All AP Psychology Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #111 : Research And Testing
Which of the follow is not true about projective and objective personality tests?
The Rorschach Inkblot test is an objective test
Projective tests involve interpreting responses to ambiguous stimuli
The Thematic Apperception Test is a projective test
Objective tests are scored in a standardized, predetermined way
The Rorschach Inkblot test is an objective test
The key difference between projective and objective personality tests is the way they are scored. Objective tests, which often involve self-report methods and “true/false” or multiple choice questions, are scored in a standardized, predetermined way. For example, if Joe and Anne both bubble in the exact same set of answers for a certain personality test, their score reports will show the exact same results. Contrastingly, projective tests generally don’t use a hard-coded method of scoring participant responses. Instead, the psychologist interprets a freeform response to an ambiguous stimulus and attempts to infer meaning from it, sometimes using guides created for this task as a reference. Both the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) and the Rorschach Inkblot Test are projective tests. The TAT uses ambiguous, uncaptioned scenes as the ambiguous stimuli, while the Rorschach uses monotone, symmetrical inkblot splatters as the ambiguous stimuli.
Example Question #111 : Research And Testing
Which of the following is the best example of naturalistic observation?
Counting the number of trials it takes an infant child to successfully grip a ball and put it in a basket (from behind a two-way mirror)
Asking a participant to give a short speech about a dream job, recording it, and later noting how many seconds she paused while speaking
Sitting on a park bench and tallying the number of times a parent tells their child to be careful versus to have fun
Giving one group of subjects a piece of chocolate and one group a sour candy and seeing who performs better on cognitive tasks
Sitting on a park bench and tallying the number of times a parent tells their child to be careful versus to have fun
Naturalistic observation refers to watching individuals in their “natural habitat” when laboratory observation would be cost-prohibitive, impossible, or otherwise unrealistic. The defining feature of naturalistic observation is watching individuals and recording data about their behaviors in the normal, unaltered environment. This can be useful when the individuals might change their behavior when they are aware they’re being watched (i.e. a phenomenon sometimes called the Hawthorne effect). The example involving sitting at a park is naturalistic observation, because the researcher is observing the behavior of parents of children at play in their natural environment, as opposed to bringing the parent-children pairs into a lab and then observing the parents’ behavior. The other examples all involve bringing human subjects into a lab setting, which by definition is not naturalistic observation.
Example Question #1616 : Ap Psychology
Which of the following processes is known as the brain imaging technique that involves amplifying electrical impulses recorded from electrodes on the scalp?
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
Positron emission tomography (PET)
Electroencephalography (EEG)
Electrocardiography (ECG)
Electroencephalography (EEG)
The correct answer is "electroencephalography (EEG)." In EEG, the researcher applies electrodes to the participant’s (or patient’s) scalp and records the electrical signals emitted by the brain. Recall that neurons communicate with one another using electrical impulses. The electrodes are placed in specific places that allow the researcher to measure activity in different areas of the brain. This technique is often used in sleep research.
Example Question #1612 : Ap Psychology
Which of the following is NOT true about double blind studies?
Researchers are unaware which group the participants have been assigned to
Participants are unaware which group they have been assigned to
There is a control group and at least one experimental group
The control group participants often receive a placebo treatment
Researchers gather correlational data to draw conclusions
Researchers gather correlational data to draw conclusions
Double blind studies collect experimental data to draw conclusions, not correlational data! In other words, researchers are able to examine cause and effect relationships due to the random assignment of participants to a control group or an experimental group.
Example Question #111 : Research And Testing
What kind of statistical test would be used to determine if there is a linear relationship between two variables?
Average
Chi-square
ANOVA
Pearson correlation
T-test
Pearson correlation
A Pearson correlation between two variables indicates that as one variable increases, another variable either increases or decreases by some amount in a linear manner.
Example Question #1 : Interpreting Results
A study finds a strong negative correlation between the amount of chocolate a child consumes and the number of absences the child has from school. Which of the following values could express that correlation?
Correlations range between and , with signifying the strongest possible negative correlation between two variables, signifying the strongest possible positive correlation, and signifying the complete absence of any correlation between two variables.
Example Question #3 : Interpreting Results
What is an illusory correlation?
A perfect correlation between two variables
The perception of a relationship where none exists
When one variable negatively predicts a second variable
A type of Pearson product moment correlation commonly used in the field of social psychology
An illusion of a correlation (often called sans-stats)
The perception of a relationship where none exists
An illusory correlation occurs when someone thinks that two variables are related, but they are actually not (they have a correlation of 0).
Example Question #1621 : Ap Psychology
Which of these represents the strongest correlation coefficient?
Correlation coefficients range from -1 to 1, with the strongest correlations being closer to -1 or 1. A correlation of 0 indicates no relationship between two variables. Negative correlations can be as strong or stronger than positive correlations; the most important factor is the magnitude of the correlation.
Example Question #111 : Research And Testing
Which term refers to the middle term in a distribution of data?
The standard deviation
The median
The mean
The range
The mode
The median
The median is the middle number in a data set. For example, the median of {3, 7, 4, 5, 8} is 5. The terms must first be placed in increasing order: {3, 4, 5, 7, 8}. From here, it becomes evident that 5 is the middle term, or median.
Example Question #114 : Research And Testing
Which of the following is an appropriate definition for statistics?
An analysis of numerical data
A subjective interpretation of numerical data
The negative or positive correlational relationship between different percentages
Numerical data that shows the cause of a certain phenomenon
None of these
An analysis of numerical data
Statistics play a big role in much of the research in the field of psychology. In studying groups of people and individuals, their behaviors, reactions, etc. a researcher will have lots of numerical data on their hands. Statistics is the analysis of this numerical data.