All AP Psychology Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Language
What is the name of the theory in linguistics that suggests that some rules of grammar are hard-wired into the brain, and manifest without being taught?
Role and reference grammar
Universal grammar
Systematic functional grammar
Lexical functional grammar
Country grammar
Universal grammar
Usually credited to Noam Chomsky, the theory of universal grammar suggests that all possible human languages share certain properties, such as the rules of grammar. For Chomsky, the development of language involves genetic endowment, external data, and principles not specific to the faculty of language (i.e. those properties of the brain that cause it to learn language).
Example Question #1051 : Ap Psychology
What is the name of the region of the brain responsible for controlling speech?
Sprachbund area
Wernicke area
Broca area
Brokaw area
Bicameral area
Broca area
Also called convolution of Broca, the Broca area region of the brain contains motor neurons involved in speech production. The Broca region was discovered by a French surgeon, named Paul Broca, in 1861.
Example Question #2 : Language
An individual with damage to Broca's area is most likely to have difficulty with which of the following tasks?
Comprehending a spoken request
Remembering a phone number
Answering a question out loud
Distinguishing between blue and yellow
Answering a question out loud
Broca's area is a region of the frontal lobe of the cortex, and is linked to the ability to produce speech. Damage to Broca's area can lead to Broca's aphasia, which is the inability to speak out loud.
In contrast, Wernicke's area is located in the temporal lobe of the cortex and is credited with processing and interpreting the speech of others. Damage to Wernicke's area could leave a patient unable to comprehend a spoken request. Remembering a phone number would require processing by the hippocampus, which is a component of the limbic system credited with memory storage. Blue-yellow color blindness arises when a genetic disorder leaves the individual unable to produce cones that detect light at short wavelengths (such as blue).
Example Question #41 : Cognition
Which hypothesis predicts that differences in language cause differences in thinking patterns and other cognitive processes?
Psychoanalytic hypothesis
Social learning hypothesis
Perceptual organization hypothesis
Kohlberg hypothesis
Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis (also known as linguistic relativity) states that language shapes the way we see the world. The strong version of the theory states that language determines thought, whereas the weak version states that language merely influences some non-linguistic processes.
Example Question #3 : Language
How did Noam Chomsky propose that we acquire language?
We are born with an innate capacity to rapidly learn language
We acquire the native language of our parents
We acquire language through teachings from caregivers and peers
We acquire the dominant language of the society in which we live
We are born with an innate capacity to rapidly learn language
Noam Chomsky proposed that we all are born with a "language acquisition device" in our minds, which gives us universal principles of human language. We learn our language's own "settings" for human communication according to these universal principles. For instance, if all human language has temporal tenses, we learn how our particular language expresses tense. Although the behaviorists believe we only learn language through our environment, Chomsky pointed out that we learn language very quickly through processes that appear similar to the human species, regardless of environment.
Example Question #3 : Language
What's the difference between semantics and syntax?
Semantics is concerned with how we assign meaning in language; syntax is concerned with the structure of human language and its idiosyncrasies
Semantics studies the structure of sound and how certain sounds reflect meaning in language; syntax is the study of how we assign meaning to units of sound
Semantics is concerned with the structure of human language and its idiosyncrasies; syntax is concerned with how we assign meaning in language.
Semantics is concerned with the acoustics of sound; syntax is concerned with patterns of sound across language
Semantics is concerned with how we assign meaning in language; syntax is concerned with the structure of human language and its idiosyncrasies
Semantics and syntax are fields of linguistics that concern different aspects of language. Syntax is primarily concerned with the universal properties and idiosyncrasies of the structure of language. For example, syntax studies how we construct our language an speech, and how we form certain phrases and clauses. Semantics is concerned with deciphering meaning in language by looking at its logical structure, the meaning of words, or how it is represented cognitively.
Example Question #3 : Language
What, according to Hockett, is a unique property and linguistic universal of human language?
Communication, which allows us to signal back and forth from one another
Emotive, the ability to convey complex human emotions, which are unique to the human species
Displacement, which allows us to communicate about events or objects which are not immediately apparent
Semanticity, which allows us to assign a meaning to auditory units
Displacement, which allows us to communicate about events or objects which are not immediately apparent
Displacement is a unique property of human language. The only possible exception is in the case of bees, which may have a method of communicating directions to a plant they found. Other than this, we are unique in our ability to discuss events or objects that are not immediately apparent such as places far away, the past, and the future. Some have even theorized this was where the need for language began.
Example Question #4 : Language
How can syntax influence the meaning of what we say?
In English syntax, the overall structure of a sentence can be used to convey the emotions of the speaker. For instance, sentences with fewer words and less structural complexity indicates anger, sadness, or boredom. If someone asks "How are you doing?" and the person replies "Okay," they are more likely experiencing negative emotions than if they replied with a more detailed and structurally complex sentence such as "I'm doing alright today."
In English syntax, we know the verb comes after the subject in a setence. Hence we know in the sentence "The cop carded the student" that "carded" isn't used as the noun "card," but instead is being used as a verb, as in the cop demanded the student for their card.
In syntax, certain sounds and pitches are used to convey a particular meaning. For instance, high pitched tones are often used to convey affection, particularly from mothers to their children.
None of these.
In English syntax, we know the verb comes after the subject in a setence. Hence we know in the sentence "The cop carded the student" that "carded" isn't used as the noun "card," but instead is being used as a verb, as in the cop demanded the student for their card.
Syntax is primarily concerned with the ordering of words and phrases, and their respective grammatical functions. That said, it assists in conveying meaning but is not the singular mode to express meaning. For instance, independent of whether or not the word "cat" is ordered in a particular way in a sentence, we know the word refers to a small fluffy feline animal. This is semantics.
However, if we place "cat" at the beginning of the sentence—"the cat sniffed the pigeon"—we know the cat is performing the action of sniffing. But once we reverse the order so that the sentence is "the pigeon sniffed the cat," we know the cat is being sniffed by the pigeon. The order of the nouns, verbs, and objects is determined by the syntactic rules of a language thus assists in conveying meaning.
Example Question #51 : Cognition
Which of the following is a phoneme of the English language?
The "a" in "cat" and "crate" since it manifests as two different sounds in different phonetic contexts
None of these
"im-", since this can be added to words to create new meanings (impossible, improbable, etc.)
"C", because it is a sound that is able to distinguish meaning between two words
"C", because it is a sound that is able to distinguish meaning between two words
The "C" sound—represented phoenetically as [k], a voiced velar stop—is a phoneme of the English language. Phonemes are units of sound that can distinguish meaning in a language. Another example would be "G" and "B." Since "boat" and "goat" would sound exactly the same if it weren't for the first consonant, we know the first consonant is used to distinguish between the meaning of these two words. Therefore, we know that both "B" and "G" are phonemes of English.
Example Question #4 : Language
What is the holophrastic stage of language acquisition?
When babies babble
When babies combine words to form simple commands
When babies begin to acquire syntactic rules, but overgeneralize them
When babies speak in single words
When babies speak in single words
At this particular stage of language acquisition, babies are transitioning away from babbling and beginning to develop communication using whole words. They can only say simple words and cannot combine them, even into simple commands, which is the next stage of acquisition.
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