Written by students who passed Immediately available after payment Read online or as PDF Wrong document? Swap it for free 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

cogs midterm with correct answers 100%

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
7
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
22-03-2026
Written in
2025/2026

cogs midterm with correct answers 100% Which of the following are useful methods for studying language in pre-verbal infants? - Correct Answer -Preferential looking -Habituation and dishabituation Gilder and Heerey (2018) investigated "the role of experimenter belief in social priming." In a series of experiments, they manipulated participants' 'social priming' condition — but they also manipulated the condition that the research assistants *thought* the participants were in. They then investigated whether participants' performance was affected by their actual condition or by the condition that the research assistants thought they were in. Which of the following are true of this study? - Correct Answer -If researcher belief had been confounded with participant condition, this would have been a threat to internal validity. -It used a double-blind design. -It demonstrates that some instances of "social priming" are actually driven by observer expectancy effects. Which of the following are true of the Institutional Review Board (IRB)? - Correct Answer -It is responsible for ensuring the rights and welfare of participants. -It must approve all human-subjects research In the reading by Brian Hayes on "The Math of Segregation," he describes a simple model of racial segregation, first introduced by Thomas Schelling. Which of the following are true of the model? - Correct Answer -The model's qualitative behavior (amount of segregation) is sensitive to the value of the "tolerance" parameter that governs individual decisions. -The model is an Agent Based Model Which of the following are examples of the "habituation and dishabituation" method? - Correct Answer -A researcher repeatedly presents images of a yellow car until the child stops showing interest, and then the researcher presents an image of a red car of observers whether the child regains interest. -A researcher plays the sound 'da' until the child gets bored and then plays the sound 'ba' to see if they notice. You want to study the relationship between motivation and school success. You recruit participants from three populations: elementary school children; disabled adults in college; and adults in prison who are pursuing college degrees online. Which of the following are true about the ethics of your research? - Correct Answer Children cannot legally give consent, so you must this adult You decide to investigate the acceptability of negative concord (a.k.a., 'double negatives') among native speakers of English who grew up in Merced. You send out surveys that ask people to indicate how acceptable they consider different sentences. Example sentences include: "I won't do it no more," "They didn't have no car," "Nobody said anything." Which of the following are true of this study? - Correct Answer -This survey allows us to document whether native English speakers in Merced speak a variety (or dialect) of English that differs from Standard American English. -This is an example of a quantitative survey. -Acceptability judgments can be unnatural for non-linguists You are investigating how people sing karaoke. You suspect that most karaoke singers don't even know the song's melody — they just try to follow along by coupling the pitch of their singing with the current pitch of the music. To show that your proposal can account for observed karaoke singing, you build a simple computational model of a karaoke singer. In this model, the karaoke singer has expectations about what pitches are likely (not super high, not super low). Whenever they're about to sing, they perceive the current pitch of the music. They combine what they perceived with their prior expectations to generate a belief about the song's actual current pitch. They then sing the next line of the song in that pitch. Which of the following are true? - Correct Answer -If this model successfully generated the kind of singing that is observed in real karaoke, this would indicate that the proposed mechanism could be involved in karaoke singing. -This is a descriptive model that is trying to reproduce a known behavior In the Stanford Prison Experiment, Philip Zimbardo assigned volunteers to be 'guards' or 'prisoners.' Which of the following are true of this study? - Correct Answer -It was unethical because participants were not warned of foreseeable mental anguish. -It was unethical because the study continued after participants began to experience unexpected harm. In the reading by Halberda et al (2008), the authors investigated the relationship between "individual differences in non-verbal number acuity" and "maths achievement." They found that they could predict teenagers' performance on standardized math tests based on their ability to rapidly estimate the relative quantity of dots on a screen. Which of the following are true of this study? - Correct Answer This is a correlational study. in tene - Correct Answer it example it illustrates it psy Real scientific practice typically includes... - Correct Answer trying to resolve both conceptual and empirical revising hypotheses on the basis of data collecting data that can be used as evidence to creativity, guesses, accidents, and hunches Which of the following are true of Patient HM? - Correct Answer He was unable to create new explicit memories. His case establishes a single dissociation between

Show more Read less
Institution
COGS 200
Course
COGS 200

Content preview

Which of the following are useful methods for studying language in pre-verbal infants? - Correct Answer
-Preferential looking

-Habituation and dishabituation



Gilder and Heerey (2018) investigated "the role of experimenter belief in social priming." In a series of
experiments, they manipulated participants' 'social priming' condition but they also manipulated the
condition that the research assistants *thought* the participants were in. They then investigated
whether participants' performance was affected by their actual condition or by the condition that the
research assistants thought they were in. Which of the following are true of this study? - Correct Answer
-If researcher belief had been confounded with participant condition, this would have been a threat to
internal validity.

-It used a double-blind design.

-It demonstrates that some instances of "social priming" are actually driven by observer expectancy
effects.



Which of the following are true of the Institutional Review Board (IRB)? - Correct Answer -It is
responsible for ensuring the rights and welfare of participants.

-It must approve all human-subjects research



In the reading by Brian Hayes on "The Math of Segregation," he describes a simple model of racial
segregation, first introduced by Thomas Schelling. Which of the following are true of the model? -
Correct Answer -The model's qualitative behavior (amount of segregation) is sensitive to the value of
the "tolerance" parameter that governs individual decisions.

-The model is an Agent Based Model



Which of the following are examples of the "habituation and dishabituation" method? - Correct Answer
-A researcher repeatedly presents images of a yellow car until the child stops showing interest, and then
the researcher presents an image of a red car of observers whether the child regains interest.

-A researcher plays the sound 'da' until the child gets bored and then plays the sound 'ba' to see if they
notice.

, You want to study the relationship between motivation and school success. You recruit participants
from three populations: elementary school children; disabled adults in college; and adults in prison who
are pursuing college degrees online. Which of the following are true about the ethics of your research? -
Correct Answer Children cannot legally give consent, so you must

this

adult



You decide to investigate the acceptability of negative concord (a.k.a., 'double negatives') among native
speakers of English who grew up in Merced. You send out surveys that ask people to indicate how
acceptable they consider different sentences. Example sentences include: "I won't do it no more," "They
didn't have no car," "Nobody said anything." Which of the following are true of this study? - Correct
Answer -This survey allows us to document whether native English speakers in Merced speak a variety
(or dialect) of English that differs from Standard American English.

-This is an example of a quantitative survey.

-Acceptability judgments can be unnatural for non-linguists



You are investigating how people sing karaoke. You suspect that most karaoke singers don't even know
the song's melody they just try to follow along by coupling the pitch of their singing with the current
pitch of the music. To show that your proposal can account for observed karaoke singing, you build a
simple computational model of a karaoke singer. In this model, the karaoke singer has expectations
about what pitches are likely (not super high, not super low). Whenever they're about to sing, they
perceive the current pitch of the music. They combine what they perceived with their prior expectations
to generate a belief about the song's actual current pitch. They then sing the next line of the song in that
pitch. Which of the following are true? - Correct Answer -If this model successfully generated the kind
of singing that is observed in real karaoke, this would indicate that the proposed mechanism could be
involved in karaoke singing.

-This is a descriptive model that is trying to reproduce a known behavior



In the Stanford Prison Experiment, Philip Zimbardo assigned volunteers to be 'guards' or 'prisoners.'
Which of the following are true of this study? - Correct Answer -It was unethical because participants
were not warned of foreseeable mental anguish.



-It was unethical because the study continued after participants began to experience unexpected harm.



In the reading by Halberda et al (2008), the authors investigated the relationship between "individual
differences in non-verbal number acuity" and "maths achievement." They found that they could predict

Written for

Institution
COGS 200
Course
COGS 200

Document information

Uploaded on
March 22, 2026
Number of pages
7
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

$9.99
Get access to the full document:

Wrong document? Swap it for free Within 14 days of purchase and before downloading, you can choose a different document. You can simply spend the amount again.
Written by students who passed
Immediately available after payment
Read online or as PDF


Also available in package deal

Thumbnail
Package deal
COGS 200 Midterm Questions With Complete Solutions bundle
-
15 2026
$ 149.35 More info

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
PROFFESORMAURINE West Virgina University
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
16
Member since
2 year
Number of followers
3
Documents
1181
Last sold
3 days ago
NURSING

this i a trusted platform you can get all NURSING EXAMS s and correct answers and the prices are affordable they are clear and can be depended on without any inconveniences 100 % . You can trust me and be sure to get 100% good notes and clear ones during your exam

3.0

1 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
1
2
0
1
0

Trending documents

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions