mind.
object permanence.
a secure attachment.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
77.Five-year-olds who were surprised to discover that a Band-Aids box contained pencils
were able to anticipate their friend's false belief about the contents of the box. This best
illustrates that the children had developed a
secure attachment.
conventional morality.
theory of mind.
concept of conservation.
A)
B)
C)
D)
78.Chloe can clearly sense when her sister's teasing is intended to be friendly fun or a hostile
put-down. This best illustrates that Chloe has developed a(n)
sense of object permanence.
insecure attachment.
concept of conservation.
theory of mind.
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A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
83.ASD has differing levels of severity. Those who have normal intelligence but lack social
and communication skills are said to
have developed a theory of mind.
have low levels of testosterone.
be high functioning.
be able to mirror others' actions.
A)
B)
C)
D)
84.Animations that grafted emotion-conveying faces onto toy trains have been developed to
alleviate symptoms of
fetal alcohol syndrome.
Alzheimer's disease.
infantile amnesia.
autism spectrum disorder.
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A)
B)
C)
D)
85.According to Piaget, the ability to think logically about events first develops during the
________ stage.
sensorimotor
formal operational
concrete operational
preoperational
A)
B)
C)
D)
86.According to Piaget, children come to understand that the volume of a substance remains
constant despite changes in its shape during the ________ stage.
sensorimotor
preoperational
concrete operational
formal operational
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
90.The Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky suggested that children's ability to solve
problems is enhanced by
basic trust.
inner speech.
conservation.
imprinting.
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A)
B)
C)
D)
91.According to Vygotsky, parents who say No, no! when pulling a child's hand away
from a cake are giving the child a tool for
habituation.
self-control.
object permanence.
a secure attachment.
A)
B)
C)
D)
92.Vygotsky suggested that new words provide a temporary ________ from which children
can step to higher levels of thinking
preoperational stage
neural network
critical period
scaffold
A)
B)
C)
D)
93.Piaget emphasized how the child's mind grows through interaction with the physical
environment. Vygotsky emphasized how the child's mind grows through
imprinting.
a pruning process.
social mentoring.
cross-sectional study.
A)
B)
C)
D)
94.Four-year-olds are not completely egocentric and 5-year-olds can exhibit some
understanding of conservation. This indicates that Piaget may have underestimated the
importance of critical periods in early life.
role of motivation in cognitive development.
continuity of cognitive development.
importance of early attachment experiences.
A)
B)
C)
D)
95.At about 8 months, children become increasingly likely to react to newcomers with tears
and distress. This best illustrates
role confusion.
insecure attachment.
egocentrism.
stranger anxiety.
96.Lilianne is beginning to develop a fear of strangers and will reach for her mother when
she sees someone who is unfamiliar. It is likely that Lilianne has also just
A)
mastered the principle of conservation.
B)
overcome the limitation of egocentrism.
C)
developed a sense of object permanence.
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D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
97.Infants develop a fear of strangers at about 8 months of age because they can't assimilate
unfamiliar faces into their
schemas.
attachments.
theory of mind.
self-concept.
A)
B)
C)
D)
98.Little Karen will approach and play with unfamiliar animals only if her mother first
reassures her that it is safe to do so. This best illustrates the adaptive value of
conservation.
attachment.
egocentrism.
habituation.
A)
B)
C)
D)
99.Studies of monkeys raised with artificial mothers suggest that mother-infant emotional
bonds result primarily from mothers providing infants with
adequate nourishment.
body contact.
the opportunity to explore.
self-esteem.
100.Providing children with a safe haven in times of stress contributes most directly to
A)
habituation.
B)
stranger anxiety.
C)
object permanence.
D)
secure attachment.
101.A critical period is a phase during which
children frequently disobey and resist their parents.
children become able to think hypothetically and reason abstractly.
parents frequently show impatience with a child's slowness in becoming toilet
trained.
D)
exposure to certain experiences is needed for proper development.
A)
B)
C)
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D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
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108.Instead of happily exploring the attractive toys located in the pediatrician's waiting room,
little Sandra tenaciously clings to her mother's skirt. Sandra most clearly shows signs of
A)
habituation.
B)
egocentrism.
C)
insecure attachment.
D)
accommodation.
109.Aaron cried when his mother left him in the infant nursery at church, and he was not
reassured or comforted by her return a short while later. Aaron showed signs of
A)
egocentrism.
B)
habituation.
C)
conservation.
D)
insecure attachment.
110.In a pleasant but unfamiliar setting, infants with a secure maternal attachment are most
likely to
A)
act as though their mothers are of little importance to them.
B)
use their mothers as a base from which to explore the new surroundings.
C)
cling to their mothers and ignore the new surroundings.
D)
show hostility when their mothers approach them after a brief absence.
111.Some mothers feed their infants when they show signs of hunger, whereas others fail to
respond predictably to their infants' demands for food. These different maternal feeding
practices are most likely to contribute to differences in infant
A)
habituation.
B)
attachment.
C)
conservation.
D)
egocentrism.
112.A mother who is slow in responding to her infant's cries of distress is most likely to
encourage
A)
conservation.
B)
insecure attachment.
C)
object permanence.
D)
egocentrism.
113.Evidence that easy, relaxed infants develop secure attachments more readily than
difficult, emotionally intense babies would illustrate the importance of
A)
egocentrism.
B)
temperament.
C)
conservation.
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D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
object permanence.
114.Nature is to nurture as ________ is to ________.
secure attachment; imprinting
heredity; maturation
accommodation; assimilation
temperament; responsive parenting
115.Which of the following factors contributes most positively to the development of secure
attachment between human infants and their mothers?
A)
conventional morality
B)
responsive parenting
C)
stranger anxiety
D)
authoritarian discipline
116.Two-year-old Anna perceives her parents as cold and rejecting. This is most indicative of
A)
habituation.
B)
egocentrism.
C)
infantile amnesia.
D)
insecure attachment.
117.When placed in strange situations without their artificial mothers, the Harlows' infant
monkeys demonstrated signs of
A)
insecure attachment.
B)
egocentrism.
C)
basic trust.
D)
curiosity.
118.Children's sense that their parents are trustworthy and dependable is most indicative of
A)
maturation.
B)
accommodation.
C)
secure attachment.
D)
object permanence.
119.Marlys is a sensitive, responsive parent who consistently satisfies the needs of Sara, her
infant daughter. According to Erikson, Sara is likely to
A)
form a lifelong attitude of basic trust toward the world.
B)
encounter some difficulty in overcoming the limitation of egocentrism.
C)
encounter some difficulty in forming an attachment to her father.
D)
achieve formal operational intelligence more quickly than the average child.
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120.In a British study following over 7000 people from birth to adulthood, those individuals
whose fathers were most involved in parenting tended to demonstrate greater
A)
role confusion.
B)
separation anxiety.
C)
empty nest syndrome.
D)
academic achievement.
121.Already at 15 months of age, Justin strongly senses that he can rely on his father to
comfort and protect him. According to Erikson, this most clearly contributes to
A)
egocentrism.
B)
conservation.
C)
object permanence.
D)
basic trust.
122.Many researchers believe that adult styles of romantic love correspond with childhood
patterns of
A)
habituation.
B)
attachment.
C)
conservation.
D)
object permanence.
123.Romanian children raised in orphanages with untrained and overworked staff were found
to have ________ than found in children assigned to quality foster care settings.
A)
less egocentrism
B)
lower intelligence scores
C)
more secure attachments
D)
greater infantile amnesia
124.Most children who experience parental neglect or abuse manage to have socially
meaningful and productive lives. This best illustrates
A)
postconventional morality.
B)
object permanence.
C)
conservation.
D)
resilience.
125.Harlow observed that most monkeys raised in total isolation
A)
were totally apathetic and indifferent to the first monkeys they encountered.
B)
were incapable of mating upon reaching sexual maturity.
C)
showed slower social development but more rapid cognitive development.
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D)
126.Edith abuses both her 3-year-old and 1-year-old daughters. Her behavior is most likely
related to a lack of
A)
childhood experience with younger brothers and sisters.
B)
maturation.
C)
an early and secure attachment to her own parents.
D)
formal operational intelligence.
127.When golden hamsters were repeatedly threatened and attacked while young, they
suffered long-term changes in
A)
object permanence.
B)
brain chemistry.
C)
conservation.
D)
habituation.
A)
B)
C)
D)
128.Severe and prolonged child sexual abuse places children at risk for
fetal alcohol syndrome.
menarche.
imprinting.
substance abuse.
129.For several months following a sudden and unexpected divorce, Henry was excessively
preoccupied with thoughts of his ex-wife. His reaction resulted from the disruption of
A)
a critical period.
B)
conservation.
C)
object permanence.
D)
attachment.
130.In considering day-care opportunities for their four children, Mr. and Mrs. Taylor should
be most concerned about whether the experience will influence
A)
egocentrism in their 3-year-old son, James.
B)
object permanence in their 2-year-old son, Billy.
C)
secure attachment in their 6-month-old daughter, Julia.
D)
maturation in their 4-year-old daughter, Sandra.
131.An ongoing study of 1100 children in 10 American cities has found that those who had
spent the most time in day-care facilities had
A)
slightly advanced thinking and language skills and an increased rate of
aggressiveness.
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B)
C)
D)
slightly inferior thinking and language skills and a decreased rate of aggressiveness.
slightly advanced thinking and language skills and a decreased rate of
aggressiveness.
slightly inferior thinking and language skills and an increased rate of aggressiveness.
132.One study of 4 1/2- to 6-year-old children in 10 American cities found that the children's
rate of aggressiveness was influenced more by ________ than by the amount of time they
spent in day-care programs.
A)
children's temperaments
B)
parents' caregiving sensitivity
C)
family's economic and educational levels
D)
all of these factors
133.Your understanding and awareness of who you are is your
A)
temperament.
B)
egocentrism.
C)
self-concept.
D)
theory of mind.
134.Researchers have used mirror images to assess infants' development of
A)
infantile amnesia.
B)
self-awareness.
C)
egocentrism.
D)
basic trust.
135.Mrs. Carmichael secretly dabs some lipstick on the nose of her 2-year-old son and then
allows him to see his face in a mirror. The child is most likely to
A)
touch his own nose.
B)
touch the mirror at the point where the lipstick shows.
C)
wave at his mirror image as if it were another child.
D)
assimilate the lipstick mark into his existing self-concept.
136.Compared with others their own age, children who form a positive self-concept are more
likely to be
A)
obedient.
B)
egocentric.
C)
sociable.
D)
habituated.
137.Two characteristics of authoritarian parents are that they
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A)
B)
C)
D)
138.The McDougals use harsh discipline on their children and demand unquestioning
obedience. Psychologists are likely to characterize the McDougals as ________ parents.
A)
authoritarian
B)
egocentric
C)
permissive
D)
authoritative
139.Brad and Jane exercise very little control over their two young children, and they usually
allow them to do whatever they want. Psychologists would characterize Brad and Jane as
________ parents.
A)
authoritarian
B)
authoritative
C)
conventional
D)
permissive
A)
B)
C)
D)
140.Parents who are demanding and yet sensitively responsive to their children are said to be
authoritarian.
conservative.
permissive.
authoritative.
A)
B)
C)
D)
142.At age 12, Sean is happy, self-reliant, and has a positive self-image. It is most likely that
Sean's parents are
A)
permissive.
B)
conservative.
C)
authoritarian.
D)
authoritative.
143.Compared with authoritarian parents, authoritative parents are likely to be
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A)
B)
C)
D)
more conservative.
less educated.
more responsive.
less trusting.
144.If warmly supportive parents are especially likely to have children with high self-esteem,
this would most clearly indicate that
A)
authoritative parenting is more effective than authoritarian parenting.
B)
permissive parenting is more effective than authoritative parenting.
C)
children's self-esteem stimulates warmly supportive parenting.
D)
warmly supportive parenting and children's self-esteem are correlated.
A)
B)
C)
D)
146.The development stage of adolescence is likely to be most brief in cultures where teens
are
A)
egocentric.
B)
seldom married.
C)
experiencing role confusion.
D)
financially self-supporting.
147.People experience rapid physical development and sexual maturation during
A)
late adolescence.
B)
puberty.
C)
the preoperational stage.
D)
late childhood.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
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C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
152.Females who have experienced stress related to father absence, sexual abuse, or insecure
attachment experience ________ a few months earlier than average.
A)
infantile amnesia
B)
habituation
C)
egocentrism
D)
menarche
153.The first ejaculation is to an adolescent boy as ________ is to an adolescent girl.
A)
sexual intercourse
B)
puberty
C)
menarche
D)
secure attachment
A)
B)
C)
D)
155.Ten-year-old Heidi is maturing early and already towers over all the girls and most of the
boys in her fifth-grade class. Heidi is likely to be
A)
the most popular student in class.
B)
self-assured and independent.
C)
challenging her teacher's authority.
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D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
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C)
D)
formal operational
preoperational
A)
B)
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C)
D)
168.Mr. Lambers refuses to pay income taxes because his conscience will not allow him to
support a government that spends billions of dollars on military weapons. Mr. Lambers'
reasoning best illustrates Kohlberg's ________ stage.
A)
postconventional
B)
concrete operational
C)
preconventional
D)
conventional
169.Avoiding physical punishment is to ________ morality as respecting the laws of society
is to ________ morality.
A)
conventional; postconventional
B)
preconventional; postconventional
C)
conventional; preconventional
D)
preconventional; conventional
170.Critics have noted that Kohlberg's ________ level of moral reasoning is culturally
limited, appearing mostly among people who prize individualism.
A)
preconventional
B)
postconventional
C)
concrete operational
D)
conventional
171.Haidt's intuitionist perspective highlights the impact of automatic gut-level feelings on
A)
attachment.
B)
egocentrism.
C)
moral judgments.
D)
stranger anxiety.
A)
B)
C)
D)
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A)
B)
C)
D)
morality.
epigenetic
intuitionist
postconventional
concrete operational
174.Many people would find it more morally repulsive to kill someone by thrusting a knife
into his or her body than by shooting him or her with a gun from a distance. This is best
explained in terms of
A)
Erikson's psychosocial perspective.
B)
Harlow's attachment perspective.
C)
Haidt's intuitionist perspective.
D)
Kohlberg's moral development perspective.
175.The corrupt behavior of many ordinary people who served as Nazi concentration camp
guards best illustrates that immorality often results from
A)
social influence.
B)
the curse of knowledge.
C)
abnormal cognitive development.
D)
postconventional moral thinking.
176.Learning to delay gratification promotes
A)
maturation.
B)
imprinting.
C)
moral action.
D)
permissive parenting.
177.According to Erikson, trust is to infancy as identity is to
A)
infancy.
B)
childhood.
C)
adulthood.
D)
adolescence.
178.According to Erikson, achieving a sense of identity is the special task of the
A)
toddler.
B)
preschooler.
C)
elementary schoolchild.
D)
adolescent.
179.Erikson would have suggested that adolescents can most effectively develop a sense of
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A)
B)
C)
D)
identity by
seeking a lifelong romantic relationship.
severing the emotional ties between themselves and their childhood friends.
investigating the personal suitability of various occupational and social roles.
adopting whatever values and expectations their parents recommend.
180.Sixteen-year-old Brenda questions her parents' values but does not fully accept her
friends' standards either. Her confusion about what she really wants and values in life
suggests that Brenda is struggling with the problem of
A)
autonomy.
B)
identity.
C)
initiative.
D)
integrity.
A)
B)
C)
D)
181.According to Erikson, teens who suffer role confusion have not yet
experienced a sense of basic trust.
achieved a sense of autonomy.
strived for a sense of competence.
solidified a sense of identity.
182.An awareness of your distinctive status as an international student in a university far from
your homeland best illustrates a sense of
A)
stranger anxiety.
B)
postconventional morality.
C)
social identity.
D)
insecure attachment.
183.The we aspect of our self-concept that comes from our group membership is our
A)
theory of mind.
B)
basic trust.
C)
social identity.
D)
egocentrism.
184.Compared with their counterparts in more collectivist countries, 17-year-olds in North
America are more likely to experience
A)
infantile amnesia.
B)
a critical period.
C)
social identity.
D)
romantic relationships.
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185.Branden is so apathetic about his occupational future that within two years of his high
school graduation he had already been fired by four different employers. According to
Erikson, Branden best illustrates
A)
the curse of knowledge.
B)
preconventional morality.
C)
role confusion.
D)
egocentrism.
186.Which of the following best describes adolescent self-esteem?
A)
It rises through the early teen years and falls during the late teen years.
B)
It falls through the early teen years and rises during the late teen years.
C)
It rises through the early teen years and rises during the late teen years.
D)
It falls through the early teen years and falls during the late teen years.
187.Erikson suggested that the adolescent search for identity is followed by a developing
capacity for
A)
competence.
B)
intimacy.
C)
autonomy.
D)
trust.
188.Research indicates that the high school girls who have the most affectionate relationships
with their mothers also tend to
A)
have the most intimate relationships with girlfriends.
B)
have somewhat less intimate relationships with girlfriends.
C)
take longer than normal to establish their own independence and separate identity.
D)
have difficulty forming intimate relationships with boys.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
190.In teen calls to hotline counseling services, the most discussed topic is
parent-child conflict.
peer relationships.
secondary sex characteristics.
moral intuition.
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191.Persistent exclusion from peer social relationships is most likely to increase teens' risk for
A)
imprinting.
B)
egocentrism.
C)
depression.
D)
habituation.
192.Adolescents are most likely to be influenced by their parents with respect to ________,
and they are most likely to be influenced by their peers with respect to ________.
A)
language accents; college choices
B)
dating practices; religious faith
C)
bedtime preferences; political views
D)
career choices; clothing preferences
193.A rite of passage is most similar to a(n)
A)
critical period.
B)
preoperational stage.
C)
initiation ceremony.
D)
pruning process.
194.Which of the following is true of adolescence in contemporary industrialized societies, as
compared with previous centuries?
A)
It begins earlier in life and ends earlier in life.
B)
It begins later in life and ends earlier in life.
C)
It begins earlier in life and ends later in life.
D)
It begins later in life and ends later in life.
A)
B)
C)
D)
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A)
B)
C)
D)
198.As men advance through middle adulthood they experience a gradual decline in
A)
testosterone level.
B)
sperm count.
C)
ejaculation speed.
D)
all of these things.
A)
B)
C)
D)
199.Menopause refers to
the cessation of menstruation.
the loss of male sexual potency.
irregular timing of menstrual periods.
the loss of sexual interest in late adulthood.
200.African infants have had a greater chance of survival if they have a living maternal
grandmother who is without young children of her own. This fact has been used to
support an evolutionary explanation of
A)
conservation.
B)
habituation.
C)
stranger anxiety.
D)
menopause.
A)
B)
C)
D)
201.Between the middle of the last century and the early years of the current century
human birthrates have increased and life expectancy at birth has increased.
human birthrates have decreased and life expectancy at birth has decreased.
human birthrates have increased and life expectancy at birth has decreased.
human birthrates have decreased and life expectancy at birth has increased.
A)
B)
C)
D)
203.Aging cells may die without being replaced due to the shortening of
A)
critical periods.
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B)
C)
D)
teratogens.
schemas.
telomeres.
204.In one 15-year period, more Americans died on the two days after Christmas than on the
two days before Christmas. It has been suggested that this illustrates
A)
a death-deferral phenomenon.
B)
a critical period.
C)
terminal decline.
D)
habituation.
205.Lewis is a 70-year-old retired college professor. In contrast to when he was 30, he now
probably
A)
does not hear as well.
B)
is more susceptible to catching the flu.
C)
has significantly fewer neural connections.
D)
has all of these problems.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
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C)
D)
menarche.
memory.
A)
B)
C)
D)
214.A diminishing sense of smell is associated with the pathology that foretells
FAS.
pneumonia.
Alzheimer's disease.
autism spectrum disorder.
215.Researchers have detected unusually diffuse brain activity while people at risk for
________ are trying to memorize words.
A)
autism spectrum disorder
B)
fetal alcohol syndrome
C)
Alzheimer's disease
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D)
infantile amnesia
216.When asked to recall the one or two most important events over the last half century,
older adults tend to name events that occurred when they were between ________ years
of age.
A)
2 and 5
B)
5 and 10
C)
10 and 30
D)
30 and 50
217.When adults of varying ages were tested for their memory of a recently learned list of 24
words, the older adults demonstrated
A)
no decline in either recall or recognition.
B)
a decline in recognition but not in recall.
C)
a decline in recall but not in recognition.
D)
a decline in both recognition and recall.
218.On which of the following tasks is a 20-year-old most likely to outperform a 70-year-old?
A)
recalling previously presented nonsense syllables
B)
recognizing previously presented foreign language words
C)
recalling previously presented names of cities
D)
recognizing previously presented names of fruits and vegetables
219.Remembering to take your prescribed medications at a specific time of day best
illustrates
A)
the social clock.
B)
a critical period.
C)
prospective memory.
D)
a death-deferral phenomenon.
220.A cross-sectional study is one in which
A)
the same people are retested over a period of years.
B)
different age groups are tested at the same time.
C)
different characteristics of a given individual are assessed at the same time.
D)
the behavior of a group is assessed by different researchers.
221.Researchers studied the effects on exercise on the physical health of over 5000 residents
in one locale throughout their middle and late adulthood. The research best illustrates a
________ study.
A)
formal operational
Page 37
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
cross-sectional
concrete operational
longitudinal
222.The same people are retested over a long period in a ________ study.
concrete operational
longitudinal
postconventional
cross-sectional
223.Professor Kuilema compared the moral intuitions of one group of children, a second
group of adolescents, and a third group of adults by assessing their reactions to a variety
of moral dilemmas. Professor Kuilema conducted a ________ study.
A)
longitudinal
B)
postconventional
C)
cross-sectional
D)
concrete operational
224.The terminal decline phenomenon involves a decrease in mental ability that accompanies
the approach of
A)
menopause.
B)
retirement.
C)
death.
D)
any critical period.
225.Researchers have discovered that the midlife transition between early and middle
adulthood is characterized by unusually high levels of
A)
job dissatisfaction and career change.
B)
marital dissatisfaction and divorce.
C)
anxiety and emotional instability.
D)
none of these feelings or events.
226.People have been most likely to describe themselves as a sandwich generation during
their
A)
adolescence.
B)
early adulthood.
C)
middle adulthood.
D)
late adulthood.
227.The age at which people are expected to leave home, get a job, and marry has changed
Page 38
A)
B)
C)
D)
dramatically in Wallonia over the past 50 years. Developmentalists would say that the
country's ________ has been altered.
social clock
developmental norm
maturation cycle
family calendar
228.Professor Parker suggested that heterosexual adults are genetically predisposed to form
monogamous bonds because this practice facilitated the cooperative nurture and survival
of children. The professor's suggestion best illustrates a(n) ________ perspective.
A)
authoritarian
B)
postconventional
C)
psychosocial
D)
evolutionary
229.Marie feels socially useful in her career as a financial investment advisor. Erik Erikson
would have suggested that Marie experiences a sense of
A)
secure attachment.
B)
conventional morality.
C)
generativity.
D)
conservation.
A)
B)
C)
D)
230.Compared with their counterparts of 40 years ago, American men today are marrying
at a younger age and American women are marrying at an older age.
at an older age and American women are marrying at a younger age.
at an older age and American women are marrying at an older age.
at a younger age and American women are marrying at a younger age.
231.After living together for a year, Sylvia and Yefim have decided to marry. Research on
premarital cohabitation most strongly suggests that
A)
they have more positive attitudes toward the institution of marriage than the average
couple.
B)
their marriage will have a higher-than-average probability of being successful.
C)
most of their college friends and acquaintances have viewed their cohabitation
negatively.
D)
their marriage will have a higher-than-average probability of ending in divorce.
232.The best predictor of a couple's marital satisfaction is the
A)
frequency of their sexual intimacy.
B)
intensity of their passionate feelings.
C)
ratio of their positive to negative interactions with each other.
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D)
233.Among employed women, the task of raising children is especially likely to be associated
with ________ marital satisfaction. The departure of mature children from the home is
typically associated with ________ marital satisfaction.
A)
increasing; decreasing
B)
decreasing; increasing
C)
increasing; further increasing
D)
decreasing; further decreasing
A)
B)
C)
D)
234.When children grow up and leave home, mothers most frequently report feeling
depressed.
bored.
happy.
anxious.
A)
B)
C)
D)
A)
B)
C)
D)
236.There is very little relationship between the age of an adult and his or her
risk of neurocognitive disorder.
ability to recall meaningless information.
level of life satisfaction.
susceptibility to accidental physical injury.
237.As people progress into late adulthood, they increasingly use words that convey
________ emotions, and the amygdala shows diminishing activity in response to
________ events.
A)
negative; negative
B)
positive; positive
C)
negative; positive
D)
positive; negative
238.Compared with middle-aged adults, older adults experience
A)
positive emotions with less intensity and negative emotions with more intensity.
B)
positive emotions with more intensity and negative emotions with less intensity.
C)
positive emotions with less intensity and negative emotions with less intensity.
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D)
positive emotions with more intensity and negative emotions with more intensity.
239.Compared with when she was an adolescent, elderly Mrs. Packer is likely to experience a
sad mood with
A)
less intensity and for a longer time.
B)
more intensity and for a shorter time.
C)
less intensity and for a shorter time.
D)
more intensity and for a longer time.
240.An integrated understanding of successful aging in terms of appropriate nutrition, family
support, and an optimistic outlook is most clearly provided by
A)
a cross-sectional study.
B)
an intuitionist perspective.
C)
a biopsychosocial approach.
D)
Piaget's cognitive development theory.
241.During the time following the death of a loved one
those who express the strongest grief immediately do not purge their grief more
quickly.
B)
those who talk frequently with others are unusually likely to prolong their own
feelings of depression.
C)
grieving men are at less risk for ill health than are grieving women.
D)
both men and women go through predictable stages of denial followed by anger.
A)
242.Older adults who feel satisfied when reflecting on their lives demonstrate what Erikson
called a sense of
A)
attachment.
B)
maturity.
C)
integrity.
D)
resilience.
A)
B)
C)
D)
244.Abner, a 70-year-old retired teacher, feels that his life has not been of any real value or
significance. According to Erikson, Abner has failed to achieve a sense of
A)
basic trust.
Page 41
B)
C)
D)
intimacy.
autonomy.
integrity.
Page 42
Answer Key
1.D
2.B
3.B
4.C
5.C
6.B
7.A
8.A
9.B
10.B
11.C
12.A
13.C
14.C
15.C
16.A
17.B
18.C
19.B
20.D
21.A
22.D
23.D
24.D
25.D
26.B
27.C
28.C
29.C
30.D
31.B
32.C
33.B
34.D
35.B
36.C
37.B
38.B
39.A
40.C
41.D
42.C
43.B
44.B
Page 43
45.C
46.D
47.C
48.D
49.B
50.B
51.B
52.C
53.C
54.B
55.A
56.D
57.D
58.C
59.C
60.C
61.C
62.A
63.A
64.A
65.B
66.C
67.C
68.D
69.B
70.D
71.C
72.C
73.B
74.B
75.B
76.A
77.C
78.D
79.D
80.D
81.C
82.D
83.C
84.D
85.C
86.C
87.D
88.B
89.A
90.B
Page 44
91.B
92.D
93.C
94.C
95.D
96.C
97.A
98.B
99.B
100.D
101.D
102.A
103.C
104.A
105.C
106.C
107.B
108.C
109.D
110.B
111.B
112.B
113.B
114.D
115.B
116.D
117.A
118.C
119.A
120.D
121.D
122.B
123.B
124.A
125.B
126.C
127.B
128.D
129.D
130.C
131.A
132.D
133.C
134.B
135.A
136.C
Page 45
137.C
138.A
139.D
140.D
141.B
142.D
143.C
144.D
145.C
146.D
147.B
148.A
149.B
150.B
151.B
152.D
153.C
154.C
155.D
156.A
157.D
158.D
159.D
160.A
161.C
162.C
163.C
164.B
165.C
166.A
167.B
168.A
169.D
170.A
171.C
172.C
173.B
174.C
175.A
176.C
177.D
178.D
179.C
180.B
181.D
182.C
Page 46
183.C
184.C
185.C
186.B
187.B
188.A
189.C
190.B
191.C
192.D
193.C
194.C
195.B
196.C
197.B
198.D
199.A
200.D
201.D
202.A
203.D
204.A
205.A
206.C
207.D
208.B
209.D
210.C
211.C
212.D
213.C
214.C
215.C
216.C
217.C
218.A
219.C
220.B
221.D
222.B
223.C
224.C
225.D
226.C
227.A
228.D
Page 47
229.C
230.C
231.D
232.C
233.B
234.C
235.B
236.C
237.D
238.C
239.A
240.C
241.A
242.C
243.A
244.D
Page 48