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Multiple Choice Quiz
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1

Adolescents' thought processes, unlike those of children, are not necessarily tied to
A)logic
B)abstract ideas
C)fantasy
D)concrete events
2

How does the cognition of adolescents compare to that of children?
A)adolescents' thinking becomes multidimensional, rather than unidimensional
B)adolescents are more likely to see things as absolute, rather than as relative
C)adolescents spend less of their time thinking about the process of thinking itself
D)adolescents limit their thoughts to what is real, rather than possible
3

Adolescents develop the ability to draw logical conclusions based on a set of facts or premises, known as
A)inductive reasoning
B)abstract reasoning
C)relational reasoning
D)deductive reasoning
4

The monitoring of one's own cognitive activity during the process of thinking is
A)multidimensional thinking
B)automatization
C)propositional logic
D)metacognition
5

During adolescence, the brain may lose many of its redundant neuronal connections that actually improve information processing, a process known as
A)myelination
B)fMRI
C)synaptic pruning
D)neocortex
6

A heightened sense of self-consciousness, which can lead a young person to believe that he or she is the focus of everyone's attention, is known as
A)imaginary audience
B)interpersonal vanity
C)personal fable
D)adolescent egocentrism
7

Adolescents' egocentric and erroneous belief that their feelings and experiences are unique is known as the
A)imaginary audience
B)interpersonal vanity
C)personal fable
D)hypothetical thinking
8

The adolescent's ability to provide more sophisticated answers to complex questions is due to the development of thought conducted on
A)systematic ways
B)abstractions
C)metacognitive ways
D)multidimensional levels
9

The adolescent's ability to understand sarcasm in comparison to a child is indicative of the advanced ability to engage in
A)metacognition
B)hypothetical thinking
C)multidimensional thinking
D)relativistic thinking
10

When adolescents become extremely skeptical, and begin doubting the certainty of things that they had previously believed, they are demonstrating
A)multiple dimensions
B)adolescent relativism
C)metacognition
D)abstract reasoning
11

Which of the following best represents Keaton's (2004) conclusions regarding differences in cognitive processes between children and adolescents?
A)there is general consensus about differences in these processes
B)there are no substantial differences in cognitive processes
C)it is unlikely a single factor distinguishes thinking in childhood from adolescence
D)researchers from differing theoretical perspectives agree about these processes
12

In their investigation of the competence-performance distinction, Ward and Overton (1990) found that task ________ tended to effect adolescents' performance on deductive reasoning tasks.
A)length
B)relevance
C)difficulty
D)sequence
13

The large part of the brain that processes emotions, and may make individuals more emotional, more responsive to stress, and less responsive to rewards, is known as the
A)neurotransmitters
B)synapses
C)limbic system
D)synaptic pruning
14

Piaget described the stage of cognitive development that emerges from adolescence to adulthood as
A)sensorimotor period
B)formal operations period
C)preoperational period
D)concrete operations period
15

Piagetian theorists believe that the foundation of formal-operational thinking that clearly differentiates adolescents' thought from that of children is
A)introspection
B)intellectualization
C)prepositional logic
D)self-consciousness
16

Piaget's theory of cognitive development would support which one of the following conclusions regarding achievement of formal-operational thinking?
A)that insecure children are more likely to achieve formal-operational thought compared to their more secure peers
B)that all adolescents employ formal-operational thought regularly
C)that all adolescents use formal-operational thought in a variety of situations
D)that not all adolescents, or adults, develop formal operational thinking
17

Improvements in all of the following domains during adolescence have been linked with the information processing perspective except
A)processing speed
B)metacognitive abilities
C)attention
D)propositional logic
18

Changes in the levels of dopamine and serotonin, which alter the way in which neurons communicate with one another, are examples of
A)neurotransmitters
B)synapses
C)limbic system
D)pruning
19

The fatty substance that acts as insulation around brain cells allowing them to function faster and more efficiently is known as
A)myelination
B)limbic system
C)synaptic pruning
D)neocortex
20

SAT scores are used to predict
A)performance on the job
B)success in college
C)success in graduate school
D)creative and artistic potential
21

According to Robert Selman, adolescents are better at social perspective-taking than children are because they can engage in ________ role taking.
A)subjective
B)bidirectional
C)mutual
D)advanced
22

Full maturation of the _____ is not complete until sometime between adolescence and early adulthood. This part of the brain is in control of planning, decision-making, goal-setting, and metacognition.
A)limbic system
B)prefrontal cortex
C)neurons
D)neurotransmitters
23

In regard to adolescent risk taking behavior, researchers working from a behavioral decision framework have proposed that adolescents
A)use different cognitive processes than adults to make decisions
B)are more likely than adults to feel invulnerable and untouchable
C)evaluate the desirability of consequences differently than adults
D)are more irrational and illogical than adults in social decision making situations
24

Some theorists point out that in the context of the classroom, most American adolescents
A)are not capable of abstract and analytical thinking in the educational context
B)prefer educational tasks that stress rote memory of concrete facts
C)are rarely asked to think in analytical and relativistic ways in the classroom
D)do not profit from hands-on learning experiences that are designed to teach fundamental principles
25

Which type of attention involves the ability to pay attention to two sets of stimuli at the same time?
A)selective attention
B)divided attention
C)adapted attention
D)bi-directed attention
26

According to Sternberg's Triarchic Theory of Intelligence, individuals possess intelligence that involves our ability to acquire, store, and process information, known as
A)experiential intelligence
B)contextual intelligence
C)componential intelligence
D)neuronal
27

Which of the following is not an accurate description of the difference between child and adolescent thinking skills, from the perspective of information-processing theory?
A)children have higher abilities in divided attention
B)adolescents have better working memory
C)adolescents have better long-term memory
D)adolescents outperform children in information processing speed
28

The researcher who argued that the main reason adolescents think at a higher level than children is that adolescents' thinking has become automatized is
A)Howard Gardner
B)Robert Selman
C)Jean Piaget
D)Robbie Case
29

Which of the following is generally true regarding IQ scores during adolescence?
A)IQ increases as adolescents get smarter
B)IQ decreases as adolescents get distracted by extracurricular activities
C)IQ remains about the same because while adolescents process information more efficiently, they do not learn significant amounts of truly new information
D)IQ remains about the same even though adolescents' cognitive abilities improve dramatically (i.e., they are getting smarter)
30

The difference in cognitive abilities currently believed to exist between genders is that males have a slightly higher ability, on average, in
A)mathematical reasoning
B)spatial reasoning
C)verbal reasoning
D)memory
31

Lev Vygotsky is well known for his concept of the zone of proximal development, which states that individuals learn best when new information is
A)extremely challenging, beyond the student's present ability level
B)extremely easy to master below the student's present ability level
C)taught by another person who lives in close proximity to the student
D)of moderate difficulty, but still within the individual's intellectual reach
32

Culture-fair intelligence testing involves the development of tests
A)for different cultural groups
B)that assess a core set of verbal skills
C)that focus more on nonverbal skills
D)that do not contain stereotypic representations of members of ethnic minorities
33

Overall, mental abilities increase at least until around age _____, when they may level off and remain high throughout early and middle adulthood
A)14
B)16
C)18
D)20
34

The development of an individual's understanding of the norms that guide day-to-day behavior changes over time such that are no longer absolutes but social expectations and insufficient reasons for compliance.
A)perspective-taking
B)mutual role-taking
C)risk-taking
D)social conventions
35

Individuals who have higher needs for _____ may be more likely to engage in risky behaviors compared to their peers.
A)approval
B)engagement
C)sensation-seeking
D)helping others







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