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Thinking and Language Concentra te Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

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Page 1: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

Thinking and Language

Concentrate

Solve the Problem

Speak up!

Think before you speak.

Talk to the Animals

Page 2: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

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Concentrate

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Solve the Problem

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Speak up!

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Think before you speak!

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Talk to the Animals

Page 7: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

1. A mental grouping of objects or events is called a:

• A) mental image.• B) concept.• C) abstract representation.• D) cognition.• E) schema.

Page 8: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

2. When we think of a “bird” we are more likely to think of a robin than a penguin because a robin fits our:

• A) perception.• B) cognition.• C) formal concept.• D) prototype.

Page 9: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

3. When following this procedure to solve problems, you will always arrive at a correct solution.

• A) trial-and-error• B) heuristic• C) algorithm• D) insight

Page 10: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

4. Jim misplaced his keys. He knew they were in the house, so he first looked on the hook, then on the dresser, then in other places he has found them in the past. He is using the strategy of:• A) trial-and-error.• B) heuristics.• C) algorithm.• D) insight.

Page 11: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

5. A team of researchers have discovered an area of the brain activated during sudden flashes of insight, it was the:

• A) right temporal lobe.• B) left parietal lobe.• C) prefrontal cortex.• D) amygdala.• E) right occipital lobe

Page 12: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

6. When the United States went to war with Iraq on the false assumption it had weapons of mass destruction, this was an

example of: • A) heuristics.• B) fixation.• C) ignorance.• D) belief perseverance.• E) framing.

Page 13: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

7. Our tendency to approach a problem a certain way, i.e., a way successful in

the past, is called:

• A) prototype.• B) heuristics.• C) mental set.• D) algorithm.

Page 14: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

8. Mary was out of coffee filters. She did not think of using a paper towel, so she went without coffee. Her failure was one of:

• A) representativeness heuristic.• B) algorithms.• C) functional fixedness.• D) availability heuristic.• E) mental set

Page 15: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

9. Gambling is perpetuated, in part, by the ease we have of remembering the times we won. This is an example of:

• A) false memory.• B) availability heuristic.• C) false prototypes.• D) concept misattribution.• E) representativeness heuristic.

Page 16: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

10. Politicians know that labeling military action as a “pre-emptive strike” gains more support than, “invasion.” This is

an example of:

• A) belief perseverance. • B) framing.• C) overconfidence.• D) exaggerated fear.• E) belief bias

Page 17: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

11. The rule of grammar, its ___, helps determine the meaning being communicated.

• A) nanogram• B) linguistics• C) semantics• D) morpheme• E) phoneme

Page 18: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

12. The smallest unit of language that carries meaning is called a:

• A) morpheme.• B) phoneme.• C) babble.• D) telegraphic speech.• E) grammar.

Page 19: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

13. By the time infants are about 10 months old,

• A) they should be speaking full sentences.

• B) they should be putting two words together.

• C) their babbling is universal across all cultures.

• D) their babbling has features of the household language.

Page 20: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

14. The stage of speech in which a young child says things like, “go car,” and, “momma come,” is called:

• A) one-word speech.• B) telegraphic speech.• C) babbling.• D) morpheme speech.• E) household language.

Page 21: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

15. Chomsky believes our capacity for language is natural and quick due to:

• A) behavioral conditioning.• B) sequential developmental stages.• C) language being entirely inborn.• D) a language acquisition device.

Page 22: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

16. According to Worf (1956), differences among languages cause differences in perceptions and thinking. This idea is called:

• A) displacement hypothesis.• B) linguistic determinism.• C) perceptual change theory.• D) linguist shift.

Page 23: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

17. Deaf children are unable to learn a language:

• A) if their parents are hearing and don’t sign.

• B) if their parents are deaf and sign.• C) in some languages more than

others.• D) regardless of what they are

exposed to.

Page 24: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

18. Wallace Lambert (1992) found that bilingual education:

• A) resulted in a loss in vocabulary for the English speaking children.

• B) had no benefit to Canadian students.• C) resulted in higher levels of English

proficiency.• D) resulted in higher levels of

self-esteem for Hispanics.

Page 25: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

19. Thinking in images and without words

• A) is not possible. • B) can improve your performance on

the basketball court.• C) is found only in animals.• D) occurs more often in cultures

without language.

Page 26: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

20. Students wanting to improve their test scores should:

• A) should study every chance they get.• B) should spend 5 minutes every day

imagining themselves getting an “A”.• C) should think more often.• D) spend 5 minutes every day

imagining themselves studying.

Page 27: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

21. Most researchers who work with Apes conclude their mental accomplishments:

• A) are around the level of a 2-year-old human.

• B) include self-recognition.• C) include empathy and reasoning.• D) all of the above.

Page 28: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

22. Chimpanzees can use language:

• A) to meaningfully communicate with symbols.

• B) if taught to speak at an early age.

• C) to obey commands.• D) just like people.

Page 29: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

23. Bees communicate:

• A) in a quick series of buzzing sounds.

• B) with their antennae. • C) by a complex dance to tell

where the flowers are.• D) all of the above.

Page 30: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

24: Human communication differs from animal communication in our use of:

• A) vocal sounds.• B) syntax.• C) phonemes.• D) morphemes.

Page 31: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

25. Animal researchers have shown that chimpanzees and apes can:

• A) communicate with one another.• B) show insight.• C) comprehend the syntax of

human speech.• D) all of the above.

Page 32: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

Zimbardo Video

Page 33: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

When asked the question about the length of the Mississippi, answers were more

inclined to be closer to the mileage given to the person. This is called…

A. Risk AversionB. Group ThinkC.Cognitive DissonanceD.Availability HeuristicE. Anchoring Effect

Page 34: Thinking and Language Concentrate Solve the Problem Speak up! Think before you speak. Talk to the Animals

Thinking and Language Answers

1. B

2. D

3. C

4. B

5. A

6. D

7. C

8. C

9. B

10. B

11. C

12. A

13. D

14. B

15. D

16. B

17. A

18. C

19. B

20. D

21. D

22. A

23. C

24. B

25. D