Matsumoto and Assar (1992) tested participants who spoke English and Hindi on their abilities to recognize emotions of people in photographs. They concluded that
a. the participants were engaged in the same types of mental processing regardless of language.
b. the participants' thought processes were more conducive to thinking about emotions when they spoke English.
c. speakers of English had less willingness to deal with the emotions depicted in the photographs.
d. the same ideas and emotions are expressed easily in either language.
B
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Morrie Schwartz says, in his conversation with Mitch, "Once you learn how to die, you learn how to live.". What does he mean?
a. Death is no different from life. b. When you die, you live in the hereafter. c. When you accept the reality of death, you become more appreciative of life. d. Death dominates life, leaving the day-to-day realities of life meaningless.
The process of keeping information in short-term memory by mentally repeating it is called:
A) rehearsal. B) chunking. C) memorizing. D) mnemonic storage.
Objects in the right visual field:
A) stimulate only the right optic nerve. B) are only detected by retinal ganglion cells in the right eye. C) stimulate the left half of each retina. D) are processed in area V1 in the right brain hemisphere.
The F ratio tells us how likely it is that :
a. our independent variable caused a change in our dependent variable. b. our results occurred by chance. c. our results were caused by a confound. d. all of these