All AP Psychology Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1501 : Ap Psychology
What is the name of the experiments, conducted by Roger Sperry and his colleagues, that revealed the functional specialization of cerebral hemispheres?
Transcranial Stimulation experiments
Bicameral Mind experiments
Interhemispheric experiments
Lateralus experiments
Split-Brain experiments
Split-Brain experiments
Roger Sperry and colleagues, using a tachistoscope and other instruments, studied patients that had their corpus callosum severed. Their findings demonstrated that information is specialized in the hemispheres of the brain.
Example Question #1502 : Ap Psychology
Solomon Asch's line judgment task investigated which phenomenon of human interaction?
Altruism
Conformity
Dependency
Empathy
Obedience
Conformity
Participants in the line-judgment task were asked to identify which of three lines shown in a series of projected images was the longest while sitting in a room with a group of study confederates whom they believed were other participants in the study. The confederates would unanimously agree on the same incorrect line for a question, forcing the participant to choose between conforming to the majority opinion or trusting his/her own eyes and dissenting.
Example Question #1503 : Ap Psychology
During the Milgram Shock Experiment, which of the following factors diminished the likelihood that a participant would obey the commands of the person running the experiment?
Dressing the experimenter to appear as less of an authority figure
Providing a role model of disobedience
All answers are correct
Placing the participant in a different room from the experimenter and relaying instructions via intercom
Placing the participant in the same room as the confederate victim
All answers are correct
Participants were more likely to disobey when they were far away from the experimenter or when the experimenter's authority was diminished. They were also more likely to disobey if they were nearer to the suffering victim (really a confederate acting as though they were in pain) or if they had previously observed someone else disobeying.
Example Question #2 : History And Research
Which of the following scores represents average intelligence for Terman and Stern's original IQ test?
The IQ test has an average score of 100, with a standard deviation of 15. Scores of 130 or above demonstrate a person with superior ("gifted") intelligence, while scores of 70 or below indicate an intellectual disability. This scale is the same for both the original IQ test, as well as modern iterations.
Example Question #3 : History And Research
Which famous psychologist studied conformity and obedience by having participants ("teachers") administer electric shocks to other participants ("learners")?
Stanley Milgram
Elizabeth Harwell
Robert Asch
Carl Jung
Phillip Zimbardo
Stanley Milgram
Milgram is best known for devising an experiment to study how human participants react when they are asked to shock others. Whenever the "learner" got a memory question wrong, the "teacher" was told to administer a shock to a learner located in a different room. Milgram devised this study to examine how so many people participated in the cruel acts of the Holocaust.
Example Question #2 : History And Research
Which famous psychological experiment observed infant-caregiver attachment patterns?
Zimbardo's Stanford Prison study
Pavlov's Classical Conditioning experiment
Sherif's Robbers Cave experiment
Asch's Conformity study
Ainsworth's Strange Situation experiment
Ainsworth's Strange Situation experiment
Mary Ainsworth was a developmental psychologist who is best known for creating the "Strange Situation" to test infant-caregiver attachment patterns. In brief, the Strange Situation involves the caregiver leaving the infant alone for a short period of time, and then returning. Ainsworth observed the infant's response to the caregiver's return, and classified the response into an attachment pattern.
Example Question #5 : Influential Experiments And Methods
Which of the following choices best defines case studies?
Case studies involve one individual and can suggest fruitful ideas
Case studies involve one individual and suggest information for only atypical situations.
Case studies involve one individual and can suggest general principles that may be later applied to a population
Case studies involve more than one individual and can suggest fruitful ideas
Case studies involve more than one individual and can suggest general principles that may be later applied to all populations
Case studies involve one individual and can suggest fruitful ideas
Case studies are known to examine one individual with the ability to collect very detailed data. Despite the hope of being able to reveal information that may later be true for many people, the ideas and suggestions collected from observing one individual cannot be applied to a population. We cannot be sure that observed principles in a particular case can apply or be true for a population—it could be "an exception to the rule.” For instance, a case study may examine one male individual who smokes and has lived to 110; however, a mass study could have been released that suggests the average lifespan for male smokers to be less than 85. In this instance, the case study was of an atypical example; therefore, it would not be scientifically sound to theorize that all male smokers should have a similar life expectancy based on the information of one extraordinary case.
Example Question #2 : Research And Testing
Which of the following choices best characterizes a research method that collects a mass amount of less in-depth information?
Case Study
Counseling
Naturalistic observation
None of these
Survey
Survey
Surveys provide the ability to sample multiple cases that require volunteers to self-report their opinions and behaviors. This method permits the statistical analysis of the information collected from a wide variety of participants while also covering a broad base of questioning. Subsequently, surveys are not as keen methods of observation as case studies, naturalistic observation, or counseling. These three methods may require a close engagement with an individual in a particular setting; therefore, they provide an opportunity to collect detailed information about one particular individual as opposed to collecting data on massive populations.
Example Question #1511 : Ap Psychology
A group of scientists wish to test the relationship between pregnant mothers consuming coconut milk and the intelligence of their children. In order to complete this experiment, what else must the researchers obtain other than a control group?
Blind study
Double blind study
Placebo
Experimental group
Another control group
Experimental group
When testing the effects or the relationship between two factors, in this case coconut milk consumption and intelligence, an experiment requires a control and a treatment (experimental) group. The first is the group without the treatment whereas the second is exposed to the treatment (in this case, coconut milk). The two groups should be compared post-experiment after data analysis in order to understand or observe the effects of the treatment relative to standard conditions (in this case, no coconut milk).
Example Question #1512 : Ap Psychology
In Mark Rosenzweig and David Krech's 1950's rat experiment, they observed rats that were in impoverished caged environments versus ones in cages with communally enriched environments that included slides and toys. Which of the following best represent the significant discovery that resulted from the brain analysis of the two types of rats?
There were no difference between the rats' brains
The rats from the impoverished environment had significant development in all brain tissue
The rats that lived in the enriched environment usually developed a thicker and heavier brain cortex
The rats from the enriched environments had significant development in all brain tissue
The rats that lived in confinement developed more neural connections
The rats that lived in the enriched environment usually developed a thicker and heavier brain cortex
The result Rosenzweig and colleagues noted was that the brain weight of the environmentally enriched rats increased over time relative to the impoverished rats. Taking a closer look, they realized that it was specifically the cerebral cortex that had the most significantly noticeable difference. This experiment marked a cornerstone in the “nature vs. nurture” debate where genes ("nature") are said to be be responsible for the brain's blueprints, but experiences ("nurture") fill in the rest—in this case, development and establishing impressive branched neural connections. In order to make sure, Rosenzweig and colleagues repeated the experiment multiple times prior to publishing. This finding has been extended into observing the importance of nurturing in early childhood. This was true for the young rats—as seen in the experiment—and has been noted for young children as well.
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