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EASY 1. A relatively permanent change in knowledge behaviour or understanding that results from experience.

a) Adaptation b) Learning c) Fluid Intelligence d) Development 2. The non-verbal cues which are used during speech, and include speech sounds, such as er and um the timing of utterances or inflection and accents. a) Kinetic Communication b) Non-verbal communication c) Paralanguage d) Subliminal Message 3. Interruption of a train of speech before a thought or idea has been completed. a) Blocking b) Interrupting c) Frustration d) Cognitive Hindrance 4. A person who has achieved a balance between extreme introversion and extreme extroversion as described by Eysenck. a) Bipolar b) Mesovert c) Mental Hygiene d) Ambivert 5. The year APA published the first edition of The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. a) 1916 b) 1952 c) 1905 d) 1864 6. Characterized by the childs blind obedience to his parents. a) Inclination b) Internalization c) Moral Obligation d) Moral Realism 7. A learning effect in which the items which occurred most recently in a sequence are more likely to be recalled than those which occurred earlier on a) Recency effect b) Serial effect c) Latency effect

d) Rehearsal effect 8. A visual diagram of a family over two or three generations. a) Genograph b) Family Tree c) Genogram d) Family Heritage 9. The inclination to see events that have already occurred as being more predictable than they were before they took place. a) Hindsight Bias b) Historicalization c) Experiential Efference d) Dergree of Inferrence 10. Research approach that conducts an in-depth analysis of one person a) Longhitudinal Study b) Pathology c) Etiology d) Case study 11. Seventeeth-century notion that the mind and body are separate and do not significantly interact or influence each other. a) Seperatism b) Individualism c) Dualism d) Independence 12. The process of taking single items of information and recoding them on the basis of similarity or some other organizing principle. a) Gestaltism b) Chunking c) Encoding d) Sytemization 13. Self-Perception Theory asserts that people develop their attitudes by observing their behaviour and concluding what attitudes must have caused them. Who developed this? a) Daryl Bem b) Edward Tichener c) Harry Stak Sullivan d) Carl Jung 14. Excessive interest in bathing and cleaning oneself. It is common in obsessive compulsive disorder. a) Pathophobia b) Streromania c) Ablutomania d) Chetophobia 15. It is a phobia of Friday the 13th.

a) Paraskavedekatriaphobia b) Treciantophobia c) Paraskavedeoligophobia d) Tetrenokantophobia 16. It is an irrational and persistent fear of things to the left side of the body. a) Sinistrophobia b) Levodextrophobia c) Levophobia d) Sinistrodextrophobia 17. Which defense mechanism did Freud believe to be a sign of maturity? a) Rationalization b) Sublimation c) Intelectualization d) Anticipation 18. Mary has an argument with her boss, but remains calm while at work. When she gets home that evening, she yells at her spouse and children. What defense mechanism is Mary displaying? a) Catharsis b) Substitution c) Scapegoating d) Dispalcement 19. It is a conflict between the ego and superego. a) Cognitive Dissonace b) Emotional Dissonance c) Moral Anxiety d) Incongruency 20. A category of knowledge that allows us to interpret and understand the world. a) Science b) Schema c) System d) Syntax 21. It is a term in social psychology which refers to a bias people commonly have towards members of an outgroup. a) Ultimate Attribution Error b) Exclusion c) External Attribution Error d) Discrimination 22. It's an irrational and exaggerated fear of the seas and oceans. a) Aquaphobia b) Atlantophobia c) Oceanophobia d) Thalassophobia 23. The tendency of people to be made uncomfortable by any restriction of their freedom of choice. Once such pressure is perceived people will often act in opposition to it. a) Disturbance

b) Reactance c) Resistance d) Defiance 24. Cognitive processing problems in reading, writing, math, and other skills important to success in school. a) Mental Retardation b) Feeblemindedness c) Learning Disorder d) Intellectual Incapacity 25. The psychologist who proposed the concept of the 'fully-functioning person' was ____________.? a) Abraham Maslow b) Carl Rogers c) Rollo May d) Hans Eysenk

Anwers: 1. Learning 2. Paralanguage 3. Blocking 4. Ambivert 5. 1952 6. Moral realism 7. Recency effect 8. Genogram 9. Hindsight bias 10. Case study 11. Dualism 12. Chunking 13. Daryl Bem 14. Ablutomania 15. Paraskavedekatriaphobia 16. Levophobia 17. Sublimation 18. Displacement 19. Moral anxiety 20. schema 21. Ultimate attribution error 22. Thalassophobia

23. Reactance 24. Learning disorders 25. Carl rogers

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