Deck 8: Motivation, Emotions, and Sexual Behaviors: an Overview

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Question
Shortcomings of instinct approaches to motivation include which of the following?

A) Humans don't appear to have any true instincts.
B) Human behaviours are far more complex than those of other organisms.
C) both of these options
D) neither of these options
Use Space or
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Question
Basic drives that are related to biological needs of the body or of the species as a whole are called__________ drives.

A) biological
B) psychological
C) primary
D) secondary
Question
Basic drives in which behaviour fulfills no obvious biological needs are called __________ drives.

A) motivational
B) psychological
C) primary
D) secondary
Question
Each of the following is a primary drive except

A) hunger.
B) thirst.
C) avoidance of pain.
D) desire to be competent.
Question
Which of the following is the best example of drive based behaviour?

A) Sky-diving.
B) Working long hours because of how much you love your job.
C) Putting on a sweater when you are cold.
D) Solving a crossword puzzle.
Question
Why do drive-reduction approaches fail to offer a complete account of human motivation?

A) Prior experience and learning are not considered.
B) The difference between primary and secondary drives is not well defined.
C) People are sometimes motivated to increase rather than to decrease their level of stimulation.
D) All of these are failures of drive-reduction theory.
Question
Which of the following statements BEST expresses the relationship between drives and incentives in the explanation of human behaviour?

A) Drives and incentives each tend to explain quite different types of behaviours.
B) Drives and incentives tend to work in opposing directions when it comes to motivation.
C) Drives and incentives are really the same thing.
D) Drives and incentives are likely to both contribute to the explanation of a given behaviour.
Question
According to Maslow, the needs that must be met before all other needs are

A) safety.
B) physiological.
C) self-esteem.
D) self-actualization.
Question
A person seeking a sense of self-worth is at which level in Maslow's hierarchy?

A) physiological
B) self-actualization
C) esteem
D) safety
Question
Which of the following are limitations to Maslow's theory of needs?

A) Research has not validated the order of the needs proposed in the hierarchy.
B) It is difficult to measure self-actualization objectively.
C) both of these options are correct
D) neither of these options are correct
Question
Why are there so many different approaches to motivation?

A) A large number of approaches is required to sufficiently confuse students new to psychology.
B) Different approaches are needed to explain different behaviours.
C) Even common behaviours such as eating may be motivated by many different factors.
D) Because it is important to have explanations that cover both natural instincts and social drives.
Question
Which figure best approximates the number of people with anorexia who literally starve themselves to death?

A) 1%
B) 10%
C) 25%
D) 45%
Question
The Body Mass Index (BMI) is a measure of:

A) obesity
B) weight-to-height ratio
C) weight as a function of height
D) All of these
Question
Which of the following is an accepted operational definition of obesity?

A) BMI>5
B) BMI > 10
C) BMI > 20
D) BMI > 30
Question
Your text points out that other species rarely become obese. This fact

A) suggests that some people are born without a lateral hypothalamus.
B) does not support theories of human obesity emphasizing the social and cultural roots of the phenomenon.
C) supports theories of human obesity emphasizing the social and cultural roots of the phenomenon.
D) suggests that some people are born without a ventromedial hypothalamus.
Question
Which of the following chemical or hormonal processes signal hunger?

A) changes in glucose levels in the blood
B) increases in the levels of the hormone ghrelin
C) both of these options
D) neither of these options
Question
Social factors that contribute to eating-and overeating-include

A) eating at customary times of day, even if we are not especially hungry.
B) the tendency to associate eating with comfort, relief, and pleasure.
C) norms regarding the size of portions.
D) All of these
Question
Brittany has experienced a major weight loss and has begun refusing to eat. She denies that she has an eating problem and does not recognize that she suffers from

A) bulimia.
B) poor self-actualization
C) obesity.
D) anorexia nervosa.
Question
Approximately _____ of those who suffer from anorexia nervosa ultimately die from its effects.

A) 15%
B) 10%
C) 5%
D) 1%
Question
Valerie eats huge amounts of food in a single sitting, then vomits and uses laxatives to purge the excess food. Valerie appears to suffer from

A) bulimia.
B) the flu.
C) obesity.
D) anorexia nervosa.
Question
Anorexia nervosa and bulimia: Nature or nurture?

A) Nature: chemical imbalances in the hypothalamus and pituitary glands seem to be associated with eating disorders.
B) Nurture: Western culture exerts pressure on women to be thin.
C) Nurture: overly demanding or controlling family environments tend to be associated with the development of eating disorders.
D) Nature and nurture: all these factors may come into play.
Question
Androgen is to estrogen as __________ is to _________.

A) testes; ovaries
B) cyclical; noncyclical
C) ovaries; testes
D) none of the above
Question
Which of the following is NOT one of the female sex hormones?

A) estrogen
B) progesterone
C) androgen
D) All of these are female sex hormones.
Question
__________ men report that they have masturbated at least once during their lives.

A) Most
B) About half of all
C) Very few
D) Nearly all
Question
__________ women report that they have masturbated at least once during their lives.

A) Most
B) About half of all
C) Very few
D) Nearly all
Question
Many decades ago, a majority of adults indicated that premarital sex was _________.

A) always wrong
B) usually wrong
C) acceptable
D) a personal decision
Question
Currently, a majority of adults indicate that premarital sex is _________.

A) always wrong
B) usually wrong
C) acceptable
D) a personal decision
Question
Your text suggests that rates of extramarital sex have _______ in recent decades.

A) increased
B) declined
C) stayed about the same
D) not been studied
Question
With regard to brain structure, research shows that compared to heterosexual men and women, gay men have a larger

A) anterior commissure.
B) anterior hypothalamus.
C) cerebral cortex.
D) amygdala.
Question
Fact or fiction: Gay people are sick.

A) Fact: the American Psychiatric Association classifies homosexuality as a mental illness.
B) Fact: the Bible condemns it.
C) Fiction: gay people are just as well-adjusted psychologically as are their straight counterparts.
D) none of these options
Question
Tasks of low difficulty tend to be _______ to high need achievers.

A) attractive
B) unappealing
C) challenging
D) confusing
Question
Kylie plans to assess the need for achievement among a sample of college seniors, and divides them into three groups: high need achievers, medium need achievers, and low need achievers. She then examines their GPAs at the end of the year. Which group would she expect to have the highest GPA?

A) Low need achievers
B) Medium need achievers
C) High need achievers
D) It is impossible to predict GPA based on need achievement ratings.
Question
Dr. Moffat measures the need for affiliation among a sample of male and female college students; in addition, she asks participants to report the number of hours they spend socializing with friends each week. She prepares a line graph of her results, with need-for-affiliation scores on the x-axis and hours spent socializing on the y-axis. One line shows the results for her female participants; the other, those for her male participants. Based on your text's discussion, how do you think the lines would look?

A) They would converge from left to right.
B) They would diverge from left to right.
C) They would cross.
D) They would remain more or less parallel from left to right.
Question
A current controversy in the psychology of emotion concerns the extent to which emotions involve a cognitive element. Of which of the following statements might we be certain at present?

A) Emotional experiences may involve a cognitive component.
B) Emotional experiences necessarily involve a cognitive component.
C) Separate physiological systems govern cognitive responses on the one hand, and emotional ones on the other.
D) The subjective feeling of an emotion precedes its cognitive component.
Question
According to your text, the functions of emotions include which of the following?

A) preparing the individual for action
B) facilitating learning
C) enhancing communication with others
D) All of these
Question
Controversial issues in the psychology of emotion include:

A) being unable to identify several key functions of emotion.
B) identifying the most basic, fundamental emotions.
C) both of these options
D) neither of these options
Question
English contains many, many words to describe emotions. How have psychologists attempted to reduce this complexity to identify the most fundamental emotions?

A) They have tried to sort the emotions into discrete, broad categories.
B) They have tried to identify a small number of component dimensions constituting all emotional experience.
C) They have attempted to develop a hierarchical organization of emotions.
D) All of these
Question
What are Schadenfreude, hagaii, and musu?

A) condiments used in other countries
B) highly specific emotions
C) night-blooming flowers
D) bizarre weather conditions found in different parts of the world-like the Santa Ana winds, only foreign
Question
The English language lacks a specific term to refer to a mood of vulnerable heartache tinged by frustration. The Japanese language has a single term to refer to this feeling. This may mean that, compared to Japanese speakers, English speakers

A) have a harder time talking about this feeling.
B) may have more difficulty experiencing this emotion.
C) both of these options
D) neither of these options
Question
Which of the following statements correctly identifies a shortcoming of James-Lange theory of emotion?

A) Physiological activation doesn't always produce an emotional experience.
B) Physiological activation may not be sufficiently specific to account for the wide range of emotions we experience.
C) Physiological changes may not always occur quickly enough to be the basis of our emotional experiences.
D) All of these
Question
Which of the following theories of emotion is/are INCORRECTLY matched with the sequence of events it proposes?

A) Cannon-Bard-stimulus ? physiological response ? cognitive labelling ? emotional experience
B) Schachter-Singer-stimulus ? physiological response + emotional experience
C) Both are incorrectly matched.
D) Neither are is incorrectly matched.
Question
Is it a problem that there are so many theories of emotion?

A) Yes-it suggests that psychology is not really a science. If it were, something more coherent would
Have emerged by now.
B) No-psychology is a complex, developing field, and a diversity of approaches is to be expected, especially with emerging research techniques that may someday bring additional clarity to the field.
C) both of these are correct
D) neither of these is correct
Question
The likelihood that the similarity between emotional expressions observed in Western cultures and those seen in Papua New Guinea actually reflect the role of "nurture" rather than that of "nature" is relatively low because

A) the cultures have had extremely little contact with each other.
B) the experiences of individuals in one of these cultures are probably vastly different from those of individuals in the other.
C) both of these options
D) neither of these options
Question
The facial-affect program

A) is a forensic software program, often featured on police procedural shows.
B) is innate and universal.
C) is strongly "tweaked" by experience.
D) is under the deliberate control of executive areas of the frontal cortex.
Question
People who are intrinsically motivated are motivated by which of the following?

A) personal satisfaction and interest
B) rewards or personal recognition
C) both of these options
D) none of these options
Question
People who are extrinsically motivated are motivated by which of the following?

A) personal satisfaction and interest
B) rewards or personal recognition
C) both of these options
D) none of these options
Question
According to a 2002 Canadian health survey, approximately _______ women and _______ men are at risk of developing an eating disorder.

A) 150,000; 29,000
B) 230,000; 48,000
C) 360,000; 64,000
D) 400,000; 80,000
Question
Men who have a waist circumference of 102 cm and women who have a waist circumference of 88 cm are at an increased risk for which of the following?

A) high blood pressure
B) diabetes
C) heart disease
D) all of these options
Question
How many stages did Masters and Johnson discover there were in the human sexual response cycle?

A) 4
B) 5
C) 6
D) 7
Question
Lucia O'Sullivan and colleagues conducted research on students' engagement in unprotected sex. Which of the following did the researchers find was the reason why students don't use protection?

A) the lack of immediate negative consequences
B) alternative prevention (e.g. withdrawal)
C) the belief that condom use results in a loss of physical sensation
D) all of these options
Question
A 1995 survey determined that ________ of Canadians believed extramarital affairs were never okay.

A) 40%
B) 65%
C) 80%
D) 95%
Question
Drive theory is to internal as the ________ approach is to external.
Question
Concerning the roots of obesity, the settling point hypothesis takes the environment into account to a_________ extent than does the set point hypothesis.
Question
A "perfect gentleman" might, but he wouldn't tell; a "nice girl," in contrast, just plain wouldn't. This exemplifies the ________ regarding premarital sex.
Question
Transsexualism is a _________ concept than transgenderism.
Question
A "gut reaction" is more formally termed a(n) ___________.
Question
Comparing the James-Lange and Cannon-Bard theories with respect to the time course of an emotional experience, the subjective feeling of emotion occurs _________ following a stimulus in the Cannon-Bardthan in the James-Lange theory.
Question
The psychologist Paul _______ is known for early demonstrations among Westerners and New Guineansof the universality of emotional expressions.
Question
Sally studies because she wants to attain a high average, but she doesn't really like her geography course.This would be an example of ______ motivation.
Question
John studies because he is interested in psychology and it peaks his interest. This would be an example of________ motivation.
Question
About one out of every _______ Canadians are overweight.
Question
Researchers studying eating habits of college students found that students who made an intention to eat healthier also had healthier _______.
Question
The four stages in Masters and Johnson's human sexual response cycle include excitement, plateau, orgasm, and _______.
Question
Define the "double standard" as it applies to premarital sex. To what extent is the double standard a product of culture? Review the evidence examining stability or change in the double standard over time in Western culture.
Question
Compare and contrast the James-Lange and Schachter-Singer theories of emotion. How might contemporary neuroscientific evidence inform the evaluation of these competing theories?
Question
To what extent do one's language and one's culture influence one's experience of emotion? Survey the evidence regarding cross-cultural variability and cross-cultural universality in the experience and expression of emotion.
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Deck 8: Motivation, Emotions, and Sexual Behaviors: an Overview
1
Shortcomings of instinct approaches to motivation include which of the following?

A) Humans don't appear to have any true instincts.
B) Human behaviours are far more complex than those of other organisms.
C) both of these options
D) neither of these options
both of these options
2
Basic drives that are related to biological needs of the body or of the species as a whole are called__________ drives.

A) biological
B) psychological
C) primary
D) secondary
primary
3
Basic drives in which behaviour fulfills no obvious biological needs are called __________ drives.

A) motivational
B) psychological
C) primary
D) secondary
secondary
4
Each of the following is a primary drive except

A) hunger.
B) thirst.
C) avoidance of pain.
D) desire to be competent.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Which of the following is the best example of drive based behaviour?

A) Sky-diving.
B) Working long hours because of how much you love your job.
C) Putting on a sweater when you are cold.
D) Solving a crossword puzzle.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Why do drive-reduction approaches fail to offer a complete account of human motivation?

A) Prior experience and learning are not considered.
B) The difference between primary and secondary drives is not well defined.
C) People are sometimes motivated to increase rather than to decrease their level of stimulation.
D) All of these are failures of drive-reduction theory.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which of the following statements BEST expresses the relationship between drives and incentives in the explanation of human behaviour?

A) Drives and incentives each tend to explain quite different types of behaviours.
B) Drives and incentives tend to work in opposing directions when it comes to motivation.
C) Drives and incentives are really the same thing.
D) Drives and incentives are likely to both contribute to the explanation of a given behaviour.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
According to Maslow, the needs that must be met before all other needs are

A) safety.
B) physiological.
C) self-esteem.
D) self-actualization.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
A person seeking a sense of self-worth is at which level in Maslow's hierarchy?

A) physiological
B) self-actualization
C) esteem
D) safety
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Which of the following are limitations to Maslow's theory of needs?

A) Research has not validated the order of the needs proposed in the hierarchy.
B) It is difficult to measure self-actualization objectively.
C) both of these options are correct
D) neither of these options are correct
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Why are there so many different approaches to motivation?

A) A large number of approaches is required to sufficiently confuse students new to psychology.
B) Different approaches are needed to explain different behaviours.
C) Even common behaviours such as eating may be motivated by many different factors.
D) Because it is important to have explanations that cover both natural instincts and social drives.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which figure best approximates the number of people with anorexia who literally starve themselves to death?

A) 1%
B) 10%
C) 25%
D) 45%
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The Body Mass Index (BMI) is a measure of:

A) obesity
B) weight-to-height ratio
C) weight as a function of height
D) All of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Which of the following is an accepted operational definition of obesity?

A) BMI>5
B) BMI > 10
C) BMI > 20
D) BMI > 30
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Your text points out that other species rarely become obese. This fact

A) suggests that some people are born without a lateral hypothalamus.
B) does not support theories of human obesity emphasizing the social and cultural roots of the phenomenon.
C) supports theories of human obesity emphasizing the social and cultural roots of the phenomenon.
D) suggests that some people are born without a ventromedial hypothalamus.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Which of the following chemical or hormonal processes signal hunger?

A) changes in glucose levels in the blood
B) increases in the levels of the hormone ghrelin
C) both of these options
D) neither of these options
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Social factors that contribute to eating-and overeating-include

A) eating at customary times of day, even if we are not especially hungry.
B) the tendency to associate eating with comfort, relief, and pleasure.
C) norms regarding the size of portions.
D) All of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Brittany has experienced a major weight loss and has begun refusing to eat. She denies that she has an eating problem and does not recognize that she suffers from

A) bulimia.
B) poor self-actualization
C) obesity.
D) anorexia nervosa.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Approximately _____ of those who suffer from anorexia nervosa ultimately die from its effects.

A) 15%
B) 10%
C) 5%
D) 1%
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Valerie eats huge amounts of food in a single sitting, then vomits and uses laxatives to purge the excess food. Valerie appears to suffer from

A) bulimia.
B) the flu.
C) obesity.
D) anorexia nervosa.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Anorexia nervosa and bulimia: Nature or nurture?

A) Nature: chemical imbalances in the hypothalamus and pituitary glands seem to be associated with eating disorders.
B) Nurture: Western culture exerts pressure on women to be thin.
C) Nurture: overly demanding or controlling family environments tend to be associated with the development of eating disorders.
D) Nature and nurture: all these factors may come into play.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Androgen is to estrogen as __________ is to _________.

A) testes; ovaries
B) cyclical; noncyclical
C) ovaries; testes
D) none of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Which of the following is NOT one of the female sex hormones?

A) estrogen
B) progesterone
C) androgen
D) All of these are female sex hormones.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
__________ men report that they have masturbated at least once during their lives.

A) Most
B) About half of all
C) Very few
D) Nearly all
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
__________ women report that they have masturbated at least once during their lives.

A) Most
B) About half of all
C) Very few
D) Nearly all
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Many decades ago, a majority of adults indicated that premarital sex was _________.

A) always wrong
B) usually wrong
C) acceptable
D) a personal decision
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Currently, a majority of adults indicate that premarital sex is _________.

A) always wrong
B) usually wrong
C) acceptable
D) a personal decision
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Your text suggests that rates of extramarital sex have _______ in recent decades.

A) increased
B) declined
C) stayed about the same
D) not been studied
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
With regard to brain structure, research shows that compared to heterosexual men and women, gay men have a larger

A) anterior commissure.
B) anterior hypothalamus.
C) cerebral cortex.
D) amygdala.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Fact or fiction: Gay people are sick.

A) Fact: the American Psychiatric Association classifies homosexuality as a mental illness.
B) Fact: the Bible condemns it.
C) Fiction: gay people are just as well-adjusted psychologically as are their straight counterparts.
D) none of these options
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Tasks of low difficulty tend to be _______ to high need achievers.

A) attractive
B) unappealing
C) challenging
D) confusing
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Kylie plans to assess the need for achievement among a sample of college seniors, and divides them into three groups: high need achievers, medium need achievers, and low need achievers. She then examines their GPAs at the end of the year. Which group would she expect to have the highest GPA?

A) Low need achievers
B) Medium need achievers
C) High need achievers
D) It is impossible to predict GPA based on need achievement ratings.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Dr. Moffat measures the need for affiliation among a sample of male and female college students; in addition, she asks participants to report the number of hours they spend socializing with friends each week. She prepares a line graph of her results, with need-for-affiliation scores on the x-axis and hours spent socializing on the y-axis. One line shows the results for her female participants; the other, those for her male participants. Based on your text's discussion, how do you think the lines would look?

A) They would converge from left to right.
B) They would diverge from left to right.
C) They would cross.
D) They would remain more or less parallel from left to right.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
A current controversy in the psychology of emotion concerns the extent to which emotions involve a cognitive element. Of which of the following statements might we be certain at present?

A) Emotional experiences may involve a cognitive component.
B) Emotional experiences necessarily involve a cognitive component.
C) Separate physiological systems govern cognitive responses on the one hand, and emotional ones on the other.
D) The subjective feeling of an emotion precedes its cognitive component.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
According to your text, the functions of emotions include which of the following?

A) preparing the individual for action
B) facilitating learning
C) enhancing communication with others
D) All of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Controversial issues in the psychology of emotion include:

A) being unable to identify several key functions of emotion.
B) identifying the most basic, fundamental emotions.
C) both of these options
D) neither of these options
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
English contains many, many words to describe emotions. How have psychologists attempted to reduce this complexity to identify the most fundamental emotions?

A) They have tried to sort the emotions into discrete, broad categories.
B) They have tried to identify a small number of component dimensions constituting all emotional experience.
C) They have attempted to develop a hierarchical organization of emotions.
D) All of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
What are Schadenfreude, hagaii, and musu?

A) condiments used in other countries
B) highly specific emotions
C) night-blooming flowers
D) bizarre weather conditions found in different parts of the world-like the Santa Ana winds, only foreign
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
The English language lacks a specific term to refer to a mood of vulnerable heartache tinged by frustration. The Japanese language has a single term to refer to this feeling. This may mean that, compared to Japanese speakers, English speakers

A) have a harder time talking about this feeling.
B) may have more difficulty experiencing this emotion.
C) both of these options
D) neither of these options
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Which of the following statements correctly identifies a shortcoming of James-Lange theory of emotion?

A) Physiological activation doesn't always produce an emotional experience.
B) Physiological activation may not be sufficiently specific to account for the wide range of emotions we experience.
C) Physiological changes may not always occur quickly enough to be the basis of our emotional experiences.
D) All of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Which of the following theories of emotion is/are INCORRECTLY matched with the sequence of events it proposes?

A) Cannon-Bard-stimulus ? physiological response ? cognitive labelling ? emotional experience
B) Schachter-Singer-stimulus ? physiological response + emotional experience
C) Both are incorrectly matched.
D) Neither are is incorrectly matched.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Is it a problem that there are so many theories of emotion?

A) Yes-it suggests that psychology is not really a science. If it were, something more coherent would
Have emerged by now.
B) No-psychology is a complex, developing field, and a diversity of approaches is to be expected, especially with emerging research techniques that may someday bring additional clarity to the field.
C) both of these are correct
D) neither of these is correct
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 66 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
The likelihood that the similarity between emotional expressions observed in Western cultures and those seen in Papua New Guinea actually reflect the role of "nurture" rather than that of "nature" is relatively low because

A) the cultures have had extremely little contact with each other.
B) the experiences of individuals in one of these cultures are probably vastly different from those of individuals in the other.
C) both of these options
D) neither of these options
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44
The facial-affect program

A) is a forensic software program, often featured on police procedural shows.
B) is innate and universal.
C) is strongly "tweaked" by experience.
D) is under the deliberate control of executive areas of the frontal cortex.
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45
People who are intrinsically motivated are motivated by which of the following?

A) personal satisfaction and interest
B) rewards or personal recognition
C) both of these options
D) none of these options
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46
People who are extrinsically motivated are motivated by which of the following?

A) personal satisfaction and interest
B) rewards or personal recognition
C) both of these options
D) none of these options
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47
According to a 2002 Canadian health survey, approximately _______ women and _______ men are at risk of developing an eating disorder.

A) 150,000; 29,000
B) 230,000; 48,000
C) 360,000; 64,000
D) 400,000; 80,000
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48
Men who have a waist circumference of 102 cm and women who have a waist circumference of 88 cm are at an increased risk for which of the following?

A) high blood pressure
B) diabetes
C) heart disease
D) all of these options
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49
How many stages did Masters and Johnson discover there were in the human sexual response cycle?

A) 4
B) 5
C) 6
D) 7
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50
Lucia O'Sullivan and colleagues conducted research on students' engagement in unprotected sex. Which of the following did the researchers find was the reason why students don't use protection?

A) the lack of immediate negative consequences
B) alternative prevention (e.g. withdrawal)
C) the belief that condom use results in a loss of physical sensation
D) all of these options
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51
A 1995 survey determined that ________ of Canadians believed extramarital affairs were never okay.

A) 40%
B) 65%
C) 80%
D) 95%
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52
Drive theory is to internal as the ________ approach is to external.
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53
Concerning the roots of obesity, the settling point hypothesis takes the environment into account to a_________ extent than does the set point hypothesis.
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54
A "perfect gentleman" might, but he wouldn't tell; a "nice girl," in contrast, just plain wouldn't. This exemplifies the ________ regarding premarital sex.
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55
Transsexualism is a _________ concept than transgenderism.
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56
A "gut reaction" is more formally termed a(n) ___________.
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57
Comparing the James-Lange and Cannon-Bard theories with respect to the time course of an emotional experience, the subjective feeling of emotion occurs _________ following a stimulus in the Cannon-Bardthan in the James-Lange theory.
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58
The psychologist Paul _______ is known for early demonstrations among Westerners and New Guineansof the universality of emotional expressions.
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59
Sally studies because she wants to attain a high average, but she doesn't really like her geography course.This would be an example of ______ motivation.
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60
John studies because he is interested in psychology and it peaks his interest. This would be an example of________ motivation.
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61
About one out of every _______ Canadians are overweight.
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62
Researchers studying eating habits of college students found that students who made an intention to eat healthier also had healthier _______.
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63
The four stages in Masters and Johnson's human sexual response cycle include excitement, plateau, orgasm, and _______.
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64
Define the "double standard" as it applies to premarital sex. To what extent is the double standard a product of culture? Review the evidence examining stability or change in the double standard over time in Western culture.
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65
Compare and contrast the James-Lange and Schachter-Singer theories of emotion. How might contemporary neuroscientific evidence inform the evaluation of these competing theories?
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66
To what extent do one's language and one's culture influence one's experience of emotion? Survey the evidence regarding cross-cultural variability and cross-cultural universality in the experience and expression of emotion.
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