A) the importance of specific events.
B) the most frequently occurring event.
C) a holistic approach to categorization.
D) the importance of a first impression.
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Multiple Choice
A) ideal for a category.
B) average of various category members.
C) same for every person.
D) central tendency (middle) of all category members.
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Multiple Choice
A) a prototype to exemplar-based knowledge.
B) exemplar-based knowledge to a definition.
C) a definition to a prototype.
D) exemplar-based knowledge to a prototype.
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Multiple Choice
A) represents an average or ideal for the category's members.
B) specifies the necessary and sufficient conditions for category membership.
C) is located on the boundary of the category.
D) lists the perceptual features that are found only in that category.
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Multiple Choice
A) depend on a judgment of typicality.
B) are not settled entirely by an assessment of typicality.
C) rely on comparing the example to a prototype.
D) do not conform to the requirements of a definition.
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Short Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) perceive object; trigger memory; categorize item; judge resemblance
B) perceive object; compare object to memories; judge resemblance; categorize item
C) perceive object; judge resemblance; search memory; make decision
D) search memory; perceive object; judge resemblance; categorize item
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Multiple Choice
A) both theories require the triggering of a memory.
B) both theories require previous memories to be averaged, or combined.
C) both theories require a judgment of resemblance.
D) conclusions for both processes are based on resemblance.
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A) initially connected.
B) stronger.
C) weaker.
D) close in proximity.
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Multiple Choice
A) Psychologists will never understand categorization.
B) Category membership cannot be based on resemblance alone.
C) Category membership is based on previously encountered examples.
D) Prototype theory is the most accurate theory of categorization.
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Multiple Choice
A) the standard used in a particular category can vary from one occasion to the next.
B) one categorizes objects by comparing them to a mentally represented standard.
C) categorization depends on a judgment of resemblance.
D) categories are represented in the mind by a single relatively concrete illustration of the category.
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Multiple Choice
A) each person has his or her own idea about how concepts should be defined.
B) many of our abstract concepts (e.g., justice, love, God) are difficult to define.
C) it is easy to find exceptions to any proposed definition.
D) most of our concepts are difficult to express in words.
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Multiple Choice
A) if asked simply to describe an object, participants are likely to use the basic-level term.
B) basic-level categories are usually represented in the language by a single word.
C) basic-level descriptions are more difficult to remember than more general descriptions.
D) basic-level terms are acquired by children at a younger age than either more specific or more general terms.
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Multiple Choice
A) An object can be in a category even if it has no resemblance to the category's prototype.
B) An object can be excluded from a category even if it has a strong resemblance to the category's prototype.
C) The history of an object is sometimes crucial in determining its category membership.
D) Participants are unable to separate their judgments about category membership from their judgments about typicality.
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Multiple Choice
A) our beliefs and background knowledge influence how we categorize things.
B) clinicians are often mistaken in their diagnoses.
C) theories are often fallible and so should not be depended on in many situations.
D) theories are not involved when placing a test case into a particular category.
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Multiple Choice
A) Neurons that represent Neil Armstrong and astronaut are connected via a synaptic junction.
B) Nodes representing Neil Armstrong and astronaut are in close proximity to one another.
C) A pattern of connections among many nodes represent Neil Armstrong and astronaut separately, and through learning, these patterns begin to co-occur.
D) A single node representing Neil Armstrong is connected via a proposition to the word "astronaut."
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