All GRE Subject Test: Psychology Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Thinking
Which of the following mental processes are promoted by intrinsic motivation, persistence, and expertise?
Creativity
Functional fixedness
Crystallized intelligence
Convergent thinking
Creativity
Creativity is another word for divergent thinking, a type of problem solving ability wherein a person’s brain searches various areas as it seeks the solution to a particular problem. Certain traits—including intrinsic motivation, persistence, expertise, nonconformity, and curiosity—can help promote creative thinking.
Example Question #2 : Thinking
Which of the following terms is used to describe the increase in IQ scores over the past century?
Flynn effect
Hawthorne effect
Zeigarnik effect
Cattell-Horn-Carroll Theory
Flynn effect
The "Flynn effect" describes the increase in IQ scores that has been observed over the past century. On the other hand, the "Zeigarnik effect" is the tendency to remember unfinished tasks better than completed ones. The "Hawthorne effect" is the change in people's behaviors while they are being observed, and can occur in research subjects. Last, the "Cattell-Horn-Carroll theory" or CHC theory is the most supported intelligence theory, and states that intelligence includes three strata: general ability or "g," broad abilities, and several narrow abilities.
Example Question #3 : Thinking
Which of the following situations is an example of using fluid (Gf) intelligence abilities?
Bob solves a math equation using familiar formulas.
Bob remembers how to ride a bike even after not riding one for several years.
Bob is given a math problem using concepts he has never tackled before but is able to arrive at the correct answer.
Bob can recite all of the former presidents of the United States from memory.
Bob is given a math problem using concepts he has never tackled before but is able to arrive at the correct answer.
Fluid intelligence involves the ability to reason and solve novel problems. The example of Bob solving an unfamiliar math problem is the only example that involves a novel situation. Bob being able to recite the former presidents and solve a math problem using familiar formulas are examples of crystallized intelligence (Gc), which refers to stored knowledge. Bob remembering how to ride a bike does not fit into Gc and Gf theory, but rather is an example of procedural/implicit memory.
Example Question #4 : Thinking
Who is often considered the father of the multiple intelligences theory?
Howard Gardner
Stuart Richie
Sigmund Freud
Mary Ainsworth
Jakob Pietschnig
Howard Gardner
Howard Gardner is the father of the theory of Multiple Intelligences, which divides intellectual intelligence into seven different modalities (music, logical/mathematical, bodily/kinesthetic, visual/spatial, interpersonal, intrapersonal, linguistic).
Example Question #1 : Sensation & Perception
People's ability to discern one conversation or focus on one point from another, prioritized by interest, is known as which of the following?
Attentional spotlight
Cocktail party effect
Divided attention
Aural wandering
Specific attention
Cocktail party effect
The cocktail party effect, demonstrated and named by Colin Cherry, illustrates people's ability to selectively attend to common stimuli--even in the presence of several conflicting conversations or auditory stimuli--which the brain identifies as more important. This is demonstrated by people's ability to hear their name, or the voice of a partner or friend, more clearly than other stimuli in a crowded environment.
Example Question #1 : Experimental
Which of the following does not act as a cue for depth perception?
None of these
Dark adaptation
Interposition
Motion parallax
Binocular disparity
Dark adaptation
In 1709, George Berkeley noted various depth cues in the human visual system, including interposition, which refers to the depth cue wherein one object covers or overlaps with another object. A second cue is motion parallax wherein the disparity in speed and motion gives us cues about the relative depth of parts of the object. The last cue is binocular disparity, also known as stereopsis. This cue is linked to the fact that our different eyes provide us with two slightly different views of the world around us. When the brain adds together these two images, we get a perception of depth.
Example Question #2 : Sensation & Perception
Sensory integration can be best describe as which of the following?
None of these
The process of combining different sensory signals
A change in afference caused by external stimuli
When a mixture of lights add together and create the perception of color
A mathematical technique for computing definite integrals of one real variable
The process of combining different sensory signals
The correct answer is the process of combining different sensory signals. To give cause or equal opportunity to each sense and a mathematical technique for computing definite integrals of one real variable are answers that utilize the incorrect definition of integration for this problem. When a mixture of lights add together and create the perception of color is additive color mixture.
Example Question #2 : Experimental
Phyllis is 63 years old, and recently she has noticed that colors do not appear as bright or clear as they used to in her memory. She is having trouble driving and reading, but can still knit and cook with little to no issues (i.e. she remembers the recipes without having to read them). Which of the following conditions is most likely affecting Phyllis?
Glaucoma
Hemeralopia
Cataracts
Prosopagnosia
Macular degeneration
Macular degeneration
Macular degeneration is a degenerative condition affecting the retina and choroid—the blood supply that feeds the retina. In either "dry" or "wet" forms, it causes progressive central blindness while leaving the peripheral vision largely intact. It is estimated that from 40-55 million people worldwide suffer from the condition, which is suspected to have been long under-diagnosed.
Example Question #2 : Vision
Which of the following best defines a feature detector?
The place in the ear where transduction occurs
Cone cells
Structures we use to organize the stimuli in our environment
A neuron that responds to stimuli in one's environment
A neuron that responds to stimuli in one's environment
The interpretation of sensory stimuli is an important biological process. Feature detectors play an important role in the sense of sight. Once visual signals reach the primary visual cortex, specialized visual cells called "feature detectors" code for the elements of stimuli that are most important.
Example Question #2 : Vision
How do infants typically react when placed on a visual cliff? What do these findings suggest?
They move towards the shallow side of the visual cliff. Infants learn early in development to fear heights.
They move towards the shallow side of the visual cliff. A degree of depth perception seems to be innate.
They remain still. Infants have no conception of depth.
None of these
They remain still. Young infants are not yet perceptually aware of depth cues.
They move towards the shallow side of the visual cliff. A degree of depth perception seems to be innate.
Infants will move towards the shallow side of the visual cliff apparatus. This behavior is exhibited a significant percentage of times, even when their mothers stand at the "deep" end, and encourage them to step over the "cliff."
These findings suggest that young infants are aware of depth cues, as in the case of the visual cliff, and are able to modify their behavior appropriately in response to these. The young age of the infants involved in such experimentation suggests that at least a degree of depth perception is innate. It is inconclusive how much of this ability is innate and how much learned, though it seems most likely to be a combination of both 'nature' and 'nurture'. The significance of such studies was to demonstrate that 'nature' had a role.
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