Deck 9: Visual Imagery and Spatial Cognition

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Question
Cooper's studies of the mental rotation of complex polygons indicated that people ______.

A)rotated more complex polygons in the same amount of time as simpler polygons
B)took longer to rotate more complex polygons
C)actually took less time to rotate more complex polygons
D)were unable to mentally rotate a polygon with greater than 10 points with more than chance accuracy
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Question
Behaviorists objected to the study of visual imagery because ______.

A)it cannot be investigated with sufficient scientific control
B)there are too many individual differences in people's abilities to visualize
C)behaviorists prefer to study animals and animals have no imagery abilities
D)we can only study visual imagery and not auditory images,olfactory images,etc.
Question

According to the symbolic distance effect,which of the following questions would be answered most quickly?

A)Which is bigger,a mouse or a house?
B)Which is bigger,a mouse or a rat?
C)Which is bigger,a house or a store?
D)Which is bigger,a rat or a cat?
Question
In Paivio's study of paired-associate learning,subjects learned four types of word pairs: I.concrete-concrete (e.g. ,book-table)
II)concrete-abstract (e.g. ,book-freedom)
III)abstract-concrete (e.g. ,freedom-table)
IV)abstract-abstract (e.g. ,freedom-honesty)
Which of the following accurately portrays participants' recall of the four types of pairs,from highest recall to lowest?

A)I,III,II,IV
B)I,II,III,IV
C)II,III,I,IV
D)IV,III,II,I
Question
Which of the following questions would take you the LONGEST TIME to answer?

A)Which is faster,a snail or a caterpillar?
B)Which is faster,a turtle or a cheetah?
C)Which is faster,a cheetah or a caterpillar?
D)Which is faster,a caterpillar or a cat?
Question
According to the dual-coding hypothesis,which of the following word pairs would be easiest to remember?

A)cat-liberty
B)freedom-honesty
C)ferret-catalog
D)fear-door
Question
Studies of mental rotation have shown all of the following EXCEPT ______.

A)the amount of time taken to decide if two drawings are the same or a mirror image reversal is proportional to the angle of rotation required
B)the time taken to decide if two drawings are the same is equal for rotations within the picture plane (two-dimensional rotations)and rotations in depth (three-dimensional rotations "forward" or "backward")
C)mental rotations are faster when done in a clockwise direction than in a counterclockwise direction
D)the rate of mental rotation is the same for simple and complex geometric figures
Question
Several mnemonic devices,including the method of loci,the pegword method,and the method of interacting images,have in common their reliance on ______.

A)verbal rehearsal
B)creating a stor.
C)visual imagery
D)connecting new information to well-known information
Question
The dual-coding hypothesis states that recall will be best when items are coded ______.

A)visually
B)verbally
C)both visually and verbally
D)with two distinct visual images
Question
Barbara Tversky's research suggests that people's mental maps are ______.

A)astonishingly accurate
B)systematically distorted by the use of heuristics
C)improved through practice
D)highly correlated with their travel experience
Question
Forming a visual image and then moving from one location on the image to another is known as ______.

A)symbolic distance
B)imaginal scanning
C)mnemonic movement
D)heuristic distortion
Question
Research by Chambers and Reisberg indicated that people ______.

A)spontaneously reverse ambiguous pictures (such as the rabbit/duck)and visual images of those pictures equally frequently
B)frequently spontaneously reverse ambiguous pictures but not ambiguous visual images
C)frequently spontaneously reverse ambiguous visual images but not ambiguous pictures
D)almost never spontaneously reverse ambiguous visual images or pictures
Question
The results from the studies of Kosslyn,Ball,and Reiser indicated that ______.

A)roughly one-third of the subjects had to be dropped from the experiment for inability to construct mental images
B)subjects' reaction times to mentally "scan" across a map of an island were dependent upon the amount of practice each one had with the task;those subjects who actually lived on the island demonstrated a constant scanning time,regardless of actual distance
C)subjects' reaction times to mentally "scan" across a map of an island were strongly correlated with the distance scanned
D)subjects' reaction times to mentally "scan" across a map of an island were unrelated to the distance scanned
Question
Paivio's ______ hypothesis argues that long-term memory contains two separate systems that represent information in verbal and visual forms,respectively.

A)picture-word
B)dual code
C)visuo-verbal
D)relational-organizational
Question
Your mental map of your campus is probably ______ than reality.

A)larger
B)smaller
C)more regular,with more straight lines and right angles.
D)less regular,with fewer straight lines and right angles.
Question
When participants in an experiment were asked to imagine a letter and mentally move clockwise around the letter's corners,______.

A)they could respond more accurately by pointing than by responding verbally
B)only about half of the participants could complete the task at all
C)they could respond more quickly in verbal form than by pointing
D)most could not complete the task,but those who did preferred to point
Question
Which of the following methods would most help you to remember the word pair "elephant-cigar"?

A)repeating the word "elephant" over and over while visualizing a cigar
B)repeating the word "cigar" over and over while visualizing an elephant
C)visualizing an elephant smoking a cigar
D)visualizing an elephant and a cigar,not touching each other
Question
Research by Chambers and Reisberg on ambiguous figures such as the duck/rabbit showed that ______.

A)different people can form different mental images of the same physical stimulus
B)mental images are reversed more easily than physical images
C)once a mental image is formed,people cannot detect alterations to it
D)forming a mental image makes a person unable to later reverse his/her interpretation of a physical stimulus
Question
When comparing people's speed at reasoning with abstract concepts (smarter- dumber),spatial concepts (above-below),and visual relationships (cleaner-dirtier),Knauff and Johnson found that ______ relationships had the slowest performance.

A)abstract
B)spatial
C)visual
D)abstract and visual
Question
The relational-organizational hypothesis is supported by ______.

A)the effectiveness of the method of loci
B)the fact that concrete words are recalled better than abstract words
C)the fact that noninteractive images do not facilitate recall,whereas interactive images do facilitate recall
D)the effectiveness of the pegword method
Question
When you imagine hearing a song,which part of your brain is probably active?

A)temporal lobes
B)parietal lobes
C)occipital lobes
D)frontal lobes
Question
Finke's principle of ______ states that mental imagery allows us to retrieve information that was not intentionally stored.

A)perceptual equivalence
B)transformational equivalence
C)implicit encoding
D)structural encoding
Question
Participants doing mental imagery tasks tend to show brain activity in the ______ lobe.

A)temporal
B)parietal
C)frontal
D)occipital
Question
Some theorists believe that there is a single code for all types of information;this code is known as a ______ representation.

A)visual
B)pictorial
C)verbal
D)propositional
Question
Which of the following is NOT one of Finke's principles describing the fundamental nature and properties of visual images?

A)Images contain only information that has been intentionally stored.
B)Mental imagery uses several of the same internal processes as visual perception.
C)The spatial arrangement of parts of a mental image corresponds to the way parts of the actual physical objects are arranged.
D)Transformations of visual images obey the same laws of motion as transformations of actual physical objects.
Question
Visual images are formed in pieces that are assembled into a final product.This is a statement of the principle of ______ equivalence.

A)spatial
B)transformational
C)perceptual
D)structural
Question
Images can prime the visual pathway,making it easier to detect a faint stimulus.This is an example of ______ equivalence.

A)perceptual
B)spatial
C)structural
D)transformational
Question
A propositional representation is thought to be ______ in nature.

A)verbal
B)visual
C)both verbal and visual
D)neither verbal nor visual
Question
Which of the following studies is least susceptible to demand characteristics?

A)mental rotation
B)mnemonic usage
C)image scanning
D)PET scan studies
Question
When the experimental task itself "cues" the subject about how to behave,the task is said to have ______.

A)internal validity
B)demand characteristics
C)transformational equivalence
D)implicit encoding
Question
Neurological studies indicate that processing mental images activates areas of brain ______.

A)involved in visual perception
B)involved in auditory perception
C)involved in verbal memory
D)not involved in ordinary sensory perception
Question
Your occipital lobe would be activated when you ______.

A)perform a mental arithmetic task
B)perform a mental rotation task
C)imagine the smell of cinnamon
D)imagine the taste of chocolate
Question
Kosslyn compared people's verification times for statements like "Cats have claws" (high association,small visual part of a cat)to "Cats have heads" (low association,large visual part of a cat).He found that people were faster at verifying ______.

A)"claws" whether or not they used visual imagery
B)"heads" whether or not they used visual imagery
C)"heads" when they used imagery,"claws" when they did not
D)"claws" when they used imagery,"heads" when they did not
Question
Which is NOT one of Finke's principles of visual imagery?

A)perceptual equivalence
B)spatial equivalence
C)temporal equivalence
D)structural equivalence
Question
Both blind and sighted participants take longer to "scan" the visual image of a map when the actual distance between two landmarks is greater.This illustrates the idea of ______ equivalence.

A)spatial
B)perceptual
C)transformational
D)structural
Question
The temporal lobes would be most active when you ______.

A)visualize the Mona Lisa
B)form a mental map of your campus
C)think about a sad event
D)imagine listening to your favorite song
Question
One criticism of visual imagery research is that the studies ______.

A)may involve demand characteristics
B)may be too difficult for most people to perform
C)result in too many individual differences in performance
D)cannot be statistically tested
Question
When an experimenter gives subtle cues to participants about how to behave,we say that a(n)______ has occurred.

A)experimenter-expectancy effect
B)double-blind design
C)implicit error
D)external validity
Question
Nickerson and Adams showed that when it comes to memory for commonly seen objects like pennies,______.

A)people's visual memory is extremely accurate
B)people can recognize a penny,but cannot recall it well enough to draw it
C)people are not very good at recognizing a penny even though they see it frequently
D)75% of people can recognize common logos out of context
Question
Finke theorized that there are ______ principles of mental imagery.

A)two
B)three
C)four
D)five
Question
When creating a mental image of a location,you would most likely to see brain activation in which of the following areas?

A)brainstem
B)fusiform face area
C)hippocampus
D)occipital lobe
Question
In a mental rotation task,you'd fastest to match a target object to its rotated counterpart if the target and its counterpart were ______.

A)180 degrees apart
B)not identical
C)only 10 degrees apart
D)mirror images of each other
Question
In studying mental rotation of objects,Shepard and Metzler (1971)found that the ______ an object is rotated in space (from zero degrees),participants confirmed the object's identity ______.

A)less;faster
B)less;slower
C)more;faster
D)more;as fast as when it was rotated less
Question
Knowledge or beliefs that you have about a task,its outcome,and its underlying mechanisms is known as ______.

A)implicit knowledge
B)tacit knowledge
C)explicit knowledge
D)foreknowledge
Question
Which classic image from Chambers and Reisberg (1992)shows that although our mental images are in many ways like real images,they are still susceptible to manipulation by our biases and existing understanding?

A)goose-otter
B)duck-rabbit
C)hawk-squirrel
D)crane-beaver
Question
The process of ______ occurs when we move through space and revise our mental representations of where things are in the environment.

A)visual updating
B)visual editing
C)spatial editing
D)spatial updating
Question
Demand characteristics are a problem for psychological experiments because ______.

A)participants must follow instructions in order to complete a task
B)researchers cannot currently create appropriate demand stimuli
C)the demands change how a cognitive process normally works
D)demand characteristics cannot be studied in the context of the lab
Question
Tversky's work suggests that people localize objects along which of these axes?

A)inside-outside and front-back
B)left-right and front-back
C)up-down and inside-outside
D)left-right,up-down,and front-back
Question
Which of the following mnemonic devices involves using imagery to imagine storing pieces of information in particular locations (such as in your house)?

A)peg-word
B)method of loci
C)cognitive map
D)analog
Question
Neurological results avoid demand characteristics because ______.

A)demand characteristics are negated by the magnetic field of an MRI
B)participants only try to change their cognitive processes in behavioral experiments
C)neuroscientists create better experiments than behavioral scientists
D)participants are unable to change their brain activation patterns
Question
Which image representation would contain a list of descriptive features?

A)analagous image
B)propositional image
C)simultaneous image
D)dependent image
Question
Knowledge of where your feet are located right now is part of your cognition of the space ______.

A)around the body
B)of the body
C)within the body
D)of navigation.
Question
Because of experimenter expectancy effects,Intons-peterson (1983)found that experimenters who had been told imaginal primes would be ______ effective than perceptual primes found that imaginal primes were ______ effective than perceptual primes and vice versa.

A)more;more
B)less;more
C)equally;less
D)equally;more
Question
Which image representation would be similar to a (possibly distorted)snapshot of an actual real-world image?

A)propositional image
B)dependent image
C)analagous image
D)simultaneous image
Question
Of the following,which is NOT one of Barbara Tversky's spaces of spatial cognition?

A)space of the body
B)space around the body
C)space of navigation
D)space of projection
Question
Based on Bower's (1970)findings,you are most likely to remember the word pair "elephant-cigar" best when you visualize an elephant smoking a cigar compared to visualizing either the elephant or the cigar separately.This is because ______.

A)only humanzing information will improve memory recall
B)imagery must be paired in order to be effective
C)imagery is distracting for individual objects
D)this creates more memory links between the two concepts
Question
How do people represent and navigate in and through space? This is a question of ______ cognition.

A)navigational
B)representational
C)spatial
D)visual
Question
According to Barbara Tversky,there are three types of "space" that result in different types of spatial cognition: space of the body,space around the body,and ______.

A)space within the body
B)space around the world
C)space of imagination
D)space of navigation
Question
The idea that as organisms navigate their environment they must continually revise their representation of the the environment and objects in it is known as ______.

A)spatial updating
B)spatial awareness
C)spatial modification
D)spatial reformation
Question
Cognitive maps can be built from what kind of information?

A)survey information
B)route information
C)spatial information
D)all of these
Question
Spatial cognition involves which of the following?

A)representing space
B)navigating through space
C)reasoning about space
D)all of these
Question
Mental rotations are more accurate when done in two dimensions than when done in three dimensions.
Question
Of the evidence reviewed in this chapter,which type of empirical evidence best supports Finke's principle of transformational equivalence?

A)mental rotation studies
B)image scannign studies
C)neurological studies
D)mnemonic studies
Question
The observation that we appear to construct our mental images out of similar kinds of parts as their real world-counterparts would be described by Finke as ______.

A)implicit encoding
B)strucutral equivalence
C)spatial equivalence
D)perceptual equivalence
Question
In Brook's (1968)task involving a capital letter F,participants are able to correctly identify the orientation of particular corners even if they do not consciously remember how they were marked.This is an example of ______.

A)implicit encoding
B)perceptual equivalence
C)spatial equivalence
D)transformational equivalence
Question
Studies of imaginal scanning suggest that visual images are very much like physical pictures or maps.
Question
Which of the following is NOT a criticism often directed at imagery research?

A)Experimenters may give unconscious hints about the expected outcome of the study.
B)Real-world images may not be stored analagously in memory.
C)Imagery research cannot be conducted in a neuroscience paradigm.
D)Descriptions and details of images can be used as imagery representations.
Question
Inherent in Finke's description of implicit encoding is that mental images ______.

A)can never be consciously created
B)have information that can be used in the future
C)are only created from unnattended stimuli
D)cannot be created to represent real-world objects
Question
Imagery is more effective when it is interactive.
Question
Both mental images and real world objects are expected to conform to a set of physical principles.According to Finke,this demonstrates ______.

A)implicit encoding
B)spatial equivalence
C)transformational equivalence
D)structural equivalence
Question
Spence and Feng (2010)demonstrate that video games like Call of Duty may result in ______ in spatial cognition performance.

A)narrow benefits
B)general deficits
C)narrow deficits
D)general benefits
Question
In Kerr's (1983)study,she had blind participants acquire map and feature information through touch.She found that when asked to imagine moving a dot from one feature to another,blind participants ______.

A)could not complete the task because they were unable to acquire spatial information
B)completed the task faster than sighted participants suggesting that mental imagery is detrimental
C)were fastest when they had features described to them instead of having touched the map
D)performed similarly to sighted participants suggesting that both groups had mental representations
Question
Clockwise mental rotation is easier than counterclockwise mental rotation.
Question
Inherent in Finke's description of perceptual equivalence is that mental images and perceptions use ______ mental processes.

A)different
B)all
C)zero
D)similar
Question
In studies by Kosslyn and colleagues (1983),participants were generally shown to use ______ parts to create their mental images compared to their real-world counterparts.

A)abstract
B)similar
C)different
D)unrelated
Question
Of the evidence reviewed in this chapter,which kinds of empirical findings best support Finke's notion of spatial equivalence?

A)mental rotation studies
B)image scanning studies
C)neurological studies
D)mnemonic studies
Question
According to the dual code hypothesis,memory is better when we can create both a verbal code and a visual image of the thing that we are trying to remember.
Question
Because similar visual systems are active for both mental imagery and visual perception,Finke argues that mental images have ______.

A)implicit encoding
B)spatial equivalence
C)perceptual equivalence
D)transformational equivalence
Question
Implicit encoding involves storing information ______.

A)that you never paid atttention to in the first place
B)retrieving information from the unconscious
C)that you wanted to specifically use to create a mental image
D)that you did not intend to
Question
According to Finke,the observation that mental images typically have the same arrangments of features as real-world objects is evidence for ______.

A)spatial equivalence
B)perceptual equivalence
C)transformational equivalence
D)implicit encoding
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Deck 9: Visual Imagery and Spatial Cognition
1
Cooper's studies of the mental rotation of complex polygons indicated that people ______.

A)rotated more complex polygons in the same amount of time as simpler polygons
B)took longer to rotate more complex polygons
C)actually took less time to rotate more complex polygons
D)were unable to mentally rotate a polygon with greater than 10 points with more than chance accuracy
rotated more complex polygons in the same amount of time as simpler polygons
2
Behaviorists objected to the study of visual imagery because ______.

A)it cannot be investigated with sufficient scientific control
B)there are too many individual differences in people's abilities to visualize
C)behaviorists prefer to study animals and animals have no imagery abilities
D)we can only study visual imagery and not auditory images,olfactory images,etc.
it cannot be investigated with sufficient scientific control
3

According to the symbolic distance effect,which of the following questions would be answered most quickly?

A)Which is bigger,a mouse or a house?
B)Which is bigger,a mouse or a rat?
C)Which is bigger,a house or a store?
D)Which is bigger,a rat or a cat?
Which is bigger,a mouse or a house?
4
In Paivio's study of paired-associate learning,subjects learned four types of word pairs: I.concrete-concrete (e.g. ,book-table)
II)concrete-abstract (e.g. ,book-freedom)
III)abstract-concrete (e.g. ,freedom-table)
IV)abstract-abstract (e.g. ,freedom-honesty)
Which of the following accurately portrays participants' recall of the four types of pairs,from highest recall to lowest?

A)I,III,II,IV
B)I,II,III,IV
C)II,III,I,IV
D)IV,III,II,I
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
5
Which of the following questions would take you the LONGEST TIME to answer?

A)Which is faster,a snail or a caterpillar?
B)Which is faster,a turtle or a cheetah?
C)Which is faster,a cheetah or a caterpillar?
D)Which is faster,a caterpillar or a cat?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
According to the dual-coding hypothesis,which of the following word pairs would be easiest to remember?

A)cat-liberty
B)freedom-honesty
C)ferret-catalog
D)fear-door
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Studies of mental rotation have shown all of the following EXCEPT ______.

A)the amount of time taken to decide if two drawings are the same or a mirror image reversal is proportional to the angle of rotation required
B)the time taken to decide if two drawings are the same is equal for rotations within the picture plane (two-dimensional rotations)and rotations in depth (three-dimensional rotations "forward" or "backward")
C)mental rotations are faster when done in a clockwise direction than in a counterclockwise direction
D)the rate of mental rotation is the same for simple and complex geometric figures
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Several mnemonic devices,including the method of loci,the pegword method,and the method of interacting images,have in common their reliance on ______.

A)verbal rehearsal
B)creating a stor.
C)visual imagery
D)connecting new information to well-known information
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The dual-coding hypothesis states that recall will be best when items are coded ______.

A)visually
B)verbally
C)both visually and verbally
D)with two distinct visual images
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Barbara Tversky's research suggests that people's mental maps are ______.

A)astonishingly accurate
B)systematically distorted by the use of heuristics
C)improved through practice
D)highly correlated with their travel experience
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Forming a visual image and then moving from one location on the image to another is known as ______.

A)symbolic distance
B)imaginal scanning
C)mnemonic movement
D)heuristic distortion
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Research by Chambers and Reisberg indicated that people ______.

A)spontaneously reverse ambiguous pictures (such as the rabbit/duck)and visual images of those pictures equally frequently
B)frequently spontaneously reverse ambiguous pictures but not ambiguous visual images
C)frequently spontaneously reverse ambiguous visual images but not ambiguous pictures
D)almost never spontaneously reverse ambiguous visual images or pictures
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The results from the studies of Kosslyn,Ball,and Reiser indicated that ______.

A)roughly one-third of the subjects had to be dropped from the experiment for inability to construct mental images
B)subjects' reaction times to mentally "scan" across a map of an island were dependent upon the amount of practice each one had with the task;those subjects who actually lived on the island demonstrated a constant scanning time,regardless of actual distance
C)subjects' reaction times to mentally "scan" across a map of an island were strongly correlated with the distance scanned
D)subjects' reaction times to mentally "scan" across a map of an island were unrelated to the distance scanned
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Paivio's ______ hypothesis argues that long-term memory contains two separate systems that represent information in verbal and visual forms,respectively.

A)picture-word
B)dual code
C)visuo-verbal
D)relational-organizational
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Your mental map of your campus is probably ______ than reality.

A)larger
B)smaller
C)more regular,with more straight lines and right angles.
D)less regular,with fewer straight lines and right angles.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
When participants in an experiment were asked to imagine a letter and mentally move clockwise around the letter's corners,______.

A)they could respond more accurately by pointing than by responding verbally
B)only about half of the participants could complete the task at all
C)they could respond more quickly in verbal form than by pointing
D)most could not complete the task,but those who did preferred to point
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Which of the following methods would most help you to remember the word pair "elephant-cigar"?

A)repeating the word "elephant" over and over while visualizing a cigar
B)repeating the word "cigar" over and over while visualizing an elephant
C)visualizing an elephant smoking a cigar
D)visualizing an elephant and a cigar,not touching each other
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Research by Chambers and Reisberg on ambiguous figures such as the duck/rabbit showed that ______.

A)different people can form different mental images of the same physical stimulus
B)mental images are reversed more easily than physical images
C)once a mental image is formed,people cannot detect alterations to it
D)forming a mental image makes a person unable to later reverse his/her interpretation of a physical stimulus
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
When comparing people's speed at reasoning with abstract concepts (smarter- dumber),spatial concepts (above-below),and visual relationships (cleaner-dirtier),Knauff and Johnson found that ______ relationships had the slowest performance.

A)abstract
B)spatial
C)visual
D)abstract and visual
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The relational-organizational hypothesis is supported by ______.

A)the effectiveness of the method of loci
B)the fact that concrete words are recalled better than abstract words
C)the fact that noninteractive images do not facilitate recall,whereas interactive images do facilitate recall
D)the effectiveness of the pegword method
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
When you imagine hearing a song,which part of your brain is probably active?

A)temporal lobes
B)parietal lobes
C)occipital lobes
D)frontal lobes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Finke's principle of ______ states that mental imagery allows us to retrieve information that was not intentionally stored.

A)perceptual equivalence
B)transformational equivalence
C)implicit encoding
D)structural encoding
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Participants doing mental imagery tasks tend to show brain activity in the ______ lobe.

A)temporal
B)parietal
C)frontal
D)occipital
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Some theorists believe that there is a single code for all types of information;this code is known as a ______ representation.

A)visual
B)pictorial
C)verbal
D)propositional
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Which of the following is NOT one of Finke's principles describing the fundamental nature and properties of visual images?

A)Images contain only information that has been intentionally stored.
B)Mental imagery uses several of the same internal processes as visual perception.
C)The spatial arrangement of parts of a mental image corresponds to the way parts of the actual physical objects are arranged.
D)Transformations of visual images obey the same laws of motion as transformations of actual physical objects.
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26
Visual images are formed in pieces that are assembled into a final product.This is a statement of the principle of ______ equivalence.

A)spatial
B)transformational
C)perceptual
D)structural
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27
Images can prime the visual pathway,making it easier to detect a faint stimulus.This is an example of ______ equivalence.

A)perceptual
B)spatial
C)structural
D)transformational
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28
A propositional representation is thought to be ______ in nature.

A)verbal
B)visual
C)both verbal and visual
D)neither verbal nor visual
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29
Which of the following studies is least susceptible to demand characteristics?

A)mental rotation
B)mnemonic usage
C)image scanning
D)PET scan studies
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30
When the experimental task itself "cues" the subject about how to behave,the task is said to have ______.

A)internal validity
B)demand characteristics
C)transformational equivalence
D)implicit encoding
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31
Neurological studies indicate that processing mental images activates areas of brain ______.

A)involved in visual perception
B)involved in auditory perception
C)involved in verbal memory
D)not involved in ordinary sensory perception
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32
Your occipital lobe would be activated when you ______.

A)perform a mental arithmetic task
B)perform a mental rotation task
C)imagine the smell of cinnamon
D)imagine the taste of chocolate
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33
Kosslyn compared people's verification times for statements like "Cats have claws" (high association,small visual part of a cat)to "Cats have heads" (low association,large visual part of a cat).He found that people were faster at verifying ______.

A)"claws" whether or not they used visual imagery
B)"heads" whether or not they used visual imagery
C)"heads" when they used imagery,"claws" when they did not
D)"claws" when they used imagery,"heads" when they did not
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34
Which is NOT one of Finke's principles of visual imagery?

A)perceptual equivalence
B)spatial equivalence
C)temporal equivalence
D)structural equivalence
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35
Both blind and sighted participants take longer to "scan" the visual image of a map when the actual distance between two landmarks is greater.This illustrates the idea of ______ equivalence.

A)spatial
B)perceptual
C)transformational
D)structural
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36
The temporal lobes would be most active when you ______.

A)visualize the Mona Lisa
B)form a mental map of your campus
C)think about a sad event
D)imagine listening to your favorite song
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37
One criticism of visual imagery research is that the studies ______.

A)may involve demand characteristics
B)may be too difficult for most people to perform
C)result in too many individual differences in performance
D)cannot be statistically tested
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38
When an experimenter gives subtle cues to participants about how to behave,we say that a(n)______ has occurred.

A)experimenter-expectancy effect
B)double-blind design
C)implicit error
D)external validity
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39
Nickerson and Adams showed that when it comes to memory for commonly seen objects like pennies,______.

A)people's visual memory is extremely accurate
B)people can recognize a penny,but cannot recall it well enough to draw it
C)people are not very good at recognizing a penny even though they see it frequently
D)75% of people can recognize common logos out of context
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40
Finke theorized that there are ______ principles of mental imagery.

A)two
B)three
C)four
D)five
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41
When creating a mental image of a location,you would most likely to see brain activation in which of the following areas?

A)brainstem
B)fusiform face area
C)hippocampus
D)occipital lobe
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42
In a mental rotation task,you'd fastest to match a target object to its rotated counterpart if the target and its counterpart were ______.

A)180 degrees apart
B)not identical
C)only 10 degrees apart
D)mirror images of each other
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43
In studying mental rotation of objects,Shepard and Metzler (1971)found that the ______ an object is rotated in space (from zero degrees),participants confirmed the object's identity ______.

A)less;faster
B)less;slower
C)more;faster
D)more;as fast as when it was rotated less
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44
Knowledge or beliefs that you have about a task,its outcome,and its underlying mechanisms is known as ______.

A)implicit knowledge
B)tacit knowledge
C)explicit knowledge
D)foreknowledge
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45
Which classic image from Chambers and Reisberg (1992)shows that although our mental images are in many ways like real images,they are still susceptible to manipulation by our biases and existing understanding?

A)goose-otter
B)duck-rabbit
C)hawk-squirrel
D)crane-beaver
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46
The process of ______ occurs when we move through space and revise our mental representations of where things are in the environment.

A)visual updating
B)visual editing
C)spatial editing
D)spatial updating
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47
Demand characteristics are a problem for psychological experiments because ______.

A)participants must follow instructions in order to complete a task
B)researchers cannot currently create appropriate demand stimuli
C)the demands change how a cognitive process normally works
D)demand characteristics cannot be studied in the context of the lab
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48
Tversky's work suggests that people localize objects along which of these axes?

A)inside-outside and front-back
B)left-right and front-back
C)up-down and inside-outside
D)left-right,up-down,and front-back
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49
Which of the following mnemonic devices involves using imagery to imagine storing pieces of information in particular locations (such as in your house)?

A)peg-word
B)method of loci
C)cognitive map
D)analog
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50
Neurological results avoid demand characteristics because ______.

A)demand characteristics are negated by the magnetic field of an MRI
B)participants only try to change their cognitive processes in behavioral experiments
C)neuroscientists create better experiments than behavioral scientists
D)participants are unable to change their brain activation patterns
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51
Which image representation would contain a list of descriptive features?

A)analagous image
B)propositional image
C)simultaneous image
D)dependent image
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52
Knowledge of where your feet are located right now is part of your cognition of the space ______.

A)around the body
B)of the body
C)within the body
D)of navigation.
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53
Because of experimenter expectancy effects,Intons-peterson (1983)found that experimenters who had been told imaginal primes would be ______ effective than perceptual primes found that imaginal primes were ______ effective than perceptual primes and vice versa.

A)more;more
B)less;more
C)equally;less
D)equally;more
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54
Which image representation would be similar to a (possibly distorted)snapshot of an actual real-world image?

A)propositional image
B)dependent image
C)analagous image
D)simultaneous image
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55
Of the following,which is NOT one of Barbara Tversky's spaces of spatial cognition?

A)space of the body
B)space around the body
C)space of navigation
D)space of projection
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56
Based on Bower's (1970)findings,you are most likely to remember the word pair "elephant-cigar" best when you visualize an elephant smoking a cigar compared to visualizing either the elephant or the cigar separately.This is because ______.

A)only humanzing information will improve memory recall
B)imagery must be paired in order to be effective
C)imagery is distracting for individual objects
D)this creates more memory links between the two concepts
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57
How do people represent and navigate in and through space? This is a question of ______ cognition.

A)navigational
B)representational
C)spatial
D)visual
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58
According to Barbara Tversky,there are three types of "space" that result in different types of spatial cognition: space of the body,space around the body,and ______.

A)space within the body
B)space around the world
C)space of imagination
D)space of navigation
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59
The idea that as organisms navigate their environment they must continually revise their representation of the the environment and objects in it is known as ______.

A)spatial updating
B)spatial awareness
C)spatial modification
D)spatial reformation
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60
Cognitive maps can be built from what kind of information?

A)survey information
B)route information
C)spatial information
D)all of these
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61
Spatial cognition involves which of the following?

A)representing space
B)navigating through space
C)reasoning about space
D)all of these
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62
Mental rotations are more accurate when done in two dimensions than when done in three dimensions.
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63
Of the evidence reviewed in this chapter,which type of empirical evidence best supports Finke's principle of transformational equivalence?

A)mental rotation studies
B)image scannign studies
C)neurological studies
D)mnemonic studies
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k this deck
64
The observation that we appear to construct our mental images out of similar kinds of parts as their real world-counterparts would be described by Finke as ______.

A)implicit encoding
B)strucutral equivalence
C)spatial equivalence
D)perceptual equivalence
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k this deck
65
In Brook's (1968)task involving a capital letter F,participants are able to correctly identify the orientation of particular corners even if they do not consciously remember how they were marked.This is an example of ______.

A)implicit encoding
B)perceptual equivalence
C)spatial equivalence
D)transformational equivalence
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66
Studies of imaginal scanning suggest that visual images are very much like physical pictures or maps.
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67
Which of the following is NOT a criticism often directed at imagery research?

A)Experimenters may give unconscious hints about the expected outcome of the study.
B)Real-world images may not be stored analagously in memory.
C)Imagery research cannot be conducted in a neuroscience paradigm.
D)Descriptions and details of images can be used as imagery representations.
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k this deck
68
Inherent in Finke's description of implicit encoding is that mental images ______.

A)can never be consciously created
B)have information that can be used in the future
C)are only created from unnattended stimuli
D)cannot be created to represent real-world objects
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69
Imagery is more effective when it is interactive.
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70
Both mental images and real world objects are expected to conform to a set of physical principles.According to Finke,this demonstrates ______.

A)implicit encoding
B)spatial equivalence
C)transformational equivalence
D)structural equivalence
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71
Spence and Feng (2010)demonstrate that video games like Call of Duty may result in ______ in spatial cognition performance.

A)narrow benefits
B)general deficits
C)narrow deficits
D)general benefits
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72
In Kerr's (1983)study,she had blind participants acquire map and feature information through touch.She found that when asked to imagine moving a dot from one feature to another,blind participants ______.

A)could not complete the task because they were unable to acquire spatial information
B)completed the task faster than sighted participants suggesting that mental imagery is detrimental
C)were fastest when they had features described to them instead of having touched the map
D)performed similarly to sighted participants suggesting that both groups had mental representations
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73
Clockwise mental rotation is easier than counterclockwise mental rotation.
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74
Inherent in Finke's description of perceptual equivalence is that mental images and perceptions use ______ mental processes.

A)different
B)all
C)zero
D)similar
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75
In studies by Kosslyn and colleagues (1983),participants were generally shown to use ______ parts to create their mental images compared to their real-world counterparts.

A)abstract
B)similar
C)different
D)unrelated
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76
Of the evidence reviewed in this chapter,which kinds of empirical findings best support Finke's notion of spatial equivalence?

A)mental rotation studies
B)image scanning studies
C)neurological studies
D)mnemonic studies
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77
According to the dual code hypothesis,memory is better when we can create both a verbal code and a visual image of the thing that we are trying to remember.
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k this deck
78
Because similar visual systems are active for both mental imagery and visual perception,Finke argues that mental images have ______.

A)implicit encoding
B)spatial equivalence
C)perceptual equivalence
D)transformational equivalence
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79
Implicit encoding involves storing information ______.

A)that you never paid atttention to in the first place
B)retrieving information from the unconscious
C)that you wanted to specifically use to create a mental image
D)that you did not intend to
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80
According to Finke,the observation that mental images typically have the same arrangments of features as real-world objects is evidence for ______.

A)spatial equivalence
B)perceptual equivalence
C)transformational equivalence
D)implicit encoding
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.