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Example Questions
Example Question #71 : Studying Developmental Psychology
Which of the following carries the genetic material of an individual?
Gene
Cells
Loci
Chromosomes
Chromosomes
Chromosomes are made up of DNA and store the genetic material of an individual. Chromosomes are found in the nucleus of human cells and contain all of our DNA. Genes are found in specific loci (locations) on chromosomes. These terms are commonly used in many areas of psychology that use genetics to describe certain behaviors or outcomes.
Example Question #411 : Individual Psychology And Behavior
Which of the following is considered to be an alternative form of a gene?
Alleles
Chromosomes
Cells
Loci
Alleles
"Alleles" are the different versions of a gene. Alleles can have varying patterns of inheritance like dominant alleles and recessive alleles. They can be found at the same location on a specific chromosome.
Example Question #811 : Ap Psychology
Humans have __________ pair(s) of autosomes and __________ pair(s) of sex chromosomes.
Humans have a total of 23 chromosomes. 22 of them are autosomes, or non-sex chromosomes, and 1 pair are sex chromosomes. Autosomes are chromosomes that control traits like skin and hair color. Sex chromosomes determine things like gender and different gender characteristics.
Example Question #73 : Studying Developmental Psychology
The process that swaps genetic material from homologous chromosomes that results in genetic variability and four unique chromatids is known as which of the following?
Crossing over
Mitosis
Meiosis
Prophase
Crossing over
"Crossing over" occurs in prophase I of meiosis. It involves the swapping of genetic material between homologous chromosomes. This creates genetic variability in individuals. Crossing over is extremely important because without genetic variablity humans would be very vunerable to different diseases or dysfunctions.
Example Question #74 : Studying Developmental Psychology
The trait that is always expressed when at least one of its alleles is present is known as a _________ trait
None of these
recessive
dominant
co-dominant
dominant
A dominant pattern of inheritance describes traits that are expressed over other traits. For example, brown eyes are dominant to blue eyes. It only takes one dominant allele for a trait to be expressed. It takes two recessive alleles for a recessive trait to be expressed.
Example Question #75 : Studying Developmental Psychology
A trait that is determined by a gene on a non-autosomal chromosome is known as a __________ trait.
dominant
sex-linked
recessive
autosomal
sex-linked
"Sex-linked" traits are passed down by the X or Y chromosomes of the parents. A female gets the chromosomes XX and a male gets XY. This is especially important in fields like developmental psychology where psychologists need to understand genetic disorders that can effect the cognitive development of a child. Sex linked traits have patterns of inheritance that make them unique from autosomal traits. For example, if a trait is Y linked, then a father will pass it down to all of his sons because he passes down his Y chromosome to each one of them. on the other hand, his daughters would not have the trait because he only passes down an X chromosome to each of them.
Example Question #411 : Individual Psychology And Behavior
Which sector of psychology focuses on the psychological growth of individuals?
School psychology
Industrial-organizational psychology
Cognitive-behavioral psychology
Clinical psychology
Developmental psychology
Developmental psychology
Developmental psychologists study humans of all ages to observe how different stages of life (e.g., infants, adolescents) react to various stimuli. A significant proportion of research in developmental psychology focuses on children, seeing as childhood sees the greatest amount of change.
Example Question #71 : Developmental Psychology
According to Erik Erikson, which of the following psychosocial stages takes place during adolescence?
Initiative vs. Guilt
Generativity vs. Stagnation
Integrity vs. Despair
Identity vs. Role Confusion
Trust vs. Mistrust
Identity vs. Role Confusion
Erik Erikson was a famous psychologist who proposed eight psychosocial stages that every human being experiences during his or her lifetime. Erikson believed that adolescents experience confusion over which roles they wish to fulfill (e.g., rebel, good student, class clown). To successfully conquer this stage, adolescents must merge their various roles of choice into a complete identity. This conflict is known as identity vs. role confusion.
A general overview of Erikson's stages is given below:
Trust vs. mistrust, age 0-2 years
Autonomy vs. shame and doubt, age 2-4 years
Initiative vs. guilt, age 4-5 years
Industry vs. inferiority, age 5-12 years
Identity vs. role confusion, age 12-19 years
Intimacy vs. isolation, young adulthood
Generativity vs. stagnation, middle adulthood
Ego integrity vs. despair, late adulthood
Example Question #1 : Other Developmental Factors
Which parenting style is characterized by excessive rules and strict actions?
Uninvolved
Authoritarian
Secure
Permissive
Authoritative
Authoritarian
Authoritarian parenting is typically depicted as the parent being controlling and power-assertive over their child. The authoritarian parent expects a lot of their child, and may reject him/her if he/she does not meet their high expectations.
Example Question #82 : Developmental Psychology
Which researcher studied attachment patterns in monkeys?
Harry Harlow
Mary Ainsworth
Ivan Pavlov
James Maas
Carl Jung
Harry Harlow
Harry Harlow was an American psychologist who is best known for his maternal separation, dependency needs, and social isolation experiments with primates. His experiments would not have been allowed today because they would be considered animal cruelty by the IRB research approval panel.
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