Anthony Isaac
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Quiz on Cognition: Exam 2 Quiz Questions, created by Anthony Isaac on 05/11/2016.

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Cognition: Exam 2 Quiz Questions

Question 1 of 84

1

Which word is not processed by the letter-to-sound pathway?

Select one of the following:

  • hush

  • bush

  • crush

  • brush

  • blush

Explanation

Question 2 of 84

1

Which spelling error is least likely to be detected?

Select one of the following:

  • Selter

  • Siller

  • Farn

  • Saller

  • Firn

Explanation

Question 3 of 84

1

The reason that the same set of ambiguous strokes is read "B" in one context and "13" in another context without awareness of the ambiguity is

Select one of the following:

  • making an interpretation in one context makes it difficult to make the same interpretation in another context

  • the structural description of the stroke pattern is different each time it is encountered

  • it is not possible to perceive both interpretations of an ambiguous visual pattern

  • letters are more salient for some people and numbers are more salient for other people

  • the context primes only one structural description

Explanation

Question 4 of 84

1

Priming may occur between

Select one of the following:

  • Two words similar in meaning that occur close together in time

  • Two words with the same initial consonant cluster that occur in the same context

  • Any two words that occur close together in time

  • Any two words that are spoken in the same voice

  • Any two words that are spoken in the same context

Explanation

Question 5 of 84

1

A human adaptation for language is

Select one of the following:

  • The location of the voice box

  • The speech processing area in the left temporal lobe

  • The speech production area in the left frontal lobe

  • The logogens for word recognition

  • All of the above

Explanation

Question 6 of 84

1

Animals that have a specialized area in the left hemisphere controlling vocalization include

Select one of the following:

  • some songbirds

  • other primates besides humans

  • other great apes besides human

  • some songbirds and primates (other than humans)

  • bonobo chimpanzees

Explanation

Question 7 of 84

1

The phonemic restoration effect occurs when the missing phoneme is:

Select one of the following:

  • part of a meaningful utterance

  • is replaced with noise

  • is part of a word

  • all of the above

  • none of the above

Explanation

Question 8 of 84

1

When a speech segment matches more than one syllable representation, one is selected if

Select one of the following:

  • it can be combined with prior and subsequent representations matching other segments to form a word

  • it forms part of a word that can be combined with prior and subsequent words to form a grammatical sequence

  • it forms part of a grammatical sequence that can be combined with prior sequences to form a meaningful phrase

  • it forms part of a meaningful phrase that can be combined with subsequent phrases to form a meaningful utterance.

  • all of the above

Explanation

Question 9 of 84

1

"Because of the hold, they later went for two" is difficult to understand because

Select one of the following:

  • ungrammatical

  • terse

  • it is syntactically complex

  • it lacks context

  • deictic.

Explanation

Question 10 of 84

1

In aphasia, one language function that is always impaired is

Select one of the following:

  • vocal volume

  • spoken and written sentence comprehension

  • spoken intonation

  • auditory threshold

  • pitch discrimination.

Explanation

Question 11 of 84

1

In the mobile recognition paradigm, the infant is connected to the mobile during

Select one of the following:

  • baseline

  • training

  • test

  • all of the above

  • none of the above

Explanation

Question 12 of 84

1

One factor that influences retention of the memory of a mobile or train that an infant has learned to move is

Select one of the following:

  • The age of the infant

  • The attractiveness of the study object

  • The communication skills of the infant

  • The time of day of the training session.

  • The sex of the infant

Explanation

Question 13 of 84

1

After two days of training, a 3-month-old infant trained to kick to move the training mobile will:

Select one of the following:

  • kick to any hanging object

  • kick to only the training mobile

  • kick to any swinging object

  • kick to move any similar mobile

  • kick to move any mobile

Explanation

Question 14 of 84

1

In which condition is the 3-month-old infant most likely to kick to a mobile during test

Select one of the following:

  • Training with mobile A on days 1 and 3, testing with mobile A on day 9

  • Training with mobile A on days 1 and 3, testing with mobile B on day 9

  • Training with mobile A on day 1 and testing with mobile A on day 5

  • Training with mobile A on day 1 and mobile B on day 2, testing with mobile 1 on day 9

  • Training with mobile A on days 1 and 2, testing with mobile A on day 14

Explanation

Question 15 of 84

1

When a more memorable event immediately occurs after a less memorable event:

Select one of the following:

  • The infant incorporates features of the more memorable event into the less memorable event, creating a false memory.

  • Retention of the more memorable event is somewhat reduced by association with the less memorable event

  • Retention of the each event is independent of the other

  • The infant forgets the less memorable event

  • The infant associates them and remembers the otherwise less memorable event longer

Explanation

Question 16 of 84

1

When an infant is reminded by being shown the target of an action

Select one of the following:

  • The older the infant, the longer the interval between the presentation of the target and the retrieval of the action.

  • The retention interval for the reminder is nearly as long as for the original training

  • At less than six months of age, the reminder is not yet effective

  • At greater than six months of age, the reminder is not yet effective

  • The mobile and train, but not the puppet, are effective reminders

Explanation

Question 17 of 84

1

English is an unusual language in the relationship of its printed to spoken forms. Most languages have regular spelling rules and only require the letter-to-sound pathway to read. However, because English is an amalgam of Anglo-Saxon and French, its spelling rules are irregular. Which word is not processed by the letter-to-sound pathway?

Select one of the following:

  • come

  • home

  • dome

  • rome

  • none of the above

Explanation

Question 18 of 84

1

Evidence that pronunciation of a word is automatically generated when it is seen comes from the fact that misspelled words that are homonyms of correctly spelled words take longer to detect. Which spelling error takes longest to be detected?

Select one of the following:

  • Navion

  • Nasion

  • Netion

  • Nution

  • Nition

Explanation

Question 19 of 84

1

Over a century ago, Cattell discovered semantic priming while measuring the threshold for word recognition. Cow will be read fastest when preceded by

Select one of the following:

  • apple

  • bird

  • snake

  • mammal

  • bug

Explanation

Question 20 of 84

1

The effect of context on the processing of ambiguous targets plays an important role on keeping people oriented to the task at hand. An ambiguous drawing of a rat or a face is seen as a rat in the context of other animals because

Select one of the following:

  • the animal context results in more superficial processing

  • other animals share more of the form features of the drawing

  • the other animals semantically prime the rat structural description

  • other animals induce a whole body rather than a facial interpretation of the drawing

  • it is not possible to construct a facial spatial description in the context of animals

Explanation

Question 21 of 84

1

What is true about early language learning?

Select one of the following:

  • Cooing consists of stop consonants, like /t/ and /d/

  • Babbling consists only of the sounds of the language the infant hears

  • Babbling begins with consonant-vowel-consonant combinations containing stop consonants, like /t/ and /d/

  • Babbling begins with random sequences like tadedoti.

  • Adult speech to infants often contains many simple consonants, like /m/, /b/, and /p/

Explanation

Question 22 of 84

1

The first aspect of language that an infant detects is:

Select one of the following:

  • The most common phoneme

  • The most common word

  • Its stress pattern

  • Its fundamental pitch

  • None of the above

Explanation

Question 23 of 84

1

Using words like camed and comed is a symptom of

Select one of the following:

  • autism

  • normal language learning

  • agrammatism

  • deep dyslexia

  • specific language impairment

Explanation

Question 24 of 84

1

Autistic children have impaired language development as the result of

Select one of the following:

  • poor hearing

  • poor speech and hearing

  • impaired social relations

  • attention deficit disorder

  • poor motor control

Explanation

Question 25 of 84

1

One measure that predicts subsequent vocabulary growth for 4-year-olds is

Select one of the following:

  • word recognition

  • question comprehension

  • nonword repetition

  • word recall

  • word repitition

Explanation

Question 26 of 84

1

A vocabulary surge occurs at

Select one of the following:

  • 26 months

  • 10 months

  • 18 months

  • 22 months

  • 14 months

Explanation

Question 27 of 84

1

Over three million years ago, the human diverged from the line that produced chimpanzees and bonobos. Since then, humans have undergone several evolutionary changes that collectively have made human language possible. A human adaptation for language is:

Select one of the following:

  • the bilateral speech production areas in the left and right frontal lobes

  • the speech processing area in the left inferior colliculus

  • the speech processing area in the left parietal lobe

  • the location of the voice box

  • the shape of the auditory canal

Explanation

Question 28 of 84

1

For a long part of their history, professionals in the fields of speech science and linguistics were trained to hear and record accurately precisely the sounds that a speaker produced. However, this proved to be impossible. Since communication is the goal of speech, when a predictable speech sound is missing from the speech input, the brain of the listener just fills it in. The phonemic restoration effect occurs when the missing phoneme is:

Select one of the following:

  • replaced by silence

  • part of a nonspeech sound

  • Part of a word in a sentence

  • part of a nonsense word

  • does not change the meaning of the word

Explanation

Question 29 of 84

1

In conversation, understanding of the speaker's knowledge allows the speaker to leave some things unsaid. This is what makes text messaging possible. At some point in the future your own text messages will be incomprehensible to you. The reason that you don’t understand “College was impossible because he couldn't wait,” is

Select one of the following:

  • the syntax is too difficult

  • you lack the necessary contextual information

  • it is a novel sentence

  • it is ambiguous

  • it is a “garden path” sentence

Explanation

Question 30 of 84

1

Most cognitive functions are performed in equally by both hemispheres in all animals. There is one exception. The left hemisphere is specialized for vocalization in:

Select one of the following:

  • humans and chimpanzees

  • humans and orangutans

  • humans and monkeys

  • humans only

  • All great apes

Explanation

Question 31 of 84

1

Contrary to our intuitions, we do not hear speech as it is spoken, word for word, but at the end of each phrase, after a brief delay. The sound a small segment of a sentence is heard as may be influenced by

Select one of the following:

  • only the sound immediately before it

  • only the sounds immediately before and after it

  • only the sounds and meanings of the words before it

  • only the sounds before it and the meaning of the word it is part of

  • the sounds and meanings of the words before and after it

Explanation

Question 32 of 84

1

Family members may over-estimate an aphasic patient's language comprehension because the patient is able to understand non-linguistic cues. In aphasia, which ability may be normal?

Select one of the following:

  • Reading aloud

  • Reading silently

  • Writing to dictation

  • Writing requests and commands

  • Copying a line drawing

Explanation

Question 33 of 84

1

An example of a basic level category is:

Select one of the following:

  • Oak Tree

  • Hedge

  • Liquid

  • Tree

  • Plant

Explanation

Question 34 of 84

1

A typical category member of a perceptually-defined category

Select one of the following:

  • does not have any defining category features

  • looks like a lot of other category members

  • Is common

  • is present in many locales

  • has at least one unique feature

Explanation

Question 35 of 84

1

A four-year old sees John hide a candy in the blue box and Sam move it to the red box when John is away. When asked, the child will answer that when he returns ___ will look for the candy in ___ box.

Select one of the following:

  • John; the red

  • John; the blue

  • Sam; the blue

  • Sam; either

  • John; Sam’s box

Explanation

Question 36 of 84

1

When the category learning of humans versus rhesus monkeys was compared:

Select one of the following:

  • humans were superior for verbal categories

  • after practice there was a sharp increase in performance for humans

  • humans showed the most improvement for the most complex categories

  • there was no difference for visual categories

  • both species made use of verbal rules

Explanation

Question 37 of 84

1

Infants both learn through their own actions and by observing the actions of others. Immediately after viewing one puppet pull the glove off of another, an infant discovers that by banging a large spoon on the tray on his high chair, he can make a loud banging sound, which he loves.

Select one of the following:

  • The infant will immediately forgot the puppet show.

  • The puppet will become a cue for the banging action and increase retention of it.

  • The spoon will become a cue for the puppet show but will not increase the retention interval for it.

  • This will have no effect on memory of the puppet show.

  • The spoon will become a cue for the puppet show and increase the retention interval for it.

Explanation

Question 38 of 84

1

An infant does not always have to repeat an action to increase the retention interval over which its result is remembered. When an infant is shown a reminder of an action:

Select one of the following:

  • the older the infant, the longer the interval before the action is retrieved

  • the puppet and train, but not the mobile, are effective reminders

  • he mobile and train, but not the puppet, are effective reminders

  • only the mobile is an effective reminder, but not the train or puppet

  • the retention interval for the reminder is nearly as long as for the original training

Explanation

Question 39 of 84

1

A single training session, a three-month-old infant forgets the training mobile in five days. So, a second training session is required for longer retention. Which 3-month-old infant was most likely to kick to mobile A on day 9?

Select one of the following:

  • Ed was trained on mobile A on day 1 and on day 2

  • Cal was trained on mobile A on day 1 and mobile B on day 6

  • Al was trained on mobile A on day 1 and day 3

  • Bob was trained on mobile A on day 1 and mobile B on day 8

  • Don was trained on mobile A on day 1 and mobile B on day 3

Explanation

Question 40 of 84

1

The factors that determine retention of the memory of an event for infants are the same as for adults. After learning to kick to move a training mobile, whether an infant kicks to move a test mobile is a function of:

Select one of the following:

  • the similarity between the training and test mobile

  • the similarity between the training and test crib liner

  • the similarity between the training and test crib

  • all of the above

  • none of the above

Explanation

Question 41 of 84

1

The best way to learn a phone number is

Select one of the following:

  • count to seven after you hear the phone number, then repeat it

  • repeat each digit as it is heard

  • repeat the entire string in reverse order as each digit is heard

  • repeat the entire phone number immediately after hearing the last digit

  • generate a visual image of each digit, as it is heard

Explanation

Question 42 of 84

1

The first time you heard your 9-digit student number and tried to write it down, which digits were you most likely to get wrong?

Select one of the following:

  • You would not get any wrong.

  • The last three.

  • There was an equal probability of getting each digit wrong.

  • The first three

  • The middle three

Explanation

Question 43 of 84

1

In an immediate recall task, increasing the speed of item presentation should have which effect?

Select one of the following:

  • Decreased distributed rehearsal of the middle of the study list.

  • Increased distributed rehearsal of the beginning of the study list.

  • Increased distributed rehearsal of the middle of the study list.

  • Decreased distributed rehearsal of the beginning of the study list

  • Decreased distributed rehearsal of the end of the study list.

Explanation

Question 44 of 84

1

Which name on this list would be most memorable because of the Von Restorff Effect to someone unfamiliar with college football: Wisconsin, Nebraska, Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, Purdue, Ohio, Maryland.

Select one of the following:

  • Maryland

  • Wisconsin

  • Nebraska

  • Purdue

  • Illinois

Explanation

Question 45 of 84

1

Infant vocalization of speech sounds begins with cooing and babbling. What is true about early language learning?

Select one of the following:

  • Cooing consists only of the sounds of the language the infant hears.

  • Babbling consists of the simple sounds of all languages.

  • Babbling begins with consonant-vowel-consonant combinations containing stop consonants, like /t/ and /d/

  • Babbling begins with reduplications like mama and papa.

  • Adult speech to infants often contains many simple consonants, like /m/, /b/, and /p/

Explanation

Question 46 of 84

1

Each spoken language has one of three different stress patterns. Infants detect the stress pattern of the language spoken to them

Select one of the following:

  • As the first step towards segmenting the speech stream into words

  • As soon as they can pronounce a few words

  • as soon as they detect the fundamental pitch of the language

  • as soon as they detect the most frequent phonemes

  • as soon as they detect the most frequent words

Explanation

Question 47 of 84

1

The ability of a mother and child to focus on each other and an object at the same time is crucial to learning the names of things. There are several toys on the floor between the mother child. Which toy is the mother most likely to name?

Select one of the following:

  • the most colorful

  • the one closest to the child

  • the novel one

  • the most familiar

  • the largest

Explanation

Question 48 of 84

1

Over-generalization is characteristic of normal speech development and not a symptom of a disability. Because they generalize inflections across similar words, children sometimes say

Select one of the following:

  • goed

  • mealed

  • songed

  • dirted

  • speeched

Explanation

Question 49 of 84

1

Autism often emerges when an apparently normal infant begins to regress. Autistic children have

Select one of the following:

  • impaired social relations with all other people. The distinct behavioral characteristics ... include an inability to develop normal relations with people

  • poor object recognition

  • poor hearing

  • telegraphic speech

  • excellent singing ability

Explanation

Question 50 of 84

1

Four-year-old children must learn new words every day in order to have a vocabulary of sufficient size to learn sentence structure. An indication that a 4-year-old can encode the sounds of new words and hence is capable of rapid vocabulary growth is

Select one of the following:

  • good word recall

  • good word recognition

  • good question comprehension

  • good nonword repetition

  • good word repetition

Explanation

Question 51 of 84

1

You decide to learn the functions of various body parts by creating linking sentences that contain the name of each part and its function. Who can provide you with the most effective linking sentences for this task?

Select one of the following:

  • The course instructor

  • Yourself

  • An experimental psychologist studying learning

  • A clinical psychologist specializing in learning strategies

  • A professional mnemonist

Explanation

Question 52 of 84

1

Which list is easiest to learn?

Select one of the following:

  • Dog fox wolf tiger leopard puma moose antelope elk

  • Dog tiger moose fox leopard antelope wolf puma elk

  • Antelope dog elk fox leopard moose puma tiger wolf

  • Fox elk dog puma wolf moose tiger leopard antelope

  • all of the above are equally difficult because they have the same words

Explanation

Question 53 of 84

1

Which college team name is most memorable?

Select one of the following:

  • Chanticleer

  • Hokie

  • Crimson

  • Hoya

  • Tiger

Explanation

Question 54 of 84

1

Below are three items from a 15-item word list containing similar items. Which list will be best recalled?

Select one of the following:

  • All lists were be learned equally well.

  • happy, brave, nice, ... when using visual imagery to learn the list

  • dog, rock, wrench, ... when using verbal rehearsal to learn the list

  • happy, brave, nice, ... when using verbal rehearsal to learn the list

  • dog, rock, wrench, ... when using visual imagery to learn the list

Explanation

Question 55 of 84

1

What is true about learning high imagery words and nameable pictures?

Select one of the following:

  • Naming pictures results in better memory for them than mentally imaging them

  • Naming words results in better memory for them than mentally imaging their referents

  • Pictures of objects and the words that name them are always remembered equally well

  • Words with imageable words are always remembered better than pictures

  • Both pictures and words are always better remembered when named than as the result of making mental images of them

Explanation

Question 56 of 84

1

In order to immediately encode large amounts of information, a mnemonist must:

Select one of the following:

  • have a large hippocampus

  • have a large striatum

  • an active amygdala

  • have a large frontal cortex

  • become practiced at using a mnemonic to encode the study material

Explanation

Question 57 of 84

1

Humans and rhesus monkeys sorted colored shapes into one of two artificial categories and were given feedback in order to learn them. When the category learning of humans versus rhesus monkeys was compared:

Select one of the following:

  • Humans were only superior to monkeys when the categories were verbally described by the experimenter

  • Both species made use of verbal rules regardless of how the categories were defined.

  • Humans showed the most improvement for the most complex categories

  • After an initial period of gradual improvement with practice, there was a sharp increase in performance for humans indicating that the human had a inferred a verbal rule describing the category.

  • There was no difference in performance because these were visual categories.

Explanation

Question 58 of 84

1

An example of a basic level category is

Select one of the following:

  • salmon

  • tuna

  • seafood

  • dolphin

  • fish

Explanation

Question 59 of 84

1

When an instance shares many features with most other category members, the instance is perceived as

Select one of the following:

  • distinctive

  • mundane

  • atypical

  • typical

  • familiar

Explanation

Question 60 of 84

1

A four-year old sees Mary hide a candy in the blue box and Sally move it to the red box when Mary is away. When asked, the child will answer that when she returns ___ will look for the candy in ___ box.

Select one of the following:

  • Mary; the red

  • Mary; the blue

  • Sally; the blue

  • Sally; either

  • Mary; Sally’s box

Explanation

Question 61 of 84

1

In the mobile recognition paradigm the infant is connected to the mobile during

Select one of the following:

  • Baseline

  • Test

  • Baseline and test

  • The retention interval

  • None of the above

Explanation

Question 62 of 84

1

The retention interval over which an infant remembers a mobile or train she can move is influenced by

Select one of the following:

  • The age of the infant

  • The training environment

  • Attractiveness of the mobile or train

  • The pointing skill of the infant

  • The verbal ability of the infant

Explanation

Question 63 of 84

1

As the result of the Von Restorff Effect, which name on the list Jami, Kerri, Loni, Meg, Randi, Tami, Toni, would be most memorable:

Select one of the following:

  • Randi, Tami and Toni, equally

  • Toni

  • Kerri

  • Meg

  • Jami

Explanation

Question 64 of 84

1

here have always been books with tips on how to remember things, written by individuals from a variety of backgrounds. One was co-written by Jerry Lucas, an all-star professional basketball player and notable mnemonist. One way to remember pairs of words is to create linking sentences for them. Who should you consult for the best linking sentences?

Select one of the following:

  • any fellow student

  • a psychology major

  • the wittiest person you know

  • an English major

  • no one

Explanation

Question 65 of 84

1

Which list is easiest to learn?

Select one of the following:

  • hammer, wrench, pliers, pencil, pen, paper, fork, spoon, knife

  • since all the lists contain the same words they would be equally easy to learn

  • hammer, pencil, fork, wrench, pen, spoon, pliers, paper, knife

  • pen, fork, knife, paper, spoon, hammer, pencil, pliers, wrench

  • fork, hammer, knife, paper, pen, pencil, pliers, spoon, wrench

Explanation

Question 66 of 84

1

Movie titles may be copyrighted, so that no one else can use the same title without permission. The movie "Lee Daniels' The Butler," was given this odd title to avoid infringing on the copyright of a 90 year old silent film called "The Butler." One characteristic that makes a title useful, hence valuable, is that it is easy to remember. Which movie title would be most memorable?

Select one of the following:

  • 193MJW

  • Jersey Drive

  • Car-Jacking in Newark

  • Glizzle

  • Evil Speed

Explanation

Question 67 of 84

1

Both high imagery words and nameable pictures are easy to remember, especially if the most appropriate study strategy is used. What is true about learning high imagery words and nameable pictures?

Select one of the following:

  • Imaging their referents results in better memory for words than naming them

  • Pictures of objects and the words that name them are always remembered equally well

  • Words with imageable referents are always remembered better than pictures

  • an imagery task results in better memory for pictures than naming them

  • Naming words results in better memory for them than mentally imaging their referents

Explanation

Question 68 of 84

1

Sequence learning is difficult. When a sequence has more than nine items, thus exceeding the immediate memory span of most individuals, an error on the first repetition attempt is likely. Suppose that you read through your 16-digit credit card number once in preparation for typing it into a website. The digits in which positions are you must likely to get wrong?

Select one of the following:

  • First

  • 4th through 12th

  • Fourteenth or Fifteenth

  • Second

  • Sixteenth

Explanation

Question 69 of 84

1

Psychologists were studying verbal learning for 60 years before they appreciated how important the characteristics of the words and the strategies of the students were in determining how much was remembered. Below are three items from a 15-item word list containing similar items. Which list will be best recalled?

Select one of the following:

  • Cat, gem, saw, ... when using verbal rehearsal to learn the list

  • Vague, well, odd, ... when using verbal rehearsal to learn the list

  • Vague, well, odd, ... when using visual imagery to learn the list

  • All lists were be learned equally well.

  • Cat, gem, saw, ... when using visual imagery to learn the list

Explanation

Question 70 of 84

1

Some mnemonists are only good at remembering a specific kind of study material while the skills of other mnemonists are more general. A mnemonist's ability is based on part upon

Select one of the following:

  • an enlarged hippocampus

  • hyper-emotionality

  • a highly practiced mnemonic

  • autistic obsession with repetition

  • compensation for a deficit in some other cognitive ability

Explanation

Question 71 of 84

1

Early in the history of experimental psychology it was found that merely hearing something repeatedly was insufficient to learn it. Though a psychologist read the same passage to his young son every day, the son was not able to repeat it accurately. It is the habit system that makes possible the learning of a sequence, has of phone numbers, passwords, etc. The best way to learn a password is

Select one of the following:

  • have someone say it to you one character at a time and repeat each character as it is heard

  • have someone say it to you one character at a time and visualize each character as it is heard

  • count to seven after you hear it and then repeat it

  • repeat the entire sequence in reverse order as soon as you hear it

  • repeat the entire sequence as soon as you hear it

Explanation

Question 72 of 84

1

When the presentation rate of text is increased past normal speaking rate and even normal reading rate, comprehension remains good. However, there is an effect an learning. In an immediate recall task, decreasing the speed of item presentation should least affect which portion of the recall function?

Select one of the following:

  • Central Portion

  • Central Portion and Recency

  • Primacy and Recency

  • Primacy

  • Recency

Explanation

Question 73 of 84

1

Which spelling error is most likely to be detected?

Select one of the following:

  • Wark

  • Werk

  • Soller

  • Wurk

  • Wirk

Explanation

Question 74 of 84

1

Because language is processed in phrases, the perception of an ambiguous speech sound is influenced by:

Select one of the following:

  • Sounds before it and after it

  • The meanings of words before it

  • The meaning of words after it

  • None of the above

  • All of the above

Explanation

Question 75 of 84

1

A symptom of aphasia is an impairment in understanding:

Select one of the following:

  • Either spoken or written language, depending on the type

  • Written words and sentences

  • Spoken words only

  • Sentences while still understanding words

  • Both spoken and written language

Explanation

Question 76 of 84

1

The phonemic restoration effect occurs when the missing phoneme is:

Select one of the following:

  • Part of a meaningless utterance

  • Replaced with silence

  • All of the above

  • None of the above

  • Part of a word

Explanation

Question 77 of 84

1

Tulip is read fastest if preceded by:

Select one of the following:

  • Apple

  • Tree

  • Flower

  • Plant

  • Corn

Explanation

Question 78 of 84

1

The fireworks exploded as the scarecrow burned, is difficult to understand because

Select one of the following:

  • Lacks a causative verb

  • Lacks a clear reference

  • Is telegraphic

  • Has unusual vocabulary

  • Lacks contextual information

Explanation

Question 79 of 84

1

The left hemisphere is specialized for vocalization in:

Select one of the following:

  • Some songbirds

  • Mammals

  • All songbirds

  • Birds

  • Animals

Explanation

Question 80 of 84

1

Which word is not pronounced through the letter-to-sound pathway:

Select one of the following:

  • Slave

  • Save

  • Pave

  • All words are pronounced through the letter-to-sound pathway

  • Have

Explanation

Question 81 of 84

1

A symptom of aphasia is an impairment in understanding:

Select one of the following:

  • Both spoken and written language

  • Either spoken or written language, depending on the type

  • Spoken language only

  • Written words and sentences

  • Sentences while still understanding words

Explanation

Question 82 of 84

1

Because language is processed in phrases, the perception of an ambiguous speech sound is influenced by:

Select one of the following:

  • Sounds before it and after it

  • The meanings of words before it

  • The meaning of words after it

  • All of the above

  • None of the above

Explanation

Question 83 of 84

1

To determine whether the infant remembers that she could move the mobile, her foot is not connected to the mobile during:

Select one of the following:

  • Baseline, to provide a pre-training measure of performance

  • Training, to determine the effect of training

  • Test, to provide a post-training measure of performance

  • Only after the experiment is completed.

  • Both baseline, to provide a pre-training measure of performance, and test, to provide a post-training measure

Explanation

Question 84 of 84

1

One factor that influences retention of the memory of a mobile that an infant has learned to move is:

Select one of the following:

  • The age of the infant

  • The length of the training sessions

  • The distributions of the training sessions

  • All of the above

  • None of the above

Explanation