Evolutionary Psychology: The New Science of the Mind
David M. Buss
7th Edition
PR
O
FD
O
C
,Table of Contents — Evolutionary Psychology: The New Science of the Mind (7th
Edition)
Part 1: Foundations of Evolutionary Psychology
1. The Scientific Movements Leading to Evolutionary Psychology
2. The New Science of Evolutionary Psychology
Part 2: Problems of Survival
3. Combating the Hostile Forces of Nature
Part 3: Challenges of Sex and Mating
4. Women’s Long-Term Mating Strategies
5. Men’s Long-Term Mating Strategies
6. Short-Term Sexual Strategies
Part 4: Challenges of Parenting and Kinship
7. Problems of Parenting
8. Problems of Kinship
Part 5: Problems of Group Living
PR
9. Cooperative Alliances
10. Aggression and Warfare
11. Conflict Between the Sexes
12. Status, Prestige, and Social Dominance
Part 6: Toward an Integrated Evolutionary Psychology
O
13. Toward a Unified Evolutionary Psychology
FD
O
C
,Chapter 01
Multiple Choice Questions
1. Which of the following questions is NOT a focus of evolutionary psychology? (c)
(a) Why is the mind designed the way that it is?
(b) How do the components of the mind interact with the environment?
(c) What is the relationship between the human mind and the Big Bang?
(d) What are the functions of the components of the human mind?
2. Evolution refers to . (a)
(a) changes in gene frequency within a population over time
(b) differences between species
(c) changes over time in the shape of the human skull
(d) differences between men and women
3. Change in life forms over time was suggested . (b)
(a) first by Darwin
(b) well before Darwin’s time
(c) well after Darwin’s time
(d) first by George Williams
PR
4. Which of the following arguments did Lamarck present? (d)
(a) Species originate from microscopic algae.
(b) Species progress toward a lower form.
(c) acquisition of inherited characteristics.
(d) inheritance of acquired characteristics.
O
5. According to Cuvier’s theory of catastrophism, species are . (a)
(a) exterminated by sudden catastrophes and replaced by different species
(b) irradiated by sudden catastrophes, thereafter replacing other species
FD
(c) exterminated by gradual elimination due to disease, leaving room for new species
(d) irradiated and extinguished, and replaced by the same species
6. Which of the following clues to change in organic structure over time were not known or noted prior to
Darwin? (d)
(a) cross-species structural similarities
O
(b) cross-species embryological similarities
(c) apparent function of traits
(d) mechanism to explain change in organic structure over time
C
7. Which of the following is NOT an example of genetic drift? (a)
(a) natural selection
(b) founder effect
(c) genetic bottleneck
(d) mutation
8. Which of the following is NOT one of the three essential processes identified by Darwin’s theory of
evolution by natural selection? (b)
(a) variation
(b) particulation
(c) selection
(d) inheritance
, 9. provides the “raw materials” for evolution. (a)
(a) Variation
(b) Particulation
(c) Selection
(d) Inheritance
10. For evolution to work, successful variations must be , or passed down reliably from parent to
offspring. (d)
(a) variated
(b) particulated
(c) selected
(d) inherited
11. The process of refers to the component of Darwin’s theory of evolution that states that
organisms with some heritable attributes leave more offspring because those attributes help with the tasks of
survival and reproduction. (c)
PR
(a) variation
(b) particulation
(c) selection
(d) inheritance
12. In contrast to the theory of natural selection, which focused on adaptations that have arisen as a
O
consequence of successful survival, the theory of focused on adaptations that have arisen
as a consequence of successful mating. (a)
(a) sexual selection
FD
(b) internal selection
(c) external selection
(d) social selection
13. The work of Gregor Mendel documented that . (c)
(a) evolution is unlikely to have occurred in pea plants
O
(b) evolution is unlikely to have occurred in pea genes
(c) inheritance is particulate, not blended
(d) inheritance is blended, not particulate
C
14. A is the smallest discrete unit that is inherited by offspring intact, without being broken up or
blended. (d)
(a) genotype
(b) phenotype
(c) meme
(d) gene
15. Ethologists are interested in four key issues, which became known as the four “whys” of behavior
advanced by Niko Tinbergen, a founder of ethology. Which of the following is not one of the four “whys” of
behavior? (a)
(a) imprinted influences of behavior
(b) immediate influences of behavior
(c) developmental influences of behavior
(d) function of behavior