Pam's mirror neurons are MOST activated when she:
A) paints a nature scene while viewing it.
B) draws a picture of a scene from a book after she reads about it.
C) watches her neighbour attempting to parallel park.
D) writes a paragraph describing her physical body.
C) watches her neighbour attempting to parallel park.
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Why is it particularly useful to study identical twins who were raised in different environments?
A. Differences in brain function can be easily identified. B. Concordance rates tend to be higher. C. It is possible that the genetics of twins who have been separated have changed in ways to explain any differences found. D. It is possible that high concordance rates between identical twins reared together are due to their being treated more similarly than nonidentical twins.
What is the value of longitudinal research that monitors children at high risk for schizophrenia?
A. It can identify the specific genes responsible for the disorder. B. It can identify factors that precede breakdown and aid in intervention efforts. C. It can separate the impact of genetics from that of subtle neurological impairment. D. It can identify the factors that improve treatment outcome.
Collins and Quillian's semantic network model predicts that the reaction time to verify "a canary is a bird" is the reaction time to verify "an ostrich is a bird."
a. interfered with by b. faster than c. the same as d. slower than
Peter is describing the inside of his doctor's office to one of his friends. In his description, he mentions that there were two diplomas on the wall, even though his doctor does not have any diplomas displayed on the wall. Peter's error in recall most clearly illustrates the concept of:
a. a memory schema b. cryptomnesia c. a flashbulb memory d. retroactive interference