Your text describes imagery performance of a patient with unilateral neglect. This patient was asked to imagine himself standing at one end of a familiar plaza and to report the objects he saw. His behavior shows
a. neglect manifests itself in perception only, not in imagery.
b. neglect occurred in imagery such that some objects in the plaza were never reported.
c. neglect involved both the
left and right sides of the visual field, with an apparently "random" agnosia ofdifferent components of the fields.
d. neglect always occurred on the left side of the image, with "left side" being determined by the direction in which the patient imagined he was positioned.
d
You might also like to view...
Dave's wife suggests that he talk to a doctor because of his crippling fear of heights. The doctor suggests that Dave's phobia is a learned disorder that can be unlearned with proper treatment. This view is typical of the _______ model of abnormality
a. biological b. cognitive c. behavioral d. psychoanalytic
Having limited _______ helps us to function in the world, because otherwise, we would be swamped with irrelevant information.
-attention -memory -perception -storage
Suppose that you are supposed to go on a blind date, and you find out that the date is with an investment banker. Suppose further that you hold the stereotype that investment bankers are aggressive, rude, self-serving, and chauvinistic. If you are like MOST people, you will spend the evening
A. assuming that the date is aggressive, rude, self-serving, and chauvinistic, without ever looking for evidence one way or the other. B. hoping that the date will be aggressive, rude, self-serving, and chauvinistic. C. testing the hypothesis that the date is aggressive, rude, self-serving, and chauvinistic. D. thinking about how much you detest people who are aggressive, rude, self-serving, and chauvinistic.
How does a person’s mood affect the likelihood that he or she will be persuaded by an appeal?