1. When Sam listens to his girlfriend Susan in the restaurant and ignores other people’s conversations, he is engaged in the process of ____ attention. |
D. selective |
2. Which of the following is an experimental procedure used to study how attention affects the processing of competing stimuli? |
D. Dichotic listening |
3. Dichotic listening occurs when |
B. different messages are presented to the left and right ears. |
4. In a dichotic listening experiment, ______ refers to the procedure that is used to force participants to pay attention to a specific message among competing messages. |
B. shadowing |
5. When a person is shadowing a message, he or she is |
C. saying the message out loud. |
6. Colin Cherry’s experiment in which participants listened to two different messages, one presented to each ear, found that people |
C. could focus on one message and ignore the other one at the same time. |
7. The cocktail party effect is |
A. the ability to pay attention to one message and ignore others, yet hear distinctive features of the unattended messages. |
8. Broadbent’s "filter model" proposes that the filter identifies the attended message based on |
C. physical characteristics. |
9. Which of the following would likely be an input message into the detector in Broadbent’s model? |
C. A message with a German accent |
10. Selection of the attended message in the Broadbent model occurs based on the |
B. physical characteristics of the message. |
11. In Broadbent’s filter model, the stages of information processing occur in which order? |
B. Sensory store, filter, detector, memory |
12. Broadbent’s model is called an early selection model because |
A. the filtering step occurs before the meaning of the incoming information is analyzed. |
13. The main difference between early and late selection models of attention is that in late selection models, selection of stimuli for final processing doesn’t occur until the information is analyzed for |
B. meaning |
14. Which experimental result caused problems for Broadbent’s filter model of selective attention? |
D. The result of the "Dear Aunt Jane" experiment |
15. Suppose twin teenagers are vying for their mother’s attention. The mother is trying to pay attention to one of her daughters, though both girls are talking (one about her boyfriend, one about a school project). According to the operating characteristics of Treisman’s attenuator, it is most likely the attenuator is analyzing the incoming messages in terms of |
C. meaning. |
16. Which of the following is most closely associated with Treisman’s attenuation theory of selective attention? |
D. Dictionary unit |
17. According to Treisman’s "attenuation model," which of the following would you expect to have the highest threshold for most people? |
D. The word "platypus" |
18. Which stage in Treisman’s "attenuation model" has a threshold component? |
B. The dictionary unit |
19. A high threshold in Treisman’s model of attention implies that |
B. it takes a strong signal to cause activation. |
20. Suppose you are in your kitchen writing a grocery list, while your roommate is watching TV in the next room. A commercial for spaghetti sauce comes on TV. Although you are not paying attention to the TV, you "suddenly" remember that you need to pick up spaghetti sauce and add it to the list. Your behavior is best predicted by which of the following models of attention? |
D. Late selection |
21. In support of late selection models, Donald MacKay showed that the presentation of a biasing word on the unattended ear influenced participants’ processing of ____ when they were ____ of that word. |
D. ambiguous sentences; unaware |
22. In the flanker compatibility procedure, flanker stimuli and target stimuli must necessarily differ in terms of |
A. location. |
23. Flanker compatibility experiments have been conducted using a variety of stimulus conditions. By definition, this procedure must include at least one target and one distractor. In any condition where we find that a distractor influenced reaction time, we can conclude that the distractor |
B. was processed. |
24. Experiments that support the idea of early selection involve |
B. high-load tasks. |
25. Which of the following everyday scenarios is most likely to support what the early selection approach would say about how attention will affect the performance of the two tasks involved? |
D. Conversing on the phone while doing a crossword puzzle |
26. According to your text, the ability to divide attention depends on all of the following EXCEPT |
D. task cueing. |
27. The ability to pay attention to, or carry out, two or more different tasks simultaneously is known as |
A. divided attention. |
28. Imagine that U.S. lawmakers are considering changing the driving laws and that you have been consulted as an attention expert. Given the principles of consistent vs. varied mapping, which of the following possible changes to driving laws would most interfere with a skilled driver’s automatic performance when driving a car? |
D. Creating conditions where sometimes a green light meant "stop" |
29. In Schneider and Shiffrin’s experiment, in which participants were asked to indicate whether a target stimulus was present in a series of rapidly presented "frames," divided attention was easier |
A. in the consistent-mapping condition. |
30. Automatic processing occurs when |
C. tasks are well-practiced. |
31. The automatic process exhibited in the standard Stroop effect is |
B. reading words. |
32. The Stroop effect demonstrates |
A. how automatic processing can interfere with intended processing. |
33. The Stroop effect demonstrates people’s inability to ignore the ______ of words. |
A. meaning |
34. With the Stroop effect, you would expect to find longest response times when |
B. the color and the name differed. |
35. The Stroop effect occurs when participants |
B. try to name colors and ignore words. |
36. Controlled processing involves |
A. close attention. |
37. Which of the following statements concerning the "100-car naturalistic driving study" is true? |
A. Video recorders created records of both what the drivers were doing and the views out the front and rear windows |
38. Research on the use of cell phones while driving indicates that |
C. the main effect of cell phone use on driving safety can be attributed to the fact that attention is used up by the cognitive task of talking on the phone. |
39. Strayer and Johnston’s (2001) experiment involving simulated driving and the use of "hands-free" vs. "handheld" cell phones found that |
A. talking on either kind of phone impairs driving performance significantly and to the same extent. |
40. In Simons and Chabris’s "change blindness" experiment, participants watch a film of people playing basketball. Many participants failed to report that that a woman carrying an umbrella walked through because the |
C. participants were counting the number of ball passes. |
41. Automatic attraction of attention by a sudden visual or auditory stimulus is called |
B. exogenous attention. |
42. The use of an eye tracker can help reveal the shifting of one’s _____ attention. |
A. overt |
43. A bottom-up process is involved in fixating on an area of a scene that |
A. has high stimulus salience. |
44. When we search a scene, initial fixations are most likely to occur on ____ areas. |
C. high-saliency |
45. Scene schema is |
D. knowledge about what is contained in a typical scene. |
46. Eye tracker studies investigating attention as we carry out actions such as making a peanut butter sandwich shows that a person’s eye movements |
C. were determined primarily by the task. |
47. Lan has no idea what she just read in her text because she was thinking about how hungry she is and what she is going to have for dinner. This is a real-world example of |
C. inattentional blindness. |
48. Results of precueing experiments show that participants respond more rapidly to a stimulus that appeared at the ____ location. |
B. cued |
49. Colby and coworkers’ study showed that a monkey’s parietal cortex responded best to the appearance of a light when it was the focus of the monkey’s |
A. attention. |
50. Location-based attention is when |
C. people move their attention from one place to another. |
51. Imagine we conducted a series of attention experiments. The idea that attention is associated with objects would be indicated if reaction time were |
B. reduced when targets appeared within a cued object compared to within an adjacent object. |
52. A dynamic environment, in which objects move throughout a scene, is likely to invoke ____ attention. |
D. object-based |
53. According to Treisman’s feature integration theory, the first stage of perception is called the _____ stage. |
C. preattentive |
54. Illusory conjunctions are |
A. combinations of features from different stimuli. |
55. In Klin and coworkers’ research that investigated autistic reactions to the film Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, autistic people primarily attended to ____ in the scene. |
A. objects |
Cognitive Psych Quiz 2- Chapter 4
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