Positive Psychology 1st Edition Zelenski Test Bank
Test Bank for Positive Psychology The Science of Well-Being 1st Edition John Zelenski, ISBN: 9781473902152, ISBN: 9781473902145
Table of Contents
Part I: Introduction
Chapter 1 Describing the Science of Positive Psychology
Part II: Happiness and Positive States
Chapter 2 Positive Emotions
Chapter 3 Happiness
Part III: Personality Processes
Chapter 4 Personality
Chapter 5 The Self
Chapter 6 Thinking
Part IV: Social, Psychological, and Physical Environments
Chapter 7 Social and Physical Environments
Chapter 8 Close Relationships
Part V: Towards Increasing Positivity
Chapter 9 Stability and Change
Chapter 10 Looking Forward
Multiple choice
1. Positive psychology is primarily concerned with ______.
a. happiness
b. optimal human functioning
c. reducing mental health problems
d. self-help
e. seeing the world with ‘rose coloured’ glasses
Ans: B
2. What are common topics of study of mainstream psychology?
a. Mental illness
b. Maladaptive behaviour
c. Irrationality
d. Prejudice
e. Aggression
f. All of these
Ans: F
3. The greatest strength of positive psychology has been ______.
a. its ability to rebalance psychology
b. its lack of focus on the negative
c. its ability to study fun subjects
d. its optimistic approach to science
e. its application to all fields of psychology
f. its resemblance to self-help psychology
Ans: A
4. In his blog Data Colada, Nelson (2014) described the classic ______ as the phenomenon where people draw on their own behaviour when judging the behaviour of others.
a. bias effect
b. false consensus effect
c. ego effect
d. psychology effect
Ans: B
5. Positive psychologists typically consider ______ to know whether or not something is positive.
a. habits, choice of career and relationships
b. cognitive ability, personality and perception
c. choices, values and subjective experiences
d. mental health, social functioning and performance
Ans: C
6. Positive psychologists rely on ______ to understand people.
a. strong opinions
b. historical documents
c. the self-help method
d. the scientific method
e. the humanistic method
Ans: D
7. In a longitudinal study by Harker and Keltner (2001), women who expressed more positive emotions in their photos were more likely to ______.
a. be married by age 27
b. score higher on the traits of affiliation and competence
c. score low on the trait of negative emotionality
d. All of these
Ans: D
8. What does the correlation coefficient describe?
a. The causal direction of the association between two things
b. The strength and direction of the association between two things
c. The longitudinal association between two things
d. All of these
Ans: B
9. A longitudinal study is ______.
a. conducted over multiple points in time
b. synonymous to an experimental design
c. conducted with different age groups
d. the only way to infer causality
Ans: A
10. An important characteristic of an experimental manipulation is that ______.
a. participants are randomly assigned to conditions
b. participants choose their own condition
c. participants are not assigned to any condition
d. there is only one condition
Ans: A
11. Why do we not have to worry about the causal direction of findings in an experiment?
a. Because the experimental manipulation comes after the dependent variable
b. Because the outcome comes after the experimental manipulation
c. Because the dependent variable comes after the independent variable
d. Both because the outcome comes after the experimental manipulation and because the dependent variable comes after the independent variable
e. Both because the experimental manipulation comes after the dependent variable and because the dependent variable comes after the independent variable
f. None of these
Ans: D
12. What do we call a variable that is the outcome of a manipulation?
a. An independent variable
b. A confound variable
c. A random variable
d. A dependent variable
Ans: D