Research on situated cognition suggests that

Assignment Help Other Subject
Reference no: EM13856368

Question 1

Think of 10 animal names that begin with the letter R. This problem would probably be solved using a ______ technique.
• A. means-end analysis
• B. reasoning-by-analogy
• C. gestalt restructuring
• D. generate-and-test
• E. productive-thinking

Question 2
The problem-solving technique of ______ involves comparing the goal with the starting point, thinking of possible ways to overcome the distance between them, and choosing the best one.
• A. generate-and-test
• B. means-end analysis
• C. reasoning by analogy
• D. mental set
• E. introspection

Question 3
When one recalls the solution to an old problem and uses it to solve a new, similarly structured problem, one has reasoned by:
• A. introspection
• B. analysis
• C. analogy
• D. backtracking
• E. working memory

Question 4
When you adopt a certain framework or strategy for solving a series of problems, you may fail to see other, more efficient ways of solving some of the problems. This is referred to as:
• A. functional fixedness
• B. procrastination
• C. a heuristic
• D. mental set
• E. reasoning by analogy

Question 5
Study of chess masters indicate that masters:
• A. consider more possible moves than novices do
• B. choose the best move only after lengthy consideration
• C. extract more information from a brief exposure to a chess board
• D. are better at planning future moves than novices are
• E. consider more possible "reply" moves by their opponents

Question 6
When you walk away from a difficult problem and do something else for a while, then come back and solve the problem successfully, you have experienced the
• A. incubation effect
• B. mental-set effect
• C. unconscious-processing effect
• D. problem-space effect
• E. functional-fixedness effect
Question 7
Which type of reasoning results in conclusions that contain new information?
• A. inductive reasoning
• B. deductive reasoning
• C. invalid reasoning
• D. both inductive and deductive reasoning
• E. neither inductive nor deductive reasoning
Question 8
Some members of the Jones family are tall. Some tall people play basketball. Which of the following is true?
• A. Logically, some members of the Jones family play basketball
• B. Logically, no members of the Jones family play basketball
• C. Most people assume that some members of the Jones family play basketball
• D. Most people assume that all members of the Jones family play basketball
• E. Most people assume that no members of the Jones family play basketball

Question 9
Which of the following is a difference between everyday reasoning and formal reasoning?
• A. In everyday reasoning, all premises are usually supplied
• B. In everyday reasoning, there is typically one correct answer
• C. In everyday reasoning, problems are solved as a means of achieving other goals
• D. In formal reasoning, problems are not self-contained
• E. In formal reasoning, the content of the problem typically has potential personal relevance

Question 10
The tendency to seek out information that supports our current beliefs is called:
• A. a believability effect
• B. a content effect
• C. a confirmation bias
• D. syllogistic reasoning
• E. false induction

Question 11
According to psychologists, human decision making often falls short of optimality because:
• A. there is not enough information available to make a rational decision
• B. one cannot be rational under conditions of uncertainty
• C. the information available overwhelms the cognitive processes
• D. rationality assumes a higher degree of intelligence than most people have
• E. true rationality can only be achieved by a computer

Question 12
Which of the following is NOT one of the five phases of decision making, according to Galotti?
• A. goal setting
• B. information gathering
• C. planning
• D. random choice
• E. decision structuring

Question 13
When we assess probability by judging the ease with which relevant examples come to mind, we are using the heuristic of:
• A. representativeness
• B. availability
• C. framing
• D. hindsight
• E. the law of small numbers

Question 14
Because of the representativeness heuristic, we are likely to erroneously assume that which of the following sequences of coin flips is more probable?
• A. heads-heads-heads-heads-heads
• B. heads-tails-heads-tails-heads
• C. heads-heads-tails-tails-tails
• D. tails-tails-tails-tails-heads
• E. heads-tails-heads-tails-tails

Question 15
According to research on the anchoring phenomenon,
• A. even when given additional information, people refuse to depart from their original "anchors."
• B. people ignore rational anchors that should influence their subsequent estimates
• C. even when the anchor is arbitrary, people are unwilling to adjust upward or downward from that anchor by large amounts
• D. anchoring can result in serious overestimation of quantities such as 1 x 2 x 3 x 4 x 5 x 6 x 7 x 8
• E. people should never use anchors in judgment

Question 16
Past events seem "inevitable" due to the action of the:
• A. framing effect
• B. hindsight bias
• C. gambler's fallacy
• D. availability heuristic
• E. illusory correlation

Question 17
Patients with prefrontal cortex damage tend to show deficits in their:
• A. intelligence
• B. semantic memory
• C. working memory
• D. inductive reasoning
• E. deductive reasoning

Question 18
Field-independent people:
• A. find it easy to identify embedded figures in a larger picture
• B. find it difficult to identify embedded figures in a larger picture
• C. rely primarily on external referents in processing information
• D. rely upon others in ambiguous social situations
• E. rely upon both external referents and others in processing information

Question 19
Research has suggested that experts are more likely than novices to:
• A. perceive subtle distinctions between stimuli
• B. categorize stimuli based on perceptual similarities
• C. chunk information into meaningful configurations
• D. perceive subtle distinctions and chunk information into meaningful configurations
• E. perceive subtle distinctions, categorize based on perceptual similarities, and chunk information into meaningful configurations

Question 20
Research on ways of knowing has established that:
• A. connected knowing is consistently more prominent in women than men
• B. a person's "way of knowing" can shift with the context in which a person is interacting
• C. ways of knowing are stable characteristics
• D. ways of knowing predict different kinds of performance on cognitive tasks
• E. socioeconomic status, level of education, and cultural heritage do not interact with gender in determining ways of knowing

Question 21
Susceptibility to certain kinds of visual illusions may depend on:
• A. schooling
• B. visual acuity
• C. literacy
• D. experience in certain environments
• E. religious beliefs

Question 22
Studies of the Kpelle children of Libya (regarding clustering in a memory recall task) suggest that:
• A. people in some cultures do not have long-term memory
• B. long-term memory processes vary dramatically across cultures
• C. the Kpelle are incapable of using clustering to aid recall
• D. the Kpelle are capable of learning to use clustering, but never get the amount of benefit from the technique that American children do
• E. more sophisticated participants spontaneously engage in organizational strategies to aid recall, while less sophisticated participants are not likely to engage in such behaviors without explicit instruction to do so

Question 23
Cross-cultural studies of categorization have shown all of the following EXCEPT:
• A. As children grow older, they become more likely to sort objects by function rather than by perceptual characteristics (color or size)
• B. As children grow older, they increase their abilities to sort systematically by any criteria (function, color, size, etc.)
• C. Education seems to play little role in categorization ability
• D. Categorization of familiar materials is easier than categorization of unfamiliar materials
• E. Mayan first-graders were almost completely unable to re-sort a set of stimuli that had previously been sorted by another dimension

Question 24
Studies comparing Mano farmers and American undergraduates on sorting cards and bowls of rice indicate that:
• A. different cultures' exposure to stimuli affects how people in those cultures sort objects
• B. schooling affects how people sort objects
• C. intelligence varies across culture
• D. different cultures' attitudes affect how people in those cultures sort objects
• E. innate perceptual abilities play a strong role in sorting tasks

Question 25
Studies of logical reasoning among nonliterate cultures show that:
• A. the ability to accept initial premises that contradict one's own experience is culturally universal
• B. nonliterate participants treat general premises as descriptions particular to one person's experience only
• C. both literate and nonliterate participants have no trouble seeing premises as interdependent parts of a single problem
• D. literate participants show a greater tendency than nonliterate participants to introduce new premises into a logical reasoning task
• E. nonliterate participants show accurate recall of individual premises of a reasoning task, although they cannot come to a reasonable conclusion from those premises

Question 26
Content effects in formal reasoning tasks are:
• A. greater for Americans than for Koreans
• B. equal for Americans and Koreans
• C. greater for Koreans than Americans
• D. never found at all in Koreans
• E. never found at all in Americans

Question 27
Different cultures develop different counting systems. The Oksapmin children of New Guinea learn to count using a system based on:
• A. branches of trees
• B. petals on flowers
• C. body parts
• D. types of animals
• E. types of fruit

Question 28
Which of the following is NOT a way in which culture affects cognition, according to Vygotsky?
• A. Cultures arrange for the occurrence of non-occurrence of particular problems
• B. Cultures determine the frequency with which problems occur
• C. Cultures determine which events go together
• D. Cultures regulate the level of difficulty of tasks
• E. Cultures regulate the value attached to certain abilities

Question 29
Scribner and Cole did discover some literacy effects among the Vai people, most having to do with:
• A. logical reasoning
• B. spatial cognition
• C. knowledge of language
• D. arithmetic skill
• E. confidence in problem solving

Question 30
Research on situated cognition suggests that:
• A. practical thinking is less flexible than formal, classroom thinking
• B. practical thinking employs methods that are more likely to be inaccurate
• C. practical thinking is tailored to specific contexts, whereas classroom thinking is more abstract
• D. practical thinking is only found in classrooms
• E. classroom thinking is more socially oriented than practical thinking

Reference no: EM13856368

Questions Cloud

Explain organization''s information security department : You recently accepted this job and have completed your first 3 months in the position. There are many security concerns, and the environment lacks policies and standards. You would like to address this, but you must first research the standard app..
Valid defense to the charge of smuggling : Dan was suspected by customs and immigration officers of having information concerning the smuggling of drugs into the United States. Acting undercover, a customs and immigration official went to Dan and suggested that he bring illegal drugs into thi..
How can managers break down silos in organizations : Silos are cohesive divisions or units in organizations that don’t work well with other units and undermine the success of organizations. Silos can be encouraged by managers that pit people or departments against each other. What is a silo and how do ..
Research on situated cognition suggests that : Research on situated cognition suggests that
Responsible for convening major event : You are responsible for convening a major event in which senior officials from several state governments will try to come to an agreement on environmental issues. It is well known that some officials posture so that they appear superior, whereas othe..
Consultant for local landscape supply company : You are working as a consultant for a local landscape supply company. One of the possibilities that has consistently come up in conversation with the owners is making your own mulch instead of continuing to buy mulch in bulk from the distributer.
Relational and logical operators to evaluate logical : Boolean w6 using Relational and Logical Operators to Evaluate Logical (Boolean) Expression Evaluate the logical (Boolean) expressions in the following exercises and circle the correct answer after you evaluation
Performance base on financial measures-customer satisfaction : Assume that you are Lisa Johnson. Evaluate James’ performance based on financial measures, strategy implementation, customer satisfaction, control measures, and people standards. Provide support for your ratings. Put yourself into Lisa Johnson’s shoe..

Reviews

Write a Review

Other Subject Questions & Answers

  Separated from the conclusion with a slash

Complete the following derivations. Note: Individual premises are separated by semicolons and separated from the conclusion with a slash. Eg. A; B/C. A and B are individual premises. C is the conclusion. 1.(S?~I) & N ; (N?~I) & ~A / S & ~A

  Understanding about contracts

Freeman denies entering into any agreement to sell the second 4,000 bushels of wheat to Terminal Grain but admits that he received the two written confirmations sent by Maher. Provide your Decision?

  What are the exemptions from flsa requirements

The federal government does not impose a general requirement for employers to pay a fair salary to their employees. However, it offers employees some protection through the FLSA requiring employers to pay for overtime work.

  Understanding the needs of business

Is it true that lawyers fail to understand the needs of business, and managers fail to understand the approach of lawyers?

  Recognize and describe at least the two instances of

identify and discuss at least the two instances of non-diegetic sound and two instances of diegetic sound in the film

  The indication of musical dynamics arose in which century

The indication of musical dynamics arose in which century?

  By expanding public and private insurance coverage

By expanding public and private insurance coverage, The Affordable Care Act (Links to an external site.) was designed to (1) increase the quality and affordability of health insurance and (2) decrease the number of uninsured people. These measures al..

  Evidence of individual differences in working memory

Matlin (2013) discusses various types of cognitively-based activities in which individual differences in working memory might be prominent. Based on your knowledge of working memory, what other types of cognitively-based activities might provide evid..

  Possible problems in a real estate transaction

What are possible problems in a real estate transaction that may need addressing and how could they be resolved?

  Compare the essential characteristics of partnerships

Compare the essential characteristics of partnerships

  Terrorism depends on the ability to inspire fear

As you have already learned, terrorism depends on the ability to inspire fear. In the past, this influence was limited by an individual's proximity to the event and word of mouth regarding the act.

  Global political economy-washington consensus

Do you agree with the statement that the 'Washington Consensus' led to the transformation of the Bretton Woods institutions into 'Third World debt collecting agencies'?

Free Assignment Quote

Assured A++ Grade

Get guaranteed satisfaction & time on delivery in every assignment order you paid with us! We ensure premium quality solution document along with free turntin report!

All rights reserved! Copyrights ©2019-2020 ExpertsMind IT Educational Pvt Ltd