Test Bank For Theories of Personality 9th Edition by Feist
Test Bank For Theories of Personality 9th Edition by Feist
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Test Bank for Theories of Personality 9th Edition By Feist
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1. What is the relationship between theory and each of the following terms:
(a) philosophy, (b) speculation, (c) hypothesis, and (d) taxonomy?
Answer:
A. A theory is a set of related assumptions capable of generating hypotheses. As such, it is narrower than a philosophy and more general than a
hypothesis.
B. Philosophy deals with what should be, whereas theories are built on scientific evidence. Theory relates to a branch of philosophy called
epistemology, or the nature of knowledge, because theory is an essential tool of science, an important means of gaining knowledge.
C. Although theories are built partially on speculation, they do not stem from baseless speculation. Theorists combine scientifically derived data with
thoughtful speculation to construct theories that will lead to further scientific experimentation.
D. A useful theory is capable of generating multiple hypotheses, or educated guesses. Scientists can test hypotheses through scientific
experimentation, whereas theories are not directly testable.
E. Theories should include a careful taxonomy, or classification system. A taxonomy is merely part of a useful theory. Unlike a theory, a taxonomy is
not dynamic; that is, it is not capable of generating hypotheses.
Answer:
Theories and observations have a mutual and dynamic interaction. A newly born theory is built on tentative observations. Scientists can test
hypotheses spawned by that theory, leading to new observations. As more observations become available, the theory can grow to include a greater
number of hypotheses, and, in turn, scientists can test these hypotheses and provide additional observations.
Answer:
A. A useful theory should generate both descriptive research and hypothesis testing. A theory that fails to spark research falls into disuse and will be
discarded by scientists.
B. A theory must be open to falsifiability. It must suggest research that is capable of either supporting or refuting its major tenets. Theories that can
explain opposing data are not falsifiable.
C. Theories should organize observations. A theoretical framework allows scientists to make sense of their findings.
D. A theory should guide action. It provides people with a road map for making day-to-day decisions.
E. A useful theory is internally consistent. It has a set of operational definitions that are used consistently and does not offer opposing answers to the
same questions.
F. A theory should be as parsimonious as possible. Other things being equal, scientists prefer the simpler of two theories.
4. The term “personality” comes from the Latin word “persona,” which means
A. that which one truly is.
B. the evil side of people.
C. a theatrical mask.
D. the soul.
5. A set of related assumptions that allows scientists to use logical deductive reasoning to formulate testable hypotheses is
A. the definition of philosophy.
B. the definition of scientific theory.
C. the definition of taxonomy.
D. an armchair speculation.
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A. taxonomies.
B. philosophies.
C. theories.
D. definitions of personality.
7. Which of the following statements highlights the role of theory within science?
A. Theories enable scientists to know how they should live their lives.
B. Theories are tools used by scientists to generate research and organize observations.
C. Theory building is the ultimate aim of science.
D. Theories play no role in scientific pursuits.
8. Which of the following statements best characterizes the relationship between a theory and a hypothesis?
A. A theory is narrower than a hypothesis.
B. A theory is directly verifiable, a hypothesis is not.
C. A theory is logically deduced from a specific hypothesis.
D. A theory may generate one or more hypotheses.
9. Which of the following terms is defined as an educated guess or prediction scientific enough for its validity to be tested through the use of the
scientific method?
A. a theory
B. a hypothesis
C. a philosophy
D. a taxonomy
10. _____ focused on the importance of early childhood experience and on relationships with parents as guiding forces that shape personality
development.
A. Psychodynamic theories
B. Humanistic-existential theories
C. Dispositional theories
D. Biological-evolutionary theories
13. _____ assume that not only are people driven by a search for meaning, but also that negative experiences such as failure, awareness of death,
death of a loved one, and anxiety, are part of the human condition and can foster psychological growth.
A. Cognitive theorists
B. Psychodynamic theorists
C. Dispositional theorists
D. Existential theorists
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14. _____ argue that the unique and long-term tendencies to behave in particular ways are the essence of human personality.
A. Dispositional theorists
B. Psychodynamic theorists
C. Biological-evolutionary theorists
D. Learning-cognitive theorists
15. Which of the following theories emphasizes that what people think, feel, and do is always an interaction between nature and nurture?
A. learning-cognitive theories
B. biological-evolutionary theories
C. dispositional theories
D. psychodynamic theories
16. The _____ perspective argues that how one thinks about oneself and other people, as well as the assumptions one makes and the strategies one
uses for solving problems, are the keys to understanding differences between people.
A. dispositional
B. biological
C. cognitive
D. existential
17. What is the relationship between a useful theory and research data?
A. They are mutually exclusive.
B. Several theories make up an observation.
C. Several observations make up a theory.
D. There is a mutual and dynamic interaction between them.
19. The personalities, cognitive processes, developmental histories, and social experiences of personality theorists help shape their theories. The
discipline that deals with these factors is called
A. personology.
B. psychology.
C. sociology.
D. the psychology of science.
E. psychobiology.
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26. A researcher uses the number of times a person smiles at others as a measure of friendliness. This an example of
A. an operational definition.
B. hypothesis testing.
C. parsimony.
D. internal consistency.
28. Which of the following is not a dimension used by the authors to assess a theorist’s concept of humanity?
A. determinism versus free choice
B. order versus disorder
C. pessimism versus optimism
D. conscious versus unconscious
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30. If scores on an instrument that measures introversion correlate highly with a number of other measures of introversion—for example, shyness and
inhibition—then that instrument is said to have
A. discriminant validity.
B. convergent validity.
C. divergent validity.
D. test-retest reliability.
E. concurrent reliability.
31. A test that can accurately divide extraverts from introverts is said to have
A. internal consistency.
B. divergent validity.
C. convergent validity.
D. discriminant validity.
E. test-retest reliability.
32. The extent that a test predicts some future behavior is referred to as
A. test-retest reliability.
B. predictive validity.
C. divergent validity.
D. internal consistency.
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