AP Psychology : Learning

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for AP Psychology

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Example Questions

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Example Question #5 : Attitude Change And Social Learning

IQ increases by 3 to 4 points every 10 years. This is referred to as what?

Possible Answers:

The Flynn Effect

Stanford-Binet Scale

The Strange Situation Test

Intelligence Quotient

Asch's Experiment 

Correct answer:

The Flynn Effect

Explanation:

The Flynn Effect refers to an increasing IQ average (by about three to four points) every ten years years. The Flynn Effect is a result of today’s advanced healthcare and improved living conditions. Also, increased emphasis on the importance of education in today’s culture has impacted this rising number.  

Example Question #4 : Attitude Change And Social Learning

Jen struggles with a problem during her math test. After the test, Jen looks up how to do the problem. Later, Jen feels stupid for not remembering how to do such an easy problem during the test.

Jen is experiencing __________.

Possible Answers:

An availability heuristic

Hindsight bias

Cognitive dissonance

Survivor's guilt

Delusions of grandeur

Correct answer:

Hindsight bias

Explanation:

Hindsight bias refers to a person's tendency to overestimate one's past abilities after gaining new information that the person did not have at the time of acting. Jen gets mad at herself after looking up how to solve the math problem because she now knows how to do it and it seems easy to her in that moment, despite the fact that she did not have this information while taking the test.

Example Question #1 : Attitude Change And Social Learning

Which of the following is best exemplified by Albert Bandura's Bobo Doll experiment?

Possible Answers:

Reinforcement Schedules

Classical Conditioning

Observational Learning

Latent Learning

Operant Conditioning

Correct answer:

Observational Learning

Explanation:

Bandura's Bobo doll experiment involved children viewing adults act aggressively toward the Bobo doll. When left alone with the Bobo doll, the children acted in the same manner toward the doll as they had observed the adults doing. This supported the idea of children observing, then imitating, a certain behavior, which are two key factors in observational learning.

Example Question #151 : Learning

Martin Seligman's shock studies with dogs examined the development of __________.

Possible Answers:

Resilience

In-Group Biases

Habituation

Learned helplessness

Phobias

Correct answer:

Learned helplessness

Explanation:

Seligman's work on learned helplessness began as a traditional classical conditioning study pairing the ringing of a bell with an electric shock. What surprised Seligman and his team was what occurred in the later part of the study, when the team changed the dogs' environment to give them a chance to escape the area administering the shock: because the dogs had been conditioned to understand that a shock would always follow the bell's ringing, they did not even try to exit the dangerous area. That is to say, they had learned helplessness.

Example Question #1 : Attitude Change And Social Learning

Which of the following can be defined as the process by which we learn through witnessing the behaviors and consequences of others?

Possible Answers:

Reinforcement

Punishment

Social cognitive

Observational

Correct answer:

Observational

Explanation:

Evolving the theory of behaviorism to include a social component, Albert Bandura introduced the concept of observational learning. He declared that humans are quite capable of learning by observing the sequence of behaviors and consequences in others. For example, if a young lad watches his older brother receive a reprimand from his mother for picking flowers from the flowerbed, he will learn that the same consequences would apply to him if he were to do the same.

Example Question #744 : Ap Psychology

Which of the following can best be defined as the belief in one’s capacity or ability to organize and execute the courses of action required to reach a certain goal?

Possible Answers:

Reciprocal determinism

Self-knowledge

Self-efficacy

Personal determinism

Correct answer:

Self-efficacy

Explanation:

Self-efficacy is a concept introduced by Albert Bandura as part of his theory on observational learning. While much of his theory focused on social learning, he also described aspects of learning that involved just the individual. Personal determination and self-knowledge are not Bandurian terms. Reciprocal determinism is a term introduced by Bandura but is associated with the interaction between the individual and the social environment.

Example Question #331 : Individual Psychology And Behavior

Which of the following was best describes what was demonstrated in Albert Bandura’s classic study of socially learned aggression that observed children hitting Bobo dolls?

Possible Answers:

Children tend to model aggressive behavior they observe, whether or not the behavior is praised or encouraged

Children will not model aggressive behavior they observe, unless they see the behavior being praised and encouraged

Children never model aggressive behavior they observe even with praise or encouragement

Children tend to model aggressive behavior they observe, especially if they see the behavior being praised or encouraged

Correct answer:

Children tend to model aggressive behavior they observe, especially if they see the behavior being praised or encouraged

Explanation:

Bandura’s experiment demonstrated that children who observe aggressive behavior that is praised or encouraged are more likely to mimic what they see. Scientist reached this conclusion by comparing these aggressive behaviors with the relatively unaggressive behaviors of children who witnessed aggressive actions that were not praised and negatively reinforced. 

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