Melissa has just been released from the hospital after a long illness. Prior to her illness, she had been a part of a study in which she was asked what her preferences were for life-sustaining treatment had the need arose. If she were asked now about her preferences, what would her likely response be?
A. She would likely report the same preferences she did before her hospitalization.
B. She would likely report less desire for life-sustaining treatment than she had previously.
C. She would likely report more desire for life-sustaining treatment than she had previously.
D. none of the above
B
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Based upon observations, Galton concluded that intelligence could be measured by assessing:
A. head size B. reactions to a puzzle box C. responses to inkblots D. reading comprehension
A blood pressure reading is to a _____ measure as observing how many patrons in a fast food restaurant take advantage of free drink refills is to a ______ measure
a. physical; behavioral self-report b. behavioral; physical c. physical; behavioral d. behavioral; cognitive self-report
There are two types of explicit memory, _____ memory, which is for facts and knowledge, and _____ memory for personally experienced events.
A) implicit; semantic B) procedural; implicit C) semantic; episodic D) procedural; priming
The fact that our beliefs and expectations often influence our sensory experiences is known as
A) bottom-up processing. B) parallel processing. C) subliminal processing. D) top-down processing.