Preview Extract
TB_Baron_Chapter 2
Key: Answer, Page, Type, Learning Objective, Level
Type
A=Applied
C=Conceptual
F=Factual
Level
(1)=Easy; (2)=Moderate; (3)=Difficult
LO=Learning Objective
SG=Used in Study Guide
p=page
TB_Baron_Chapter 2
Multiple Choice Single Select
M/C Question 1
One way to manage information overload is to make use of ________.
a) mental shortcuts, such as heuristics
b) the anchoring and adjustment stratagem
c) automatic priming
d) the complexity schema
ANS: a
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 2
Heuristics exert a strong influence on our thinking in large measure because they ________.
a) rely on our internal personal biases and unknown prejudices
b) are effortful processes that require an expenditure of mental energy
c) activate critical brain structures such as the amygdala
d) reduce the mental effort needed to make judgments and decisions
ANS: d
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
236
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M/C Question 3
Juanita finds that she has been given too much information about different new cars and their
relative merits and drawbacks. She is having a difficult time making a decision about which
car to buy because she cannot process all the information she has gathered. This is an
example of ________.
a) non-automatic processing
b) information overload
c) anchoring and adjustment
d) the representativeness heuristic
ANS: b
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 4
Amanda has lost some money she needs for next semesterโs tuition. While betting on red, the
roulette wheel has come up with five blacks in a row. To try to get her money back, Amanda
is now doubling up her bet each time on red, believing that red will come up soon. She bases
her belief on the (roughly) 50/50 odds of red and black occurring over a large number of
spins of the wheel. Amandaโs strategy appears to be based on ________.
a) the representativeness heuristic
b) the advice of a successful gambler
c) a magical thinking perspective
d) the availability heuristic
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 5
Sabiha is left-handed and prefers left-handed men. She is going to be introduced to Wilbur.
Left-handers comprise about 10 percent of the population. She has been truthfully informed
that Wilbur is either a left-handed Chinese psycholinguist or a left-handed used car salesman
from the Midwestern region of the United States. If Sabiha makes good use of base rates,
which of the following outcomes should she expect?
a) Wilbur is a left-handed Chinese psycholinguist.
b) Wilbur is a new car salesman from the Midwestern region of the United States.
c) She has been misinformed about Wilburโs existence as a crude statistical prank.
d) Wilbur is a used car salesman from the Midwestern region of the United States who
also happens to be left-handed.
ANS: d
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
237
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M/C Question 6
Suppose you are telling your friend about a woman you just met. You tell your friend that this
person seemed very compassionate and was interested in helping others; however, you
couldnโt recall whether she said she was a nurse or a businesswoman. On the basis of the
________ heuristic, your friend would probably think that she is a ________.
a) availability; nurse
b) availability; businesswoman
c) representativeness; nurse
d) representativeness; businesswoman
ANS: c
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 7
Blair watches the newscast each evening, with its usual diet of fires and other accidents. She
often eats at Herbyโs Fried Snacks, a restaurant located in a brick building, despite the fact
that her eating there has resulted in bad indigestion several times. She avoids the wellrespected Korean restaurant because the Korean restaurant is in a wooden building. Blairโs
eating habits are probably being guided by ________.
a) the availability heuristic
b) an anti-Korean prejudice
c) the anchoring and adjustment heuristic
d) an addiction to fried snacks
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 8
If you would like for your student government to pass a bill putting more lights along major
walkways, how could you use ease of retrieval to persuade them?
a) Ask them to generate 10 instances in which the lack of lighting led to student harm.
b) Ask them to think of 2 instances in which the lack of lighting made them or someone
they know feel fearful while walking on campus after dark.
c) Have them generate 6 newspaper stories in which students were harmed on campus at
night.
d) Give them one instance in which someone was afraid walking home at night, but
include many details.
ANS: b
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
238
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M/C Question 9
Norman chronically buys and sells things on eBay. He is used to establishing an anchor in
negotiating his way toward some endpoint, a sales price, an agreement about delivery time,
shipping costs, etc. The anchor for him is almost always a way of dealing with ________.
a) othersโ likely business judgments
b) knowing what the item likely sells for elsewhere
c) uncertainty
d) frequent ups and downs in the market price
ANS: c
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 10
Once it is activated, the status quo heuristic may have automatic effects on behavior. This can
cause individuals to ________.
a) develop information overload and a temporarily diminished cognitive capacity
b) behave inconsistently with the schema without realizing the stress this puts on their
mental frameworks
c) behave consistently with the schema without being aware of the reason for the
behavior
d) notice information that is inconsistent with the schema more readily than consistent
information
ANS: c
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 11
One way that schemas influence social thought is by ________.
a) ensuring that inconsistent information is stored in our memories and retrieved rapidly
b) increasing our cognitive load by activating more information from our long-term
memory stores
c) activating the availability heuristic and enabling automatic priming
d) acting as a filter to direct our attention towards some information and away from other
information
ANS: d
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.2: Describe the role of schemas in guiding our thoughts
and actions, Topic=2.2: Schemas: Mental Frameworks for Organizing Social Information,
Difficulty=Medium
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M/C Question 12
One evening, after seeing a ________ at the Cineplex, you are on your way home. You drive
into a store parking lot, where another driver grabs a parking place you had spotted and were
waiting for. You perceive the behavior as very ________.
a) violent movie; aggressive
b) comedy; aggressive
c) drama; meaningless
d) violent movie; funny
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.2: Describe the role of schemas in guiding our thoughts and
actions, Topic=2.2: Schemas: Mental Frameworks for Organizing Social Information,
Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 13
Which of the following individuals is exhibiting behaviors or thoughts consistent with
priming?
a) After finishing a romantic novel, Natalie passionately embraces her boyfriend and
tells him how much she loves him.
b) After watching a horror film, Jane comments on the fact that she did not find the film
to be scary at all.
c) Hector, a medical school student, realizes that his sore throat is probably the sign of a
mild cold and not a serious illness.
d) George, a business student, decides that the fastest way for him to become wealthy is
to start his own business while still a student.
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.2: Describe the role of schemas in guiding our thoughts and
actions, Topic=2.2: Schemas: Mental Frameworks for Organizing Social Information,
Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 14
Tracy encounters a member of a certain political group whose views and attributes are
inconsistent with her schemas about that group. Due to a strong perseverance effect, what is
the MOST likely conclusion that Tracy will make?
a) Tracy will completely change her schema about the group.
b) Tracy will continue to believe that most members of that group fit her schemas.
c) Tracy will decide the member is lying about her political affiliation.
d) Tracy will suppress conscious awareness of this conflicting information, but it will
exert an influence on her behavior without her awareness.
ANS: b
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.2: Describe the role of schemas in guiding our thoughts and
actions, Topic=2.2: Schemas: Mental Frameworks for Organizing Social Information,
Difficulty=Medium
240
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M/C Question 15
The fact that we can make judgments and evaluations about different aspects of the world in
either a controlled, reflective way or an automatic way suggests ________.
a) we have several different evaluative systems that operate relatively independently of
each other and generally address different aspects of the world
b) we have only one system for evaluating the social world, but this system can be
controlled or operated in two different ways
c) our reasoning abilities can overcome most of our automatic processes if we pay
attention to the judgments we are making at any particular time
d) we have two systems for evaluating the social world which may be located in
different areas of the brain
ANS: d
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.3: Distinguish between automatic and controlled
processing modes of social thought, Topic=2.3: Automatic and Controlled Processing in
Social Thought, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 16
Five students are preparing to take a mid-term exam in Political Science. Going in to the
exam, who would be most likely to suffer from the overconfidence barrier?
a) This is Ronaldโs first political science course and first semester of college.
b) Greg is a junior and a political science major.
c) Linda is a straight โAโ student who is in her 7th year of college.
d) Michele is a sophomore who hasnโt missed a class and thinks the professor is
interesting.
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition process,
Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality is Rarer
Than You Think, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 17
In thinking about a major assignment that is due in one week, Jacey focuses on the tasks to be
accomplished and how she thinks she will approach each task. She does not spend much time
thinking about how long similar tasks have taken her in the past. As a result, Jacey is likely to
underestimate the amount of time needed for the assignment. This is probably because Jacey
has ________.
a) fallen prey to the negativity bias
b) activated an inappropriate schema
c) entered a planning or narrative mode of thought
d) never attempted a similar type of assignment in the past
ANS: d
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition process,
Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality is Rarer
Than You Think, Difficulty=Medium
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M/C Question 18
During finals week, Jonah tells his friend that heโll be able to write four term papers over the
next few days. Jonah is shocked and upset when he is barely able to complete two of these
four papers. Jonahโs behavior is consistent with ________.
a) counterfactual thinking
b) the pessimistic bias
c) the negativity bias
d) the planning fallacy
ANS: d
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition process,
Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality is Rarer
Than You Think, Difficulty=Easy
M/C Question 19
Molly and Emily are members of a girlsโ basketball team who are responsible for helping to
organize fundraising efforts for their team. Molly is extremely motivated to complete this
task; in contrast, Emily only shows a mild interest in completing the required task. Which of
the following statements BEST summarizes the likelihood that Molly and Emily will
complete their tasks?
a) Mollyโs motivation will likely cause her to predict that she will finish her task
quickly; however, this will have no effect on whether she actually completes her task
quicker than Emily.
b) Molly will definitely complete the task in a prompt manner due to her high level of
motivation; Emily might not complete the task at all due to her lack of motivation.
c) Mollyโs level of motivation should not have any effect on how she thinks about
proceeding with this task; consequently, Molly and Emily should complete the task at
about the same time.
d) Mollyโs motivation will probably cause her to become overly optimistic which, in
turn, will cause her to not complete the task at all; Emilyโs lack of motivation will
likely cause her to complete the task, surprising even herself.
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition process,
Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality is Rarer
Than You Think, Difficulty=Hard
M/C Question 20
Andrew saw a TV commercial for a new video game that he had been wanting. The game
was on sale for 50% off, but the store was set to close in two hours. Andrew was 15 minutes
late getting to the store and missed the sale. To ease his distress about missing the sale,
Andrew reasoned that he never really had a chance to get to the store before it closed because
traffic was too heavy, even though he could have taken a different, quicker route. This is an
example of ________.
a) affective shifting
b) contra-affective cognition
c) affective heuristics
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d) counterfactual thinking
ANS: d
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition process,
Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality is Rarer
Than You Think, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 21
Gabriel and Jim were involved in a car accident and they both suffered a broken bone.
Gabriel told Jim, โHey, at least we only broke a few bonesโwe couldโve died!โ Jimโs
response to Gabriel was, โYes, but Iโm now thinking about how I can be a better driver so
that I never get in an accident again.โ Gabrielโs statement reflects a(n) ________
counterfactual thought and Jimโs response reflects a(n) ________ counterfactual thought.
a) downward; upward
b) upward; downward
c) upward; upward
d) downward; downward
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition process,
Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality is Rarer
Than You Think, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 22
Greg has just stopped his car to allow a funeral procession to pass by. The cars in the
procession all have stickers from his alma mater and are similar to the car he is driving. At
this point, he realizes that he too will certainly die at some point. Based on the concept of
terror management, which of the following is Greg likely to do next?
a) Buy funeral insurance.
b) Commit suicide.
c) Reconfirm his belief in supernatural powers.
d) Become an atheist.
ANS: c
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition process,
Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality is Rarer
Than You Think, Difficulty=Hard
M/C Question 23
Shortly before being interviewed for a job she really wants, Meredith finds that the human
resources director was involved in a minor traffic accident during lunch. Should Meredith be
concerned that the traffic accident may have a negative influence on the outcomes of the job
interview?
a) Yes, research indicates that even experienced interviewers are influenced by their
current moods.
b) No, other factors, such as the strength of the applicants who have already been
interviewed will strongly outweigh any lingering effect of the directorโs mood.
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c)
Yes, but only if Meredith mentions the accident in a way that accentuates the
directorโs presumed bad mood.
d) No, research indicates that experienced interviewers are not influenced by accidentrelated current moods.
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition, Topic=2.5:
Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes Feelings,
Difficulty=Hard
M/C Question 24
Jack recently had a job interview that seemed to go exceedingly well by all objective
standards. However, Jack noted that his interviewer seemed to be in a bad mood that day. To
what extent should Jack be concerned about the latter piece of information?
a) He should be aware that he will likely be viewed less favorably by the interviewer
than if the interviewer was in a good mood.
b) He should be very concerned about the interviewerโs bad mood unless something
happened immediately after the interview to improve the interviewerโs mood.
c) He should assume there is virtually no chance he will be offered the position due to
the interviewerโs negative mood.
d) He should not be concerned at all because the interviewerโs mood should have no
bearing on how he or she evaluates Jack.
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition, Topic=2.5:
Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes Feelings,
Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 25
Jason is undergoing treatment for depression. His therapist has encouraged Jason to
remember as many details as possible about times when Jason was not feeling depressed.
Jason is having difficulties remembering a time when he was not depressed. This is probably
because of the effects of ________.
a) mood-dependent memories
b) information-evoked memories
c) inappropriate retrieval cues
d) depression suppressing pleasant memories
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition, Topic=2.5:
Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes Feelings,
Difficulty=Easy
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M/C Question 26
Sarah supervises a work group of six colleagues in an advertising agency. Recently, the
creativity of her work group has not been as high as it should be. To help boost the groupโs
creativity, and keeping in mind the effects of mood on cognition, Sarah might ________.
a) speak to each member privately about performance issues
b) ask the group to remember what they were doing the last time they were highly
creative
c) take steps to put her groupโs members in a happier mood during work hours
d) remind the group that creativity is an important aspect of their job
ANS: c
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition, Topic=2.5:
Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes Feelings,
Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 27
Zoรซ is in a fairly good mood. Consequently, we should expect her to show a(n) ________ in
her use of ________.
a) increase; heuristics
b) increase; effortful cognitive processing
c) decrease; thought suppression
d) decrease; heuristics
ANS: a
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition,
Topic=2.5: Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes
Feelings, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 28
Two drivers on a highway are cut off by a third driver. The first driver is startled but shrugs,
thinking, โthat other driver was careless, but I donโt think he noticed me.โ The second driver
is furious, thinking, โthat other driver deliberately tried to run me off the road.โ This scenario
MOST clearly illustrates how________.
a) mood influences affect and arousal
b) affect influences arousal
c) cognition influences affect
d) affect influences cognition
ANS: c
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition, Topic=2.5:
Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes Feelingsadd
topic, Difficulty=Easy
M/C Question 29
People often forecast that they will feel ________ when reading about a large-scale tragedy
compared to a smaller tragedy. However, findings indicate that people who actually read
about such tragedies ________.
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a)
b)
c)
d)
worse; feel the same regardless of the size of the tragedy
more overwhelmed; felt worse about the smaller tragedy
less concerned; feel the same regardless of the size of the tragedy
helpless; felt more empathy for the smaller tragedyโs victims
ANS: a
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition,
Topic=2.5: Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes
Feelings, Difficulty=Easy
M/C Question 30
Bob and Joe are given the task of dividing $10 between them. Bob initially makes an offer to
divide the money such that he takes $7 for himself and gives Joe $3. If you were looking at
an MRI scan of Joeโs brain, what would you see?
a) No activity in the limbic system as this is clearly a rational task.
b) Activity in the limbic system, but little activity anywhere else.
c) Activity in both the limbic system and the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex because both
emotion and rationality are involved.
d) Bobโs MRI scan would be more informative than Joeโs to understand how Joe will
react.
ANS: c
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition, Topic=2.5:
Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes Feelings,
Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 31
Maria is driving her children to school. She is watching the road carefully and following a
series of detour signs. One of her children in the back seat of the car is telling her a story, and
on the radio a weather report is playing. Maria is trying to listen to her childโs story, but she
finds that she is unable to concentrate on what the child is saying. Maria is experiencing
a) information overload.
b) conditions of uncertainty
c) a representativeness heuristic.
d) anchoring adjustment.
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 32
Eric knows that plane crashes are extremely rare and statistically unlikely. However, he
avoids flying and instead drives everywhere, even though he knows the likelihood of being
injured in a car accident is far more likely than in a plane accident. Eric is being affected by
the ________ heuristic.
a) anchoring and adjustment
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b) representativeness
c) status quo
d) availability
ANS: d
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 33
Jonathan continues to buy Orange computers even though his colleagues and friends have
informed him that there are newer, better, and cheaper types of computers on the market.
Which heuristic is affecting Jonathan?
a) representativeness
b) status quo
c) uncertainty
d) anchoring and adjustment
ANS: b
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 34
When people deal with uncertainty in a situation by using something they know as a starting
point and then modifying their thinking from there, they are using the ________ heuristic.
a) representativeness
b) status quo
c) anchoring and adjustment
d) information overload
ANS: c
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 35
Billโs wife informs him that they will be attending the opera. Bill has never been to the opera,
but he immediately has a mental image of he and his wife sitting in an ornate theater and
wearing formal eveningwear. Bill is drawing up a(n) ________.
a) schema
b) heuristic
c) anchor
d) cognitive load
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ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.2: Describe the role of schemas in guiding our thoughts and
actions, Topic=2.2: Schemas: Mental Frameworks for Organizing Social Information,
Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 36
Which process of social cognition refers to the information we notice?
a) Encoding
b) Attention
c) Retrieval
d) Cognitive load
ANS: b
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.2: Describe the role of schemas in guiding our thoughts
and actions, Topic=2.2: Schemas: Mental Frameworks for Organizing Social Information,
Difficulty=Easy
M/C Question 37
Carl watches a documentary about a man who survived after being stranded on an island. Not
long after, his wife asks him if he wants to go hiking or go to the library. Carl chooses hiking.
This is an example of ________.
a) priming
b) anchoring
c) unpriming
d) adjusting
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.2: Describe the role of schemas in guiding our thoughts and
actions, Topic=2.2: Schemas: Mental Frameworks for Organizing Social Information,
Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 38
Which of the following is a downside of schemas?
a) They can cause us to process social information at a slower rate.
b) They can remain unchanged in the face of contradictory information.
c) They are unable to guide our thoughts or actions.
d) They cause social information to be disorganized in our brain.
ANS: b
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.2: Describe the role of schemas in guiding our thoughts
and actions, Topic=2.2: Schemas: Mental Frameworks for Organizing Social Information,
Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 39
Which of the following contrasts controlled processing and automatic processing?
a) Controlled processing occurs very quickly, whereas automatic processing occurs at a
much slower rate.
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b) Controlled processing is largely intuitive, whereas automatic processing is largely
logical.
c) Controlled processing occurs in the amygdala, whereas automatic processing occurs
in the prefrontal cortex.
d) Controlled processing is systematic and effortful, whereas automatic processing is fast
and relatively effortless.
ANS: d
Skill=Analyze, Objective=2.3: Distinguish between automatic and controlled processing
modes of social thought, Topic=2.3: Automatic and Controlled Processing in Social
Thought, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 40
Which of the following is an example of controlled processing?
a) Learning to ride a bike
b) Walking down your street
c) Breathing while sleeping
d) Blinking your eyes
ANS: a
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.3: Distinguish between automatic and controlled
processing modes of social thought, Topic=2.3: Automatic and Controlled Processing in
Social Thought, Difficulty=Easy
M/C Question 41
Arlene walks into the room her husband has just painted. She immediately dislikes the color.
Arlene has experienced ________.
a) a controlled evaluative reaction
b) an automatic evaluative reaction
c) an evaluative reaction schema
d) controlled priming
ANS: b
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.3: Distinguish between automatic and controlled processing
modes of social thought, Topic=2.3: Automatic and Controlled Processing in Social
Thought, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 42
Which of the following is a benefit of automatic processing?
a) It allows us to approach decisions in a systematic and logical way.
b) It allows us to dedicate our full attention to a problem at hand.
c) It allows us to deal with problems when our attention is directed elsewhere.
d) It allows us to weigh all relevant aspects of a situation before taking action.
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ANS: c
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.3: Distinguish between automatic and controlled
processing modes of social thought, Topic=2.3: Automatic and Controlled Processing in
Social Thought, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 43
โSeeing the world through rose-colored glassesโ refers to the ________ bias.
a) optimistic
b) overconfidence
c) magical thinking
d) counterfactual
ANS: a
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition
process, Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality
is Rarer Than You Think, Difficulty=Easy
M/C Question 44
Jordan recently won third place in his cityโs creative writing contest, even though he hasnโt
written creatively in years and he submitted a story he wrote years ago. He thinks to himself,
โIf only I had been working on my writing this whole time, I might have won first place.โ
This is an example of ________ thinking.
a) magical
b) optimist
c) overconfident
d) counterfactual
ANS: d
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition process,
Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality is Rarer
Than You Think, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 45
Karen has always felt that if she looks at the back of a personโs head, she can cause that
person to turn around and look at her. This is an example of ________ thinking.
a) counterfactual
b) magical
c) optimist
d) rational
ANS: b
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition process,
Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality is Rarer
Than You Think, Difficulty=Medium
250
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2012, 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved
M/C Question 46
On the walk to work yesterday, Randall was nearly run over by a bus. While the bus barely
touched him, he was knocked off his feet and suffered many bruises and a concussion.
Randall hasnโt considered himself to be religious in many years, but after the accident he felt
an increased sense of religiously and spirituality. Randallโs increased religiosity is a form of
________.
a) overconfidence bias
b) terror management
c) rational thinking
d) counterfactual bias
ANS: b
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition process,
Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality is Rarer
Than You Think, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 47
Which of the following effects describe how moods strongly determine which information in
a given situation is noticed and entered into oneโs memory?
a) affective forecasts effect
b) mood-dependent memory effect
c) mood congruence effect
d) retrieval cue effect
ANS: c
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition,
Topic=2.5: Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes
Feelings, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 48
Matt has never been to a professional baseball game, but he has a strong conviction that he
wouldnโt enjoy going to one. This prediction is known as a(n) ________.
a) affective forecast
b) mood congruence
c) mood dependency
d) interplay
ANS: a
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition, Topic=2.5:
Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes Feelings,
Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 49
Research indicates that there are two distinct systems that interact in complex ways during
cognitive processes. The two systems are those involving ________.
a) retrieval and production
b) rationality and magical thinking
251
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2012, 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved
c) reason and emotion
d) congruence and dependency
ANS: c
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition,
Topic=2.5: Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes
Feelings, Difficulty=Medium
M/C Question 50
Sarah recently went to a party even though she was in a very poor mood. At the party, she
met a man named Alan, an architect from San Diego. In one monthโs time, Sarah will more
easily remember these details if she ________.
a) has spoken to Alan again during this month
b) tries to recall them while in a negative mood
c) tries to recall them while in a positive mood
d) is at another party and is in a positive mood
ANS: b
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition, Topic=2.5:
Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes Feelings,
Difficulty=Medium
Essay
Essay Question 51
Describe the impact of schemas on memory. Explain how this may influence social thought.
ANS: Global Correct Feedback: Schemas act as a filter in that they call our attention to
some information and away from other information. This ensures that information that is
consistent with our schemas is more likely to enter the memory system. Inconsistent
information may be remembered, but will be marked with a โtagโ to indicate that it is
exceptional information. Next, schemas may guide our recall of information and the use of
remembered information. Research suggests that information that is consistent with our
schemas is more easily recalled and used than is information that is inconsistent with our
schemas. These effects are more pronounced with well-developed schemas and when
individuals are facing a heavy cognitive load. The effect of schemas on memory may
influence social thought directly by influencing the memories we record and retrieve and
indirectly by creating self-fulfilling prophecies.
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.2: Describe the role of schemas in guiding our thoughts
and actions, Topic=2.2: Schemas: Mental Frameworks for Organizing Social Information,
Difficulty=Easy
Essay Question 52
Briefly describe how the availability heuristic affects our judgments or decisions. This
heuristic appears to be used for two different kinds of judgments. What two โrulesโ are to be
252
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2012, 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved
found in our use of the availability heuristic and for what two kinds of judgments are they
likely to be used?
ANS: Global Correct Feedback: The availability heuristic is a cognitive rule of thumb that
is based on the ease of bringing information to mind. If something is easier to bring to
mind, then we think that it must be important or diagnostic, and that we should use it to
make a judgment or decision. But ease of use is not the only way in which this heuristic is
employed. We are more likely to use the ease-of-use rule for judgments involving feelings,
whereas we tend to rely more on an โamount-of-infoโ rule when our judgment or decision
is being based on information or facts.
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
Essay Question 53
Explain the difference between automatic processing and controlled processing of
information.
ANS: Global Correct Feedback: Automatic processing of information is nonconscious,
unintentional, and involuntary. It requires relatively little effort on our part. Controlled
processing, on the other hand, requires greater effort and is conscious. Beyond that,
automatic processing frequently relies more heavily on schemas and heuristics, while
controlled processing tends to rely more heavily on rational thinking and logical processes.
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.3: Distinguish between automatic and controlled
processing modes of social thought, Topic=2.3: Automatic and Controlled Processing in
Social Thought, Difficulty=Easy
Essay Question 54
Explain the distinction between how a prime might trigger schema-consistent behavior and
how a prime might trigger a preparation to interact with a person from a particular group.
How did Cesario, Plaks, and Higgins (2006) examine this experimentally?
ANS: Global Correct Feedback: Cesario, et al., (2006) provided participants with photos
of men that were labeled as โgayโ or โstraightโ with an exposure of 11ms, which is well
below conscious awareness of the stimuli. During the exposure trials, the computers would
malfunction and the program would instruct the participant to seek out the experimenter.
The male experimenter then acted in a hostile manner and the experimenters measured
whether the participants with negative attitudes toward gay men would respond in a more
hostile manner than those who had seen only straight men or participants who had positive
attitudes. Their findings suggest that being primed with โgayโ labeled photos did not
activate a stereotype of gay men as passive/non-aggressive but rather activated an
expectation of interaction with a disliked group, which led to more hostility toward a
hostile experimenter. Thus, primes may not only bring to mind stereotype content and
valence, but if the prime is associated with individuals or groups, may lead people to
prepare to interact with those people. If the group is disliked, then this could lead to more
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Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2012, 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved
hostile interactions, but it is also potentially the case that priming a liked group would lead
to more favorable interactions.
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.3: Distinguish between automatic and controlled
processing modes of social thought, Topic=2.3: Automatic and Controlled Processing in
Social Thought, Difficulty=Hard
Essay Question 55
Describe what is meant by mood-dependent memory, and give an example.
ANS: Global Correct Feedback: Mood-dependent memories are memories that are
influenced by our moods. That is, mood may serve as a retrieval cue, making it easier to
retrieve memories when we are in the same mood as we were when the memories were
first stored. If I remember a particular research talk when I was in a good mood, Iโm more
likely to remember that research talk when I am in a similarly good mood.
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition,
Topic=2.5: Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes
Feelings, Difficulty=Easy
Essay Question 56
Compare and contrast the representative heuristic and the availability heuristic.
ANS: Global Correct Feedback: Both heuristics are simple rules for making complex
decisions or drawing inferences in a rapid and efficient manner. The representative
heuristic involves making a decision based on how similar something is a to a given
group. The availability heuristic involves making a decision based on how easily it is to
bring certain information to mind.
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.1: Examine how heuristic strategies are employed to judge
complex information, Topic=2.1: Heuristics: How We Employ Simple Rules in Social
Cognition, Difficulty=Medium
Essay Question 57
List and describe the three basic processes of social cognition.
ANS: Global Correct Feedback: The three basic processes of social cognition are
attention, encoding, and retrieval. Attention refers to the information we notice. Encoding
refers to the processes we use to store noticed information in memory. Retrieval refers to
how we recover information from memory in order to use it in some manner.
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.2: Describe the role of schemas in guiding our thoughts
and actions, Topic=2.2: Schemas: Mental Frameworks for Organizing Social Information,
Difficulty=Medium
254
Copyright ยฉ 2017, 2012, 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Essay Question 58
Explain how terror management relates to the concept of the supernatural.
ANS: Global Correct Feedback: Terror management refers to efforts to come to terms
with the certainty of death and its unsettling implications. One kind of thinking that helps
with terror management is the belief that supernatural powers outside of humansโ
understanding and control can influence humansโ lives. Research indicates that when
humans are reminded of their own mortality, beliefs in the supernatural are strengthened.
Skill=Understand, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition
process, Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality
is Rarer Than You Think, Difficulty=Medium
Essay Question 59
Define counterfactual thinking and provide an example of this bias.
ANS: Global Correct Feedback: Counterfactual thinking refers to imagining what might
have been given a particular situation or outcome. For example, if a student received a low
grade on a test and then thought of an imaginary outcome that could have occurred had he
or she studied more, then that student is engaging in counterfactual thinking.
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.4: Evaluate the imperfections of the social cognition process,
Topic=2.4: Potential Sources of Error in Social Cognition: Why Total Rationality is Rarer
Than You Think, Difficulty=Medium
Essay Question 60
Explain what affective forecasts are, provide an example of an affective forecast, and
comment on the accuracy of affective forecasts.
ANS: Global Correct Feedback: Affective forecasts refer to predictions of how we would
feel about an event we have not experienced. For example, if a person imagined that he or
she would dislike being in the military even though he or she has not experienced such an
event, then that person has an affective forecast on that event. Research indicates that
affective forecasts are often inaccurate.
Skill=Apply, Objective=2.5: Assess the interrelation of affect and cognition, Topic=2.5:
Affect and Cognition: How Feelings Shape Thought and Thought Shapes Feelings,
Difficulty=Hard
255
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