Some recent research on the effect of facial expressions on emotional experience has concluded that:
A. we can initiate emotional experience with appropriate facial expression
B. laughter relieves depression because of what our face is doing
C. facial expressions are learned and therefore do not reflect emotional arousal
D. facial expressions contribute to but do not initiate emotional experience
Answer: D
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If people who take a test twice usually get about the same score both times, what can we conclude?
a. The test is standardized. b. The test is unbiased. c. The test has high validity. d. The test has high reliability.
Suzanne Kobasa studied a group of stress-resistant business executives, suggesting that they shared a trait she called:
A) hardiness. B) optimism. C) Type A. D) self-regulation.
Studies of enriched environments, or of extreme deprivation, tend to ____ the experiential (practice) hypothesis on motor development
a. be irrelevant to b. be relevant but neutral to c. contradict d. support
Ask the Experts Video 10: Catherine Borshuk on AltruismClick on the above link to access the Interactive eBook. Once you've signed in, scroll to page 303 and watch the video. When you've finished watching the video, come back to the test and answer the following question:Now that you've learned about altruistic behavior, and in particular about the bystander effect and the diffusion of responsibility, how do you feel about bystanders who fail to intervene in emergency situations? Do you think they should be prosecuted for not helping? Why or why not?
What will be an ideal response?